[HanCinema's Drama Review] "Twenty Five Twenty One" Episode 2

By William Schwartz on 2022/02/26 at 21:44 PST

I-jin (played by Nam Joo-hyuk) is the male lead of "Twenty Five Twenty One" despite his often feeling like a background character. This continues through most of the second episode, as our heroine Hee-do adjusting to her new school. Somewhat amusingly, there's not really much adjusting to be done. Hee-do is known to be an athletic transfer, with other students mostly just acknowledging her existence and going about their business.

Yoo-rim (played by Kim Ji-yeon) is the big exception, but only because Hee-do is very invested in becoming her friend. Yoo-rim is already famous as a big hopeful for the South Korean Olympic fencing team, to the point that Hee-do explicitly calls her a role model. The irony being that Hee-do actually beat Yoo-rim at a major fencing competition for children. Yoo-rim resents Hee-do, not for winning, but because Yoo-rim can't counter Hee-do's determined never-give-up personality.

This makes for an intriguing dynamic. I'd actually assumed in the first episode that Hee-do wasn't a great fencer, partially because of the framing device of the dance competition, but also because Hee-do herself didn't really act like it. She consistently treats fencing as a passion mostly divorced from any notion of actual success. Hee-do's powerful sense of determination is a huge departure from the oppressive aura of the IMF era which permeates so much of the rest of the story.

This is where I-jin finally comes in via the last act, which goes into his backstory. The short of it is, I-jin used to be in a very well-off family, to the point he could reasonably expect a German car as a graduation gift. The IMF crisis literally destroyed that, forcing I-jin's parents into a sham divorce to protect what little assets they still had. I-jin takes this failure very personally, knowing as he does that lower-level employees who relied on his family's business are much worse off than even his own fractured household.

Hee-do still isn't really appropriate as a love interest for I-jin, just because of the age gap. Well, beyond the age gap, just the fact that she has an actual goal in life, and I-jin doesn't. Hee-do looks at I-jin's situation with humility and understanding, knowing that not long ago she too was on the cusp of losing everything she cared about. "Twenty Five Twenty One" is a very sweet story about empathy in trying times- an era not so different from our own.

Review by William Schwartz

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"Twenty Five Twenty One" is directed by Jung Ji-hyun, written by Kwon Do-eun, and features Kim Tae-ri, Nam Joo-hyuk, Kim Ji-yeon, Choi Hyun-wook, Lee Joo-myung, Seo Jae-hee. Broadcasting information in Korea: 2022/02/12~Now airing, Sat, Sun 21:10 on tvN.

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William Schwartz

Staff writer. Has been writing articles for HanCinema since 2012, having lived in South Korea since 2011. Started out in Gyeongju, then to Daegu, then to Ansan, then to Yeongju, then to Seoul, lived on the road for HanCinema's travel diaries series in the summer of 2016, and is currently settled in Anyang. Has good tips for utilizing South Korea's public bus system. William Schwartz can be contacted via william@hancinema.net. He also has a substack at williamschwartz.substack.com where he discusses the South Korean film industry in broader terms and takes suggestions for future movies to review.

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