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Love in Contract – Full Review
Welcome to Love in Contract – Full Review. A young woman uses her skills as the perfect bride to run her own business as a single-life helper If you haven’t watched this drama yet, I recommend checking out my unspoiled review here.
Love in Contract
♥ Aired: September 21 – November 10, 2022
♥# of Episodes: 16
♥Where to Watch: Viki
♥Genre: Romantic Comedy
♥Starring: Park Min Young and Go Kyung Pyo
The Story
A single-life helper offers her services to those who need a significant other for events such as weddings, reunions, or nagging parents. After years of running her business, she has finally earned the money needed to pay off her debt. Her hope is to retire and make a fresh start in a new place. But one special client has been married to her for the last 5 years, and he isn’t ready to let her go. To complicate matters, an old acquaintance shows up, and he also needs her help for one last job before she closes up shop. As matters of the heart come into play, the lines between business and personal become very hard to distinguish.
The Leads
Park Min Young as Choi Sang Eun
After working for years as a single-life helper, Choi Sang Eun is finally ready to retire and live her life for herself. But for the last 5 years, she has been married to a special long-term client. And ending that contract has been more difficult than she expected. At the same time, a new client with a connection to her secret past requests her help. Now as her time is divided between these 2 men, she will need to examine her heart to find out what her true feelings are. And as she looks into her heart, she will be faced with other buried family relationships from her difficult past.
Choi Sang Eun was adopted by a greedy family whose only purpose was to marry her into a family that would help their own social standing. But Sang Eun ruined their plan and ran away from their toxic influence. Unfortunately, the scars from that experience still haunt her. Park Min Young plays this kind of arrogantly elegant role well, but there isn’t much new that she brings to this performance. For a character with so much emotional baggage, I felt like there was very little development. As a long-time fan of Park Min Young, I know she has much more to offer than she showed in this limited role.
Go Kyung Pyo as Jung Ji Ho
For the past 5 years, Jung Ji Ho has been “married” to Sang Eun. As his wife, she works 3 days a week, coming over and eating dinner with him in his apartment. As someone who doesn’t relate well to other people, this is the perfect situation for him. But when Sang Eun announces that she will be retiring and ending their contract, he is devastated at the thought of losing her. Now he will try to convince her to turn their professional relationship into something more personal. But a new client shows up to offer him some competition and showing his feelings has never been Ji Ho’s strong suit.
Jung Ji Ho is a successful judge who keeps to himself. His ex-wife left him to find her own success and riches, but also because he always felt so emotionally distant. At the thought of losing Sang Eun, he decides to really put some effort into learning to be more social, not just with her, but with all the people in his life. I love Go Kyung Pyo, and I felt like he brought this sweetly awkward character to life in a way lesser actors would never have been able to. His character’s growth was rewarding to watch and I really loved him in this role.
Supporting Characters
Kim Jae Young as Kang Hae Jin
Kang Hae Jin is a famous actor but he is also the son of a rich family. At one time, his brother was supposed to marry Sang Eun to unite their families. Hae Jin was a young student at the time, but he fell for Sang Eun immediately. When he runs into her again by chance, he knows who she is, but she doesn’t recognize him. Eager to have the chance to win her heart, he hires her to pose as his fiancee.
Kang Hyung Suk as Woo Gwang Nam
Woo Gwang Nam was one of Sang Eun’s first clients. Now he is her best friend, roommate, and confidante. After losing his job as a martial arts teacher, he becomes a body guard for Hae Jin. Both his fake marriage to Sang Eun and his losing his job were because he is gay. Now he is determined to be open and honest about who he is and not act as if his sexual orientation is something to be ashamed of.
Jin Kyung as Yoo Mi Ho
Yoo Mi Ho is the one who came to the orphanage to find Sang Eun after pitching the idea of grooming her as the perfect bride to a wealthy family. Sang Eun’s adopted family paid to send Sang Eun and Mi Ho abroad where Mi Ho could train her. No one suspected that Mi Ho was actually Sang Eun’s birth mother until much later. After years of acting as Sang Eun’s nanny and teacher, she now has a chance to develop a real relationship with her daughter.
Things I Liked
♥ Ji Ho
Ji Ho’s character was the most interesting in this drama, by far. I loved to watch the way his character developed from someone who couldn’t even carry on a conversation with his co-workers to one who attended team dinners and hosted dinner parties. At the same time, they kept his growth realistic. He still has a tendency to be a bit awkward in social situations and often misses social cues. But he has come a long way from where he began, and with Sang Eun at his side, we can expect that he will continue to improve and learn.
♥ Senior Manager
While the Senior Manager did get a bit over the top at times, there were two things that I really appreciated about his character. First, is that he saw Ji Ho as a good person with a lot of potential. It would have been easy to give up on him as a lost cause, but the Senior Manager continued to push and encourage him. He believed in Ji Ho when Ji Ho couldn’t believe in himself. Second, his unending devotion to his wife was adorable. I was also glad that it wasn’t just lip-service to stay in her good graces. He really treasured her and her opinions.
♥ Interesting Job
Sang Eun took the most painful experience of her life and turned it into a creative and rewarding job. The company that she created is unique and interesting. I enjoyed the brief glimpses into the way she used the business to help her clients in remarkable ways, and I could have used even more scenes like that. I think we could have seen more depth and character growth from Sang Eun if we had seen more of her interactions with her clients.
Things I Didn’t Like
Lead Chemistry
I think I am not alone in assuming that with two talented leads like this drama had, and Park Min Young’s reputation for making great romantic dramas, that the chemistry in this show would have been amazing. Unfortunately, the result was much less inspiring. Maybe it can be blamed on the fact that so many of their scenes took places sitting across from each other at the dinner table. There were moments where a spark glimmered but much of it felt flat and very matter of fact.
Heartless Parents
Okay, I know this is just a drama, and that means it needs, well, drama. But I can’t ignore the awful human beings who are Sang Eun’s adopted parents. And after all of this abhorrent behavior, her father pretty much weasels out of any punishment or self-reflection. Aside from the financial support they provided, they had absolutely no ties to Sang Eun’s life. I really would have liked to see him receive some kind of comeuppance for his years of neglect and heartlessness.
Gwang Nam
While I loved Gwang Nam’s character, his growth and ending were a bit disappointing for me. With such great charm and potential, I would like to see his character find love for himself and break free from his demanding family’s clutches. Instead, he is encouraged to become a celebrity so that his family won’t have to feel ashamed of him anymore. Gwang Nam deserves to be loved and accepted for who he is, and becoming famous seems like a step in the wrong direction for this gentle soul.
The Ending
Luckily, “Love in Contract” sets aside it’s melodrama alter-ego for a nice happily ever after. Sang Eun shows up at the board meeting for Kangjin Group and exposes Hae Jin’s brother for the creep he is. After the obligatory pre-ending break-up, Sang Eun proposes to Ji Ho with a big romantic gesture, and Ji Ho responds in kind with his own intimate proposal. After a few days of hectic planning and endless errands, the couple find out neither one of them is interested in the big wedding they have been working on. They decide to have a small gathering of their friends and loved ones and leave it at that. Hae Jin goes back to acting with the blessing of his mother. And there may be romance on the horizon for him and Ji Eun. And Gwang Nam decides to become a singer with Jung Hwan as his manager. The final scene shows Ji Ho and Sang Eun waking up after their wedding party. They eat ramen at the dinner table, side by side this time instead of distantly facing each other. Sang Eun realizes that it’s Sunday, which is her favorite day, and declares this one to be perfect. And hopefully this is the first of many for the happily married couple.
Should I Watch
As a rom-com, “Love in Contract” checks all the boxes. A love triangle, marriage contract, and birth secret all have the potential to be romantic comedy gold. But this one veered a little too far into the land of melodrama to be the playful romp I had expected. I wouldn’t go so far as to say I didn’t like this drama, but I didn’t love it. The chemistry and pacing just felt a bit off. If you are a die-hard rom-com fan, there is enough here for you to enjoy, as long as you don’t raise your expectations too high. But if romance is not your genre, I doubt there is anything here that will change your mind. I give “Love in Contract” a 7 out of 10 ramen.
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