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As a lover of the film that grew up on John Hughes and other filmmakers like him, I was trained from an early age to expect the high school to be filled with archetypes: bullies, popular children, cups, stamps and humor and rough. While we have developed since then (at least a small bit), there is something about some of those with now classic ’80’s movies that remain darling even if some of the characters and details on the plan feel problematic or completely silly in today’s standards.
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When I noticed it was new Netflix Original film, love was a weighted, was in a trend on a global platform Top 10 List, I knew I had to shoot him as a lifelong fan of teen movies. Love was opened by a high school romance that was placed in 1998. years and has all the signs of the upper trope, and then some.
The Film’s Logline He explains that “Following the 19th-year-old park is planned to wash her continuously hairy hair before he brought recognition to life, and as long as you get involved with the transfert student Han Yun-Seok.” I assumed from that description that the movie would be a little as if it couldn’t buy me – where the protagonist cooks the scheme to gain the favor of popular children – and in some aspect. But I also expected to stay on a lighter, Sillier side. After all, the core of the film is about teenager’s untouched hair and how it affects her love life, but the film has a lot more depth than you would expect, and complexity and darker story about too expensive playful aspects of the film.
The SE-RI (Shin Eun-SOO) park blames its accident in love for the fact that he has curly hair. Se-ri is twins, and the unfair reality is that her sister has a flat, smooth hair and shaking a boy. SE-RI, meanwhile, remains tight in the bathroom trying to manage the mana for a moment, blaming hair for all its problems.
Se-Ri has a great sympathy at Hyun, the biggest hunk at school and would do anything to make it like her. But unfortunately, her big hair means she will never fall for her – at least not the ruling social rules. Se-Ri and her friends make friends in the school, quiet and reserved Han Yun-Seok hairlery, it happened to their mom in hopes of agreeing to her services so that she could look cute and impressed his hyun.
Although Se-Rs are doing everything that can catch the Hinovo eye, it is an authentic connection that is formed with Yun-Seok that becomes a real romance of the film. Shin Eun-Soo is just as nice as Se-R, who is full of life, charm and feelings of adventure. She is the complete opposite of Yun-Seok, which rarely speaks, but when it does, it is a clean honesty and heart. These young actors rise the film from sometimes a stupid, superficial teenage romance to a little more, especially when we learn to darker in calm later and learn how Yun-Seok and his mother arrived in the city. While the film the first half focuses on romantic Hijinka Se-ri, the tone switches towards the end (and can fully leave you in tears) as the Yun-Seok is becoming focus, and the gravity of his family situation enters.
He almost seemed dishonest that love was a damn so much attention is directed to the hair of SE-R. While this can set initial moving moving events, it is much more than that than just that. BitterSveet Romance that totally records bliss for crushing high school (and spoiler: it results in a happy ending), the film deserved its place in the first 10 for good reason. It’s pure, cordial magic.