Review – Spirit Fingers

I finished a rewatch of Six Flying Dragons and after that magnificent emotional rollercoaster (it’s still my favorite historical kdrama of all time, btw), I knew I wanted something light and fluffy to clear my mind, so I randomly picked Spirit Fingers thinking it would be a drama about cheerleaders (I blame the movie Bring It On for this and it’s running gag about spirit fingers).

Spirit Fingers is not about cheerleaders. It is about a group of individuals who get together every weekend and practice art. Specifically, they practice quick figure sketching.

And it was one of the best kdramas I have seen in years.

This drama is based on a very popular webnovel of the same name by Han Kyoung Chal (한경찰) – which I read after I watched the drama and also highly enjoyed (there’s definitely enough material for a second season if they wanted to make one). It’s a story that just proves you can have a simple plot and even some well-worn tropes and still create an absolutely amazing, immersive, unique tale that will capture your attention and steal your heart.

It’s basically a coming of age story about a young lady who has just been going with the flow, overwhelmed with school work and trying to please her parents and just get by in life. One day she accidentally stumbles across this small group of artists and is asked to stand in as a model for them – something she never would have volunteered to do but agreed since a handsome man asked her (you are real for that, my dear). From there she is charmed by this random group of artists and decides to join the crew which they call Spirit Fingers.

The Spirit Fingers art group is the core of the drama. There are members in their 40s, their 30s, and their 20s – and each has a moniker, or nickname, in the group. Blue Finger, Mint Finger, Black Finger, and so on. Our protagonist becomes the youngest member, Baby Blue Finger. This eccentric small group of artists will absolutely win you over within a very short amount of time. They each have their own lives and stories outside of the sketch group, but come together each week to have a moment to shine – to be creative, wear costumes, escape the stresses of their lives, and draw (however they want to – their drawing styles are all uniquely different).

Our wallflower girl slowly gains confidence and new experiences as she becomes involved with this group. In particular, with the other teenager who starts out as one of their models but decides to join the group after he becomes fixated on the female lead.

The romance is spectacular. It’s the classic opposite’s attract pairing. He’s the super tall, super confident, super outgoing youth who doesn’t care too much about studying as he’s already successfully pursuing a career in modeling. She’s the short, shy, introverted one who is too flustered by him to take him seriously. They’re such a cute pair and their love story was genuine, with believable set backs and obstacles between them.

All the characters are grounded in realism and we are shown aspects of their personal lives outside of the drawing group. We get glimpses of where they work and live. They all have such distinctive personalities too, which really add to the group dynamics as you have all these perspectives and voices on whatever they are talking about together. The older members act as mentors but also as they are not parents or coworkers they are more casual with the younger members, able to joke with them and give them space to make their own mistakes without being overbearing or overly concerned.

Both the male and female leads have their own groups of friends, too, who have their own story lines. We are treated to many enjoyable scenes of teenagers stressing out and slacking off and just doing all the things that teenagers do together.

We also get to follow the storyline of the female lead’s family, which includes her parents and two siblings.

Though this sounds like a lot going on, it’s so perfectly integrated that it’s never overwhelming or confusing to have all these different people popping up.

The entire show is only 12 episodes and I was thoroughly engaged throughout it’s runtime. Sure, there were aspects that seemed implausible. Sure, some of it was a little too perfect. But it’s a romance, not social commentary, so I don’t expect 100 percent realism. Give me the impossibly large and always empty cafe with its multiple themed rooms for our artists to draw in. Give me a group of people who always fully commit to their costumes each week and show up in elaborately cool outfits to sketch. Give me that earnestly cute love story of the super hot guy who becomes impossibly smitten by the shy wallflower. I want all of that! I have zero complaints.

Watch it if you just want to be happy.

Rating: 10/10. A Feel-Good Story About Coloring Outside the Lines.

Review – Blind (2022)

I have just discovered I did not write a review for Blind, despite it being one of my favorite dramas in 2022. It’s got everything I love. Siblings with strained relationships but a deep connection, gruesome murders, and unfolding mysteries linked to secret atrocities that are slowly revealed. I thoroughly enjoyed every episode and am gonna run you through the general set up for it – and what happens in the first episode (so spoilers for the first episode follow!)

Blind opens to a group of young boys, elementary to middle school aged, in matching dirty uniforms running through the woods as vicious dogs chase them down through the night. These boys are terrified and desperate. It’s clear they are running from more than just the dogs… but a horrible situation. 

One of the boys gets his foot caught in a bear trap. Another boy is waiving down a car for help only to be run down on the road. Savagely the drivers put the car in reverse, running over the kid a second time, ensuring his death. Those who are uninjured are quickly surrounded and trapped, their escape attempt thwarted. A man the boys call Crazy Dog narrows in on them, whistling an eerie tune.

– and the scene closes on a child’s wide eyes before it cuts away… to an equally horrifying scene in present day 2022.

A young lady is kidnapped off the streets and wakes up in a plastic lined room tied to a chair (never a good scene). She is strangled by an unknown man… who is whistling the same creepy tune as Crazy Dog. 

Back at home her parents await her return, hanging up balloons, the entire house decorated for the young lady’s birthday. She will never come home.

The stage is set.

The basic mystery presented: 

Who were the children? And where were they? Did any of them escape? Who is the person that murdered the young lady? Is he connected to the man that was hunting the children in the first scene? Is it the same man?

I was riveted and hooked after 15 minutes. 

We meet our main character, Sung Jun (Taecyeon), in the next scene. He is a cop amongst the crew called out when the girls body is discovered on the outskirts of town. 

Sung Jun’s older brother Sung Hoon (Ha Seok Jin), is a judge. But not just any judge, he’s a righteous man known for his unfailing devotion to fairness. He eats alone, he refuses to take any bribes, and won’t even help a family member who got into trouble. The law is just in his eyes. It is only people who are fallible.

We learn quickly that both parents seem to loathe their police officer son while they dote on their judge son. It is not a happy home.

We learn the two brothers live together. That the cop brother has a history of violence and was often in fights as a youth. The judge implicates maybe he became a cop to continue a life of violence, and the suggestion clearly upsets the police officer.

Big brother judge is overseeing the murder trial of the girl strangled, now nicknamed  “Joker’s Murder Case,” because of the wounds on her face. The suspect was caught in a security camera threatening the victim with a knife… but he claims another man was involved – our young police officer! Could the judge’s suspicions be true?

The show flashes back once again to the young boys hiding in fear from the opening scene. The whistling man who is hunting them is finally revealed… It is the father of the young woman who’s been murdered. And as the camera pans in on one of the young boys, it cuts back to modern day – to our police officer.

Are they same?!

Was the murder truly an act of retribution? For whatever horrible things were obviously happening with those boys???

Ya’ll. I had to know. I knew I wasn’t going anywhere until I’d burned through this entire show and binged it all over the weekend.

Overall Rating: 9/10 – A Dark Murder Mystery About the Dark Side of Humanity.

Read on for some very mild spoilers… and the connection of this show to true events

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