I have been watching a Korean drama called 'Crash Landing on You'.
It's about a wealthy South Korean heiress who goes paragliding and gets caught up in sudden winds and then swept in North Korea. She is then found and hidden by an impossibly dashing and morally upstanding North Korean army officer.
It's fantastic. Plot twists at whiplash frequency, the Mr Darcy of North Korea, fascinating portrayal of daily life in North Korea and really funny too. Anyone who loves a good fluffy rom-com will enjoy this immensely.
A paragliding mishap drops a South Korean heiress in North Korea -- and into the life of an army officer, who decides he will help her hide.
www.netflix.com
I've just finished watching this, at your suggestion.
Fun, though often oddly paced* and frequent shifts between comedy, action, sentimental romance, etc.
Episodes are an hour and a half, give or take, so I usually watched one per night, two when I had time.
The episode structure seemed to be
Scene (which often repeated last scene of the previous episode, often from another perspective or continuing on from where it had left off)
Credits sequence
Scene
Title card
An hour+ of scenes, moving between different groups of characters and usually including scenes in both North and South Korea, and sometimes elsewhere -- sometimes brief flashbacks/memories or montages, often using footage from previous (or in some cases future) episodes
A scene that ends with a freeze frame on a cliffhanger/hook
Followed by an epilogue that is usually a flashback of some kind -- either showing events from years earlier that have bearing on the current situation, or a look at what had been happening offscreen during the leadup to the final scene, to explain how characters got in position to show up unexpectedly, etc.
This took some getting used to. The lesson I learned was not to turn off the TV after the freeze frame, because there would be another scene afterward that contained important information.
Also that opening scenes that appear to be something I'd already watched were not just "previouslies" but were going to show a different perspective on what had already been shown.
And the denouement in the last episode took a long time to get from the point where all seemed resolved in a bittersweet way until a more satisfying resolution to the main plot thread.