Quando a estudante de ensino médio Kim Eun Mi descobriu que estava grávida, toda a sua vida mudou repentinamente. Decidida a ficar com a bebê, Eun Mi levou adiante a gravidez e criou a filha, Jin Hee, sozinha, e as duas amadureceram juntas. Agora na casa dos quarenta anos, Eun Mi trabalha como fisioterapeuta, e Jin Hee, já com 29 anos, é policial na Subdelegacia Namchon. Embora adulta, Jin Hee ainda mora com a mãe, o que resulta em brigas intermináveis entre elas. Embora mãe e filha se amem muito, não conseguem encontrar harmonia atualmente. Como se não bastasse a dificuldade de lidar com a filha, a vida de Eun Mi toma um rumo complicado quando o Dr. Park Jin Hong entra de repente em sua vida. Enquanto Eun Mi tenta decifrar o misterioso Dr. Park, Jin Hee se esforça para construir um bom relacionamento com seu novo diretor, Eun Jae Won . Com suas vidas cheias de reviravoltas, será que mãe e filha descobrirão um modo de diminuir a distância cada vez maior que as separa? (Fonte: Viki) Editar Tradução
- Português (Brasil)
- ภาษาไทย
- Arabic
- Русский
- Título original: 남남
- Também conhecido como: Namnam , Not Others
- Diretor: Lee Min Woo
- Roteirista: Min Sun Ae
- Gêneros: Mistério, Comédia, Romance, Drama
Elenco e Créditos
- Jeon Hye JinKim Eun MiPapel Principal
- Choi Soo YoungKim Jin HeePapel Principal
- Ahn Jae WookPark Jin HongPapel Principal
- Park Sung HoonEun Jae WonPapel Principal
- Kim Hye EunKim Mi Jung [Jin Hee's aunt]Papel Secundário
- Seo Ye HwaLim Tae Kyung [Jin Hee's best friend]Papel Secundário
Resenhas
Mãe e filha
O caos dos primeiros episódios entre a prota a mãe e o policial, foi muito divertido! Amei o jeito moleca da Jin Hee e como ela é o Jae Won, o romance se desenvolvendo aos poucos cada ep, pena que não focaram tanto neles. A mãe é um tanto egoísta e não tinha química com o pai. Achei que haveria um desenvolvimento melhor entre mãe e filha, mas foi bom no geral.In a unique way affectionately told. Critically nuanced. Not off-the-shelf. Still easy to digest.
I might have easily missed “Not Others”, if I hadn't volunteered to help out with the German subtitling. I'm glad I didn´t miss it, because "Not Others" turned out to be an unorthodox surprise - being unexpectedly substantial and also pleasantly true to life, thus rooted in a rather simple, normal, everyday world. It is the story of a family, above all of a single mother and her daughter, but there are also a few contemporaries who are related by blood or by choice.The story goes on and on as life goes on and we go with it as a matter of course (and gladly so). (Well, at least that's how it was for me.) There was nothing particularly extraordinary and exciting about it. Just normal madness.
Well, admittedly, a bit more than normal madness... after all, the mother herself is still a teenager when she has her child and doesn't want to give up on some of the youthful pleasures in life - regardless of responsibility for the child. However, the script and the two leads find a good pitch for this very special, unusual and inherently difficult relationship dynamic with all its challenges. A clearly structured 'I'm the grown up and you're the little one' doesn´t exist. It is rather upside down here. Instead of the classic authoritarian hierarchy between parent and child, they both ended up bonding as allies sort of, in a world from which they have fallen. Due to the unusual role constellations, the arguments between mother and daughter often have a slightly funny touch. Behind this, however, lurks a rather unconscious overburdening on both sides. And this earnest approach of this emotionally tricky situation shines through again and again in the strategy of both of them trying to cope with everyday life. However, mother and daughter are overall impressing with their casual authenticity as well as pleasant directness and openness - a communication style that clearly sets them apart from so many others in the story. Choi Soo-young shines here, but especially Jeon Hye-jin, who can show herself from a completely different side in the role of the still youthful mother...).
At some point it's about a criminal case - eventually almost symbolic for the unwanted and eventually professionalized role of the daughter within the mother-daughter-relationship: the need to/the urge to look after her mother. And at some point it's also about romantic love - symbolic for the very human longing to rely on a partner on eye level, to lean on a shoulder... This human need actually concerns mother and grown-up daughter alike. But can there even be a place for 'outsiders' within the mother-daughter relationship?
Please don't take "Not Others" as a crime thriller or even as a RomCom. (The men in particular come along rather secondary...) Ultimately, it is the complicated emotional behavior patterns that characterize the family life of mother and daughter in the context of their very close and extraordinary relationship. This makes the KDrama breathe in and breathe out in its very unique pacing. It is primarily about this uncommon family, with an affectionate, yet critically nuanced look at their very special relationship dynamics. "Not Others" is cautiously questioning established (conservative) family models, too...
Overall, “Not Others” is no off-the-shelf KDrama (like so many others in 2023...).