May 8, 2024

Best Lee Jun-ho TV Shows and Movies, Ranked


Lee Jun-ho has been known for various talents throughout the years, but he actually first rose to prominence in the Korean pop band 2PM. Big during the second generation of K-pop groups, 2PM is still active to this day, although Lee, like several other members of the group, has expanded his skill set into the acting world. Lee, who debuted with 2PM in 2009, first had an acting role in the 2013 movie Cold Eyes, and it’s history from there. After being praised for his acting skills in that film, he continued to be cast in not only movies, but dramas as well, landing the coveted male lead role many desire in several dramas.

But it wasn’t until 2021 that Lee really began to garner praise for his acting. After being cast in the lead role of The Red Sleeve, he would become the first idol actor to land some of the biggest acting awards in Korea’s entertainment and drama scene. Despite being active in the Korean entertainment world for over a decade now, Lee’s filmography has continued to be selective, leaving fans looking for more. His most recent work was in Netflix’s King the Land, which saw him paired up with fellow idol actor Im Yoon-ah. That said, these are his best shows and movies so far before upcoming projects land on your screen.

12 Good Manager

Good Manager
KBS Drama Production

Despite being a drama that many predicted would fail during its run, Good Manager was a massive surprise when it managed to land good ratings throughout its domestic airing. The 2017 series takes place at a company where the protagonist, an accountant working for a mobster, ends up landing a good job there. And, above all else, he’s going to be the chief of the Accounting Department. He decides to embezzle money from the company, but doesn’t realize the emotional bonds he’ll make in the process, making him feel guilty about what he’s about to do.

11 Twenty

Twenty
Next Entertainment World

A film that came out in 2015, Twenty stars Lee Jun-ho, Kim Woo-bin, and Kang Ha-neul as three young men coming-of-age and realizing that life is hard. Each of them is completely different — one bums around, another wants to be an artist, and the last one wants to just do well in school — but because they’re good friends and trying to get through life together, they have each other’s backs at the end of the day. The movie is a comedy, so when life gets hard, these three end up getting through the day with some humorous situations sprinkled throughout the narrative.

10 Cold Eyes

Cold Eyes
Zip Cinema

A movie that had its premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, Cold Eyes also served as the acting debut of Lee Jun-ho. A woman with a photographic memory is hired at a police division, and realizes that her new job involves surveillance, not the police uniforms and gig she was thinking of originally. Her first task on the job involves a group of robbers, but that’s only the tip of the iceberg when the group’s leader decides to try and kill someone and then flee to another country, and finding him isn’t going to be as easy as it sounds.

9 The Terror Live

The Terror Live
Cine2000

Kim Byung-woo directs The Terror Live, which features Lee Jun-ho as the narrator of the film in some versions. Ha Jung-woo portrays a former top news anchor who, after an incident, finds himself back at the bottom of the barrel. When he gets a phone call one day telling him there’s a plot to blow up the Mapo Bridge, he slowly realizes that this isn’t a joke and the bridge is going to collapse. Yet, instead of telling the police, he decides this will revive his career and decides to cover it.

Related: 20 Korean Dramas With the Most Compelling Love Triangles

8 Homme Fatale

Homme Fatale
JYP Pictures

A movie that came out in 2019, Homme Fatale imagines what it would be like if a man wanted to be in a role that’s traditionally for women. The main character is Heo-saek (Lee), a man who dreams of becoming a kisaeng — a role in the Joseon Dynasty that only women would do, and if they became a kisaeng, they would be considered the bottom of society. Despite the challenges, and with the help of a woman, together they’re going to make their dreams come true.

7 Confession

Confession
Studio Dragon

A legal drama with a flair for dramatic storylines, Confession came out domestically back in 2019. Lee Jun-ho portrays Choi Do-hyun, who, after witnessing how his father was wrongly accused of murder, decides to come a lawyer because of it. He ends up becoming the lawyer investigating the circumstances of his father’s case, and if it comes to it, he knows he’s going to fight foe what is right in his father’s name. Although Confession typically isn’t considered many’s favorite Korean drama, it has been vastly underrated in the Korean drama world since its release.

6 Wok of Love

Wok of Love
SM C&C

In Wok of Love, which aired for one season in 2018, sees Lee Jun-ho as Seo Poong, a man who worked his way up from the bottom. He was a grunt working in a hotel kitchen who managed to become a top chef at a hotel, and, at the start of the series, becomes the co-owner of a small restaurant after his fame and success is taken away from him overnight. Together with an heiress and a former gangster, they’re going to change this restaurant’s luck for the better. Wok of Love is a pretty decent Korean drama, especially for those who love elements of food being incorporated into the plot of the show overall.

5 Memory

Memory
MI Co., Ltd

Before Lee managed to rise to the top and become a leading role actor in the drama world, he was in the supporting cast of the 2016 show Memory. Lee Seung-in stars in the lead role of a mam who’s slowly losing his memory. Despite this, he tries to cling to the life he’s built so far with his family, career, and relationships, and will do everything it takes to preserve what he has so far. Lee Jun-ho plays a supporting role in the drama briefly, although the drama didn’t do too well ratings-wise.

4 Rain or Shine

Rain or Shine
Celltrion Entertainment

Lee Jun-ho stars in the 2017 drama Rain or Shine, which was the first time Lee had received a leading role in a drama. The series is about a tragic accident that takes the lives of almost fifty people, leaving the survivors and loved ones of these individuals grieving with the circumstances that have happened. It focuses on the lives of two individuals impacted by the accident and how they’ve continued on with their lives, despite the trauma they face from their past. Over time, these two will fall in love with each other, helping them heal in the process.

3 Memories of the Sword

Memories of the Sword
TPS Company

Lee Byung-hun, Kim Go-eun, and Jeon Do-yeon are some of the big names associated with the 2015 film Memories of the Sword, which blends action, romance, and the historical genres together to create a pretty entertaining movie. Set in the Goryeo period, three swordsmen lead an uprising and are devastated by a betrayal. Several years later, one of them, despite having moved on with her life, has a daughter who goes out on a path of revenge for her slain father, who was one of the original three swordsmen. Park Heung-sik wrote and directed the film.

Related: 12 Great Korean Dramas That Don’t Have Love-Focused Stories

2 King the Land

Poster of King the Land
JTBC
Netflix

A 2023 release on Netflix, King the Land plays on several of the classic tropes in Korean dramas, including the rich-poor trope that appears in many big Korean dramas. Lee Jun-ho portrays Goo Won, a rich heir to a hotel chain stuck in the middle of a battle with his family members for power. When he crosses paths with a smiley receptionist named Cheon Sa-rang (Im Yoon-ah), he despises her fake smile at first, but eventually falls in love with her as they work together at the hotel. Throughout its run King the Land continued to grow in popularity, with its rating improving with each episode.

1 The Red Sleeve

Lee Se-young as Seong Deok-im and Lee Jun-ho as Yi San
MBC TV

Lee Jun-ho’s role in The Red Sleeve gained him massive recognition from the local industry as an actor. A historical drama, he portrays Yi San, who would become the king named Jeongjo. Dealing with the trauma of his father’s death and being a perfectionist, he decides to throw himself often into his work as the King of Joseon. However, when the Noble Consort Ui comes into his life, it will upend his strict vows towards solely focusing on professional duty, teaching him to incorporate love and open up his heart despite the pain that it could cause.



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