Man in Love (2021) Review: Love, Class, and Survival in Real Life

Man in Love (2021) Review: Love, Class, and Survival in Real Life




There are many romance films that suggest love can fix everything. 

Man in Love (2021), a Taiwanese romantic drama, chooses a more honest path. This film shows that love does not always save people—it sometimes only stays, quietly, while life continues to be difficult.

While watching Man in Love, I felt less like I was watching a love story and more like I was observing real life. The film portrays people from the working class, shaped by social pressure and economic hardship, where love grows not from comfort, but from survival.


Love and Masculinity in Economic Hardship

The male lead lives in a harsh environment defined by debt, limited opportunities, and emotional repression. In many real-life contexts, men like him are labeled as unsuccessful: financially unstable, emotionally rough, and unable to offer a secure future. However, Man in Love highlights something deeper—how social and economic systems often fail to provide men from lower-class backgrounds with space to grow emotionally and socially.

His way of loving is not poetic. He expresses love through actions rather than words: helping, protecting, and staying present. His love may seem clumsy, but it reflects a realistic form of masculinity shaped by struggle rather than privilege.


Women, Care Work, and Silent Sacrifice

The female lead faces the same economic limitations, yet her lived experience is different. She carries family responsibilities, delays her personal dreams, and learns silence as a survival strategy. In real life, women in similar positions are often praised for being strong and devoted, even though their strength is frequently the result of obligation, not choice.

The film clearly shows how gender roles operate within the same social class. Poverty does not erase gender inequality—it often deepens it.


When Love Is Not Enough

One of the strongest messages of Man in Love is that love alone cannot overcome structural problems. The relationship does not fail because of a lack of sincerity, but because social reality is heavier than emotional commitment. Economic instability, family pressure, and limited mobility slowly suffocate the space where love could grow.

This makes Man in Love stand out among romantic films. It does not romanticize poverty or portray love as an escape. Instead, love becomes a temporary shelter—a place to rest, even if only for a moment.


A Realistic Romance Film

By the end of the film, I was left with a heavy feeling, not because the story is tragic, but because it is familiar. Many couples in real life love each other deeply, yet still lose to circumstances beyond their control.

Man in Love is not a film about happy endings. It is a film about reality—about love, class, gender roles, and survival in a world that is not equally kind to everyone.

This film is not meant to inspire hope in a traditional romantic sense. Instead, it invites viewers to understand love within real-life social and economic conditions.

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