Kandora: Korean Dramas in Japan
My wife is hooked on Kandora, short for Kankoku dorama or South Korean soap operas, and it seems every time I walk through the living room she’s got another one on the TV.
When I ask her what’s so interesting about the shows, she gets very animated. “Oh, they’re nothing like Japanese dramas,” she says. “They’re more intense, and the stories are much more involved and interesting. The characters really change and grow.”
It struck me that she sounded like me back in the 80s, describing why Japanese animation was so superior to whatever else was on TV back then for people to watch (I actually can’t remember at this point).
It seems to me that the human brain is wired to appreciate things that are fresh and new, and when a concept comes along that is totally unique, people are drawn to it irresistibly, which goes a long way towards explaining the revolution that Japanese animation has brought to the world over the past 20 years. My wife is finding that Korean series like Time Between Dog and Wolf, Spring Waltz and Something Happened in Bali are offering her a higher level of drama and depth, sometimes moving her to tears with their (often sad) stories.
The Japanese soaps, with their lighter and more formulaic stories that you can usually guess ahead of time, don’t seem to be doing it for her.
That explains a lot about Hallyu in Japan.
August 26th, 2008 at 5:52 amBae Yong Joon (ヨン様) and Lee Jun Ki (李準基) seems to be very popular in Japan.
To me, Lee Jun Ki creates an aura of mi-sonyun (I think Japanese call it “bishonen”) that grabs women’s attention.
Bae Yong Joon, I do not know. I barely remember the Winter Sonata storyline now.
Cool, you can tell how the same word game from the same source (kanji).
August 26th, 2008 at 10:59 amkorean dramas are predictable too. Name me one korean drama that doesn’t involve love triangle.
August 29th, 2008 at 2:48 pm