The Witch Trials: A Historical Perspective in 'The Witches

By admin

The Witches is a Korean drama that revolves around a group of women who are connected by their shared experiences and struggles. The drama explores themes of friendship, love, and betrayal, as well as the power dynamics within society. The main characters of the drama are four women who have different backgrounds and personalities. They are brought together by their common goal of seeking justice and finding happiness in their lives. Each woman has her own story and her own set of challenges to overcome. One of the central themes of The Witches is the role of women in society.



The Witch's Game (2022)

Yu Kyung is a successful woman who is proficient enough to become an executive director of Chunha Group when she started as a secretary. She recently found out her daughter is alive, so she plans to get her back and take her revenge. Meanwhile, Hye Soo is a strong girl who faces challenges head-on. She has a daughter with Ji Ho, and she would do anything for her. However, she gets tragically betrayed by Ji Ho, the love of her life, over power and money. How will those two mothers end their fierce revenge? (Source: Kocowa) Edit Translation

  • English
  • magyar / magyar nyelv
  • עברית / עִבְרִית
  • dansk
  • Native Title:마녀의 게임
  • Also Known As:Manyeoui Geim , Game of Witches
  • Director:Lee Hyung Sun
  • Screenwriter:Lee Do Hyeon
  • Genres:Mystery, Drama
  • Tags:Manager Female Lead, Manager Male Lead, Female Centered Plot, Married Female Lead, Chairwoman Female Lead, Heir Male Lead, Secretary Supporting Character, Company President (CEO) Female Lead, Age Gap [Real Life], Motherhood(Vote or add tags)
  • Country: South Korea
  • Type: Drama
  • Episodes: 119
  • Aired: Oct 11, 2022 - Apr 14, 2023
  • Aired On: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday
  • Original Network:MBC
  • Duration: 35 min.
  • Score: 7.1 (scored by 220 users)
  • Ranked: #8436
  • Popularity: #6587
  • Content Rating: 15+ - Teens 15 or older
  • Watchers: 1,349
  • Favorites: 0
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Reviews

Completed NF212 3 people found this review helpful Apr 14, 2023 119 of 119 episodes seen Completed 2 Overall 3.5 Story 3.0 Acting/Cast 6.5 Music 7.0 Rewatch Value 1.0 This review may contain spoilers

One of the worst's daily dramas that i ever seen

I really dont know how i managed to see the entire thing, but i guess that i was to late to drop when this had become a total train wreck.

After the mark of 80-ish episodes there was literally nothing new to the plot, the writers kept repeating the same thing over and over and over again.
First of all was the fact that almost every person of the cast was in prison once, it looked that they were going to their vacation house.
I still dont know how that company didnt went bankrupt, a stupid prosecutor was somehow fit to manage a entire company, i also lost count how many times the position of the chairman changed, scandals after scandals (including murder) but none of that left the company in ruins.
At some point i also didnt know who was daughter/ son of who cuz baby the way they be exchanging left me confused AF.
JH was a total looser that choose to cheat on a decent woman with another looser and both of them decided to be looseres together , the way this man was DELUSIONAL the entire drama is mind-blowing.
Made his daughter live with his mistress after attempting to kill his ex, but once HS was back and richer and ready to take her daughter back he somehow wanted them to be together again because he didnt want another man raising his daughter (the double standards), and of course he knew he more to gain if he married the biological heir.
And the fact that by the end writers tried to slip in there the fact that he was a good father.
Over all this was a huge mess and honestly i dont think it is worth the watching!

The witches korean drama

A mother and daughter, sacrificed to great evil, go through a bloody battle. Then they fight against evil, determined to avenge themselves.

Starring Jeong Hye Soo | Kim Kyu Seon

An iron-willed girl who never gives up but keeps trying.
She was abandoned at four and sent to an orphanage, but she's positive and cheerful.
She chose to support Ji Ho, her common-law-husband so that he could pass the bar exam. And Hye Soo and Ji Ho promise to hold a wedding in the year when their daughter Han Byul turns five.
However, Hye Soo not only learns that Ji Ho is cheating on her with another girl but also finds out the girl is Se Young, her old friend from the orphanage, and gets hugely shocked.

Seol Yu Gyung | Jang Seo Hee

She's a former secretary of Chairperson Ma of Cheonha Group and rose to the CEO through the executive director position. She's not only so beautiful that it's hard to tell how old she is but also very elegant in every way.
She's very skilled at controlling her emotion. She can even stay calm all the time and never lets anyone read her mind.
Although she keeps it under wraps, her goal is to take revenge on Chairperson Ma.
Believing that her four-year-old daughter Mi So died in the fire, Yu Gyung married Beom Seok. She believes that Kang Ju, a little girl she meets in the orphanage she visits to give a helping hand from time to time, is Mi So and adopts her, making her live as Se Young, the daughter of Beom Seok's ex-wife.
Nineteen years later, she's caught in a vortex between Hye Soo, her real daughter that believes she's like a daughter to Yu Gyung, and Se Young, a fake daughter that believes to be her real daughter.

Joo Se Young | Han Ji Wan

She has to say what she wants to say, has to do what she wants to do, and has to have what she wants to have, even if she has to take it away from others.
Whatever it is, once she's hooked on it, she 'gives her all,' but once she loses her interest, she turns freezing cold in an instant.
And Ji Ho satisfied Se Young's hidden desire to be loved. He is not only the best friend of her fianc? In Ha but also has been in a ten-year-old relationship with a girlfriend who is the mom of Ji Ho's daughter.
Moreover, the fact that the girlfriend is the biological daughter of her mother Yu Gyung makes her fighting spirit aflame.

Kang Ji Ho | Oh Chang Seok

A prosecutor in his third year in the special prosecutors' team of the Seoul District Prosecutor's Office
Ji Ho, who is clearheaded, handsome, and with a body of a model, has nothing but only himself.
On the day he passed the bar exam, thanks to Hye Soo's devoted support, he spent a night with Hye Soo, and that's how Han Byul came into the world.
But he started to have excuses not to want to marry Hye Soo from deep inside his heart, and he finally gave in to the seduction of Se Young, the daughter of Beom Seok, the chief of the Seoul District Prosecutor's Office.
For him, Hye Soo and the daughters are the responsibility he wants to run away from, and his feelings for Se Young are so dangerous that they turn into fascinating love.

Yoo In Ha | Lee Hyun Seok

The successor of Cheonha Group, the best friend of Ji Ho, his friend from high school.
He may look arrogant and indecisive, but he is a romantic guy who loves animals and art and cries at the romantic melody.
Believing that the next chairman title of the Cheonha Group is safely secured, he thinks he just needs to enjoy anything he likes without making an effort. In Ha hates complicated things that give him a headache.
And from one day, he can't help but think of Hye Soo, who used to be the woman of Ji Ho, his best friend.
He feels pity and empathy for Hye Soo, who is broken-hearted, and he grows deeper feelings toward her.

The witches korean drama

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Song Ji-hyo in a still from The Witch’s Diner. After a lengthy intro, her character fades somewhat into the background for the rest of the series.

One of the central themes of The Witches is the role of women in society. The drama highlights the struggles and discrimination that women face in their everyday lives. It also explores the ways in which women support and empower each other, highlighting the importance of female friendships.

Review | K-drama review: The Witch’s Diner – supernatural drama starring Song Ji-hyo falls apart after a promising start

  • Look beyond its colourful sets and rich costumes and The Witch’s Diner offers little – the show’s internal logic is off and the characters are sadly underwritten
  • Song Ji-hyo does her best with what she’s given but there’s precious little for her to play with – the rest of the cast are even less effective
+ FOLLOW + FOLLOW Published: 10:48am, 24 Aug, 2021 Corrected [ 10:11am, 25 Aug, 2021 ]
  • [ 10:11am, 25 Aug, 2021 ] Tom Kim hosted a birthday party for his daughter, not his son.

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This article contains spoilers.

1.5/5 stars

With their repetitive storylines and sometimes drawn-out dialogue delivery, K-dramas can be long-winded, but thankfully television is a flexible medium, with formats being altered all the time to fit different stories and mediums.

Streaming services are the most elastic platform yet to emerge for small-screen content, and what we’ve seen in South Korea are some shows pitched to online audiences with more ambitious but tighter storylines, such as Kingdom .

The Witch’s Diner, just the second original programme from the fledgling Korean streaming service Tving, is brief by Korean drama standards. With eight episodes averaging 40 minutes, it’s less than a third the length of a typical series with 16 70-minute episodes, yet it still follows a classic K-drama narrative template.

The show revolves around three characters. Song Ji-hyo, billed as the lead but who in reality has the least screen time of its three main stars, plays Jo Hee-ra, a witch who runs a restaurant that serves food and grants wishes to desperate clients. They don’t have to pay money for her delectable dishes, but they will end up paying for it somehow, and the cost can easily outweigh the benefits of the wish granted them.

The Witch’s Diner: Song Ji-hyo in supernatural K-drama

Nam Ji-hyun plays down-on-her-luck Jung Jin, a young woman who finds herself becoming Hee-ra’s partner after enduring a series of setbacks, including losing her job and boyfriend and seeing a restaurant she runs with her mother quickly go to pot.

Jin accepts Hee-ra’s unusual proposal to take over her failed restaurant, but despite being the most prominent character, her story grinds to a halt for most of the series after a lengthy introduction in the first episode.

Lastly, we have the soft-hearted and perpetually grinning high school student Lee Gil-yong (Chae Jong-hyeop). Early on, he struggles to juggle his athletic ambitions and scholastic needs and deal with homeroom bullies, but once he finds himself employed as a helper in Hee-ra’s restaurant, his story slows to a crawl as well.

Nam Ji-hyun in a still from The Witch’s Diner.

From then on, he just quietly pines after Jin, and keeps flashing his boyish smile.

Ha Do-kwon – one of the hidden treasures of The Penthouse – appears in a smattering of scenes as Hee-ra’s assistant, and Jin’s mother (So Hee-jung) weaves in and out of the story, but that’s pretty much it for recurring characters. Instead, we get a few guest actors to fill up the episodic stories of sad-sack clients who visit Hee-ra’s establishment.

Festooned with colourful sets and rich costumes, The Witch’s Diner got off to an intriguing start, but after zipping around establishing its premise, the show quickly ran out of steam. The guest stories were rote and predictable, but more than that, their resolutions revealed something more serious – the show’s colourful concept was half-baked.

The Witch’s Diner has a starting point for all its characters, after which most of them do a lot of waiting around, until a perfunctory climax reveals the true relationships between them all. Hee-ra is actually Jin’s mother, but while such a revelation was never going to be a huge surprise, the show’s lack of depth and character building robs it of any dramatic impact.

Chae Jong-hyeop in a still from The Witch’s Diner.

There’s no getting around the fact that The Witch’s Diner is a badly written show, although whether that is the fault of the source novel, the adaptation, or both, I can’t say. The show’s internal logic is off and the characters are underwritten, but more than that it repeatedly stumbles on the smallest steps.

For example, Jin enters into a relationship with celebrity writer Tom Kim (Choi Sung-jae), who anyone can see is bad news. During their relationship, he repeatedly blows her off, and one day, after calling off a date at the last minute for the umpteenth time, Jin goes to a wedding and in the same building she discovers Tom, who is there with his wife hosting a first birthday party for their daughter.

Never mind the extraordinary coincidence, but why would Tom have scheduled a date with his unwitting lover on the same afternoon as such a major event, which requires an enormous amount of planning?

Song Ji-hyo in a still from The Witch’s Diner.

Shows are allowed some leniency for small inconsistencies, but The Witch’s Diner is littered with egregious ones that frankly beg the question: were the writers even paying attention?

Unfortunately, the buck doesn’t stop there, as the show features some of the least effective casting seen on screens this year. Song is a fine actress and mostly does OK here, but behind her striking outfits and eerie contact lenses there’s precious little for her to play with.

Chae, who is a decade older than his character and looks it, also has nothing to do in a role than merely calls on him to smile and pine after the lead. But the biggest problem is Nam, who lacks charisma and is stiff as the lead character, a role in which she seems miscast.

Nam Ji-hyun in a still from The Witch’s Diner.

The Witch’s Diner ends with Jin and Gil-yong taking over as witch and assistant of the restaurant. Let’s hope this isn’t an invitation to a follow-up season.

The Witch’s Diner is streaming on myTV Super.

[Drama 2022-2023] Witch's Game - 마녀의 게임 - Mon to Fri 8:50 - 9:30 KST

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The witches korean drama

The Witches also delves into the complex dynamics of love and relationships. The drama portrays various types of relationships, such as marriage, friendship, and romantic relationships. It shows how these relationships can be both empowering and destructive, and explores the choices that individuals make in the pursuit of happiness. Another important aspect of The Witches is the exploration of power and success. The drama examines the different paths that the characters take to achieve their goals, and the sacrifices they are willing to make along the way. It also raises questions about the definition of success and whether it is worth compromising one's values and integrity. The Witches is a compelling drama that tackles important social issues while also providing engaging and emotional storytelling. It offers a nuanced portrayal of women and their experiences, and encourages viewers to reflect on their own identities and choices. Overall, The Witches is a thought-provoking and powerful drama that is worth watching..

Reviews for "The Epic Finale of 'The Witches' Korean Drama: A Recap"

1. Jane - 2/5 stars - I had high hopes for "The Witches" Korean drama, but I was left disappointed. The storyline seemed promising at first, but it quickly became convoluted and confusing. The character development was lacking, and I struggled to connect with any of the main characters. The pacing was also off, with some episodes dragging on while others felt rushed. Overall, I found it difficult to stay engaged and invested in the series.
2. Michael - 1/5 stars - "The Witches" Korean drama was a complete letdown for me. The plot was incredibly predictable, and I was able to guess the twists and turns long before they were revealed. The acting was mediocre at best, with many of the characters lacking depth and emotion. The special effects were also disappointing, often looking cheap and poorly executed. I had high hopes for this drama, but it fell flat in almost every aspect. I would not recommend wasting your time on this one.
3. Lily - 2/5 stars - I found "The Witches" Korean drama to be quite frustrating. While the concept was intriguing, the execution was poor. The storytelling felt disjointed, and there were several plot holes that were never addressed or explained. The dialogue was often cheesy and melodramatic, making it difficult to take the series seriously. Additionally, the ending felt rushed and unsatisfying. Overall, I was left feeling underwhelmed and wishing I had spent my time on a different drama.
4. Alex - 3/5 stars - I had mixed feelings about "The Witches" Korean drama. While the premise was interesting and had potential, it didn't quite deliver. The pacing was uneven, with some episodes feeling slow and others rushed. The character development was also lacking, which made it difficult for me to really care about what happened to them. However, the visuals were impressive and the cinematography was well done. It had its moments, but overall, it fell short of my expectations.

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