As a chief of staff in the National Assembly, Jang Tae-jun influences power behind the scenes while pursuing his own ambitions to rise to the top.As a chief of staff in the National Assembly, Jang Tae-jun influences power behind the scenes while pursuing his own ambitions to rise to the top.As a chief of staff in the National Assembly, Jang Tae-jun influences power behind the scenes while pursuing his own ambitions to rise to the top.
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Lee Jung Jae plays a chief of staff trying to change a corrupt system with the help of the beautiful Shin Min Ah, an assemblywoman of the opposing party. In this well acted drama he is faced with the dilemma that to change the system he has to stoop as low as the people he despises. Well paced with a story that holds the attention and an excellent supporting cast.
A series that you can't seem to stop watching. Always have the urge to know who outwits the other.
Although it's politically themed drama but it's a watered-down surface-level politics and the excessive overdramatization didn't fit its theme. Repeating the exact same dramatic flashbacks multiple times throughout both seasons further highlights my point. It ended up relying on these melo moments rather than having a better written political drama and a more engaging dialogues as you would expect from a good political drama to have. What also didn't fit its theme is the male lead constant overreacting and overacting for his role. The romance of the main leads and the pair up of the secondary leads were all out of place. On the other hand, the OST was nice, it reminded me of Comrades (2010). The drama is okay if it was your first political drama, can serve as an easy introduction to the genre.
It's a good series, though pretty fast-paced and with a lot of characters and relationships to track. There's an ungodly amount of double-crossing and backroom-dealing from both the good and bad guys-which is hardly surprising, since this is a political drama.
Lee Jung-jae is always fantastic, and he really nails the morally grey protagonist role here. Even when his character, Jang Tae-jun, is doing the shadiest of things, you can't help but root for him. Of course, that's essentially the argument his character makes-that to defeat scumbags in power and bring a positive change to the world, one must also become powerful-even if means using questionable tactics to do so. There are moments in this series that will have you questioning just how far this man is willing to go to get his job done. I won't tell you how that all works out for him, but it's a really great journey full of twists and suspense.
An enjoyable watch with a solid cast.
Lee Jung-jae is always fantastic, and he really nails the morally grey protagonist role here. Even when his character, Jang Tae-jun, is doing the shadiest of things, you can't help but root for him. Of course, that's essentially the argument his character makes-that to defeat scumbags in power and bring a positive change to the world, one must also become powerful-even if means using questionable tactics to do so. There are moments in this series that will have you questioning just how far this man is willing to go to get his job done. I won't tell you how that all works out for him, but it's a really great journey full of twists and suspense.
An enjoyable watch with a solid cast.
The show was suspenseful and dramatic just fine. I would only give it a medium rating because watching this old man playing the M. O. J eat in like every other scene was distracting and DISGUSTING. Who's idea was that and please fire them forever. Yuck. Totally took away from potentially powerful scenes. So i guess I'd just say great writing (other than that the genius main character would just leave game changing evidence in his desk drawer. Not believable even for an idiot.) Great cast. Bad directing. Ew made me sick watching him eat.
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- SoundtracksRainfall
Performed by CHEN (Kim Jong-dae)
- How many seasons does Chief of Staff have?Powered by Alexa
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- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
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