All this makes for gripping viewing, in a train-wreck sort of way, but the unrelenting darkness made it hard for me to really engage with the characters or their world. Some of this may have been due to the unexpected cut in the show’s length, as plot was prioritized over character development, but much of it stemmed from its deep pessimism about human nature. Certainly there are plenty of examples of people behaving badly in times of crisis, but I’d like a drama to leave me with more than “most humans suck” as a final message. Because, really, do you want your audience rooting for the virus?
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The way in wich it mixes the police thriller and the medical drama is quite new and refreshing, especially for the Korean television, where it is so rare to see something that tries to break off from the conventional genres. What is particularly praiseworthy in this drama is the strict commitment to realism in the portrayal of characters and scenes to counterbalance the science-fiction elements of the plot. You end up believing the whole story, although it can seem unrealistic, because you see the people on the screen behave like you imagine they could do in the real world.
I feel here that the director and the writers really believe that the story they are telling is worth of attention, and so the plot is not simply the pretext for the typical scenes you could expect in this kind of drama, but is well assembled so that each step leads to the next in a natural way.
The medical and political elements of the setting are well explored and instead of being merely on the background they constitute one of the driving elements of the plot.
For once you have doctors that do not act like every 16 years old schoolgirl, but you can feel that there is something specific in their professionalism.
Another thing that makes this drama really stand apart is that it tries to convey some meaning, not just to fill up the airing time it is given. It displays a society in wich the egoism of each individual leads to a possible disaster, and explores various forms in wich this egoism hide itself.
I have to admit that the show slows a bit down in the middle part and that the ending, with the cut imposed by jtbc, although decent, is not as satisfying as it could have been.
Finally The End of the World is another great work from director An Pan Seok and a great show for people that want something more than the typical drama.
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