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    Home » Entertainment » Reviews » Web Series Review » Notes From the Last Row Review: Netflix’s Slow-Burn Korean Thriller Is Worth Every Minute
    Web Series Review

    Notes From the Last Row Review: Netflix’s Slow-Burn Korean Thriller Is Worth Every Minute

    Netflix's latest Korean thriller is exactly the kind of show you think you can stop watching — and then suddenly it is two in the morning and you are already on episode four.
    By Mohan NasreJune 27, 2026
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    Notes From the Last Row Review: Netflix's Slow-Burn Korean Thriller Is Worth Every Minute

    Notes From the Last Row Review: ★★★★☆ (4/5)

    Choi Min-sik and Choi Hyun-wook deliver mesmerizing performances in a slow-burning psychological thriller that keeps you questioning reality until the very end. Netflix’s Notes From the Last Row is a gripping Korean psychological thriller with six-episodes. A mysterious student, a frustrated professor, and an obsession that spirals into something far darker than either of them expected.


    Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5)
    Director: Kim Kyu-tae
    Platform: Netflix
    Episodes: 6
    Cast: Choi Min-sik, Choi Hyun-wook, Kim Yunjin, Huh Joon-ho, Jin Kyung
    Language: Korean


    Notes From the Last Row is the kind of show that sneaks up on you.

    The first episode looks, on the surface, like a quiet drama about a bitter literature professor who has stopped believing in himself. Nothing about it screams thriller. And then, slowly, almost imperceptibly, the show begins to pull the floor out from under you.

    By episode three, you are no longer sure what is real.

    The story centres on Professor Heo Mun-oh, played by Choi Min-sik. He is a failed novelist who wrote one book twenty years ago, received criticism he could not recover from, and has spent the years since teaching students he openly disdains. Then a paper from a quiet, unremarkable student in the last row of his class catches his eye.

    The student, Lee Kang, played by Choi Hyun-wook, writes about real people and real situations in his life with a precision and vividness that the professor finds impossible to resist. Mun-oh offers to mentor him privately, pays him for his time, and waits impatiently for each new instalment of the story. The more he reads, the more he needs.

    And that is where the show gets interesting — and unsettling.

    The series is loosely adapted from a Spanish play, and it carries that theatrical DNA in the best possible way. Everything is about what is said, what is withheld, and what is slowly revealed. Each conversation between the professor and his student operates on at least two levels at once, and the show trusts the audience to hold both meanings simultaneously.

    Choi Min-sik is extraordinary.

    He plays Mun-oh as a man whose ego and insecurity exist in constant, exhausting conflict. You feel his hunger for validation, his resentment of younger talent, his growing awareness that he is being manipulated and his inability to stop anyway. It is a performance built on small, precise choices — a flicker of jealousy, a moment of recognition, a smile that does not quite reach his eyes.

    Choi Hyun-wook, as the student, is the quiet revelation of the series.

    Known mostly for youthful, likeable roles, he plays Lee Kang as deliberately unreadable. You cannot tell, for most of the runtime, whether he is naive or calculating. Whether his writing reflects genuine observation or something more deliberate. That ambiguity is the show’s central engine, and Hyun-wook maintains it with impressive restraint.

    The two of them together are magnetic in a deeply uncomfortable way.

    The supporting cast fills in the world around them effectively. Kim Yunjin and Huh Joon-ho add texture and subplot threads that expand the show’s thematic reach, even if some of those threads get less resolution than they deserve.

    Also Read: Lingam Web Series Review

    The show’s one genuine weakness is its final episode.

    After five episodes of carefully controlled tension and deliberate ambiguity, the last hour delivers an exposition dump that explains too much too quickly. It is not a fatal flaw, but it does slightly deflate what should have been the most unsettling hour of the six.

    Still, what you carry out of Notes From the Last Row is the unease. The feeling that storytelling — the act of shaping narrative, deciding what gets written and what gets left out — is its own form of power. And its own form of danger.

    A must-watch for anyone who enjoys Korean psychological thrillers.

    Notes From the Last Row is now streaming on Netflix. All 6 episodes available.

    K-Drama Korean Netflix Web Series to Watch
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    Mohan Nasre

      With over 2000 articles and blogs to his name for Flickonclick, Mohan Nasre is a versatile content writer skilled in multiple niches, including entertainment, technology, finance, news, lifestyle, fitness, and more. His dynamic writing style and ability to adapt to diverse topics have made him a go-to writer for high-quality, engaging content that resonates with readers across various industries.

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