The last few episodes go to surprisingly dark, melodramatic places (fate, memory loss, sacrifice). It’s over-the-top, but if you’ve invested in the characters, it works. The famous “candle scene” remains a gut-punch. What Doesn’t Work (The Flaws) 1. The Male Lead is Toxic (By Today’s Standards) Kim Joo-won is controlling, verbally abusive, classist, and borderline stalks Gil Ra-im in early episodes. He tells her she’s beneath him. He forces kisses on her. In 2010, this was “passionate.” In 2025, many viewers will find it uncomfortable. The show knows he’s flawed but often frames his obsession as romantic.
The second couple (Oska and尹瑟) has potential, but their conflict relies on a miscommunication so absurd (she secretly got an abortion years ago and never told him why) that it feels jarringly out of place in a fantasy rom-com. secret garden kdrama
★★★★☆ (4/5) – A classic, but not for everyone. The last few episodes go to surprisingly dark,
Here’s a solid, balanced review of the classic Korean drama Secret Garden (2010), covering its strengths, weaknesses, and lasting impact. Verdict: 8.5/10 (Iconic, flawed, and utterly addictive) What Doesn’t Work (The Flaws) 1
A rich, arrogant department store CEO and a poor, stuntwoman swap bodies. What ensues is a strange, magical, and deeply emotional battle of wills that helped define early 2010s K-drama tropes. What Works (The Magic) 1. The Chemistry & Lead Performances Hyun Bin and Ha Ji-won are the entire engine of this show. Hyun Bin’s Kim Joo-won is a masterpiece of controlled absurdity—a man in expensive tracksuits who delivers insults like poetry. Ha Ji-won’s Gil Ra-im is the polar opposite: tough, physically capable, and emotionally guarded. Their push-pull is electric. When they body-swap, both actors deliver pitch-perfect imitations of each other’s mannerisms, which is genuinely hilarious and impressive.
The body-swap rules are never explained. The magical “rain” that triggers the swap appears randomly. The middle episodes (episodes 9–13) drag with repetitive misunderstandings and the second female lead’s tedious schemes. You’ll want to skip the mother’s scenes—she’s a one-note villain who yells a lot.
A rainy weekend when you want to scream at your screen one minute and cry the next.