JamFlix

Bite Me

Drama, Comedy • 2021 • 48m

01

I Need You

0

Aek, a student rider who loves cooking, unexpectedly meets Aue, a lonely chef, beginning an unlikely bond

02

Your Dream

0

Aue is impressed by Aek’s cooking and hires him, but a mysterious woman sparks doubt and hidden insecurity

03

Painful Memories

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Eve revives Aue’s past pain, yet Aek’s quiet support helps him heal as their bond deepens at the restaurant

04

The Pastry Chef

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New romances form as Aue grows surer of his feelings and brings Aek to meet his beloved mother

05

Hometown

0

Misunderstandings push Aek to leave Aue behind and return home, questioning love, dreams, and intention

06

Realization

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Filled with regret, Aue follows Aek to Nan, where both finally confront the feelings they’ve been denying

07

Come and Bite Me

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Encouraged by his brother, Aue resolves to be honest and brave enough to confess his feelings to Aek

08

Competition

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Under pressure in a timed cooking battle, Aek faces rivals and must prove his worth to become The Chef

09

What is Love?

0

After a sudden accident, Aek spirals into guilt and doubt, struggling to understand love and himself

10

Promise

0

As the contest ends, Aue and Aek learn that love isn’t about winning or losing, but choosing each other

11

Finale

0

With dreams fulfilled, Aue and Aek cook, travel, and share a peaceful future built on love together

Cast

Reviews

trashbeingJul 2022

** SPOILERS BELOW!** I wanted to like this more than I did (seriously so badly) as I can tell that a lot of passion went into how they filmed it, the pure love of Thailand and it's food/culture really can be felt in this drama... but did not focus on the relationship between the two male leads enough and it will be judged and criticized as such. The focus of this drama is food, and if you go in with the expectation of it being a passionate and interesting romance, you will be disappointed. This drama is slower than a slow burn... there is no burn, so you just feel frustrated for most of it. The good part of this drama (I have to hold onto the good to justify why I watched literally all of it), is about how food is a huge meaning of retaining cultural identity, and how it rooted in family history, and in some ways related to poverty and upbringing. Those relationships between Aek and his mother were the most compelling aspect of this drama, and had it been marketed as a family/lifestyle drama with a side of BL it may have been more well received. Especially with the story ark of Aek's internal self-conflict about his attraction to Aue and his confusion about his own sexual identity. Those scenes with him and his mother were the soul of this show, and I would like to see them perform together again sometime. The cinematography of this show was stunning, the long shots, some astounding scenery shots of Thailand, and elegant close ups were all beautifully done. It was very visually interesting to watch, and it helps that Mark Jumlongkul (Aek) is possibly one of the most beautiful people I have ever seen in my life. Especially when he actually gets to act somewhat normal (like in the very final scene of the drama) and doesn't just stare at Aue and not say anything .... looking at the writers for that one That could not save some of the dialogue, side characters that were wholly uninteresting and unnecessary, and I was not invested in the secondary romance at all even if they got more lovely-dovey screen time. This show had so much potential, and could of benefited from a meaner editing floor, some more natural not-at-work interaction between our male leads, trimmed down supporting cast and maybe better dialogue.

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