This week, I just watched the last episode of the Korean BL Always Meet Again, and my heart has gone through an actual time loop. It is not a follow-up of A Breeze of Love, but we get to see our cuties sharing screen again in yet another BL, in a darker, more adult, and more tragic and disastrous form. I am glad they reunited with Shin Jeong-you and Woo Ji-han, since their chemistry is the lightning one catches only once in a lifetime.
The Art of the Regretful Return
I am immediately drawn into the mini-series because Jang Hye-seong (Woo Ji-Han) is a well-known painter who is evidently troubled by something. He goes to his former high school to lecture there and gets hold of his old sketchbook. He attracts his first love, Lee U-jin (Shin Jeong-You), on a whim, and as soon as the pencil gets out of the paper, the world changes. He found himself in 2008 as an 18-year-old.

The immediate feeling of dread, in the form of nostalgia, annoys me in the first two episodes. Hye-seong knows what happens. He is aware of the coming accident. I liked it when he tried to separate himself from U-jin at once to rescue him. But U-jin? U-jin is an absolute flirt. He is immoral, relentless, and his crooked smile is such that Hye-seong, and honestly, I, can’t stay defensive for long.
The Mid- Series Heartbreak (Episodes 3-4)
I am already completely engaged in their second chance dates by episode 3. The scene of the sketchbook is so tender that it is painfully so. They are cheerful, and it is at this point that I realized that the writers were going to turn the knife.
The breakdown began in episode 4. Hye-seong believes that the only possible solution to rescue U-jin is a clean break. He stands him up. He acts cold. He tells him he’s going abroad. The image of U-jin with his heartbroken face at the train station literally broke me. However, the show throws another huge plot twist: U-jin spotted Hye-seong glitch or vanish! It is even messier than I imagined that the current timeline is. The sister and his best friend Tae-jun have been secretly burying the truth about the memorial day. I am enraged with the characters who are on the side, yet I also recognize his wrongly placed motive to shield himself against his own culpability.
An Imagery and Sound Masterpiece
Last but not least, I need to discuss the value of production since it makes it feel like a high-end indie film. The use of color is genius. When Hye-seong touches U-jin, the color may fade, or there may be some immobility on the screen, which seems like the universe opposing their union. It reminds me of Color Rush with a much more grounded and melancholic performance.
Another perfection level is the OST. This hollow-echoing quality of the instrumental pieces in the art room scenes makes the silence seem heavy. I was already searching up the Spotify playlist even before the episode was over. Whenever the piano picks up on a staring match, I realize that I am losing yet another part of my soul to the bl.
The Climax and the Philosophy of Fate (Episodes 5-7)
The logic of time travel becomes somewhat confusing in the later episodes, yet I personally do not care. I am here because I want the emotions and not the physics. Hye-seong understands that he could be the very thing that drives U-jin to the tragedy that he is attempting to avoid.

I do like the change in the story here. It does not matter whether it is changing the past or living the present to the full extent. It is the best angst to see them going through the fear of the accident that is about to happen, and yet they decide to love one another. In episode 6, they simply look at one another, and you can have a glimpse of the soul of 35-year-old Hye-seong through the eyes of his 18-year-old self. It is haunting.
A Bittersweet Exhale
I have only just watched episode 8, and I am still processing. It ends somewhat of an anti-climax as it lacks a big blast and a 20-minute wedding, but I believe it fits the introverted soul of the show.
The resolution of the accident is silent. It is concerned with the internal transformation of the characters, not merely an outer plot to fill. The only fact I regret is that it was so sudden. The episodes are not longer than 30 minutes, and the finale seemed to deserve an additional 10 minutes so that we could sit with them and enjoy the silence. We should certainly have an episode special or an epilogue version, to give the after of it all.
This is like A Breeze of Love except that you will be bearing a much heavier emotional burden. It is a narrative of the burden of the unsaid and the horrific loveliness of the second chance. I am, in fact, a fanatic, and I shall be prescribing this to all who like a good soul-destroying romance. At this point, however, I will excuse myself and proceed to listen to the OST and weep into my pillow.
Drama Info & Ratings
- Title: Always Meet Again (2026)
- Episodes: 8
- Genre: Romance, Youth, Fantasy
- Main Cast: Woo Ji-Han, Shin Jeong-You
- Where to Watch: GagaOOLala
- Overall Score 8/10
- Story 8.5/10
- Acting 9.5/10
- Cinematography 10/10
- Rewatch Value: 8/10
Check Out: Korean BL “The Story of Bi Hyeong” Review

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