My Liberation Notes is a South Korean television drama series that premiered on JTBC on April 9, 2022, and concluded on May 29, 2022, consisting of 16 episodes aired on weekends.[1] The narrative centers on the Yeom siblings—eldest sister Ki-jeong, middle brother Chang-hee, and youngest Mi-jeong—who reside in the rural village of Sanpo and contend with the emotional exhaustion of repetitive daily routines while pursuing elusive personal fulfillment.[2] Their stories intersect with that of Mr. Gu, a reclusive and troubled stranger who becomes entangled in their lives, emphasizing themes of loneliness, family dynamics, and quiet introspection over conventional plot-driven action.[3] Starring Kim Ji-won as Mi-jeong, Lee Min-ki as Chang-hee, Lee Bo-young as Ki-jeong, and Son Suk-ku as Mr. Gu, the series was directed by Kim Seok-yoon and written by Park Ji-eun, marking a departure from high-stakes tropes in favor of a slow-burn, character-focused exploration of mundane discontent.[1] It garnered critical acclaim for its authentic portrayal of adult ennui, achieving a 94% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes and steadily rising viewership that culminated in a nationwide peak of over 6.7%, doubling its premiere figures and establishing it as an unlikely 2022 hit amid faster-paced competitors.[4][5] While not sweeping major awards, its reception highlighted praise for nuanced performances and realistic depictions of interpersonal stagnation, influencing discussions on mental fatigue in contemporary Koreansociety.[6]
Synopsis
Plot Overview
My Liberation Notes centers on the Yeom siblings—eldest sister Yeom Mi-jeong (Kim Ji-won), brother Yeom Chang-hee (Lee Min-ki), and youngest sister Yeom Ki-jeong (Lee El)—who reside with their parents in the rural village of Sanpo, South Korea, and endure long daily commutes to unfulfilling jobs in Seoul.[3][2] Mi-jeong, a corporate worker in her late 30s, grapples with workplace frustrations and personal stagnation, prompting her to initiate a "Liberation Club" among colleagues to articulate desires for escape from routine existence.[3] Chang-hee, a translator, harbors ambitions to relocate to Seoul permanently, while Ki-jeong pursues aspirations of becoming an internet broadcaster amid familial dynamics and individual disillusionments.[3] The narrative expands with the arrival of the reclusive Mr. Gu (Son Seok-gu), a stranger with an undisclosed traumatic history who settles in Sanpo, gradually intersecting with the siblings' lives and catalyzing reflections on isolation, aspiration, and quiet desperation.[3][2] Spanning 16 episodes aired from May 21 to June 26, 2022, on JTBC, the series portrays their incremental quests for personal "liberation" against a backdrop of mundane rural-urban drudgery.[7]
Character Arcs
Yeom Mi-jeong, the youngest sibling, enters the narrative ensnared in emotional stagnation, marked by a recent breakup with an ex-boyfriend who exploited her financially and a monotonous marketing job that amplifies her sense of invisibility. Her pivotal interaction with the reclusive Mr. Gu evolves into a profound, non-traditional bond that catalyzes introspection, enabling her to articulate suppressed desires through shared "liberation notes" and reclaim agency by confronting her ex for restitution. This progression fosters resilience, as evidenced by her forgiveness of past grievances and pursuit of passion projects like revisiting old diaries, culminating in a liberated state of self-worth and openness to love by the finale, where she narrates feeling replete with affection.[8][9]Mr. Gu, introduced as a brooding alcoholic neighbor tormented by professional downfall and familial estrangement, initially embodies isolation and self-loathing, relying on alcohol to evade accountability for debts and betrayals. Mi-jeong's persistent overtures prompt incremental vulnerability, including admissions of addiction and practical amends like repaying his brother's debts while applying her philosophy of welcoming adversaries. His arc resolves with nascent redemption—eschewing formal rehab for mutual support and hinting at sobriety—ending on an optimistic note as he approaches Mi-jeong, signaling readiness for interpersonal connection over solitude.[8][9]Yeom Gi-jeong, the eldest sibling and a rigid schoolteacher, commences with abrasive traits rooted in status consciousness and familial resentment, straining her budding romance with single father Tae-hun amid his chaotic household. Through confrontations with rejection fears, including public humiliations and status clashes, she cultivates bravery, confessing love unreservedly and embracing relational imperfections by episode 10. Yet her development remains tempered by enduring judgments and family burdens, achieving partial liberation via authentic self-expression and commitment to Tae-hun, though sustainability hinges on unresolved dynamics.[8][9]Yeom Chang-hee, the middle sibling in finance, grapples with ambition thwarted by workplace drudgery and paternal debts, manifesting in irritability and relational volatility, including a breakup with Hyun-ah. Post-business collapse and maternal loss, he clears family obligations and serendipitously pivots to funeral directing after a misattended lecture, unearthing purpose in service-oriented quietude and earning paternal validation. This trajectory liberates him from frustration, yielding self-awareness and familial harmony through acceptance of modest, meaningful labor over unattainable success.[8][9][10]
Cast and Characters
Main Roles
The principal roles in My Liberation Notes center on the three Yeom siblings living in the rural village of Sanpo and a reclusive outsider known as Mr. Gu.[11][7]
Mr. Gu (a enigmatic day laborer with a traumatic past who becomes intertwined with the family)[11][7][3]
These actors were selected for their ability to convey subtle emotional depth, with the series emphasizing introspective performances over dramatic flair.[12]
Supporting Roles
Cheon Ho-jin portrays Yeom Je-ho, the father of the Yeom siblings, embodying the stoic rural patriarch who influences family dynamics through his quiet presence and traditional expectations.[13][14]Lee Ki-woo plays Jo Tae-hoon, a colleague of Yeom Chang-hee at the convenience store headquarters, providing comic relief and workplace camaraderie amid the drudgery of corporate life.[11][3]Lee Kyung-sung appears as Kwak Hye-sook, a relative in the Yeom family circle, contributing to depictions of intergenerational rural existence.[11] Jeon Hye-jin depicts Ji Hyeon-ah, a close friend of Yeom Mi-jeong, offering external perspectives on urban dissatisfaction and personal aspirations.[11][14] Other supporting performers include Lee Ji-hye as So Hyang-gi, involved in Gi-jeong's social and professional interactions, and Park Soo-young as Park Sang-min, adding layers to the siblings' relational networks.[14] These roles collectively ground the protagonists' emotional journeys in realistic interpersonal contexts.[3]
Special Appearances
The series features various guest actors in brief roles, enhancing its depiction of everyday encounters in Sanpo and urban settings. In episode 1, Seong No-jin appears as an employee at the Joy Card Bowling club, interacting with protagonist Yeom Chang-hee during a moment of leisure. Kwon Young-guk portrays the local convenience store owner in the same episode, providing a glimpse into the rural community's routine commerce.[15]Choi Hee-jin recurs briefly as a bank teller in episodes 1 and 7, handling transactions that underscore the characters' financial mundanities. Jeon Soo-jin also contributes to minor scenes, though specific details on her role remain tied to ensemble backdrops.[15]Episode 10 includes multiple special appearances, such as Son Seul-gi as Ms. Lee, Lee Soo-bin as Ko Eun-bi, and Shin So-yeon as a Ystat employee, appearing in professional contexts that highlight workplace dynamics. Additional guests like Choi Kyo-sik, Park Hyuk as Chairman Shin, Lee Shin-seong, and Moon Seong-ryong further populate corporate and advisory interactions.[16]A notable non-actor cameo occurs via dialogue in an early episode, where Yeom Chang-hee references the K-pop group BTS while confronting his girlfriend about infidelity, embedding contemporary cultural touchpoints without visual presence.[17] Veteran actress Jung Young-joo delivers a subtle cameo, drawing attention for its understated integration into the narrative's introspective tone.[3]
Production
Development and Writing
"My Liberation Notes" was written by Park Hae-young, whose previous work "My Mister" (2018) established her reputation for character-driven life dramas exploring human struggles and resilience.[18] The script for "My Liberation Notes" emerged in the years following "My Mister," reflecting a four-year creative evolution where Park focused on portraying the inherent warmth and overlooked charm in ordinary individuals, aiming to evoke empathy for "pure people deeply rooted in humanity's origin."[19][18]Park's writing process emphasized avoiding preconceived judgments of characters, instead allowing each to "live their life within the drama" to ensure authentic depth and honor the actors' portrayals.[18] This approach prioritized psychological realism and interpersonal dynamics over conventional plot progression, resulting in an unconventional screenplay noted for its subtlety and emotional resonance.[20][21]The project was greenlit by JTBC for its Saturday-Sunday evening slot, succeeding "Forecasting Love and Weather," with teasers and casting announcements released in early 2022 ahead of the April 9 premiere.[3] Director Lee Han collaborated closely with Park during development, aligning the script's introspective tone with visual and narrative techniques to capture mundane existential fatigue.[22] The 16-episode format allowed for expansive character arcs, drawing from Park's intent to humanize everyday ennui without resorting to melodrama.[23]
Casting Process
The main cast for My Liberation Notes was confirmed on July 9, 2021, with Lee Min-ki cast as Yeom Chang-hee, Kim Ji-won as Yeom Mi-jeong, Son Suk-ku as Mr. Gu, and Lee El as Yeom Ki-jeong.[24] Director Kim Seok-yoon described the casting process as proceeding smoothly from the project's inception, attributing this to the alignment between the screenplay by Park Hae-young and the selected actors' abilities to portray introspective, everyday characters.[25]Kim Ji-won, in particular, joined after reviewing the script during the 2021 reading session, citing its depth in exploring personal stagnation and liberation as a key factor in her decision. No public auditions were reported, consistent with the production's reliance on established performers from prior works like Park Hae-young's My Mister, emphasizing nuanced emotional delivery over broad appeal.[26] Supporting roles, including family members and colleagues, were filled through similar direct selections to maintain thematic coherence in depicting mundane rural and urban lives.
Filming and Locations
Filming for My Liberation Notes took place across multiple regions in South Korea, emphasizing authentic rural, suburban, and urban environments to portray the series' themes of everyday monotony and introspection. Principal locations included Cheonan in Chungcheongnam-do Province, where Seonghwan Station served as the primary stand-in for the fictional Dangmi Station featured in siblings' commute sequences.[27][28] Nearby sites in Cheonan, such as the Why Black Cafe and Moon Toast & Coffee near Seonghwan Station, were used for casual encounter scenes, including a cafe meeting in episode 8 and a pork cutlet meal in episode 5.[28][29]Rural settings were captured in Yeoncheon-gun, Gyeonggi-do Province, where the Yeom family house and adjacent bus stop exteriors were shot to evoke the isolated "Sanpo" village.[28] In Paju, Gyeonggi-do, Yagcheonsa Temple provided the backdrop for a contemplative scene in episode 8.[28][29]Urban sequences shifted to Seoul and surrounding areas, including Yeouido Park for the series finale, Mapo Bridge crossroads for transitional moments, and the National Assembly Carpark Bridge for a key reunion in episode 14.[28]Convenience store interiors appeared at a CU branch in Jongno-gu, while Gyeongine Snack Bar in Mapo-gu hosted tteokbokki-related scenes.[28] Additional sites encompassed Busan for metro interiors at Hopo Station and a church exterior near Geumgok Station, as well as Incheon's Paradise City for the Club Chroma nightclub sequence.[28] Moda Outlet in Cheonan doubled as a department store in episode 13.[28] These choices facilitated the drama's grounded aesthetic, blending real-world accessibility with narrative intimacy.[29]
Themes and Style
Core Themes
My Liberation Notes examines the pervasive dissatisfaction arising from routine existence, portraying characters trapped in cycles of unfulfilling work and emotional isolation. The Yeom siblings commute daily from their rural home in Sanpo Village to Seoul jobs that offer little fulfillment, embodying the quiet desperation of modern life where societal pressures enforce conformity over personal agency.[30] This theme draws from writer Park Hae-young's intent to question liberation from "false life living in fake happiness," critiquing how collective dreams of escape mask individual inertia.[20]Central to the narrative is the "Liberation Club," an informal group where participants voice fantasies of reinvention, underscoring escapism as a coping mechanism for existential voids. Rather than resolving through external triumphs, the series depicts liberation as a protracted internal process, involving confrontation with grief, guilt, and self-doubt amid familial and romantic entanglements.[31]Mental health struggles, including depression and emotional fatigue, are rendered without sensationalism, reflecting how ordinary individuals persist despite unrecognized societal burdens.[8]Family dynamics serve as both anchor and impediment, with intergenerational conflicts and subtle dependencies illustrating causal links between past traumas and present stagnation. The drama posits that incremental self-sovereignty—through honest reckoning rather than illusionary worship in relationships—fosters gradual agency, aligning with Park Hae-young's focus on underrepresented emotional labors over conventional redemption arcs.[22] This approach privileges realistic causality, where change emerges from sustained effort amid unrelenting mundanity, eschewing tidy resolutions for ongoing human resilience.[32]
Narrative and Directorial Techniques
The series adopts a slice-of-life narrative format across its 16 episodes, each averaging 67 minutes, emphasizing character introspection over conventional plot arcs. Rather than linear progression toward resolution, the storyline unfolds through fragmented vignettes of daily routines in the rural village of Sanpo, interspersed with urban escapes to Seoul, allowing subtle exploration of emotional stagnation and fleeting hopes. This structure prioritizes psychological depth, with voiceover monologues drawn from the characters' personal "liberation notes"—journal-like entries articulating their dissatisfactions and aspirations—serving as a framing device to reveal inner monologues and foster viewer empathy for mundane existential struggles.[33][34]Directorial choices by Park Ji-hwan emphasize cinéma vérité aesthetics, capturing quiet realism through unhurried pacing that mirrors the protagonists' fatigue and isolation, often extending scenes of silence, meals, or solitary walks to immerse audiences in their tedium. Contrasting wide rural landscapes with claustrophobic urban frames highlights spatial metaphors for entrapment versus fleeting liberation, while natural lighting and cluttered domestic sets enhance authenticity in portraying non-confrontational familydynamics and grief. Cinematography employs deliberate techniques such as push-in shots for emotional intimacy (e.g., close-ups on subtle smiles or tears) and pull-outs to underscore alienation, alongside rack focus shifts to redirect attention between foreground thoughts and background realities.[33]Editing supports this introspective approach via cross-cutting between present ennui and fragmented past events, revealing backstories incrementally without exposition dumps, as seen in sequences blending memories with current isolation. The production adheres to a 2:1 aspect ratio suited for streaming platforms, facilitating immersive wide compositions. Notable rule-breaking includes frequent violations of the 180-degree axis in dialogue scenes to signal relational shifts or tension (e.g., abrupt perspective changes during confrontations), and Dutch angles to evoke psychological disorientation, though the latter's ubiquity has drawn critique for diluting impact in non-essential moments like household chores. Camera rolls and motion blur further convey agitation or dreamlike detachment, aligning visual language with the narrative's focus on subtle mental unrest.[35]
Psychological and Philosophical Elements
The series portrays psychological elements centered on depression, emotional isolation, and the suppression of inner turmoil, as seen in Yeom Mi-jeong's docile exterior masking profound sadness and resentment toward her unfulfilling life.[9] Characters like Mr. Gu exhibit symptoms of alcoholism and withdrawal, reflecting deeper mental health challenges tied to past traumas and relational failures, which the narrative depicts through raw, introspective monologues rather than overt resolution.[9]Family dynamics amplify these issues, with the siblings processing grief over their mother's death via outbursts (Gi-jeong) or stoic endurance (the father), highlighting realistic stages of mourning and intergenerational emotional inheritance.[9]Philosophically, My Liberation Notes engages existential themes of purpose and authenticity, portraying the rural routine as a site of monotony that prompts characters' crises of meaning, akin to absurdism where daily absurdities underscore the search for self-sovereignty.[36][37] The "Liberation Club" motif—where participants anonymously share notes aspiring to personal freedom—symbolizes a quest for self-actualization, emphasizing introspection over external validation as a path to breaking free from societal roles and self-imposed limitations.[9]These elements converge in character arcs that prioritize gradual psychological healing through honest self-confrontation and tentative connections, such as Mi-jeong's evolving bond with Mr. Gu, which probes questions of happiness's dependency on others versus internal reconciliation.[9] The drama avoids simplistic catharsis, instead suggesting that liberation emerges from accepting imperfection and articulating suppressed truths, fostering a philosophical realism about human resilience amid ongoing existential ennui.[36]
Soundtrack
Composition and Release
The soundtrack for My Liberation Notes was overseen by music director Kim Tae-seong, who composed and arranged key instrumental tracks, including variations of "A Kind of Confession," while incorporating vocal contributions from multiple artists such as Kwak Jin Eon, HEN, and Lee Jun-hyung.[38][39] The album comprises 44 tracks blending emotional ballads, introspective vocals, and atmospheric instrumentals designed to underscore the series' themes of ennui and quiet introspection.[39][40]OST singles were released progressively during the drama's broadcast on JTBC, starting with Part 1 on April 10, 2022, and continuing weekly to align with episode airings.[41] The full digital compilation album became available on May 29, 2022, matching the series finale date, via platforms distributed by YG Plus and JTBC Studios.[39][40] Physical CD editions, including a 68-page photobook and lyrics sheets, followed on June 3, 2022.[38] A vinyl reissue was later announced for November 25, 2025.[42]
Key Tracks and Impact
The soundtrack of My Liberation Notes includes 12 vocal original soundtracks (OSTs) released episodically alongside the series' airing from April to May 2022, complemented by instrumental pieces composed to evoke introspection and emotional restraint. Key vocal tracks emphasize melancholic ballads with piano-driven arrangements and subtle builds, aligning with the drama's exploration of mundane dissatisfaction and subtle personal growth. "Deeply" (푹) by Hen, released as OST Part 1 on April 10, 2022, features a minimalist piano introduction evolving into a layered chorus expressing unspoken longing, serving as an early thematic anchor for the protagonists' internal conflicts.[39][43] Similarly, "To Be Together" by Lee Jun-hyung (OST Part 2) and "Laggard" (뒤처져) by Shin Youme (OST Part 3) deliver acoustic guitar and vocal harmonies that underscore relational hesitancy and stagnation, released in April 2022 to coincide with pivotal sibling dynamics.[39] Later entries like "That Day" by Navi (OST Part 4) and "Kind of Confession (Male Version)" by Kwak Jin-eon maintain this subdued intensity, with the former's ethereal vocals reflecting fleeting hope.[39]Instrumental highlights, such as the titular "My Liberation Notes" track, employ surreal, ambient textures to heighten psychological tension during contemplative scenes, distinguishing the score from more upbeat K-drama OSTs.[9] The full OST compilation, totaling 44 tracks including instrumentals, was digitally released on May 29, 2022, via platforms like Spotify and Apple Music, amassing streams reflective of the series' cult following rather than mainstream chart dominance.[40][39]The tracks' impact lies in their restraint, enhancing the drama's slow-burn pacing without overpowering dialogue or visuals; reviewers noted how the melodic simplicity amplified themes of quiet despair and tentative renewal, contributing to the series' reputation for atmospheric depth.[9] While individual songs like "Deeply" garnered fan appreciation on streaming services for their emotional resonance, the OST as a whole did not secure dedicated music awards or top Korean charts such as Melon or Gaon, instead bolstering the drama's critical acclaim through synergistic mood-setting.[44] The contemplative style influenced listener playlists focused on introspective K-pop ballads, with the album's availability in physical formats like 2CD sets and vinyl underscoring niche collector interest post-broadcast.[45]
Broadcast and Release
Domestic Premiere
"My Liberation Notes" premiered on JTBC in South Korea on April 9, 2022, with episodes 1 and 2 airing back-to-back.[3][1] The series occupied JTBC's Saturday and Sunday 22:30 KST time slot, succeeding "Forecasting Love and Weather" and preceding "Cleaning Up".[3] It ran for 16 episodes until May 29, 2022, targeting adult audiences with its introspective narrative on emotional stagnation.[1][46]The premiere episode recorded a nationwide viewership rating of 2.941 percent per Nielsen Korea, equivalent to approximately 0.651 million viewers.[47][48] The second episode followed with 3.018 percent.[47] These figures reflected a modest start compared to JTBC's higher-rated predecessors, yet the drama's deliberate pacing and character-driven focus drew initial attention from critics and viewers attuned to slice-of-life storytelling.[48] Domestic broadcast emphasized the series' rural-urban divide and psychological depth, aligning with JTBC's reputation for nuanced weekend dramas.[46]
International Availability
"My Liberation Notes" premiered internationally on Netflix on April 9, 2022, aligning with its initial broadcast on JTBC in South Korea.[7][2] The platform offers the series with English subtitles and select dubbed audio options in regions such as the United States and Europe, enabling widespread accessibility for non-Korean audiences.[49]By mid-2022, the series had garnered significant global viewership on Netflix, topping charts in countries including Indonesia and ranking highly in non-domestic markets due to its availability across Netflix's subscription tiers, including ad-supported plans.[50][49] It is not distributed on competing platforms like Rakuten Viki outside South Korea, limiting options for viewers in regions without Netflix access.[51]As of October 2025, the full 16-episode season remains streamable on Netflix in major markets, with no confirmed removals or territorial restrictions reported beyond standard Netflix licensing variations.[2][49]
Reception
Viewership Ratings
"My Liberation Notes," which aired on JTBC from April 9 to May 29, 2022, achieved nationwide viewership ratings as measured by Nielsen Korea, starting at 2.941% for the premiere episode and peaking at 6.728% for the series finale.[47] The drama experienced fluctuations early in its run but demonstrated a marked upward trend in the latter half, with episodes 10 through 16 consistently surpassing 4%.[52] Average nationwide ratings stood at 4.091%, reflecting solid performance for a cable channel series amid competition from broadcast networks.[47]
Episode
Air Date
Nationwide (%)
Seoul (%)
1
2022-04-09
2.941
3.057
2
2022-04-10
3.018
3.236
3
2022-04-16
2.552
2.862
4
2022-04-17
2.325
2.292
5
2022-04-23
2.766
2.874
6
2022-04-24
3.832
3.971
7
2022-04-30
3.306
3.541
8
2022-05-01
3.876
4.155
9
2022-05-07
3.625
4.259
10
2022-05-08
4.594
5.242
11
2022-05-14
4.142
4.583
12
2022-05-15
4.969
5.603
13
2022-05-21
4.760
4.981
14
2022-05-22
6.073
6.547
15
2022-05-28
5.943
6.720
16
2022-05-29
6.728
7.616
Ratings data sourced from Nielsen Korea via aggregated reports.[47] Despite not competing with top broadcast dramas, the finale's 6.728% marked the highest for the series, underscoring growing audience engagement.[52]
Critical Reviews
Critics generally praised My Liberation Notes for its nuanced depiction of existential dissatisfaction and subtle character studies, though its deliberate pacing drew divided responses. The series holds a 94% Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 10 reviews, reflecting approval for its realistic portrayal of ordinary struggles without contrived resolutions.[4] Reviewers highlighted the show's strength in exploring themes of personal stagnation and quiet yearning through everyday routines, often likening it to a meditative slice-of-life narrative that prioritizes emotional authenticity over dramatic escalation.[53]Performances anchored much of the acclaim, particularly Son Suk-ku's portrayal of the reclusive Mr. Gu, whose minimal dialogue and haunted demeanor effectively conveyed profound isolation and trauma.[53] Kim Ji-won's lead as Yeom Mi-jeong similarly earned commendation for capturing the protagonist's internal conflict between routine drudgery and elusive self-liberation. A midseason assessment from the South China Morning Post deemed it "far and away the best drama on TV right now," emphasizing its poetic restraint in addressing millennial malaise without resorting to melodrama.[54]Conversely, detractors focused on the series' unhurried tempo and initial lack of narrative momentum. Jade Budowski of Decider recommended skipping it, critiquing the "slow start" marked by "bland characters" and an "overlong pilot" that tests viewer patience before deeper engagement emerges.[55] This sentiment echoed concerns that the emphasis on ambiguity and unresolved arcs, while thematically intentional, could alienate audiences seeking more conventional progression, though later episodes reportedly build emotional investment for those who persist.[55] Overall, the critical consensus positioned the drama as a rewarding but demanding work, rewarding sustained attention with insights into human inertia.
Audience Perspectives
Audiences have largely praised My Liberation Notes for its realistic depiction of mundane dissatisfaction and interpersonal dynamics, with viewers appreciating the series' introspective exploration of ordinary lives in rural South Korea. On IMDb, the drama holds an average rating of 8.2 out of 10 from over 6,600 user reviews, reflecting strong approval for its character-driven narrative and subtle emotional depth.[7] Similarly, aggregated viewer scores on MyDramaList hover around 8.5, where fans highlight the authenticity of the Yeom siblings' struggles with routine and unfulfillment, often describing it as a "healing" experience that resonates with those feeling stuck in adulthood.[1] Many international viewers, particularly on platforms like Quora, commend the slow pacing as a deliberate choice to mirror real-life tedium, contrasting it favorably with formulaic K-dramas and praising performances by leads Kim Ji-won and Son Suk-ku for conveying quiet despair without melodrama.[56]However, a notable subset of audiences found the deliberate slowness frustrating, criticizing it as overly meandering or lacking momentum, which led some to abandon early episodes. User reviews on MyDramaList include scores as low as 4 out of 10, with complaints centering on unresolved plot threads and the absence of escapist romance or high-stakes conflict, deeming it unsuitable for viewers seeking lighter fare.[57] Discussions among fans indicate a divide: those who persevere often report a rewarding payoff in the bittersweet finale, viewing the ambiguity as realistic liberation through self-acceptance, while others express irritation at the characters' perceived passivity, feeling unliberated rather than empathetic.[58] This polarization underscores the drama's appeal to introspective audiences tolerant of slice-of-life minimalism, but its niche status stems from alienating faster-paced preferences, as evidenced by varied rewatch values in reviews.[59]
Criticisms and Debates
Critics and viewers have frequently pointed to the series' deliberate slow pacing as a primary shortcoming, arguing that its minimal plot progression and extended scenes of mundane routine contribute to a sense of stagnation that mirrors the characters' ennui but risks alienating audiences seeking more dynamic storytelling.[60][61] In user reviews on platforms like MyDramaList and Reddit, multiple commentators described the tempo as "off" or meditative to the point of tedium, with one noting that "hardly anything happens, except slight shifts in mood," which, while intentional, demands significant patience from viewers unaccustomed to slice-of-life dramas.[61] This critique aligns with broader observations in K-drama discussions, where the 16-episode format amplifies the languid rhythm, leading some to abandon the series early despite its thematic depth.[62]Debates have also emerged around the portrayal of mental health issues, particularly the depiction of chronic numbness, depression, and alcoholism through characters like Mr. Gu, whose arc involves gradual emotional thawing without dramatic interventions.[63] Supporters, including fan analyses, praise this as a realistic examination of existential malaise in rural South Korea, avoiding clichéd resolutions and highlighting subtle acts of service as pathways to connection, as evidenced by discussions framing the show as therapeutic for those grappling with similar feelings.[64][65] However, detractors contend that the narrative risks romanticizing inaction and isolation, with some viewers interpreting the ambiguous "liberation" endings—such as the siblings' incremental shifts without full transformation—as potentially endorsing passivity over proactive change, a point raised in Reddit threads questioning whether the resolution provides genuine catharsis or merely aestheticizes despair.[66] These perspectives underscore a divide between those valuing the show's unflinching realism and others who find its unrelenting bleakness, including themes of familial dysfunction and workplace drudgery, excessively draining without sufficient uplift.[67] No large-scale controversies directly tied to the production or content have surfaced, though post-release scrutiny of lead actor Kim Soo-hyun's personal life in 2025 indirectly spotlighted cast dynamics via co-star Lee El's public comments on accountability in industry scandals.[68]
Accolades
Major Awards
My Liberation Notes received its principal recognition at the 59th Baeksang Arts Awards held on April 28, 2023, where screenwriter Park Hae-young won the Best Screenplay for Television category. This marked the second consecutive Baeksang screenplay victory for Park, following her win for My Mister in 2018, highlighting the series' acclaimed narrative depth exploring themes of existential stagnation and personal reinvention. The Baeksang Arts Awards, established in 1965, are South Korea's most prestigious honors for film, television, and theater, selected by a panel of industry professionals, critics, and academics. No other major awards were secured by the production or its cast in leading international or domestic ceremonies such as the APAN Star Awards, despite nominations in screenplay and supporting actress categories.[69]
Nominations and Recognitions
My Liberation Notes received multiple nominations at the 59th Baeksang Arts Awards in 2023, a prestigious ceremony recognizing excellence in Korean television and film.[70] The series was nominated for Best Drama, competing against The Glory, Our Blues, Extraordinary Attorney Woo, and Little Women.[70]Son Suk-ku earned a nomination for Best Actor for his portrayal of Mr. Gu.[70]Kim Ji-won was nominated for Best Actress for her role as Yeom Mi-jeong.[71]Additional nominations included Best Supporting Actress for Lee El.[72] Reports indicate the drama secured a total of seven nominations across various categories, highlighting its critical acclaim for writing, direction, and performances.[73]At the 13th Korea Drama Awards in 2022, supporting actor Lee Ki-woo received a nomination for his role in the series.[74] These recognitions underscore the production's recognition within the South Korean entertainment industry for its introspective storytelling and ensemble acting.