Dear My Friends – Full Review
Welcome to Dear My Friends – Full Review. Life has it’s challenges as you meet your twilight years, but this group of friends are finding joy amidst the struggles of aging. If you haven’t watched this drama yet, I recommend checking out my unspoiled review here.
Dear My Friends
♥ Aired: May 13, 2016 – July 2, 2016
♥# of Episodes: 16
♥Where to Watch: Netflix
♥Genre: Life Drama
♥Starring: Go Hyun Jung and Go Doo Shim
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The Story
Welcome to my Dear My Friends – Unspoiled Review. A young writer and translator has spent her life looking after her mother and her mother’s tight-knit group of friends. Now, as the group approaches their twilight years, she considers turning their lives into a novel. Proving that age is just a number, these friends are determined to live life to it’s fullest, finding love and fulfillment through their relationships.
The Leads
Go Hyun Jung as Park Wan
Park Wan is a single 40 year old translator and writer. Growing up as the only daughter of a single mom, she has had her hands full taking care of her mother and her mother’s friends. Contemplating her mom’s dream of turning her mom’s life and the lives of her friends into a book, she begins researching each of their personal stories. The more she learns about each of their struggles, the more she realizes that even though she has know them as her “aunties” her whole life, she has never really known them. Wan has a man who she loves, but due to an accident that caused him to lose the use of his legs, she cannot marry him because her mother doesn’t approve.
Go Hyun Jung gives a wonderful performance as the grunging daughter who can’t help but love this crazy group of women. Just like the woman who raised her, Wan is stubborn and strong, but she also has a nurturing heart. No matter how much she wants something for herself, Wan can’t go against her mother’s wishes, which has been very difficult for her. As she delves into the histories of the women who have been her mother’s life-long friends, she is overwhelmed by all they have endured in the past, but she is also surprised by the current realities they continue to face as they age. She begins to understand that life and love do not last forever and should be savored while you can.
Go Doo Shim as Jang Nan Hee
Jang Nan Hee is Wan’s mother. She operates her own restaurant and has worked hard her whole life. As she and her friends grow older, they begin encountering new challenges. Their minds and bodies have grown weaker and their children have grown up and found their own lives. During these struggles, they realize that their friends are their greatest assets. Nan Hee meets a younger man who frequents her restaurant and she wonders if it’s too late for her to find love. But then a sudden cancer diagnosis causes her to put the rest of her life on hold as she fights the biggest battle of her life.
Nan Hee has lived her life as a devoted daughter, sister, mother, and friend. Selflessly, she pours herself out into the lives of those around her. But sometimes those efforts drive her to be short-tempered and stubborn. Usually those fits of ill-temper are aimed at her daughter, who gives at good as she gets! During the course of the drama, we watch Nan Hee learn that we can’t control everything or everyone, and that sometimes we just need to let go and let other’s live their own lives; whether that is her daughter’s love life, her disabled brother’s marriage, or her friend’s dementia. Go Doo Shim is an amazing actress and she brings such grace and beauty to this role. I have enjoyed in several roles over the years, but this one gave her a chance to really shine and be the star she deserves to be.
Supporting Characters
Kim Hye Ja as Jo Hee Ja
Jo Hee Ja is a recent widow. After the death of her husband, she went to stay with her son and his wife in the Phillipines, but she felt unneeded there, so she came home. Now she lives alone in the house she had shared with her husband. Hee Ja never sleeps well and often calls her best friend, Jung Ah, when she is lonely and can’t sleep. As her friends begin to notice some erratic behavior they find out that she is in the early stages of dementia.
Na Moon Hee as Moon Jung Ah
In the beginning, Moon Jung Ah is the only friend who is still married. Through the course of the drama, Jung Ah experiences the most change and trauma as she confronts finding out her adopted daughter is being abused by her husband, the death of her elderly mother, and her best friend’s dementia. She also decides that she wants to divorce her husband, who has taken her for granted through their whole marriage, and live on her own. Her dream is to die “on the road”.
Park Won Sook as Lee Young Won
Lee Young Won is a famous actress who is spending the later years of her career playing rich, angry mother-in-law type characters. The days of glamour and starring roles are behind her, but she continues to pretend that her life is fabulous. Nan Hee was her best friend until they had a falling out over Nan Hee’s husband’s affair. Now Young Won is trying to re-establish their relationship, but Nan Hee is still angry. Young Won has had multiple bouts with cancer, although she has hid them all from her friends. She has spent her whole life pining for her ex-husband, Dae Chul, who remarried after her.
Youn Yuh Jung as Oh Choong Nam
Oh Choong Nam is the youngest of the friends. Due to a huge extended family who weren’t able to take care of themselves, Choong Nam has become very financially savvy. Because of her family demands, she has never graduated from high school or married. In her spare time, she studies for her high school diploma. She runs her own coffee shop and raises her two nephews. Her biggest fear is that she will die alone.
Things I Liked
♥ Seo Yeon Ha
Wow! Where do I even begin. I loved everything about Yeon Ha from the acting, to the character, to the beautiful love story. Some of my favorite moments were of Yeon Ha and Wan just gazing at each other through their computer screens. It feels so quietly intimate and the way that they can talk about difficult topics in such a transparent way is engaging. The depth of Yeon Ha’s love for Wan in spite of his own struggles in life shows commitment and understanding. I could have watched a whole drama with these two characters as the leads but they made every scene together count.
♥ Cast
This cast of veteran actors is so unique and talented. There seriously is not a single, weak link in the whole group. And it was such a pleasure to see each of them as leads getting the credit and screen-time they deserve. Even though the focus of this drama is on the women, I would like to add that the men also did an outstanding job. I am so impressed with the heart and soul that this cast put into these memorable characters!
♥ Min Ho and Hee Ja
The mother/son relationship between Min Ho and Hee Ja was just so precious. You could really feel the love between these characters. While Hee Ja’s other sons were off flaunting their wealth and independence, Min Ho stays by his mom’s side while working hard to support his pregnant wife. It’s in the quiet moments when he lets her sleep on his shoulder at the movie theater or lies down next to her on the floor that the raw emotion is almost overwhelming. Every scene they had together brought joy to my heart.
Things I Didn’t Like
Need More Mark Smith
It was so sad to see the photographer, Mark Smith, quietly bow out so early. Even though his interactions with the group were limited, I enjoyed watching them together and initially thought some deeper friendships might for with time. It seems a shame to waste such an interesting character when there was still plenty of potential for storyline. Not that this drama was lacking for interesting characters, but I wouldn’t have minded Mark sticking around awhile.
Hee Ja in a Nursing Home
As I mentioned above, I loved the relationship between Min Ho and his mom, so it made me sad that she decided to live in a nursing home instead of staying with him and his family. I wish that Min Ho could have convinced Hee Ja that he never saw her as a burden. And it was heartbreaking to hear Hee Ja say she didn’t want to die in some tiny room, even if she is getting out with her friends on occassion.
Han Dong Jin
Shin Sung Woo did a fine job of acting the role of Han Dong Jin, but I didn’t really like the character. There wasn’t enough character development for me to feel any real sympathy for him and didn’t feel like his relationship with Wan did anything to further her storyline. We did get to see Nan Hee beat him up, which was fun, but really the drama would have been fine without him and his cheating.
The Ending
There are a lot of storylines to tie up for the end of “Dear My Friends” and they did a pretty thorough job of it. Here is a quick run-through of where everyone is. Maybe because she is the youngest, Choong Nam’s life is mostly the same. She is continuing to study and run her coffee shop. Young Won finds out that Dae Chul has been divorced for years and though he is sick, he is receiving treatment, so she makes plans to go to the US and see him. Jung Ah and her husband continue to live apart, but they spend most of their time together and have finally found a compromise in their relationship. Nan Hee finds out that her cancer was not as bad as the doctors had feared. She is receiving chemo and doing well. She finally let go of Wan and is allowing her to come and go between Slovinia and Korea. And since Wan is gone, Nan Hee has started dating Lee Il Woo. Wan is writing her book, “My Old Friends” and spending time with Yeon Ha. And while each of those ending are important in themselves, the real finale moment comes as we see the group, finally taking a trip together, driving down the road in an RV. Coming to a beach, they walk and talk in the sand before taking a seat to enjoy a scenic sunset. Wan watches them with a smile because she finally understands that they are not “continuously walking toward death”, they are simply “living this moment fiercely and confidently”.
Should I Watch
This is a beautiful drama about aging and the challenges both for those growing old and those who love and care for them. The heavier realities of those struggles are generously interspersed with moments of joy and humor that remind us that life doesn’t end just because our bodies are slowing down. Don’t be fooled into thinking that this story only applies to an older audience. There is so much to learn from this inspiring group of older actors and the daughter has an amazing romantic storyline to bring some diversity to the aging theme. “Dear My Friends” is not a light-hearted rom-com and the stories are sometimes sad to watch. But if you are looking for a drama that will touch your heart and remind you to embrace life and those around you, this drama is a must-see. I give “Dear My Friends” a 9 out of 10 ramen.
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