Netflix K-drama The Price of Confession review: Jeon Do-yeon, Kim Go-eun in prestige pulp

南华早报
2025.12.05 08:00
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Netflix's K-drama "The Price of Confession" stars Jeon Do-yeon and Kim Go-eun in a murder mystery thriller. The show, rated 3.5/5 stars, features bold performances and punchy scripting, though it requires patience through its slower first half. The plot involves art teacher An Yun-su, who becomes a murder suspect, and inmate Mo-eun, who offers to take the blame. The series explores themes of media pressure and moral boundaries, with a dynamic cast and a mix of prestige and pulp.

3.5/5 stars\nLead cast: Jeon Do-yeon, Kim Go-eun, Park Hae-soo\nAcclaimed Korean actresses Jeon Do-yeon (Crash Course in Romance) and Kim Go-eun (You and Everything Else) face off in the dynamic small-screen thriller The Price of Confession, a murder mystery balancing prestige and pulp with a wealth of twists.\nBold performances and punchy scripting by Kwon Jong-kwan – better known as the director of Sad Movie and Proof of Innocence – make the show a binge-worthy experience, though patience is required to navigate the slower, predictable first half before reaching the dizzying, eyebrow-raising second act.\n\n\nJeon is An Yun-su, a free-spirited art teacher married to a painter and mother to a young daughter. Her happy life shatters one evening when she discovers her husband stabbed in his studio. He dies in her arms, leaving her grief-stricken.\nFollowing her husband’s funeral, a dark chapter begins as she becomes the prime suspect in his murder.\nWith damning evidence mounting against her, she is sent to prison, where she awaits trial. There, she meets inmate Mo-eun (Kim), also awaiting trial for poisoning an affluent couple and lingering at the scene, a crime for which she has been dubbed the “Witch”.\nMo-eun approaches Yun-su with a dangerous proposition. She will take the blame for the murder of Yun-su’s husband – she has confessed to the other crimes already – in return for a grim favour, hence the show title.\n\nPursuing Yun-su is police officer turned prosecutor Baek Dong-hoon (Park Hae-soo, Squid Game season one), who becomes increasingly fixated on her following Mo-eun’s confession, which he does not believe.\nComing to Yun-su’s aid is her kind and idealistic new lawyer Jang Jeong-gu (Jin Seon-kyu, Aema). These and other characters expand the scope of the story once Yun-su is let out on bail.\nJeon, as usual, delivers a compelling turn as the mother and widow whose life takes a dark turn. Although Dong-hoon is convinced of her guilt, the show is less concerned with deceiving the audience.\nWhile we doubt she murdered her husband, the tension stems from her new circumstances and her relationship with Mo-eun, and whether they could reshape her moral boundaries, particularly as she fights to protect her young daughter.\n\nMore opaque is Mo-eun, a character who is crafty, meticulous and seemingly unhinged.\nThe role is a strong showcase for Kim’s versatility as a performer. Though the necessarily contrived nature of Mo-eun’s development strips the character of the nuance of some of her best roles (as in last year’s romcom Love in the Big City), it remains a magnetic performance.\nThere is a nuanced evolution in the shifting sympathies between these very different women and plenty of pleasing psychological gymnastics, but The Price of Confession also offers a range of other thematic treats.\nAmong those is the media circus that builds around Yun-su and Mo-eun, placing unusual pressure on the lawyers and prosecutors assigned to their cases.\n\nThe series garnered attention long before production, initially for Kwon’s buzzy script and later for its turbulent casting. Director Lee Eung-bok (Sweet Home) and stars Song Hye-kyo (The Glory) and Han So-hee (My Name) were originally attached, but all departed, citing scheduling or creative differences.\nYet it is now hard to imagine the show without leads Jeon and Kim, who both lend an aura of respectability to a story that on occasion skirts close to being trashy fun rather than a brooding psychological thriller.\nSomewhat less noticeable is the contribution of Lee Jung-hyo, the Crash Landing on You director who stepped in to take the helm.\nWhile his direction is slick, the show rarely excels stylistically, and the tone and pacing are not always consistent. Tight procedural sections are sometimes undercut by incongruous melodramatic detours serving as filler.\n\nNot every twist lands with a snap, but that is the price you pay with a densely plotted show like The Price of Confession, which peaks a little too early but remains involving from start to finish.\nThe Price of Confession is streaming on Netflix.\n