Rumors suggest that the producers had a dispute over international rights. The film’s distributor went bankrupt in 2020. Until the rights are bought by a major streamer, My Secret Partner remains in copyright limbo—hence its popularity on Dramacool.
This genre-bending is precisely why the movie gained a cult following. It rewards viewers who stay past the 45-minute mark. If you’re watching My Secret Partner on Dramacool (or any platform), look out for these pivotal moments: 1. The Contract Scene (18:00) Yoo-na slides a single sheet of paper across a café table. The terms: "Partner for 6 months. No questions about my past. You must obey any instruction." Seung-jin signs without reading. You immediately know he is doomed. 2. The Office Rooftop (54:00) Yoo-na reveals she has been sleeping with their married CEO to obtain financial data. Seung-jin vomits over the railing. It’s the film’s most realistic reaction—no heroic monologue, just visceral disgust. 3. The Mirror Monologue (1:22:00) Before the climax, Yoo-na talks to herself in a bathroom mirror. She practices smiling, then crying, then screaming. Lee Chae-young delivers this without cuts. It foreshadows her final, terrifying breakdown. 4. The Final Betrayal (1:40:00) Without spoiling: the "secret partner" of the title is revealed to be two people. One is Yoo-na. The other… is someone who has been in every single scene but never spoke a line. The twist re-contextualizes the entire movie. Is "My Secret Partner" Based on a True Story? (And Other FAQs) Q: Is this a true story? No. But the writer, Park Geun-young, claimed in a 2020 interview that the character of Kang Yoo-na was inspired by a 2009 corporate embezzlement case in Seoul where a female executive manipulated three junior employees.
steals the show as Kang Yoo-na. She is not a villain who twirls a mustache; she is chillingly realistic. Her Yoo-na uses soft whispers and fake tears to control men. In one unforgettable scene, she burns a contract while maintaining eye contact and smiling. Lee Chae-young later admitted in an interview that she studied real-life "corporate psychopaths" for the role. Genre-Bending: Why It's Not Your Typical Dramacool Watch Most users on Dramacool search for standard K-dramas: Boys Over Flowers , Descendants of the Sun , True Beauty . My Secret Partner is different. It belongs to a sub-genre Korean critics call "오피스 느와르" (Office Noir). Romance? Not exactly. Yes, there are steamy scenes. Yes, Seung-jin and Yoo-na share a bed. But this is not a love story. It is a study of toxic dependency. Yoo-na never loves Seung-jin—she collects him like a tool. Hardcore rom-com fans may feel betrayed. Fans of psychological thrillers will be thrilled. Thriller? Mostly. The second half abandons romance entirely. When Yoo-na’s ex-lover (a prosecutor with a grudge) shows up, the film turns into a cat-and-mouse game involving wiretaps, forged ledgers, and a murder cover-up. Black Comedy? Subtly. CEO Ma’s absurd greed provides moments of dark humor. In one scene, he tries to fire Seung-jin while eating fried chicken, getting grease all over the termination letter. It’s bleakly funny.
Dramacool operates in a legal gray area. While many users report no issues with My Secret Partner specifically, we advise using an ad-blocker and VPN. Better yet, check if the movie is available for digital rental on Amazon Prime or YouTube Movies in your region (occasionally, it appears under the title The Hidden Contract ). How "My Secret Partner" Compares to Other Korean Thrillers | Movie | Similarity to My Secret Partner | |-------|----------------------------------| | The Villainess | More action, less office politics | | Secret Love (2013 drama) | Similar manipulation themes, but slower | | The Negotiation | Corporate crime + female antagonist | | My Secret Romance (!!) | Only the title is similar; otherwise completely opposite tone |
| Actor | Role | Character Archetype | |-------|------|---------------------| | | Han Seung-jin | The everyman pushover who slowly grows a spine | | Lee Chae-young | Kang Yoo-na | The femme fatale / corporate sociopath | | Park Joon-hyuk | CEO Ma | The corrupt, comically evil boss | | Han Soo-ah | Secretary Min | The innocent second female lead (classic K-drama foil) |
In the vast ocean of Korean cinema, mainstream blockbusters like Parasite and Train to Busan often steal the spotlight. Yet, some of the most intriguing stories are tucked away in the mid-budget category—films that blend genres in unexpected ways. One such hidden treasure is the 2019 Korean movie (also known as The Boss's Secret or My Special Partner ).
Define "happy". Seung-jin survives, but he is left broken and unable to trust anyone. Yoo-na’s fate is ambiguous—she may have escaped to another country under a new identity. The film’s final shot shows Seung-jin staring at a new female intern, silently wondering: Is she another secret partner?