The kind-hearted heir who wants to live his life freely away from the pressures of the LJ Group . ✨ Why Watch?
Ben, ever the optimist, just smiled. "Then we won't have a wedding."
While the show is fiction, it highlights a specific "Wedding Impossible" trope: In this scenario, a real wedding is impossible because the groom does not love the bride (or loves someone else). The show resonated globally because millions of people are in "lavender marriages" or familial obligation traps where they must marry for reasons other than love, making a true wedding impossible. Wedding Impossible
In the sprawling landscape of romantic K-dramas, tropes like "contract marriages" and "fake dating" are as common as convenience store ramen. Yet, every once in a while, a series comes along that takes these familiar ingredients and cooks up a dish so delightful, spicy, and heartfelt that it feels entirely new.
While the plot centers on a wedding between Ah-jung and Do-han, the heart of the show beats for Lee Ji-han. Played by the breakout star Moon Sang-min, Ji-han is the classic "chaebol heir" archetype with a twist. Initially, he is the antagonist, determined to sabotage the wedding to protect his brother’s future and the family’s reputation. The kind-hearted heir who wants to live his
Lena had planned three weddings. Each one had been more elaborate than the last: a beachside ceremony in Santorini (canceled due to a tsunami warning), a mountaintop exchange in the Alps (called off after the groom ran off with the horse-drawn carriage driver), and a grand cathedral affair in her hometown (stopped when the priest’s secret wife showed up).
The wedding was impossible. But the marriage? That was the only thing the universe couldn't cancel. "Then we won't have a wedding
Aris stared at them, his clipboard glowing red with error messages. Then, slowly, he smiled. "Well, I'll be. You broke the system." He snapped his fingers, and the light vanished. The ground stilled.