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Poksak Sokassuda Is the Netflix Drama Living Rent-Free in Everyone's Head

Chloé Martin·6/12/2026, 6:50:27 PM

Dropped on Netflix on March 7, 2025, Poksak Sokassuda (폭싹 속았수다) — a Jeju dialect phrase meaning roughly "you've worked so hard" — is a 16-episode drama directed by Kim Won-seok and written by Im Sang-chun, produced by Fan Entertainment and Baram Pictures. IU plays the young Ae-sun, Park Bo-gum plays the young Gwan-sik, and Moon So-ri and Park Hae-jun carry their older selves. The ensemble runs deep — Kim Yong-rim, Na Moon-hee, Yeom Hye-ran, Oh Jung-se, and Eom Ji-won are all in there, and every one of them gets a real arc.

The story opens in 1960s Jeju, yellow canola flowers everywhere, and Ae-sun already announcing she will absolutely, never, under any circumstances marry a man from the island. She's a literature-loving girl with Seoul university dreams, and Gwan-sik is the fish merchant's son she can't quite bring herself to hold hands with — so she shoves her hand into his coat pocket instead, and he grips his own hem so hard his fingertips go white. That one scene tells you everything about the register this drama operates in: restrained, specific, and quietly devastating.

What the show is NOT is a straightforward romance. The emotional core is actually the mother-daughter line — Ae-sun's mother Gwang-rye working herself to the bone so her daughter never has to become a haenyeo (female diver), and then Ae-sun doing the same for her own daughter Geum-myeong a generation later. The drama makes this parallel literal: IU plays both young Ae-sun AND adult Geum-myeong in the 1990s sections, so you're watching the same face carry two generations of the same love and the same sacrifice. It's a structural choice that lands harder than any dialogue could.

The Jeju setting is not just backdrop — it's load-bearing. The dialect, the haenyeo culture, the dolhareubang stone statues, the gendered hierarchies baked into every meal (women eating fish heads and burnt rice at the small table), the way the seasons mark Ae-sun's life stages: spring canola, summer green, and so on. Cultural critic Kim Gyo-seok called it "a story like a tangled skein of thread, where even the supporting characters have full arcs" and noted that the Jeju geography and the period setting are what make the central relationship actually glow. That's exactly right. You don't need to have lived through the 1960s–70s or to have ever been to Jeju for it to hit — but if you have been to Jeju, you will feel it differently.

The writing has a literary quality that's rare in K-drama. A poem Ae-sun writes — "I want to buy one day of fishing net with the hundred hwan I earn selling abalone" — is the kind of line that stops you mid-episode. Gwang-rye's deathbed speech about henna flower dye fading from a child's fingernails, and how the living eventually forget and move on the way nails grow out, is the kind of monologue people are still quoting in comment sections. Cultural critic Jeong Deok-hyeon specifically flagged the dialogue's literary and folk-comic quality as something that sets it apart from standard melodrama.

The timeline structure also keeps things from dragging. The show cuts between the 1960s–70s storyline and the middle-aged Ae-sun and Gwan-sik (Moon So-ri and Park Hae-jun) throughout, so you're never stuck in one era long enough to lose momentum. It's a drama that's genuinely funny in places too — Ae-sun's mother-in-law muttering "I should have just gotten a dog" every time Gwan-sik disappoints her, and a newlywed scene involving a light switch that's too good to spoil, both land as actual comedy rather than relief-valve gags.

If you're building a watch list for a long flight to Seoul, put this at the top. It's the kind of drama that makes you want to go to Jeju specifically in spring, when the canola fields are out — and then feel slightly embarrassed that a Netflix show made you feel that way. No shame in it.

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