142

Scent of a Woman: Episode 11

This drama is playing havoc with my man-loyalties. One second my heart bleeds for heartbroken Ji-wook, and the other second it’s cheering on adorable Eun-seok. The drama has the curious ability to make me root for whichever character it’s focusing on in any given moment…only to have those desires flip the other way once the scene shifts to the other character. It’s wonderful, and horrible.

SONG OF THE DAY

Standing Egg – “휴식” (Rest) [ Download ]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

 
EPISODE 11 RECAP

Standing outside Yeon-jae’s hospital room, Ji-wook asks Eun-seok to confirm whether it’s cancer. He refuses to move until he hears the answer, threatening to step inside and ask her himself if Eun-seok doesn’t tell him.

Inside, Hye-won visits with Yeon-jae, asking how she’s holding up through her chemo treatments, as well as how long Yeon-jae will hide this from Ji-wook. Yeon-jae says she broke it off with him before he could find out about her cancer; she couldn’t leave him with a huge scar just so she could be happy while she’s alive.

Eun-seok doesn’t give away any details about Yeon-jae’s condition (finally, a K-dramaland doctor who cares about doctor-patient confidentiality!). He doesn’t even say whether the cancer guess is correct, only that the patient is indeed Yeon-jae. Eun-seok warns that if Ji-wook thinks he can’t handle the truth, he’d best shut the lid on that Pandora’s box and walk away.

Ji-wook leaves in a daze and thinks back to all of Yeon-jae’s comments about dying that he’d overlooked before, which now make sense — like how her Okinawa vacation might be her last. Yeon-jae may have hid the truth from people, but she’s actually been quite frank in her mentions of death — it’s just that people assumed she was being figurative.

After taking his time to contemplate the situation — and, I suspect, asking himself whether he can handle knowing — Ji-wook heads back to the hospital with new determination. He enters the grounds just in time to come face to face with Yeon-jae and gets straight to the point, asking what her condition is, and if it’s the reason she broke things off.

She confirms the cancer, and that she found out before meeting him. Ji-wook asks, hurt and accusatory, “And you still approached me? Then why did you change your mind now?” She answers that she only has a few months left to live: “Do you think you can handle me in this situation? So go.”

Struggling with his tears, he grits out, “Then you should never have approached me in the first place. You should have told me this before I fell so crazy in love with you!” She says, “I didn’t know that would happen.”

He calls her cruel, adding, “I hate myself like crazy for liking you.” With that, he leaves and heads to The Place Of All Brooding, the Han River, which I am convinced must have grown to its size purely from the tears of all its visitors throughout time.

Chairman Im tells Sae-kyung that per her wishes, he’s backed off his assault on Line Tour. Sae-kyung finally confesses a more rounded version of the truth (though still incomplete): That Ji-wook found out about her blackmailing ex, but refrained from mentioning it when he broke the engagement.

Dad understands that this makes it much less likely that Ji-wook will change his mind, but Sae-kyung asks to handle this herself, because marrying him is better than finding someone altogether new. (Ah, how romantic! “I’m too lazy to find a new fiancé!”) But she also betrays a sign of her own developing feelings by admitting, “I don’t dislike him.”

Eun-seok finds Yeon-jae listless in bed, having skipped all her meals today. She tells him dully that she told Ji-wook the truth: “It’s all over now.”

Now that the truth is out, Eun-seok tells Ji-wook that he hopes he’ll stay with her, because he’s worried for her. Ji-wook faces him with a mix of irritation and male pride, asking if the fanmeeting story about his first love is true.

Eun-seok doesn’t understand Ji-wook’s sudden change of heart, reminding him that he liked her enough to call off his engagement. Ji-wook admits that he’s not sure he has it in him to watch a woman die, and says he’s regretting his choice now — that if he knew about Yeon-jae’s cancer, he wouldn’t have “done something as stupid as call off the engagement.” Oof. And ouch. He’s not wrong when he says he’d be losing a lot of things for the sake of a few months together, but it sounds callous nonetheless. He tells Eun-seok to step in and be with her instead, both as doctor and the guy who’s been in love with her all this time.

Poor Poopypants — you get the sense that he’d give his eyeteeth for the chance Ji-wook is tossing aside, but he knows that swapping out men is hardly the same thing to Yeon-jae. I think that’s what kills me about his character — he’s always thinking of her first, though not in a stupidly noble way.

Eun-seok challenges Ji-wook, asking if he means it. Ji-wook leaves without answering, so Eun-seok follows him out to warn him not to come ’round no more: “You don’t have the right to be with her.”

To the liquor bottle it is. Eun-seok’s last words land with him, and Ji-wook seems upset with himself for proving that statement true.

Hee-joo bounces into the room to begin her own set of treatments, just as Yeon-jae’s about to be released. She confides that she was so inspired by Yeon-jae’s bucket list that she started a list of her own, including confessing to her crush on Eun-seok. She may have been instantly rebuffed, but she cheerily says that she intends to keep trying until she’s successful.

Next, Yeon-jae turns her attention to Item #14 on her bucket list: Ask for forgiveness from “S.” Apparently this is a long-standing grievance, and Hye-won wonders why she’s curious about “teacher” all of a sudden, advising her not to look him up. I smell a misunderstanding, because Hye-won is under the impression that the teacher was in the wrong, while Yeon-jae feels the need to make amends.

Yeon-jae asks if Hye-won decided on her proposal, and Hye-won sighs that she’s not sure, but that because of Yeon-jae’s comments, she’s reconsidering. While I totally get why Yeon-jae snapped at her previously — Hye-won’s concerns skewed largely materialistic — I can also see why Hye-won’s torn, because she feels that marrying this guy would be settling. She’s coming around, though, and is starting to look more favorably on him.

Hee-joo ducks to see Eun-seok in the hospital and tries to slide past him unseen, recalling that their last encounter ended with him yelling at her (for her webtoon, which she has pulled offline). Today, however, he asks to talk with her, to her delight, and she’s happy to answer his question of how a cancer patient would prefer to be treated. (Aw. Again Poopypants warms my heart.) She says that pity and sympathy are to be avoided, and that the most comforting comments she received were the normal ones, the ones that treated her the same as usual.

Despite her date offer going ignored, Hee-joo sighs happily that this feels like a date — it’s the longest they’ve ever talked together. Well, without him insulting her or yelling, I’m sure.

Mom notes Yeon-jae’s weight loss and looks at her suspiciously…then asks if she’s dating. Who was that good-looking man who came looking for her? Yeon-jae says he was just her old boss, wanting to drop the subject, and kicks Mom out of her room to receive a phone call. Mom tries to eavesdrop, suspecting a call from a man, but hears nothing.

It’s Eun-seok, who’s waiting outside and psyching himself up by telling himself, “Treat her normally, like usual.” He reminds her that tonight is tango class, and that she promised to be his partner. They stumble through new steps, with Yeon-jae distracted and fumbling the moves.

Chairman Kang drops by to check in on Ji-wook, clucking disapprovingly to see him in bed, hungover, the signs of his bender strewn around the house. Assuming that women troubles are the cause, Dad issues the ol’ “I told you so” and tells him that it was obvious things weren’t going to work out with someone of such a different class — might as well be caste, as far as he’s concerned — and that Ji-wook ought to nip it in the bud and come to his senses.

Ji-wook dully asks him to please leave him alone, and heads into the shower, fully clothed, lost in his misery.

The tango class goes for drinks after the lesson, and Yeon-jae zones out, thinking of her sizzling tango with Ji-wook while the others pout that he isn’t coming back to class. With Eun-seok’s dance performance just a week away, instructor Veronica offers to choreograph the steps and tells the pair to come by every day to practice.

Afterward, Eun-seok takes Yeon-jae back to their old school, making her smile in reminiscence. She thinks the reason he remembers it is because of his traumatic pants-pooping incident, but he tells her with a smile that there’s something he hasn’t been able to tell her for 25 years: “Thank you, that day. If you hadn’t taken off the sweater you were wearing and tied it around my waist, I might not have been able to make it home.”

He cheerily challenges her to a race, reminding her of how she used to poke fun at him for being so slow, and he draws a starting line in the dirt.

And…they’re off! He easily outpaces her and exclaims that he’s winning, but trips over his feet halfway through, letting her claim victory. He smiles up at her and acknowledges her win, while she jumps up and down in glee.

As they sit outside the school, Yeon-jae confides that there’s somebody she needs to ask forgiveness from, but has no idea how to locate the person. Eun-seok offers to show her how, and guides her to a particular function on her smartphone, telling her that she can ask a question, and people will respond with advice. (Think Yahoo Answers.)

Ji-wook visits the grave of his mother, asking her what he ought to do. Haltingly, he confesses, “I’m afraid. I’m so scared of having to say goodbye to someone, like with you. But…she’s probably even more scared, isn’t she?”

In the morning, Yeon-jae is awakened by a call from Ji-wook, which she doesn’t answer. But he stands outside her gate until she comes out, and tells her that he can’t break up with her: “I don’t care what sickness you have, or how long you have to live. I want to be with you.”

She tells him flatly that she doesn’t want him with her, and that he ought to go find someone he can be happy with for many years to come. He counters, “But you don’t care if you have to be unhappy?”

She says bitterly that it’s only for a few months. Ouch — she’s used his own words, which basically treat her like she’s already dead, like those months are so few in number they don’t even count. She tells him she doesn’t want to show him her dying process, and sends him away.

As she steps away, he cries and tells her, “I love you.”

She’s not unmoved, but she won’t let herself weaken yet and tells him that his love is a burden. Once inside the gate, she allows herself to sob silently, just feet away from a devastated Ji-wook.

Chairman Kang assures Sae-kyung in his smug, premature way that Ji-wook’s women complications are at an end. He calls Ji-wook a soft-hearted boy who fell prey to the manipulating female’s wiles, saying that there’s a difference between love and pity. Funny how he knows that, despite appearing unacquainted with either emotion.

Ji-wook returns to his time capsule tree, where he writes Yeon-jae a text message to tell her he has re-buried the old ring, intending to keep it there until she takes him back. Telling her that it’s been there 20 years and can stay there another 100, he asks, “But please don’t make me wait that long.” Yeon-jae cries as she reads the message.

Sae-kyung calls Yeon-jae to meet, which works for Yeon-jae snice she has something to say as well. Sae-kyung asks right off the bat whether it’s true she’s broken up with Ji-wook. On top of everything else that princess hates about Yeon-jae, she’s particularly incensed that the woman who “stole” her fiancé was so quick to then break up with him.

Asked if this was all her revenge, Yeon-jae replies, “Yeah, I guess so.” Agreeing that Ji-wook is to be pitied, Yeon-jae tells Sae-kyung to comfort him: “You two seem like you’d be good together. You’re just right for him. You’re rich, young, pretty — and healthy.”

She has one more thing to say: “Have a son and a daughter that resemble Kang Ji-wook, and live happily for a long, long time. That’s what I wanted to say.” And she gets up and leaves.

Eun-seok actually inquires after a patient’s condition with consideration for once, then finds his feet sliding in a tango walk as he heads down the hallway. Looking around to ensure he’s alone, he closes his eyes and lifts his hands to guide an imaginary partner, practicing the steps replete with turns and slides. Omg. I am so in love with you right now, you dorkypants.

He finishes and smiles, only to find he’s not so much alone anymore. Hee-joo flashes him a great big thumbs-up, while the nurse looks gobsmacked. Eun-seok whirls around, cringes all the way down to his soul, and hurries away.

Over the next few days, Eun-seok and Yeon-jae continue their private sessions with Ramses and Veronica, and enough of the rumors have spread that even the hospital patients wish him luck for the upcoming performance.

Ji-wook and his team go out to celebrate the Wando tour project, which is looking like it’ll be a hit. The ladies fawn over Ji-wook for leading the project, while Hye-won speaks up to say that technically, Yeon-jae should be here since it was her idea.

Hye-won clocks Ji-wook’s reaction carefully as she offers to call her, but Ramses/Bong-gil pipes up that Yeon-jae’s awfully busy these days, practicing tango nightly for the hospital show with that Schweitzer fellow. He’s forgotten that Ji-wook is the only one who knows of his secret identity, and upon realizing the slip, he fumbles that he heard the news somewhere.

Meanwhile, Ji-wook drowns his sorrows in drink, to the extent that a designated driver is called to take him home. He finds the car in front of Yeon-jae’s house, however, and is told that he’d given this address as his direction.

Ji-wook steps outside for a moment to look out at the house, just as Mom walks up to the gate and recognizes him. Telling him that Yeon-jae should be home, she offers to call her out, but he declines and gets back into the car with his driver.

Mom hurries inside to tell Yeon-jae that the “kkot-minam” (pretty flower boy) came back, prodding for juicy details. Yeon-jae brushes it aside with vague denials, though it does nothing to change Mom’s mind.

Yeon-jae checks the question she’d posted online about her old high school teacher, and finds a response from one of her classmates saying that he runs a bakery in her neighborhood. She calls Eun-seok to tell him the good news, and that she’ll drop by to see the teacher before their performance later.

Yeon-jae makes her way to the store, working up her courage to approach the man at the counter. It’s clear from his cool reception that he remembers her, and not in a good way. Averting his gaze, he tells her he’d like her to leave: “I don’t want to look at your face.” Eep! Whatever she did, it must’ve been a doozy.

Eun-seok finds her in low spirits outside the hospital. She says that forgiveness seems unlikely, and asks while on the verge of tears, “Why is this so hard? I don’t have much longer to live — why is it so difficult?”

Eun-seok looks at her with sympathy, then says in his usual matter-of-fact way (which I love) that she’d once told him about meeting an old man when she’d been feeling utterly alone, and that dancing the tango with him had provided her with comfort: “Tonight, will you think of me as that old man?” Aww, that is so sweet, it brings tears to my eyes. He pats her shoulder consolingly, and she leans on him.

Ji-wook and Sae-kyung have a business meeting, after which she suggests having dinner together. He flatly rejects the offer, but she assures him that she’s asking as a Seojin Group executive — it’s not a personal date.

Over dinner, the mood is actually cordial between them and Sae-kyung says she’s glad to see him looking okay, because she was heartbroken for quite a while after her failed romance.

He replies that his father must have told her about his breakup, adding that Dad has jumped to conclusions. But she says that she heard it from Yeon-jae, who essentially gave her her blessing to pursue a relationship with him. A shocker to Ji-wook, who’s hurt by the blow.

At the hospital show, Eun-seok and Yeon-jae await their turn backstage, and he breathes uneasily as he admits that he wants to run away. When his turn arrives, he nervously takes his place onstage and leads Yeon-jae into the dance.

After the initial sequence, they both start to smile and enjoy the show, performing to loud cheers and an enthusiastic response.

Halfway through, Ji-wook arrives in the auditorium and watches the tango, his expression reflecting his turmoil. After they exit the stage, Ji-wook follows the couple outside, and arrives just as Yeon-jae assures Eun-seok that she feels good, despite the physical strain.

Ji-wook butts right in and tells Eun-seok to leave them alone, leading to another brief glare-off until Yeon-jae tells Eun-seok it’s okay.

Eun-seok reluctantly steps aside, though not out of earshot, as Ji-wook asks one last time: “What is it you want? Is it for me to leave you?” She nods and replies, “Yes.”

Frustrated but with no other recourse, Ji-wook has to comply: “You’re saying that it can’t work. Fine, I’ll do as you want. I won’t see you again.”

He walks off, and she watches his departure tearfully.

 
COMMENTS

Over the years, we’ve had second leads who’ve been ineffectual (you know, the ones with no shot in hell but who cling and interfere and cling some more) and those who’ve been so engaging they overshadow the hero. For me, the most appealing scenario, from a storytelling perspective, is when the hero and the second lead are equally matched.

A recent example of this is Best Love, where Pil-joo (Yoon Kye-sang) was so sweet and adorable that you couldn’t help feel a little crushed for him when he didn’t win his love. But I recall reading a particular comment back in the shipping debates of that show that sums up the conflict succinctly: A person can’t deserve someone’s love more than someone else. It’s sort of the nature of the beast, that love is given freely and without condition, regardless of whether you’ve “earned” or “deserved” it.

And that’s usually enough for me to concede to the OTP, aka the two that were set up to be our main couple. If she loves the hero, who am I to wish otherwise? Yet what works especially well in Scent of a Woman is that I think she does love Eun-seok, too, in a different way. He’s not just a handsome man who developed feelings for her while she was off falling in love with another guy; he’s her friend and moral support, her confidant and guide. Moreover, he’s the guy she leans on when she can’t lean on the hero. So my heart twists just a little extra for this guy, especially every time he puts his own feelings aside to do what she needs or wants. Gah, just kill me now, why don’t you.

As for Ji-wook: I like that the drama had him go through the betrayed, accusatory phase — asking, How could she approach him knowing full well of her condition? — before he decides he loves Yeon-jae anyway. I admit feeling that same mix of sympathy and irritation with her for that, and while ultimately I’m rooting for Yeon-jae in this drama, that was enough to mar how I felt about her.

It’s one of those tricky gray areas, and I can tell from the comments that opinions are fairly split on the issue, of whether it was right or wrong for Yeon-jae to act as she did, or if the dying person in the scenario always gets carte blanche. I think Yeon-jae’s entitled to do whatever she wants with her time, and doesn’t owe anybody explanations for her behavior. It’s her life; it’s up to her to decide what is a meaningful use of the remainder. On the flipside, I can’t see a person of her character being able to die peacefully without also reaching a measure of closure with her loved ones.

But the fact that Ji-wook is angry about her choice — and that she recognizes it was selfish of her to initiate the relationship knowing she was dying — actually mitigates my own conflicted feelings, and lets me move past them. If Ji-wook could feel betrayed and then forgive her, at least it reflects some amount of inner conflict on his part. Whereas, if he hadn’t felt betrayed at all and been painted with a saintly brush, I would’ve felt dissatisfied with the unrealistic, out-of-touch reaction.

RELATED POSTS

Tags: , , , , ,

142

Required fields are marked *

love this episode so much!!! thanx for recaping.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Eun Sook-ahhhhhh i will forever remember you dancing in the hospital hall... priceless :D

this drama is really keeping me on edge and as soon as i watch the 2 new episodes, i am already fretting for the next weekend to come sooner... i've seen SO many kdramas (i'm sure a lot of you have too hehe) but this one really gets me... kudos to the writer, director, and most especially the actors for doing a splendid job... YAY!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

" A person can’t deserve someone’s love more than someone else. It’s sort of the nature of the beast, that love is given freely and without condition, regardless of whether you’ve “earned” or “deserved” it."

What does the nature of the beast here refer to? I tried googling but i didnt get the results i wanted. :/

Please answer thanks! :D

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

re: 'the nature of the beast'

Its just a saying meaning something along the lines of 'that's just how things are'.

Where, 'the beast' is the problem you're talking about, the nature of it is something you can't change.

In this instance, 'the beast' is love, and the nature of it is 'that love is given freely and without condition, regardless of whether you’ve “earned” or “deserved” it.'

I hope that explains it somewhat, I'm not very good at explaining.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think you explained it well, Eleven. :)

just to add: "beast" - a negative word - was used to refer to "love" (or the rules of the game of love) because it may or may not behave to one's favor, thereby is prone to cause pain.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

wow JB love your comments... your recaps are the best!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thank you for the recap! :)

And no, I didn't feel the same when I watched Best Love. Pil-joo's not as good as ES and I don't think that PJ and Dokko Jin were equal "competior". PJ's excessively perfect with his kindness and becuse this he didn't seem real at all.

ES isn't flawless but with it he seems believeble and real (and for me nearly perfect).
Of course this is only my opinion. :)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I am on YJ's side of things. Everyday we live, not knowing when we die and we still love. Why is it wrong then for someone who knows when they will die and still choosing to love someone? Everyone has to love whole-heartedly and YJ didn't force JW to love her. She should have told him earlier that she was going to die but honestly, whose not to say that if JW loves someone, that they weren't going to leave suddenly anyway. I don't know if I'm explaining things properly but whilst its good to see conflict, you can't define what YJ did as wrong.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

so unrealistic drama!!!!! dream on!!! does not happen in real life, purely for entertainment

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I know the feeling of 2nd lead hero I fell in love with a few of them myself...and river Han is a place full of tragedy broken love,stolen cars and a secret rendezvous that cause a scandal...and many more ...but what I am worried off is will YJ die finally...because the living will have to continue living and kept the memories bury ....till then I keep my finger cross for a good ending...even if YJ have to die ...Thanks for the wonderful recaps..

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thanks for the recap JB! First time posting here and I must say that I do appreciate the afterthought you input on every drama that u recap. This drama has a stellar cast that delivers the goods. KSA is a brilliant actress and is absolutely committed to her role. LDW could not have chosen the perfect comeback movie. R
The supporting cast is icing to the cake. At first, I just watched this drama because of Wookie, but the story got me hooked into it.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Park Hyung Ki THE WRITER
http://movie.daum.net/movieperson/Summary.do?personId=111286

surpassed himself!!!!

two greatest actors

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thanks for the recap, JB!

I dunno about you guys but the doctor friend's devotion reminds me of Hanazawa Rui's in Hanadan.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thank you JB!

Oh the torment.. :(

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Whoever wrote this drama should have an award! concept was superb, intelligent, and grounded.. :)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thanks so much for the recaps!

This drama is so wonderful! Yeon-jae, Ji-wook and Eun-sook play up their characters so well you just can't help but get sucked in. What amazes me so much of LDW is how much intensity the emotions show on his face and his various expressions as well as how well this guy can cry, like really cry. Doc Poopy-pants on the other hand is very giving that it cuts my heart out to see him pained in his effort to support Eun-jae in every way. Eun-jae, all I can say is, you really are amazing. I am a sick person too, not terminal as hers but sometimes, the feeling of not letting others into my world pops up due to this sickness. I can understand her actions and her feelings of conflict within herself.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

i LOVE the tango scenes... you know how in most dramas, peeps do a compilation of kiss scenes... well, for this drama i would really love to see a compilation of tango scenes :D

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

DEAR JB & GF

Thanks for the wonderful recaps .. I am new and i enjoy every single word..here..

I print all the pages ..cause I have to hide myself (war in Israel now in the south)

It help to calm myself .

I cried my heart because of painful moments and because of my life here under attack of bombs and fire rockets

ksa and ldw are very very talented actors ..adorable actors.

yes…we are facing a sad ending …

Thank you so much ..

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thank you for the recap. You completely captured the melancholy and also the delightful moments of this episode.
I may have cried more reading this than actually watching

G rated:
JW’s car moved mysteriously during his visit at the hospital from right near the entrance to somewhere else.
JH in PtB has the same black sequined throw pillow that SK has at her house.
When JW drank liquor directly from a very expensive looking bottle, it reminded me of his character in La Dolce Vita.

PG rated:
Umm....JW...you still have a little drip of that expensive alcohol on your bottom lip...right there...chogi...you want me to get that for you? I'm a little thirsty, too here....how about I...shakes delicious feeling of how to remove said drop and quench thirst at the same time. I think I will go gaze at my screen cap of the drop that will NOT fall...

Oh, Wookie, why so tempting?

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Oh no, Jomo!

*Jumps in to prevent a Secret Garden cafe kiss with Wookie.*

"JW’s car moved mysteriously during his visit at the hospital from right near the entrance to somewhere else."

Must be the hospital valet service. :)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This blasted episode dried up my tears. I've been crying since episode 8 (on a marathon) and when I got to this ep, insides were being twisted but couldn't shed a tear anymore. Alas, my tears ran out before my roll of tissue paper did.

This show has a gravity that equals that of the sun. You know it will hurt you when it pulls you but you just can't get off it. Indeed, this is Best Love - in tears. Buckets - no - drumloads of tears.

Torn between Wookie and Puppy Seuk. Ottoke? Argh.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Nicely put, I totally agree.

I feel like BL and SOW are about grown-ups who are just trying to figure out what the heck is going on and how the heck to make the right choices.

We have a big circle (block) party today - a live lobster boil- I will have to delay watching Ep 12 till the party's over... or not... Do you think my guests will notice if I disappear for 1 hour and 6 minutes?

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

"I feel like BL and SOW are about grown-ups who are just trying to figure out what the heck is going on and how the heck to make the right choices."

I agree. The protagonists didn't go emo just because they can or because it's sewed in their characters to throw fits anytime they want to.

I really feel for JW, coz he's already offering to go through the pains of standing by YJ's side but gets rejected over and over. He won't get closure if he just stays away and force himself to think that nothing's happening. On one hand, it hurts him to lose yet another one he loves since his mother passed, and on the other, he is faced with the possibility of being in a position that is similar to what his father did to his mother - to have no involvement/not be there for YJ during her time of need.

"Do you think my guests will notice if I disappear for 1 hour and 6 minutes?"

LOL. If I were you, I'd set up a projector and watch ep. 12 and get everyone hooked on the drama. But that's me. (Not the best source of suggestions, you see.) :P I'd suggest that you wait till everyone's a bit drunk and then sneak a peek at SoaW.

Over here a bottle of soju sits on my table awaiting my ep. 12 viewing. Let's see what drinking & watching Wookie will do to me. ;)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

omg ! the ep 11 just break my heart - ep. 12 just finish the job .

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Wow, it's been a long time since I got addicted to a Korean drama. The other Korean drama that I really loved is My Lovely Sam Soon. Kim Sun Ah is so lucky she gets to play these female characters with great depths of emotions. Usually, I get really sad when the hero and heroine don't get together, but in this series, I actually don't. Not sure why, but I totally "get" why Yeon Jae is pushing Ji Wook away. I think initially, Yeon Jae, propelled by her terminal illness, allowed herself to play along with Ji Wook. It was kind of a fun game for her because I don't think she ever in a million years thought that Ji Wook would actually fall for her. But he did and she came to really love him (as opposed to just crushing on him). With that, she realizes that Ji Wook is going to suffer a great loss and the guilt that she feels, for pulling him into her life in such a way that he now stands to suffer a great deal of pain, is too much for her to handle. And this is why she's pushing him away. I think deep down, a lot of what Yeon Jae does is motivated by guilt. Ji Wook's character really has great depth to it as well. Although the audience would want him to instantly rush to Yeon Jae's side and be her superhero, his character responds very realistically - I would feel angry too if I find out that someone was going to die and purposely lead me on so I would fall in love with him/her. It's very cruel if you step back and look at the situation more objectively. So, she is ravaged by love, guilt and regret. I bet she would do anything to turn back time and not let Ji Wook enter her life . He's torn between his love and passion for her and the anger and sense of betrayal that he feels after finding. I totally get these two characters. God damn it and this is why I am so freakin' addicted to this drama.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Poopy-Seok is John Krasinski in Something Borrowed! Aiya!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I do agree with what you said. It is indeed a gray area...this just shows that Yoon Jae is not perfect....true that she is a good friend and employee, but NO ONE is perfect.

And the rage after finding out is perfectly fine, that just makes the coming back together even better =)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Eun-seok is definitely the shining star in this episode, and Ji-wook is the poor, pitiful heartbroken guy. He looks so sad, and I just so feel bad for him. But I'm also happy that Eun-seok gets a full episode to get some attention and that the tango performance was a success. I was actually afraid that Yeon-jae would bail out on him for some stupid reason. Good thing that didn't happen! I don't think Yeon-jae has an attraction for Eun-seok though, bc her heart and mind is elsewhere whenever he tries to do things with her.
I also agree with you, JB, when they made Ji-wook experience feelings of being betrayed. I mean, who wouldn't? So glad they manage to create scenes that we can actually relate to and understand that things like that can happen in real life, not just in some pretty drama.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

First i must state that ever since i watched MNIKSS i love KSA, she's my fave actress (love her even more in City Hall) so i was very happy for this new drama of her. Also i like Wooky (who doesn't) cause he was so cute in My Girl.
So I have to admit i'm very surprised to say that the best of this drama is Eun Seok (he's just adorable and relatable) this is the first episode where he actually gets more screentime so i'm very happy with this epi. almost all the time i like or understand Ji-wook. But (i know it's weird and dont hate me) excluding the okinawa episodes i'm not liking KSA so much (i don't know if its the acting or the role) but i don't know what to think of her.
but since episode 6 i'm really enjoying the drama, and wheter it would be a happy or a sad ending i'm ok with it.
Thanks for all your wonderful recaps

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

cue your words about KSA here esp. in the early eps. She can act, no doubt, but those first few eps were strange torture for me (and this coming from someone who truly loved her in Samsoon and City Hall) but glad I stuck on cos I was sailed away by 6 or so (or 8 - that sizzling tango scene!)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

While I can understand why you would say that Yeon-Jae's life is her own & therefore her decisions are (ultimately) her own, I can't help but argue this statement. I don't believe that our life is our own.

Our choices affect those we surround ourselves with & thus these choices make an impact on their life as well. Therefore, our life isn't our's at all, but is actually interconnected with all those we have met & stayed connected to. If the choice I made in/directly impacts another person's life, does this not already cross that very thin line of what's mine & what's theirs?

While I can't say that I would do things differently if I were in Yeon-Jae's shoes (I mean, who would say no to the love of your life even with or without the 6 month time limit??), I just can't use the whole, "Well it IS her life so who am I to say that what she did was right or wrong?" statement as an excuse to justify her actions. When we get down to the core of it all, she's human.

To every one of us, we are the center of the universe & it's all about our wants & needs. Let's just call it out as it is: she acted selfishly & without any thought to the consequences. Does that make her in the wrong or right? My answer to that is, why must we always be either right or wrong? What's wrong with just sitting on the fence, being in the gray area, & not being catergorized?

With all that said, I'm actually glad that she did what she did. Even if she may not live in the end -- & trust me, I have a whole box of tissues (& then some) right beside me if this does so happen to be the case -- I think that her relations with everyone that she met (& again, whose life was affected due to her actions) will be what drives this drama home for me.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

waw! i like it.. it was "AMAZING" aawwwwww
kyyyyyyyyyyaaaaaaaaa!!!! Like* Like* Like*

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *