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49 Days: Episode 20 (Final)

If I tried to explain this episode in a paragraph, I think I’d spill more tears, and frankly, I don’t know if I have any left. So here it is in a nutshell: It’s FUCKING PERFECT. Gah. Okay, fine, it’s maybe a hair shy of perfect, but damn if it isn’t the most satisfying ending I’ve seen in a long time. It solidifies the assumption that I started this drama with—that the best thing about this show would always be the writing, which elevates everything else, and brings all our characters full circle.

 
FINAL EPISODE RECAP

Yi-kyung asks if Ji-hyun really remembers her, and Kang, from her 49 days. She says she does, but then adds, “I’m going to die soon.” What the?

Lest we think it’s her assumption because her memories are intact, we flashback to earlier in the hospital, when the Scheduler appeared in front of Ji-hyun. She recognizes him and asks why he’s here, why she can see him, if she’s not dead…

As soon as the words come out of her mouth, it dawns on her that something is wrong. Why does she remember her 49 days? Why is he appearing to her?

And in his trademark blunt but sympathetic way, the Scheduler says, “This is your last cruel gift. You can refuse it if you like.” She asks, trembling, if this means she’s going to die.

He says that he received his last schedule for his remaining time, and the last person on that list… is her. Ooof. I knew his last schedule would come back to bite us in the ass, but this is too cruel.

He tells her that she is to die six days from now, and that this date of her death was determined as she was born. He says that because she experienced the 49 days and even earned her three tears, only to be met with this, the powers that be have given her the gift to remember her time on the other side, if she chooses.

It’s crushing to watch this, because it’s clearly even upsetting the Scheduler, to have to deliver such news. But he gets through it, and tells her that she can choose not to remember, in which case six days hence, he’ll appear to her as if for the first time ever.

He tells her to go ahead and get angry. She shouts through tears, “Get angry at whom?! No matter how unfair it is, no matter how much it tears up my insides, I know it won’t change a thing. No matter how much I beg.” Heartbreak.

He puts a hand on her shoulder as she cries, and tells her that it’s one thing human hands cannot control—life and death. Still, for the love of all that is hopeful, I can’t believe she went through all that just to die again. I mean, I know she’ll die eventually, but SIX frackin’ days? Show, I know you love your circular narratives, but this is just mean.

Back in the present, Yi-kyung asks who would deliver such cruel news to her, asking defensively for Ji-hyun, not realizing that Yi-soo’s been her afterlife guide all this time. Ji-hyun just says that such beings exist.

Yi-kyung says what we’re all feeling, that it’s so unfair for her to have go through all of that, just to end up having to die all over again. But Ji-hyun shows just how much she’s matured over her 49 days, and the new perspective that’s come with being on the other side:

Ji-hyun: If I hadn’t gone on my 49 days’ journey, my father’s company would be in Kang Min-ho’s hands, and I wouldn’t be in my right mind from the trauma of being betrayed by my fiancé and friend. It’s possible that my fate was to commit suicide from that shock. But because of my 49 days, I was able to receive love from someone like Kang-ie. I was able to love. I was able to guard my father’s company. And I was able to look back on the life I had lived. I’m grateful actually, because if I hadn’t known anything and died, I would’ve lived a fake life until death.

Yi-kyung asks why she’s pretending not to remember then. She says that she wants to show the people in her life that she lived happily, as the immature, naïve, sweet Ji-hyun. Aw. But then when she saw Yi-kyung, she couldn’t hide it from her.

She clasps her unni’s hands, and it’s so sweet how happy they are to see each other, and sit next to each other in their own bodies. That sounds weird out of context, but you know what I mean.

Yi-kyung reminds her that her family might not know anything, but Kang remembers all of the 49 days, and he asked her to tell him how she feels, and not to leave without a goodbye. Ji-hyun thinks it’s no use giving him more heartache, if she’s destined to die. She’s leaving; he’s staying, and knowing isn’t going to change that. In fact, it’ll make things harder.

Ji-hyun adds that she’s learned one thing from watching Yi-kyung, and it’s that the living need to go on living. She wants to leave as Kang’s friend, so that he can live his life once she’s gone. Oh man, I’m already welling up just thinking about how sad this is going to be.

Kang goes to see Min-ho in prison, and though he does admit to being satisfied that he blocked the Haemido takeover, he asks Min-ho to serve his time and repent, and someday return to the hyung that he once respected and liked.

Ji-hyun goes home and eats with her parents, putting on a cheery smile for them, but holding back tears. Watching them be so happy that she woke up is just making it even sadder, knowing that they’re going to suffer all over again.

See, this is the stuff that totally gets to me. It was the same with Yi-kyung / Yi-soo. Their happy moments put my heart through the wringer more than anything, because of the bittersweet end that I knew was coming. It’s the happiness before the fall. When she starts doing this with Kang, I’m gonna be a wreck.

Ji-hyun shows up the next morning to Yi-kyung’s house holding a picnic basket. On her way down those familiar stairs on her street, Ji-hyun takes a moment to put her hand on the rail as she walks down, as if she had been dying to put her hands out and feel the world that she couldn’t for so long.

Yi-kyung helps her make a kimbap lunch, and Ji-hyun takes her basket to see Kang. She tells him that she’s never once been on a picnic with a boyfriend, and asks to borrow his car, his mp3 player, and he asks what else she wants to borrow. Ji-hyun: “You.”

Aw. Proper swoon. He does a double take, but agrees to play her boyfriend for a day, as long as she agrees to play his girlfriend tomorrow. Hehe. It’s just like their I-know-you-know game from before. Except, I guess, Kang doesn’t actually know this time.

They have a picnic, being adorable together and play-fighting like little kids. While they’re fighting over who looks best in their pictures, Ji-hyun’s bracelet falls out of his pocket, and she pretends to be surprised, asking if he’s had it all this time.

Then she tells him that it’s actually his mother’s, and that they were close once. We flashback to her high school days, when she’d go see Kang’s mom from time to time, and eat food and chitchat with her about Kang.

Ji-hyun asked why Kang was so mean to Mom, and she had told her that it’s because there are things she didn’t tell him. Because when you love someone so much, sometimes it’s better to just have him misunderstand, so that you can spare him pain. They’re the same words that Ji-hyun had repeated to Kang, the day she had quit Heaven before her first tear.

As they walk along in the present, Kang realizes that back then, Ji-hyun had given his mother’s words back to him. He adds, quoting 49-days-Ji-hyun, that hiding your feelings is a lot harder than not knowing (as in, the person sparing the other’s pain has the harder time of it).

That stops her in her tracks, not only because they were her words, but because it’s true of her, right now.

He takes her to a wishing statue, and tells her to toss a coin and make a wish. She gives it a toss and then closes her eyes to make her wish, and Kang turns to her, his eyes giving away more sadness than he ought to be feeling…

…Which is when we flashback to yesterday, when Yi-kyung had come to see him. She tells him the truth, and that she wasn’t supposed to say anything, but she can’t stand watching Ji-hyun go through this alone.

She tells him that she understands Ji-hyun’s wishes, to go smiling rather than crying, and to give the people she loves less pain. AHA! So it totally IS their I-know-you-know-but-you-don’t-know game!

Kang finally looks up at her, tears brimming in his eyes. “The thing I hoped for the most was for Ji-hyun to live. Isn’t there something like that? It’s okay if I never get to see her again—she just has to live!”

Nooooo! Aaaaand, here start the tears. Oh god, I can’t handle this. I can pretty much take anyone else turning into a wreck, but Kang-ah? Waaaaaaaaah.

Back in the present, Kang closes his eyes and makes a wish: “That Ji-hyun lives and stays by my side.” And Ji-hyun makes her wish: “That Kang forgets me.” God, that’s just… so… heartbreakingly perfect. Gah.

They smile at each other adorably. After he drops her off, Kang says to himself that he did the right thing, over and over again. Aw, stiff-upper-lippy Kang is so cute. And so sad.

Back at the hospital, Ji-hyun sweetly tells each of her parents that she’s so happy to have been born as their child, and hugs them. They laugh and smile together, and then… she gets a sharp pain in her stomach, and doubles over, falling to the ground.

Dad calls out but her eyes start to close. Her soul gets up, while her body lies there, and then the Scheduler appears, all dressed up, and puts out his hand. No! Already?

She looks up at him and asks if he’s been waiting all this time. She tells him that they should go, and he stands her up. She looks back, and there’s Dad, holding her lifeless body, crying, trying to wake her up.

The Scheduler walks her to the elevator. Without a word, he puts out his hand for their final goodbye. She takes it and looks up at him, smiling in gratitude. He tells her that she worked hard, and with a wave of his hand, he opens the door.

She steps inside and looks out at him with a smile, and he smiles back at her. As the doors slowly close, they betray tears at their final parting.

The doors close, and then the elevator disappears, leaving the Scheduler alone.

Mom and Dad weep over Ji-hyun’s body, now covered with a white sheet. Kang comes running in, and cries.

In Jinan, In-jung gets a phone call, and collapses in tears. So does Min-ho, only now showing true regret as he cries.

They hold the funeral, and bury her ashes by planting a tree in her name. Oh, I love that. It’s so beautiful, and simple, and marks her death with new life.

In-jung watches everything from afar, crying but unable to go near, knowing all the wrong she’s done. Min-ho weeps in his jail cell, finally repenting for the person he’s become. Kang, Yi-kyung, and Seo-woo send her with full hearts and tears.

Back at home, Mom and Dad walk into Ji-hyun’s room, and are shocked to see it stripped of all her belongings, as if she had known she was dying, and prepared for it. That’s when Dad asks what Ji-hyun had whispered in Mom’s ear that last day at the hospital, and they realize that Ji-hyun just woke up for a short time, to say goodbye.

The Mom and Dad part is where I really start to lose it. I need a tissue break.

Kang lies around in his office, hearing Ji-hyun call out his name and jumping up to find no one there. He then remembers that she’d entrusted a box of stuff to him, and opens it up. He finds a letter addressed to him:

Ji-hyun: This is Song Yi-kyung. Please return these things to me… they’re important. I’m someone who needs a friend. It would be nice if someone like Han Kang would be a friend to someone like me, who has no one to lean on. Like he was to Shin Ji-hyun…

Oh my god. She’s sending him to her. It’s breaking my heart. It’s perfectly perfect, and yet… crushingly crushing. It’s her last gesture, to send him to her, to fulfill her wish that he live go on living his life. I didn’t even know I HAD this many tears.

He returns the box to Yi-kyung, whose eyes open wide when she sees a key inside, which had been Yi-soo’s locker key, in his music studio. They go to the abandoned studio and she opens up his locker.

Inside, she finds a stack of his old music notebooks, and in the back, she notices something familiar. It’s a little child’s backpack, and she tells Kang that it was hers, from when she was first abandoned at the orphanage. They were supposed to have gotten rid of those things, but Yi-soo must’ve kept it all this time.

She looks inside and finds her little pink shoe, and then a bank book. We flashback to the day they had run into Ji-hyun and Kang and gotten the pink rose, when Yi-soo took her to the bank later that day.

He asks for her student ID card, lying that he doesn’t have his on him, and that he needs it for something. While she waits, he opens an account in her name.

The even cuter part is that every time he makes a new deposit, he adds a line in the description, and over time the whole thing reads like a letter, or rather more like song lyrics, line by line, with each deposit. It’s maybe the sweetest thing ever.

She reads it now, in the present, with tears:

Yi-soo: Yi-kyung-ah, it’s Yi-soo
The thing I promised
The February Pension
To give it to you
I made an account
In the future little by little
Our dream
Will be built
Even if we encounter hardship
If we are together
We can conquer it
This is a secret, but
Truthfully, Song Yi-kyung is
Song Yi-soo’s guardian
Because you’ve given
Me a reason to live
In all the world
Someone who needs me
You are the only one

She clutches it to her heart and cries, and we see that Yi-soo is there watching her, crying too.

Kang goes to visit Ji-hyun’s parents, and finds them arguing over old photos, as Mom clutches to her memories and Dad argues that she has to move on. Dad leaves the room in a huff, and Kang sits down next to Mom. He picks up one of the photos, but doesn’t recognize it as Ji-hyun. He asks who it is.

Mom: “It’s Ji-hyun’s unni, Ji-min.”

DUN DUN. Man, I knew they hinted at this possible thread and left the door open, but I actually didn’t think that they’d go there. I… honestly don’t love this story thread, only because there was plenty of connection and resolution without this. It seems unnecessary to me. Anyway, here we go…

Mom tells him that Ji-hyun had an unni, and that she’d lost her one day at the bus station. A lady had kidnapped her, and called to ask for ransom twice, but each time they went, no one was there. Finally the calls stopped coming. Ji-hyun was traumatized at first, but was too young to remember it as she grew up.

Kang looks at the picture of Ji-min and immediately recognizes the little girl’s shoes (not just randomly, but because Mom’s story included the bit about the girls wanting the same shoes). They’re exactly the ones Yi-kyung took out of her backpack, from Yi-soo’s locker.

They go to see Yi-kyung, and Mom asks to see the shoes. Yi-kyung denies that it could be her. She firmly remembers being abandoned by her mother. But Mom asks just to see. She adds that Ji-min liked stars, so that’s how she had differentiated the girls’ shoes.

Yi-kyung cautiously hands her the backpack, and Mom’s eyes immediately well up at the sight of it. She instantly recognizes the star Ji-min drew on it, and then takes out the shoe. She looks up at Yi-kyung and cries, “You were alive. Our Ji-min-ie was alive.”

Aw, despite the fact that I dislike how quickly this thread is being wrapped up and forced on us, it’s still tear-inducing. We see that Yi-soo is there, watching the scene unfold, and it shocks him. This is a twist he was not expecting.

But then this leaves a big gaping hole in the plot… Flashback to the Scheduler, explaining that the three tears exclude blood relations. Then on Ji-hyun’s final walk to the elevator, she asks him who her final two tears were from.

She guesses Seo-woo and Yi-kyung, but he tells her that Yi-kyung wasn’t one of them. Then flash back? Forward? Gah, who the hell knows anymore – to In-jung when she had come to try and kill Ji-hyun.

She reaches her hand toward Ji-hyun’s respirator, and in spirit form, Ji-hyun screams for In-jung to stop. I don’t know if she hears it, but something makes her stop and turn around, and she’s met with her own reflection in the glass behind her.

It’s enough to knock her back to her senses, and she cries, as she says, “What am I doing? What am I doing to you?” We see that this is when she began to regret what she had become. She confesses that this wasn’t because of Ji-hyun, but herself, and then she gets on her knees, and says that she was wrong.

She gets up to touch Ji-hyun’s face, and that’s when Kang had found her, thinking the worst. She tries to get Min-ho to stop, calling him out on his own feelings for Ji-hyun, and the fact that he pushed everything back when Ji-hyun’s dad needed surgery.

She knows that he can’t admit it, but he’s grown attached to them, and feels sorry. But he refuses to acknowledge it, and says he can’t stop it now. He’ll drag it out till the end. So In-jung goes to his mother, and asks for the file that he entrusted to her.

At first she refuses to give it up, but In-jung pleads with her that Min-ho is becoming worse than his own father. And to save him from himself, she sends the file to the prosecutor.

Outside the hospital, In-jung says to Ji-hyun that she wishes she could turn back the clock, to when they would just look at each other and laugh. And she sheds a tear. It was Ji-hyun’s third and final one, that brought her back.

Back to Ji-hyun pre-elevator-ride, the Scheduler tells her that her final tear was from In-jung. Ji-hyun looks surprised, but then instantly she lights up with a smile. “That girl. I knew it was sincere.” Wow, even after everything she’s seen, she’s so genuinely happy and trusting, that her friend really loved her. It’s amazingly pure of heart and completely without bitterness.

She turns to start her walk to the elevator, satisfied. The Scheduler looks on with a smile, and then follows her down the hall.

Alone, Yi-kyung clutches her backpack and cries, calling out Ji-hyun’s name, regretting all the things she wasn’t able to do for her, not knowing that they were sisters. Yi-soo watches her, and then realizes now the full weight of his sunbae’s words.

Flash-(listen, if you think I’m gonna keep this timetable straight, you’re sorely mistaken) to when granny sunbae told the Scheduler that he could meet Yi-kyung. She asks if his wish is still the same, to give her the rings and tell her that he loves her.

He scoffs that she assumes he’s still a child, and she laughs, kind of impressed that he’s not just a lovesick puppy anymore. And then he catches on, realizing that she gave him his memory back early on purpose, so that he’d change his wish and not waste it on something that doesn’t help the living.

She calls him smart for catching on, and then he surmises that she also broke the barrier between Yi-kyung and Ji-hyun for a reason. She doesn’t divulge what it is, but does muse that they might be connected well into the next life as well.

Then in the present, Yi-soo turns to Yi-kyung, to say his final goodbye. Gah, I HAVE GIVEN YOU TOO MANY TEARS. Stop taking more!

Yi-soo: Now I can leave with my heart at ease. Live happily, for Ji-hyun’s life too.

He reaches out to touch her face, but knows that he can’t anymore. He draws back and looks at her one last time. He smiles, and as a tear falls, he disappears.

He takes his final walk through the garden, dressed in his reaper finest, and vanishes, having completed his work.

In the coming days, Yi-kyung begins to finally live her life, eating rice instead of ramen, and looking for a new job.

Han Kang goes to… Han Kang (the river) and says his final goodbye to Ji-hyun:

Kang: Ji-hyun-ah, now I understand why you wanted to leave without a word. Though you were lonely, you’ve allowed those of us you’ve left behind to be encouraged by you. I’ll trust your words, that your 49 days were a blessing. Because they’ve returned many things to their rightful place. Be happy somewhere, Ji-hyun-ah.

Two years later.

In-jung is in Jinan, and she flashes back (wait, did we just flash forward in order to flash back? Is this drama trying to kill ME on its way out?) to when the girls were in high school.

She smiles as she thinks of Ji-hyun, and then goes to see Min-ho in prison. It’s been two years since they’ve seen each other, and she tells him that she’s moved his mother down to a hospital in Jinan.

He tells her to stop coming here, and to forget him and go her way. She tells him that she’ll continue to take care of his mother for three more years—the rest of his time in jail. She says it’s her fault that all this happened, but he makes it clear that he was the one who made the decisions and acted. She tells him that she’s living her life, and that he’ll see—someday he’ll be able to forgive himself too. He finally says that he’s sorry.

Kang is… wait, is he… WORKING? Oh my god, the man DOES have a job! It’s a miracle! He oversees a construction site for a building he’s designed.

Yi-kyung is working at Heaven, though today is her last day. Manager Oh and his wife have a baby on the way, and Seo-woo is happily dating Ki-joon.

In comes Dr. Noh. NOOOOOO! Not the doctor! No Dr. Noh!

But then, here comes Kang-ah. Oh, thank god. KANG-AAAAAAAH!

Phew. Seriously, I nearly had a fit at the reappearance of Dr. Creepy. Thankfully they hint at his being paired off to her waitress friend.

Yi-kyung confirms her plans with Kang for tomorrow, and heads to dinner with her parents. She’s heading to Haemido to work at the new resort, which is of course what Kang is designing and building.

Though the whole losing a daughter / finding a daughter thing isn’t my favorite, it IS really satisfying to see Yi-kyung with a family, and not off on her own anymore. Mom and Dad are as cute as ever, now doting on Yi-kyung, as they talk about Ji-hyun fondly. Aw.

On their last day before going down to Haemido, Yi-kyung and Kang go to pay their respects to Ji-hyun and Yi-soo, whom they’ve buried side by side with identical trees. Aw, it’s kind of killing me how poetic it is, to bury them next to each other, as they were each other’s friend and guide in the afterlife.

Kang and Yi-kyung put a bouquet of pink roses by each tree, and stand next to each other, the two in this life mirroring the two in the afterlife. In voiceover, we hear their thoughts:

Yi-kyung: Ji-hyun-ah, Han Kang is busy working, and as you requested, he’s been a really good friend to me. Because of your bright personality and your connection to others while you were with me, I was able to adjust well.
Kang: Ji-hyun-ah, though people know they’re going to die, they live as if they aren’t. Because of your 49 days, I’m living my life as if it’s 49 days. Because I saw things change that never would have happened, if you hadn’t known when you’d die. Here lie the two most important people in our lives.
Yi-kyung: Here are the two people who changed our lives and left beautifully.
Kang: Because of the 49 days’ journey that we were on with these two
Yi-kyung: We live today as if it’s precious, and our last.
Kang: Ji-hyun, because I met you
Yi-kyung: Yi-soo, because I met you
Kang: I was happy.
Yi-kyung: I was happy.

THE END

 
GIRLFRIDAY’S COMMENTS

Wow, I don’t know if I’ve ever been so satisfied with a drama ending as I am with this one. Maybe Return of Iljimae, which also has this circular, contemplative tone and structure. I was fidgety about the sister thing (still am, only because it’s unnecessary, not because it doesn’t fit) but I see why it’s part and parcel of the whole resolution. I still contend that there is enough mirroring in Yi-kyung living for Ji-hyun that their blood relation isn’t needed, but I will yield that it’s very satisfying to see Yi-kyung with a family. That alone is worth the deus ex machina plot twisting that had to occur in the last episode, when all I really wanted was the death and epilogue. Thankfully, most of the episode was just that, so I got what I wanted, full-throttle.

Truthfully, until the end of Episode 19, I wasn’t expecting Ji-hyun to die. It was something I was expecting earlier on, but then the drama did a number on me, focusing all our expectations towards what would happen when she woke up, by bringing her back so early. I was so engaged with how Kang would bring her memory back that it hit me like a ton of bricks when her death watch was reset.

And though I wasn’t anticipating it, this is exactly the ending I wanted, and even better than the one I was expecting. I thought we’d get this ending for Yi-kyung, while Kang and Ji-hyun went on to be happy in this life. But the parallel send-off actually makes Ji-hyun and Yi-soo’s lives much more poignant, in what they each leave behind in their deaths. It also fits the parallel life / afterlife mirroring better.

Throughout this drama, we’ve had the motif of mirrors and circles, both as a visual motif and figuratively as a theme, in characters facing each other across the divide and living parallel lives. It’s a theme that is rendered so poignantly, because it’s a simple one: that life is circular; that life ends in death, but death brings new life; that the way you live this life affects the life you live after it.

Yi-kyung begins the story wanting death, and ends choosing life. Ji-hyun got to live the happy, secure existence that Yi-kyung so cruelly had stripped from her; and then it gets returned to her, in Ji-hyun’s death. Yi-soo guides Ji-hyun as her friend in the afterlife, and Kang guides Yi-kyung as her friend in this life. Yi-kyung’s struggle to hold onto Yi-soo’s memory is what informs Ji-hyun to leave Kang without that tether, and her choice to do so is what helps Yi-kyung move on from her pain.

In the end, Ji-hyun makes it so that Yi-kyung can live, while at the same time, Yi-kyung helps Ji-hyun to move on in the afterlife without regret or remorse. It’s the idea that regardless of the moniker “life” or “death,” that each is a road and a journey, and that you can’t go from one to the other without letting go.

There must be death to make new life, and it’s the same in love. You let go of your last love, in order to love again. The last scene sets up Kang and Yi-kyung not necessarily to be lovers, but in the position to be able to love again, which is what’s important, and what Ji-hyun and Yi-soo made possible in the way they left the ones they loved.

 
JAVABEANS’ COMMENTS

Hm, Imma have to deviate and express some dissatisfaction. I’m of two minds of the finale. I admit to not having expected that the drama would actually go as far as to let Ji-hyun die, not because it didn’t make narrative sense — it did, as girlfriday points out — but because it wasn’t the way the show was positioning itself. The dramatic trajectory didn’t suggest it, even if the seeds were planted (a little clumsily in some cases) well in advance. Examples: Ji-hyun’s mother crying in an early episode about how she can’t lose “my one remaining child” or the hint that the Scheduler’s last assignment was a shock to him.

I do think there’s a difference between dropping a few hints and paying off a storyline satisfactorily. The drama did the former; I don’t think it did the latter. Introducing, and then completely resolving, the mystery of Yi-kyung’s birth in the finale feels like cheating, frankly. Being mysterious successfully requires more than sheer withholding of crucial information.

For instance, In-jung being the third tear is an example of a successfully paid off storyline — because it was properly set up. We saw plenty of hints that In-jung still loved Ji-hyun, that she felt remorse, and that she could be the tear, so the twist works. Not so much the birth secret. Yi-kyung happens to get her old locker contents back, happens to find Yi-soo’s old stuff, happens to discover that he kept her childhood belongings, and Kang happens to be there so he can days later recognize that backpack in old photos at the Shin household? Yeah, I’m calling that one out, drama. What this show has done pretty well so far is keeping coincidence OUT of the equation, so to provide such a huge puzzle piece through a whole series of them is kinda lazy.

In a lot of cases, I think I’d be taking girlfriday’s line and expressing satisfaction for the symbolic, metaphoric, narrative completeness of this kind of ending. Heck, I’m someone who felt perfectly satisfied by the infamous Hong Gil Dong ending, and appreciated that the writers went for a meaningful wrap-up on a deeper level. It’s just that this kind of ending wasn’t paced properly into the story — not like the Yi-kyung/Yi-soo storyline, which I think was beautifully done. I’m now recalling the pitch-perfect ending of Flowers For My Life, which accomplished what I think 49 Days was aiming for, but in a more skillful, emotionally satisfying way.

Furthermore, I do think that effect is as important as intent, and if a large portion of your (hitherto avid) viewership has to convince itself that the ending works, then it doesn’t wholly work, does it? And I don’t mean we need to bow to fanservice, because cheap fanservice that gives us the easy resolution independent of story logic is, well, cheap. 49 Days never positioned itself as a comedy, or a light-hearted drama, so I don’t think you can accuse it of hoodwinking the audience with a slightly bittersweet ending. But I don’t blame some people for feeling bait-n-switched, because you can’t spend 19 episodes hyping up one soul’s struggle to survive, and then…just…NOT.

Having written all that, maybe I’m not so two-minded about the finale after all. I’m not bitter or upset, because I agree with all that girlfriday points out so incisively above. This is a case where I’m bumping on execution, despite being happy with the dramatic intent. On a gut level, it just didn’t hit that spot for me. I leave feeling dissatisfied, and as we know, with dramas, often the heartspeak is stronger than the headspeak.

 
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I am a bit upset at the ending. I'm not the kind of person to defend something by looking at how well it works objectively, I wanted Jihyun to live!
I wouldn't have minded if Jihyun failed the 49 days and left but the fact that she was given another chance at life only to have it snatched away a week later is so unfair. I get that as a character she's come to accept her fate and that she has not regrets for the 49 days, FINE. But writers have control over what happens to these characters, and I hate their decision to kill her off. It feels like watching an awesome movie only to have the last scene showing: 'It was all a dream'.
I'd rather they came up with a slightly lame excuse as to why Jihyun remembered her 49 days by creating some wacko loophole because I wouldn't even care about a little snag like that.

Long-lost sister, don't mind it, a little rushed, but a good explanation as to why Injung was the final tear, but i wish Jihyun had been there to witness that too.

All things considered, I still love this drama, 1 episode doesn't matter to me if there are 19 that I like.

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First of all, thank you Girlfriday and Javabeans for your great work. Love you guys, you're the best!
Now about the drama- I loved it and waited impatiently every week but I must say the last episode left me totally disappointed!About what "most satisfying end" are you talking , Girlfriday? One heroine dies, the other must live with the fact that she'll never be together with her love( not even after death),the male main character loses the girl he loved -when he could have been happy with her, the parents lose their beloved daughter and so on. In a drama where schedulers,reapers ,ghosts come and go among the living and interfere in their lives, could the writers not produce a happy end for all our characters?The dramas are a perfect escapism for the viewers, a fantasy world where the evil are punished and the good are rewarded, and where the lovers live happily ever after . I feel deprived of my bit of satisfaction by this last episode, and I think I'm not the only one.

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Thank you so much to you two lovely ladies. Had you not been SO into this drama, I would not have even given it a try since I am not so fond of the actress who portrayed Ji Hyun. I haven't enjoyed a drama like this in a LONG time. Thanks again ^.^

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I've just finished re-watching the last episode of 49 Days, and I enjoyed it more than the first time.

It's probably because I have more knowledge and got better subs (from DarkSmurfSubs) prior to my second viewing. I'm still learning Korean so I'm at the mercy of the subbers (I want to thank them). I also read the recaps! I should thank girlfriday and javabeans for this and for their wonderfully insightful comments (and awesome writing). There are a lot of things that I would've missed and never fully understood in the drama had I not read them. For example, I never would've gotten the symbolisms and motifs (e.g. parallels, circles and mirrors). I think I saw them, but maybe unconsciously I rejected them because it never registered that they could be the writer's own artistic intent instead of unintentional byproducts created by set decorators and prop services. My brain says, "How can it be artistic, right? It's just a drama." Ok, I'd rather think I have this bias rather than admit (confess) than I'm dense and unperceptive :D
There are also many great comments. So my second time watching episode 20, I was, perhaps, better equipped.

I cried even more this time around.

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WOW, wasn't expecting that to happen at all. But love the drama all the seem.. ::)

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The death and the sister stuff I accepted although the sister part I wish had played out differently, but you know what bugged me?! That flashback of JiSeoJung together at school. It so ruined my bid to watch at least one drama without fast forwarding at all.

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Episode 19 left me sobbing (my husband came out from watching the basketball game and said "OMG you're crying at a Kdrama? I should take a picture"). Anyway at the end of the episode Jin-Huyn said she would die soon. I was so pissed.! I didn't even watch the last episode...I just read your recap. Thank GOD. I would have gone through an entire box of tissues and would have gone to work in the morning all puffy eyed. Damn! I know you all talk about investing time and emotion and then being shot down at the end. I felt betrayed. Thank you so much for recapping. I couldn't have taken the last episode.

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Honestly I agree with many of you I felt that the sister thing was totally random, didn't catch the clues and unnecessary. Without that this drama would have been fcking perfect :). But thinking about it now.. although it's totally unrealistic that they are sisters, it works out since Yi Soo would leave feeling content that yikyung will be in good hands for the rest of her life and the parents also get a good ending.

I was totally expecting full-out fan service with JH and HK for the last episode but I'm actually really satisfied with how they killed jihyun. Even without a kiss scene between the two you can feel they really love each other.

As well some people were hoping YK would choose to die to be with YS.. if that happened I would have truly hated this drama lol.

Ahh overall i'm REALLY satisfied. The acting was wonderful and the story is unforgettable. It's definitely on top of my favorites list. I really like this writer's other works like shining inheritance and prosecutor princess.

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Avid reader, but haven't posted until now. I have to say I was not happy with the ending, mainly because of the whole investment in Ji Hyun. Cheering for someone to live, and then totally pulling the carpet out and killing her was sort of a cheap shot, imo. Yes, bittersweet could have happened, but why with the character the drama wanted us to be invested in?

I sort of figured out the thread of Yi Kyung being someone's long lost relative, but to be honest I thought it'd turn out to be Kang. But then, I thought Ji Hyun would live, too, so I guess I should have known better. lol

Everything felt perfectly in place in this drama...until the final episode. The ending failed me; even the almost-bow-on-top did nothing to help the dissatisfaction of an otherwise awesome show.

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Just love this drama from beginning to end...

KUDOS TO LEE YOWON for A WONDERFUL JOB & to the BRILLIANT SCRIPTWRITER for the GREAT MASTERPIECE.

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Okay. After reading episode 19 and now this one, I must admit to feeling completely dissatisfied with Ji-Hyun's ending. I don't like it. Her will to live was so strong and so pure and powerful, that her dying like this does nothing but make me angry. It makes me ache for Kang-ah, who had finally gotten the girl he loved to love him back, only to have her ripped from him so soon. It's too cruel, for anyone. The only thing (or things) I was satisfied with was the wrap up of the Yi-Kyung/Yi-soo storyline. That was beautiful. True poetry in motion. I understood it and it broke my heart. But at least Yi-Kyung takes all the advice that Yi-soo and Ji-hyun had given her, and decides to live, for them, and for herself. Because that is what life is. You must live for yourself AND for those who love and/or loved you. I also liked the fact that she really was Ji-hyun's sister. Now, she has a family and people who love her. This leads me to the other thing I liked: In-jung's tear. WOW! I was so not expecting that. No matter how bad she was, though, she loved Ji-hyun still, and she cried for her, pure tears. I love In-jung for that, now.

Min-ho got what he deserved, but I do feel sorry for him. But I don't really get why he did it. Why did he do it? Hopefully, when he gets out of prison (if he gets out of prison) he will be able to live a better life, and live for Ji-hyun, the way her unni and Kang-ah are.

After careful consideration and thought, I will rate this drama, as a whole, an 8 out of 10, only because Ji-hyun did not get the ending I had wanted for her. She was such a sweet girl, and she felt compassion for everyone, she didn't deserve to go like that. If I had written it, I would have given her a happier ending, her, Kang, Yi-kyung and Yi-soo. Maybe that they could all be reborn again in another life, and be together, each couple, as they should have been. But didn't the Scheduler say that wasn't always possible?....

I feel I must now congratulate the actors on such a superb drama. Especially Nam Gyu-ri for her portrayal of Shin Ji-hyun. She was phenomenal. I absolutely love her now. The others, too, of course. Lee Yo-won as Song Yi-kyung, Jung Il-woo as Scheduler/Yi-soo, Bae Soo-bin(?) as Kang Min-ho and the others, too.

Last, but assuredly not least, Jo Hyun-jae as the amazing, manly, handsome Han Kang-ahhhhhhhhhh! He is just too cool for words.

After voicing (or rather typing) my opinion of this drama, I must now conclude before I get into trouble, because I'm supposed to be doing homework. Now, I can go on to read Best Love, Lie to Me and Romance Town, and gear up for City Hunter. Hopefully City Hunter will be good!

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wow i cried... i really thought it was gonna be a happy ending... =(

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Although this drama is overall satisfactory, I agree that the sister angle wasn't necessarily called for. They have established that both Yi Soo & Yi Kyung were orphans, there was no more need for revelation on Yi Kyung's real identity like there was no need to know why Yi Soo was an orphan. Nevertheless, the ending was ok; not great, but not terribly dissappointing.

Agh! I will miss Scheduler and Kang-ah!!!!!!

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Best drama ending ever, and one I will never forget.
:'D

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Just love this drama & the ending was beautiful.

Lee Yowon was really fantastic doing her two roles.

I love especially the Yi Soo/Yi Kyung story, it's well made & well done. Applause to both actors, they're amazing.

I am happy Yi Kyung was Ji Hyun's sister, at least the parents were also comforted. Nice to see the family could talk about Ji Hyun together happily.

Overall, it's a wonderful drama.

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I read all the recaps of this drama..Thank you for the post mortem .I have no comment on whatever the writer intentions but she executed it perfectly.I love the ending though which can be made to another story..The life after Shin Ji Hyun for both of the main cast that is left behind.Don't you just hope anyone will find happiness after a tragedy...Thank you for the good job you've done to bored person like me .I guess life can be interesting just by reading recaps of you the drama you just watched.

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oh....my poor schedular..... :(

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why does it made me cry
even by just reading the recap
great ending worth it to
watch :)

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‎"49 Days" episode 20 (Final) English Soft-Sub Subtitle is out.

URL: http://www.darksmurfsub.com/forum/index.php?%2Ftopic%2F843-49-days-2011%2F

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Days have passed and when I look at the ending objectively, I still arrive at the same conclusion: it was terrible.

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Sigh. Jung Il Woo's Scarecrow/허수아비 just came up on my playlist, and I made it about 3 seconds into the song before I had to turn it off to avoid becoming a weepy mess. Oh Scheduler, why did you have to do this to me?

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I agree with javabean that the real sister plot line was not sufficiently substantiated and looks force.

If a few more dialog from JH and/or JH parent, or a better flash back from YK (why she is abandon, I was under the impression that her mother abandon her to care for her little brother). YK had so much hatred coming into the orphanage that it does not do justice to young JH and her parent.

That aside, I do think that it is brave for the production team to actually kill off a lead to complete the story.

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Thank you for all your recaps. I love coming here after watching each episode of a drama. You two clarify my misunderstandings and make me feel content after each episode. I enjoy reading you two's point of view. It always seems like your write exactly what I'm thinking or feel.

This drama has been such an exciting run, it never failed to surprise me, which I loved. I loved all the characters and loved staring at Jung Il Woo :) The ending was good, ended exactly like how the writers showed it wanted to end, surprising and strong. But I guess there was a piece missing in my heart, I really wanted Ji Hyun to live (but that's just my cliche romantic side). Overall, it was an amazing drama which I will surly miss! Keep up the good work =)

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weeks have passed and im still having my 49 days withdrawal syndrome. i love this drama and it was my fave so far.hope to be able find a drama that will engage me like what 49 days did. missing the scheduler il woo....

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*sobs and wails* UH-HUH-HUH-UHUH-HUH-HUH-HUH-UHUHUH-HUH-HUH... WAAAAAAA!!!!! *sobs and wails some more*

How could one story be so heart-warming and so heart-breaking at the same time??!!??!!??

I WANT MY MOMMY!!!!

*continues sobbing*

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it has been a total of 3 days...i still can't get over the ending. i did say that i love this drama LIKE MAD and i'm ok with the ending (not in love with it).

i'm listening to the OST and i want to cry TT_TT. i just really wanted ji hyun to live and i still think the writer is very brave to kill her off. i still love you 49 days.

but really...HOW ABOUT KANG AH??? it's not that i want him for myself but crap if i was him, i'd kiss ji hyun before she died. i know that's not the point but i just don't want to see kang sad =(

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No more scheduler?! NOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!

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I was hoping for a miracle that Ji Hyun would survive T_T so sad......

but I'm glad they didn't force the story of Yi Kyung being with Kang.....it would have felt weird....

my fav part, must be the gift of a friend =) sending Kang to be a friend to her own sister. So touching!!!

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I totally agree with Ambie, while I appreciate the tone of the ending, I do NOT appreciate being so disappointed. What about Kang ah?! He didn't even get to hug her in her own body one time. Not even once.
There's one thing I'm looking for in fiction: an improvement on real life. The people should be prettier, the drama higher, the clothes better, and people who deserve a happy ending should fucking get it. Honestly, I don't see what is so creative about good people getting the shaft, this happens every day right in front of me. I mean, if I want to get all existential and depressed I can just turn on CNN or pick a meaningless fight with my boyfriend.

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Thumbs up to LEE YOWON for a wonderful job.

Loved this drama & loved the ending.

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LEE YOWON NAILED EVERYTHING... AWESOME!!!

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I like this drama, but generally I stay away from this kind of stuff. That "high school melodrama" that's coming up? Hot guy or not, I don't know if I can take it.

I'm somewhere between you guys on this one. At the halfway point of the finale I was ready to be super mad about the ending, but by the last few minutes, I thought it made sense how they resolved it. Intellectually I know the birth secret is a cop-out, but I'm so happy about it that I can't criticize it.

I thought Ji-hyun's death was a bit of a bait and switch, as javabeans said, and in the first half I kept waiting for the loophole that would allow her to live.

I don't know, I think it sucks that Ji Hyun died, and I really wanted her and Han Kang to be together, or at least realize their love. But that's how life is, I guess. I don't normally like reality intruding on dramas too much, but I can't hate this one. Might not like it, persay, but I don't hate it. I know javabeans wasn't quite buying what they were selling, but I ended up feeling relatively satisfied with everything, if slightly wrung out from the tears. I haven't been jaded by other, better-made ones I suppose.

I like how the drama started out with this horrible view of death, with people getting hauled into the Elevator of Doom, and a crabby and selfish (if gorgeous) Scheduler. As it went on, we grow to accpe it as Ji Hyun does, even before she got her tears, and you find out more about the system of death, and it kind of gives you hope for real life death.

One last thing- I'm also ridiculously glad that Yi Kyung and Kang-ah didn't end up together by the drama's end. It would have felt too rushed and packaged.

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So does that mean, Jihyun died without knowing that YiKyung is her long lost sister?

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I commented on this episode before after reading the recap, but I just now found time to actually watch the last few episodes...I am still in tears. While reading the recap, I was straddling the fence on how I felt about the ending. Now, after watching the end for myself, I wholeheartedly agree with Girlfriday--I thought it was perfect! I am definitely not a crier...once in a while I might get teary-eyed over a TV show, but I have never felt so emotional about a drama as I did while watching this last episode. The tears just wouldn't stop coming. The elevator scene--the doors closing and seeing Ji Hyun's peaceful smile and the Scheduler's farewell gaze--it was just so heartbreakingly beautiful. I loved it. And although I am sad that Ji Hyun couldn't have lived for Kang's sake, I know she still lives on in Kang's memory. He may move on and find someone else to love, but he will still always remember Ji Hyun, and that is enough for me. The last scene was also so poignant. I also adore the fact that Yi Soo and Ji Hyun were buried next to each other. I remember the scene in one of the earlier episodes when the Scheduler freaked out when Ji Hyun tried to hold his hand, but at the end of the drama, it was the Scheduler who was reaching out and comforting Ji Hyun. That shift in their relationship is so sweet. All in all, although it may have had its flaws, 49 Days has left a lasting impression in my heart. It will surely remain in my mind for years to come.

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I also forgot to mention how much I loved the soundtrack for this drama. 49 Days has the best OST that I have heard in a while--all the songs are so pretty and fit the tone of the drama so well.

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*sob*sob*sob*
loved the drama
wonderful and amazing

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i planned to watch this before but never got around to. now that i've seen this recap, i will have to watch it now now now! thanks for recapping 49 days!

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For some reason, I had been unable to bring myself to watch the last two episodes of 49 Days for a whole week and a half. Call it denial, anger, hurt (over Ji-hyun's death despite all her best efforts over 18 long episodes). I probably shouldn't have glanced at these recaps beforehand because I had already started forming prejudgments about the execution of the story's conclusion.

I'm glad I took a breather before diving back into the drama's most emotionally laden final episodes, because it helped me to accept many of the ending's aspects that seemed so unfair and downright cruel. The one word that sums up the endings of the individual storylines (Yi-soo's farewell, Ji-hyun's death, Min-ho's arrest, In-jung's semi-redemption, the revelation of Yi-kyung's true past) for me is: catharsis.

Is that strange? Yi-soo's goodbye was pitch perfect emotionally and it felt so good to cry tears because Yi-kyung deserved to know how much she was loved and needed to come back from her depressive funk to finally enjoy life's pleasures once again. I surprised myself by crying again in the very final episode several times, especially when Ji-hyun's spirit gave the Scheduler that final, small smile before the elevator doors closed. Yeah, I just lost it then.

All in all, I commend this drama for melting this cold heart of mine and bringing me to carthartic tears by the show's finale. I agree with Javabeans on the point that the very final few scenes left me slightly dissatisfied (just slightly!). I can't even put my finger on it. Perhaps its just leftover hurt from Ji-hyun's death. I am actually satisfied with the reveal that Yi-kyung is Ji-hyun's sister. It didn't feel too out-of-the-blue for me, probably because something good had to offset the unfairness of Ji-hyun's death. Especially for Ji-hyun's parents. Can you imagine losing the one daughter many years ago and another daughter twice? There needed to be some kind of happy result for these two parents and for Yi-kyung as well. Maybe my dissatisfaction is just with the very, very final moments with Yi-kyung and Han Kang paying their respects to their loved ones two years later. Maybe it was all those voiceovers with the cliched messages that started to grate me. I think I would have preferred the very final scene to be them starting to move away from the memorial trees, symbolizing that they are moving towards their futures. Perhaps I'm just being picky because I am actually quite grateful to the show's writers, actors, directors, and production team for making the best show they could (with such a complex, tricky plot), by managing to balance serious melodrama with some laughs and a whole lot of heart. The show has come a long way from its rocky start and some dubious acting choices (Bae Soo Bin towards the end, whoa dude reel it in) to culminate in an ultimately moving and yes, satisfying conclusion. The entire team that brought us 49 Days should be very proud. *Applause*

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Just glad to know that people who hated or were disappointed with the ending started to appreciate it.

This is one great drama with a profound ending.

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There are 2 things I take away from this drama

1. I have come to like Nam Gyu Ri - that's saying a lot because I hated her acting in the beginning.

2. My love for Han Kang because of Jo Hyun Jae - I have never fallen in love with a character before as I have fallen in love with Han Kang, and that is mainly due to the way Jo Hyun Jae portrayed this character. I think for the rest of my kdrama-watching life I will forever compare any kdrama hero to Han Kang.

Thank you, Jo Hyun Jae for giving life to Han Kang, the most wonderful kdrama romantic hero in my books.

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I've come to like (love Ji-hyun) Nam Gyu Ri and JHJ too, is it wishful thinking to hope to see them together again.

I would love to see them more.

Lastly....KANG-AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
:)

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Aw. I loved 49 Days, and I'm glad I watched it.
But I agree with Javabeans, sort of. I mean, Ji Hyun spent all that time trying to fight back towards survival, and then just a week after she wakes up, she... dies? Sure, it makes sense, but it doesn't leave me feeling very happy.

Also, the Yi Kyung x Yi Soo storyline. I was expecting more to come... It seemed kind of empty, you know, he just dying after his term as a Scheduler?

I'll miss the Scheduler D: I WANT ME MY OWN SCHEDULER >:D
kay. I'll stop talking now.

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Something I realized: You know how Ji Hyun died because the aorta was blocked - AS A RESULT OF THE ACCIDENT? Well, if the accident hadn't been planned and she wasn't meant to sort of die, then would the reason for her planned death have been different? I'm just wondering.

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This is a late comment. I am not unhappy with the ending. I also wanted Ji-hyun to live, but her screen time and presence was overshadowed by Yi-Kyung. The posters, as well, prepared us for the ending.

I have decided to spiritualize the ending. I had to do this with "East of Eden" to emotionally survive THAT ending. The whole concept of "49 Days" can be compared to the time Jesus walked on earth after His resurrection. He was seen by two disciples on the road to Emmaus, and their "hearts burned within them" when they spoke with Him.

49 days equals 7 times 7 which is when Pentecost occurred after the death and resurrection of Jesus. Pentecost is when The Holy Spirit entered the hearts of believers (Christians).

So, in a sense, Ji-hyun's spirit enters the heart of Yi-kyung after the 49 days. This would also support the idea that Kang and Y-kyung are meant to be lovers and soulmates.

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interesting take on the ending! watching 49 Days did make me think about how my religion views life and death. while I don't necessarily think that the writers meant for 49 Days to have a particular spiritual meaning, your analogy is certainly intriguing!

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Ditto to everything jb said. Ditto.

And I miss Ji Hyun.

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I started to watch this drama just to see Jung Il Woo, but was soon captivated with the story and the lessons about life, death, and relationships.

Normally I really like my dramas to have a romantically happy ending but with 49 days, I am oddly sastisfied with this bittersweet end. I will always remember that even if a person die, your connection with that person doesn't break. And also to live your life fully so that the person who has passed away can move on peacefully.

I think that the story of Yi Kyung being Ji Hyun's sister is a bit clumsy but I like to think that it's Ji Hyun's gift to Yi Kyung, to give Yi Kyung a family and a new beginning.

One thing I am really happy about the ending was that they did not hint at Yi Kyung and Han Kang's romance or anything other than just pure friendship. I would have hated it so much if they went on the route. I agree with girlfriday that now Yi Kyung and Han Kang are "in the position to be able to love again, which is what’s important, and what Ji-hyun and Yi-soo made possible in the way they left the ones they loved." I am very sastisfied with that.

I do wish that Han Kang and Ji Hyun could at least hug on their last date though. The two time they hugged, Ji Hyun was in Yi Kyung's body.

All in all, I am happy with 49 Days and I think that it is a great drama worth watching.

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Having finally marathoned this drama, I'm between JB and GF. I loved every episode, and cried for the last three solid. I actually spent most of 20 waiting for the Powers That Be to fix things omg, so on one hand I'm distraught that they let us get so invested in Ji Hyun's continued life only to kill her in the end. I'm also kind of okay with it, just because it was unexpected and one of my favorite things about this drama is the way it either avoided kdrama stereotypes or sped along at such a clip you couldn't predict everything. I'm emotionally drained and if I ever cry again it will be too soon.

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i wasn't completely satisfied with this drama because some parts were kinda boring. i like the concept but not entirely the execution. it was unnecessary to make yi-kyung ji hyun's sister, especially since the way she "got lost" was kind of lame and unrealistic as well as how she found all of her old stuff and kang made that connection. kang and ji-hyun also didn't have very much chemistry so i didn't feel emotional about their parting.

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the ending was completely surprising. I was almost positive that JiHyun was going to survive and that they would somehow add another plot twist, but it was nice that they simply wrote that she accepted her death in a way that showed that she grew as a person. The ending is really bittersweet..while I loved it, I also hated it..but one thing is for sure, I wont ever forget it! So many rom-coms have predictably "good' endings so I can't ever remember the last scene, this drama has totally changed that for me :)

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You know, before yesterday I knew nothing about this drama. However as I was flipping through the channels last night I happened to come upon this last episode, and it looked really good so I decided to watch it. I didn't know any of the characters, but by the time it ended, I was crying so bad. Somehow in that short time I had grown to love all of them. When the reaper/angel (sorry, I forget his name!) was sending Ji-Hyun off and they were looking at each other with tears, I thought, wow, I have never seen KDrama done quite as well as this.

So after doing a bit of Googling I managed to find the name of this drama, and your blog. Thank you so much for posting an episode guide, because I know I'll be enjoying this series very much (if a bit late, but.. better late than never)!

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... the goodbyes were so sad, still with many heavy, heavy sighs, I will remember this powerful drama with the insight of JB and GF... Hope you join many fans in returning to our JB and GF's Dramabeans...

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...took me a while to finish this. 'initially watched with great enthusiasm but waiting for the subs to understand the plot got tedious... so I waited 'til the whole drama finished with eng subs and sobbed my way to the end!!!

What a tenderly awesome drama, yes sad but truly humane!!! I agree with many who say each character even the baddies were so real... The ending was truly acceptable and that Kang and In Hyung could not be (together) in the end. How we all wish that she didn't go but that's how this story goes. Kang accepting her departure allowed both of them to peacefully allow the other to move on in life and beyond...

To me the most gut wrenching part was between Yi Kyung and the scheduler... Yi Kyung's character was tragic followed by the unknowing scheduler who got the shock that he had strong relations to the others... Truly they could never be as the scheduler was already gone and YK tried so many times to join him but never succeeded.. Their final coming together will forever be a classic in my Kdrama memory. If there was something else I could do beyond sobbing myself sick, well I couldn't I ran out of tears at the final reunion!!! Of course the whole important part is moving on, leave yesterday behind cherished, not forgotten yet move on to face tomorrow.

In the back of my mind, well maybe YK and KA--maybe, but I feel they were each other's comfort zone and could never go beyond the platonic relationship. These two were too deeply engrossed in their first loves...

As for the baddies who truly weren't KMH--TORN between his old and new loves, very sad but great actor and one of my fave--Seo Ji Hye-- In Jung, they were great baddies. Luckily they redeemed themselves and each other at the end, true to the Kdrama genre.

JB, what's your take on Seo Ji Hye's "baddie" character. I know she's one of your faves... I'm looking forward to her next drama... we'll I'm looking forward to the next drama of all these magnificent actors.

Thanks, always-am a fan JB, GF--thanks and to the 49 Days followers, it was a great ride...

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I was hoping that the Scheduler and Ji Hyun would leave the world together, as friends, embarking on a new journey in their next lives - that would have been more satisfying than seeing Ji Hyun and the Scheduler depart on their own.

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Arrrg, so good! The ending could have been a little better, but overall I'm very happy with it. This is one of my favorite dramas so far. What am I going to watch now?? Not sure there's anything out there I haven't seen yet that is going to compare to this.

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