

Mr. Plankton

A man plagued by misfortune and his ex, the unluckiest bride-to-be, are forced to accompany one another on the final journey of his life.
A man plagued by misfortune and his ex, the unluckiest bride-to-be, are forced to accompany one another on the final journey of his life.
Bittersweet endings hold a quiet, yet powerful beauty. They’re different from pure sadness, which settles in your heart like a weight. In stories like «Uncontrollably Fond» («함부로 애틋하게») and «Mr. Plankton» («Mr. 플랑크톤»), we know early on that joy and pain will entwine, but still, we cling to a fragile hope—that somehow love will rewrite destiny.
Mr. Plankton doesn’t just remind us of love’s power, but of life’s fragility. It nudges us to forgive, not just others but ourselves, and to embrace every moment. It teaches us to live meaningfully, without regrets, and to leave behind memories that will inspire others to live fully too. There’s a humbling reminder in these stories: at the end of our journey, the legacy we leave is a reflection of the love and peace we nurtured within ourselves.
Highly recommended.
The most bitter sweet, sad kdrama i’vee ver watched. This had me in tears and I was heart open when hae jo died. I don’t think I’ll ever recover from this or ever get over it. I knew what sort of ending it was gonna have because it got spoiled for me on TikTok but regardless, I cried non stop. I’m crying as I write this because I just finished it and i’ll forever be hurt from this.
Honestly, I expected this drama to make me bawl my eyes out, but every single episode was so sad and depressing. There was too much bitter and too little sweet, and so with doom and gloom as the baseline, when the inevitable happened, it didn't hit as hard. Losing a loved one hurts the worst when you had a lot of good memories with that person. And that was precisely what this drama lacked. It was overall way too bleak.
I also think too much focus was placed on the couple, probably in an attempt to tug at those emotional heartstrings, when in my opinion the angle about Hae Jo's soured relationship with his parents was so much more interesting and compelling.
I LOVE my romance k-dramas but here, I didn't much care for that aspect. I was much more intrigued by the themes of what makes family family. The exploration of how the orphan girl, the abandoned boy and the infantilized man grappled with their families or lack thereof. How those relationships between parent and child can be deeply impactful and leave behind terrible scars. How they can shape a child into the adult the become and influence how they see themselves and interact with the rest of the world.
It had pretty music, it had stellar acting, but for me the story was lacking and the attention was focused on the wrong places.
Where is Sponge Bob SquarePants ?
Bittersweet endings hold a quiet, yet powerful beauty. They’re different from pure sadness, which settles in your heart like a weight. In stories like «Uncontrollably Fond» («함부로 애틋하게») and «Mr. Plankton» («Mr. 플랑크톤»), we know early on that joy and pain will entwine, but still, we cling to a fragile hope—that somehow love will rewrite destiny.
Mr. Plankton doesn’t just remind us of love’s power, but of life’s fragility. It nudges us to forgive, not just others but ourselves, and to embrace every moment. It teaches us to live meaningfully, without regrets, and to leave behind memories that will inspire others to live fully too. There’s a humbling reminder in these stories: at the end of our journey, the legacy we leave is a reflection of the love and peace we nurtured within ourselves.
Highly recommended.