Another Miss Oh -2016-- Korean With English Sub... (iPhone)
Unlike fantasy dramas where the hero is a vampire or alien, Do-kyung’s ability to see the future is limited, painful, and arguably a curse. He sees a future where he is happy with the "Ordinary" Oh Hae-young, but also visions of her death. The drama uses this not as a gimmick, but as a philosophical question: If you know love will end in tragedy, do you still pursue it?
Another Miss Oh is not a gentle, feel-good rom-com. It is a raw, at times painful, exploration of how we hurt the ones we love when we hate ourselves. But it’s also deeply funny, passionately acted, and ultimately hopeful. If you can stomach the shouting and tears, you’ll find one of the most honest love stories K-dramas have ever produced.
Recommended for: Fans of My Mister, Because This Is My First Life, or It’s Okay to Not Be Okay—anyone who wants romance with psychological depth.
Rating: ★★★★½ (9/10) – A modern classic of the genre. Another Miss Oh -2016-- Korean with English sub...
You can have the best script in the world, but without chemistry, a romance fails. Seo Hyun-jin and Eric Mun deliver volcanic performances. Seo Hyun-jin, in particular, earned the Baeksang Arts Award for Best Actress for this role because she is unafraid to be ugly. She cries with snot running down her face, she screams until her voice cracks, and she laughs with reckless abandon. Eric Mun plays the stoic, traumatized male lead perfectly, but his eventual emotional breakdown is devastatingly real.
Nearly every character makes cruel, avoidable mistakes. Do-kyung ruins a man's life out of revenge. Hae-young lashes out destructively. The show doesn’t excuse these actions but shows how shame and regret can either imprison you or force you to grow.
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The story revolves around Oh Hae-young (played by Seo Hyun-jin). She is a vibrant, somewhat clumsy, and emotionally raw sound effects artist for films. She is engaged to a man named Han Tae-jin (Lee Jae-yoon), but days before the wedding, he suddenly disappears without a trace, leaving her humiliated and heartbroken.
Enter the second Oh Hae-young (played by Jeon Hye-bin). She is the "Pretty Oh Hae-young"—wealthy, successful, elegant, and the former lover of the male lead, Park Do-kyung (Eric Mun). Do-kyung is a film director suffering from a strange psychic ability: he can see "flashes" of the future. Unlike fantasy dramas where the hero is a
The Catalyst: On the day of his own wedding to the "Pretty" Oh Hae-young, Do-kyung is abruptly abandoned. Believing he was jilted by her, he uses his influence to ruin her fiancé’s career. Here is the twist: Do-kyung actually ruined the other Oh Hae-young’s (the "Ordinary" one) fiancé by mistake. He targeted the wrong woman.
The premise sets up a dark, painful comedy of errors. The "Ordinary" Oh Hae-young has no idea why her life collapsed. Do-kyung, wracked with guilt, finds himself drawn to her chaos, leading to a volatile, screaming, crying, kissing relationship that redefines the "enemies to lovers" trope.
The story revolves around two women with the same name: Oh Hae-young. Skip if you dislike: The story revolves around
One day, "Ordinary" Oh Hae-young is unexpectedly abandoned by her fiancé just one day before their wedding. As it turns out, Park Do-kyung—triggered by a past grudge—deliberately ruined "Pretty" Oh Hae-young’s wedding, but he mistakenly destroyed the wrong couple's life. Consumed by guilt, Do-kyung finds himself drawn to the devastated "Ordinary" Oh Hae-young. Complicating matters, Do-kyung has recently developed a strange ability: he can see brief, traumatic visions of his future—including himself lying dead after a car accident.
Since this is a licensed drama, the availability depends on your region, but here are the official platforms where it is typically hosted with English subtitles: