I LOVE CHARACTERS WITH THIS SPECIFIC VIBE
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I LOVE CHARACTERS WITH THIS SPECIFIC VIBE
SWEET HOME REVIEW: A STUDY IN TRAUMA, CGI AND BEAUTIFUL MEN IN BLACK
Season 1 of Sweet Home had everything. A strong, genuinely terrifying story. Monsters that were scary in theory but looked like they had escaped from someone’s mid-2010s gaming project gone wrong. LEE DO HYUN IN GLASSES AND CHECKERED SHIRTS PLAYING A COLD, KIND-HEARTED ASSHOLE WHO SOMEHOW MADE BEING EMOTIONALLY UNAVAILABLE LOOK HOT. A perfectly sculpted Lee Si Young who could kill me with a single glance (and I’d honestly thank her). And, of course, Song Kang looking permanently vulnerable, devastatingly strong, and heartbreakingly sad at all times - an emotional trifecta that he pulled off so effortlessly.
The idea that anyone could turn into a monster at any moment is what made the story hit so hard. You never really knew who you could trust, and yet, in true human fashion, these stupid, stubborn creatures chose to love and protect each other anyway. Just because they fought off a monster or two together, just because they shared tight, broken spaces and impossible situations, they decided to decided to throw caution to the wind and form unbreakable trauma bonds. UGH. Mankind. Humanity is truly just vibes and bad decisions. At its core, Sweet Home asks the simple question of “what does being human mean?” - but, naturally, it unpacks that in ways that feel messy, tragic, and painfully real.
The performances are incredible across the board, but a few stand out: Lee Do Hyun’s portrayal of Eun Hyeok, cold on the surface yet profoundly tender underneath, is devastating. Lee Si Young as Yi Kyung is a force of strength and tragedy, and Song Kang carries Hyun-su’s emotional weight with a kind of quiet, crushing vulnerability that stays with you long after the screen fades to black.
Since I watched this in 2025 - already knowing Lee Do Hyun would return - I probably missed the sheer emotional devastation that first-time viewers must have felt. Watching Eun Hyeok sit there in his stupid glasses and his stupid checkered shirt, listening to his stupid CD player, smiling at his stupid family photo, while the building literally crumbled around him… GOD. That would have kicked off my monsterization - I would’ve sprouted wings out of pure rage and grief.
As for Season 2… listen. People like to call it a filler season, and okay, fine, maybe 80% of it felt that way. Sure, most of it felt confusing, like the writers kept shoving new characters into our faces faster than we could even remember their names. And sure, it was frustrating to have invested so deeply in the Season 1 survivors just to watch them die off without the emotional weight they deserved (seriously, no one will ever be able to justify Ji Su’s death to me). But eventually, you get your bearings again. You adjust to the chaos. Plus, you get to see Lee Do Hyun’s perfect little ass - and honestly, what is this show’s deal with putting naked men on screen? Not that I’m complaining. I’m just saying: if you’re going to objectify, at least keep up the energy.
By the time you hit Season 3, you realize you’re not necessarily here for the epic storytelling anymore. You’re here to watch Song Kang, beautiful and tragic, embrace his monster side with those haunting blue eyes. You’re here to see Lee Do Hyun, dressed in all black, acting like an emotionless robot - and then, when he finally smiles, you want to claw your face off because GOD, IF YOU MADE HIM, WHY AREN’T YOU GIVING HIM TO ME?
Also, the season raises an important question: Is it really a K-drama if it doesn’t have intense homoerotic subtext between two emotionally destroyed men who can’t communicate but would absolutely die for each other?
Anyway. What was I saying?
Right - even though they put Yi Kyung through absolute hell and eventually kill her off, it doesn’t land the same way Season 1 did. It feels more like going through the motions. Still, by the end, you’re smiling through the exhaustion, because you made it. You’re left holding onto those beautiful, devastating memories of Season 1 - of a story about survival, humanity, and love in the face of absolute horror - tucked forever into your little monster heart.
Anybody else seen Sweet Home? Hyun-Su really got me in the heart strings 🥺
Incorrect quotes + Y/N
Sweet home
Eun-hyeok x reader
Eun-hyeok: What are your goals?
Y/N: To pet all the dogs.
Eun-hyeok: No, fitness goals.
Y/N: To be able to run fast enough to pet all the dogs.
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Eun-hyeok: Remember when you didn't try to solve all your problems with attempted murder? Y/N: Stop romanticizing the past.
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Eun-hyeok: If Y/N and I were drowning, who would you save? Hyun-su: You two can’t swim? Y/N: It’s a hypothetical question, Hyun-su! who would you save? Hyun-su: my time and effort.
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Eun-hyeok, negotiating with Y/N: We have Hyun-su. Give us ten thousand dollars and they will be returned to you unharmed Hyun-su: Whoa, whoa, wait, you think I’m only worth ten thousand dollars? Eun-hyeok: Hyun-su: MAKE IT ONE MILLION– Eun-hyeok: HYUN-SU STOP
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Hyun-su: Why are Eun-hyeok and Y/N sitting with their backs to each other? Eun-yoo: They had a fight. Hyun-su: Then why are they holding hands? Eun-yoo: They get sad when they fight.
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Eun-hyeok: There is no future. there is no past. do you see? Time is simultaneous, an intricately structured jewel that humans insist on viewing one edge at a time, when the whole design is visible in every facet. Y/N: Hyun-su: Eun-yoo: Everyone Else At Eun-hyeok’s Surprise Birthday Party: Y/N: All I asked was if you wanted to cut your birthday cake first...
Sweet home/ “It’s okay, Hyun-su, It’s okay. It’s not your fault. It’s not your fault.”
Survive - Hyun-su (Sweet Home) TWITTER INSTA
The fact that Sweet Home is named after a song Yoon plays on a broken guitar with four strings she found, that she makes up and Hyun-Su says it reminds him of home...is so poetic.
This series that is rooted in gore, despair, loss and tragedy. A series where monsters roam and kill all because of human desire. Names itself after a song a broken girl made up on a broken guitar with only four strings.
It shows that even though loss and grief and devastation runs wild it does not consume everything, there is always hope, there is always humanity.
Humans are flawed beings, they cheat, steal, kill, wreck but they make songs, they create art, they dance and they smile. Life is more than our low moments, life is the small moments that makes us feel at home. No matter how few and far between.
I’m really glad with how real people in Sweet Home look. There’s no fancy filters to make everyone pure white and smooth all the time. And once you see how Hyun-su really looked before all the awful bullying you really see how different he is. Sure everyone is still attractive of course but not in ridiculous super model ways.
The stark contrast in past hyun-su to now is very jarring he looks underweight and exhausted all the time which makes me really sad. But I appreciate that it would have been annoying to just make him another drama heart throb