Your Ultimate Wi Ha-Joon Drama Guide
Can’t wait to see how 'Little Women' concludes? Still wary of Choi Do-il’s motives? Why not cross another Wi Ha-joon drama off your list in the meantime?
How much do we love thee, Wi Ha-joon? Let us count the ways.
If you’ve been glued to your screens on weekend nights, trying to understand what the heck is going on in Little Women, well… you’re not alone. And just like Oh In-joo unnie, you’ve probably fallen captive to the mysterious charms of Wi Ha-joon’s Choi Do-il. Do we trust him? Current events have us swaying one way, but as with all things Little Women, we’re never too sure. Even with just two episodes left.

Born and raised on the island of Soando in South Jeolla Province, Wi Ha-joon studied theater and film at Sungkyul University before debuting in 2012. K-drama veterans have probably met Wi Ha-joon in Something in the Rain, in which he took on a supporting role as Jung Hae-in’s character’s younger brother.
Most of us, however, took notice of him in the critically acclaimed series Squid Game, where he played the courageous police officer Hwang Jun-ho. Ha-joon has received multiple nominations for Best New Actor, including a Baeksang Arts Award one for his work in Romance is a Bonus Book. Although his time as Choi Do-il is coming to an end, we will be seeing him very soon in the horror period thriller Gyeongseong Creature alongside Park Seo-joon and Han So-hee.

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While waiting with bated breath for Little Women’s last two episodes this weekend, why not go through our Wi Ha-joon drama guide and cross another one of this hottie’s works off your to-watch list?
Below, we list the complete 10 K-dramas you can see this up-and-coming hunk of an actor in, including guest appearances and leading roles, so you don't miss a thing.

Your Ultimate Wi Ha-Joon Drama Guide
Your Ultimate Wi Ha-Joon Drama Guide
By Metro.StyleNovember 29 2023, 3:53 PM
Goodbye Mr Black
Based on a manhwa of the same name, Goodbye Mr Black is a The Count of Monte Cristo-esque romance thriller drama starring Lee Jin-wook as Cha Ji-won, a Navy SEAL demolitions officer branded as a traitor due to a former friend’s machinations. He is then exiled to another country, but returns with a new identity and a plan to exact revenge.
My Golden Life
This drama revolves around two families, piecing together multiple storylines that contrast their day-to-day realities. Park Si-hoo stars as Choi Do-kyung, a third generation chaebol born into the wealthy Choi family as well as the only heir to Haeseong Group and the head of its strategic planning team. Shin Hye-sun is Seo Ji-an, a probationary employee in the same company who dreams of getting hired for a full-time position. She is cheerful and hard-working, but is also struggling financially as her father went bankrupt years ago. Somehow, she gets a chance to alter her circumstances and live as she were someone else when she is sent by her mother to live with the Choi family.
Something in the Rain
This popular noona drama is famous for pairing together Jung Hae-in and Son Ye-jin, as well as for marking Ye-jin’s return to the small screen after five years. It explores the relationship between Yoon Jin-ah (Ye-jin), a 35-year-old store supervisor who wants more out of life. She finds herself falling in love with Seo Joon-hee (Jae-in), a 31-year-old character animation designer as well as her best friend’s younger brother.
Something in the Rain
The drama chronicles the ups and downs of their unconventional romance—their age difference is considered taboo in some circles—as well as other factors concerning social status (associating with people who are “below” one’s wealth class or educational attainment), career (women being expected to flirt with male colleagues during team dinners), and even food (an older woman buying food for a younger man signifies a brother-sister relationship).
Matrimonial Chaos
A Korean adaptation of the J-Drama Saikou no Rikon, Matrimonial Chaos casts the spotlight on two couples doing their best to iron out the kinks in their relationships. It unravels the intricacies of give and take, of wanting love but having difficulty expressing it, and about sacrificing one’s happiness for the other but deserving something in return. Cha Tae-hyun is Jo Seok-moo, a 36-year-old recluse who is very stubborn; Bae Doona is Kang Hwi-roo, his 35-year-old wife who is easygoing and likes to take things at a slow pace; Lee El is Jin Yoo-young, an introverted but smart woman; Son Suk-ku is Lee Jang-hyun, Yoo-young’s charismatic love interest who is pursued by multiple admirers.
Romance is a Bonus Book
Life isn’t going all that great for Kang Dan-i (Lee Na-young), a former topnotch copywriter trying to re-enter the workforce after a year of recuperating from an accident. This was because she stepped in to save Cha Eun-ho (Lee Jong-suk), a successful author and chief editor at a book publishing company. They became good friends, but this relationship grew strained after she decided to date and later marry her inconsiderate boyfriend. In the present, Dan-i is an unemployed divorced single mother working as a temporary task support team member in the same company Eun-ho is part of. Due to the financial hardships she is going through, she secretly works as Eun-ho’s housekeeper as well.
Soul Mechanic
This drama follows a team of psychiatrists employed at Eun Kang Psychiatric Hospital as they help their patients achieve total healing. Their unique approach to dealing with mental health issues grants them an enviable success record, and this is all thanks to the doctors’ solid commitment to their patients, going as far as to think of novel ways to cure them and guide them to leading normal lives. The eccentric Lee Shi-joon (Shin Ha-kyun) is the star of the show, often getting into trouble with his supervisors because of his radical healing methods. He gets assigned to look after Han Woo-joo (Jung So-min), a celebrity with anger management issues.
18 Again
If you could go back in time to undo your mistakes in life, would you? Well, that’s what happens to Hong Dae-young (Yoon Sang-hyun at 37; Lee Do-hyun at 18), whose happy marriage starts crumbling when his wife files for divorce and his children distance themselves. Making a wish, he miraculously morphs back into his teenage body but keeps his adult outlook. He assumes the name Go Woo-young and enrolls in the school where his children go, eventually learning more about them and understanding the circumstances that led to his fractured family life.
Squid Game
Netflix’s most-watched series became the top viewed programme in over 90 countries, edging out shows such as Bridgerton and The Witcher. It received multiple accolades from numerous international award-giving bodies such as the Golden Globe Awards, Emmy Awards, and Screen Actors Guild Awards.
Squid Game
Squid Game is a survival thriller that focuses on economic class struggles in South Korea and issues that stem from capitalism on a global level. Numerous individuals, all in some form of debt, are handpicked to compete in a series of deadly children’s games. For every player that is eliminated, the cash prize increases, allowing the ugly side of human nature to rear its head as the remaining competitors eschew morality to increase their chances of winning the game.
Squid Game
Ha-joon infiltrates the game as undercover detective Hwang Jun-ho, who later learns that his missing brother is actually the Front Man, the one responsible for all this madness. The end of the first season leads us to believe that his character has been killed off, but we’re still hoping to see Jun-ho in the sequel. After all, they never show us his body.
Bad and Crazy
Corrupt and ambitious detective Ryu Su-yeol (Lee Dong-wook) is great at his job, but utilizes questionable methods to support his equally questionable ethics. All is well until K (Wi Ha-joon), a crazy guy in a helmet, shows up. His solution to injustice? Punch the living daylights out of it.
Bad and Crazy
This is a terrific role for Ha-joon, who finally gets to loosen up and show us another side to him. There’s the added extra challenge of him and Dong-wook essentially playing the same character—Su-yeol suffers from a split personality disorder—and it’s amazing to see the actors portray two sides of the same coin. Can we get these two in another drama together, pretty please?
Little Women
With the finale just around the corner, it’s almost surprising how we’re still in the dark about a lot of things. Loosely based on Louisa May Alcott’s famous novel of the same name, Little Women follows the lives of three sisters: Oh In-joo (Kim Go-eun), the eldest sister who laments growing up and wants to earn as much money as she can to provide for her family; Oh In-kyung (Nam Ji-hyun, the middle sister whose righteous nature often finds her in trouble due to her work as a reporter; and Oh In-hye (Park Ji-hu), the youngest sister who is artistically gifted but has a tendency to be callous when she feels smothered by her family’s attention. All three become involved in the case of 70 billion won going missing, and they find themselves going toe-to-toe with one of the most powerful families in Korea.
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