To My Star 2 (Movie) poster
#1876 This Week

To My Star 2 (Movie)

To My Star 2 (Movie)  ·  2023, South Korea
7.7
3,263 ratings
1
Film
0
Watchlisted
● Completed 🕑 2023

Kang Seo Joon was once one of South Korea’s top actors. But his career took a nosedive, and he fell into a funk of depression and despair. Some time ago, he met a handsome young chef by the name of Han Ji Woo. Although…

Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Episodes
Reviews (4)

After the blissful ending of Season 1, actor Kang Seo Joon’s world shatters when his beloved chef, Han Ji Woo, suddenly disappears, leaving behind nothing but a cryptic note. A year later, a heartbroken Seo Joon traces Ji Woo to his small rural hometown, where the latter is struggling to keep his Italian restaurant afloat. Determined to understand why their perfect relationship fell apart, Seo Joon inserts himself into Ji Woo’s quiet countryside life—befriending locals, helping with the menu, and slowly unraveling the deep-seated fears that made Ji Woo run away. This emotionally charged film (a compilation of the series with new scenes) explores love, abandonment, and the courage to be vulnerable. Through stunning rural cinematography and raw performances, *To My Star 2* delivers a mature, heart-wrenching journey of reconciliation that proves some loves are worth fighting for—even when the silence is deafening.

Episode data is coming soon.

7.7
out of 10
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FR
fluffy_romance_lover
February 2025
10/10
I ugly-cried through half of this movie. Seo Joon’s relentless pursuit of Ji Woo even when Ji Woo kept pushing him away—it’s the most beautiful, painful love story I’ve ever seen. Their reconciliation had me sobbing happy tears. This is what BL should feel like.
LP
logical_plot_watcher
March 2025
7/10
I get why the breakup happened, but it still felt like a retcon after the perfect ending of season 1. Some of the melodrama dragged, and Ji Woo's coldness wore thin after a while. That said, the second half found its footing and the character arcs were surprisingly solid. A flawed but worthwhile sequel.
CE
cinematic_eye
January 2025
9/10
Every frame is a painting. The way the camera lingers on Ji Woo’s isolated kitchen, the golden-hour shots of the countryside, the intimate close-ups during the arguments—it’s a masterclass in visual storytelling. Director Hwang Da Seul understands that emotion lives in the spaces between words.
SL
social_lens_observer
April 2025
8/10
I appreciate that Ji Woo’s insecurity and fear of abandonment are treated with empathy rather than demonization. The show asks us to understand why someone might push love away to protect themselves. Also, the non-judgmental rural community accepting the gay couple felt like a quiet but powerful statement for Korean BL.