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Master’s Sun: Episode 3

Despite the fact that I’m a huge scaredy-cat and the ghosts on this show are rather effective at popping up (literally, ack) to maximize my fear response, my wimpy impulse to watch through my fingers is mitigated by how much enjoyment I get out of watching our two leads interact. Arguing, insulting, bantering, sneering, hugging (especially hugging)—all of it is charged with so much chemistry that it’s just a pleasure to watch. Honestly, I can’t guarantee this show won’t tank and I’d advise against betting on it, but the romance has got me hooked and good, enough that I’m thinking Master’s Sun could be worth the watch anyway. Fingers crossed.

SONG OF THE DAY

Kang Seung-yoon – “맘도둑” (Heart thief) [ Download ]

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EPISODE 3 RECAP

After Gong-shil admits that she can see Joong-won’s ghostly first love hanging around him, he gives her a message to pass along to the dead Hee-joo: “You bitch.”

He wears the most self-satisfied smirk on his face, but Gong-shil says knowingly that he must have really loved her if he’s that angry at her for leaving him, and promises to pass along the sentiment. HA. It’s worth it just for the way Gong-shil’s reaction turns his shit-eating grin into instant confusion. I enjoy how this totally neutralizes Joong-won’s jerkwad tendencies—not that he’s being less of one, but she misinterprets his behavior through a positive lens, and he’s left feeling unjustly accused of being nice. It’s all, Wait! I was being an ass! You misunderstood!

The exchange gets noticed by (potentially) shifty security director Kang Woo, who has been waiting to go home with Gong-shil and watches curiously from the side.

One of Joong-won’s shopping mall employees, Jin-ju, leaves work that evening and finds a lone designer high heel lying in the middle of the empty hall. As she takes it to the lost and found center, someone—or thing—follows her and gives her the heebie-jeebies. Only when she looks around, she can’t see anybody.

But we can—there’s a dead woman right behind her. Ack! Even when I’m expecting it, this show still manages to creep me out with the ghost reveals. The ghost protests, “That’s my shoe!” and follows. Gahhhh, stop that Ring flicker, stop it!

Jin-ju gets scared by the resulting paranormal effects (dimming lights, falling signs) and starts running for the stairs. But a ghostly hand wraps itself around her ankle—ack they can touch now?—and she falls down the stairs.

Gong-shil, Joong-won, and Kang Woo hear the scream and find Jin-ju sprawled in the stairwell, thankfully only with minor injuries. Joong-won decides the fall is the result of a bad floor-wax job and orders Gong-shil to clean it up, then heads off—just in time to hear Kang Woo commenting to Gong-shil that they won’t be able to go home together after all. He pretends he doesn’t care. Suuure.

Kang Woo accompanies Jin-ju to the hospital, and with his secretary needing to deliver her documents, Joong-won is left to drive himself home. He sniffs that of course he’s capable, only to press all the wrong buttons, open the trunk instead of the door, and set the lights blinking. Heh.

Gong-shil finds the dropped shoe and tries it on wistfully, and then spots the ghost huddled in the stairwell with her grabby hands out. Gong-shil flees while the ghost follows her down the hall, dragging herself along with her arms—one leg is bloody and wears the other shoe.

Gong-shil makes it into the elevator (noooo, why the elevator?) as the limping ghost gets closer and closer… and then an arm shoves inside to keep the doors open. GAH.

But of course, the doors close because she is a ghost and the laws of physics are still mercifully intact.

In the driver’s seat, Joong-won squints at his car dashboard, just barely managing to read the word “home” to get his navigation going. Ha, you don’t even know the way home? You helpless little man.

Gong-shil darts into the parking lot and bangs on Joong-won’s window, begging for help. He refuses and drives off, but (against his own judgment) thinks twice when he sees her terrified face in his mirror. When he gets out and demands why she’s making such a fuss, Gong-shil launches herself at him and grabs tight.

I think we’re a bit early for the love ballad and the slo-mo pan-around to kick in, but Joong-won looks rather affected by the clinging so what do I know. A security guard catches a glimpse of the hug onscreen and assumes it’s the other thing, ha.

At the hospital, Kang Woo waits outside while Jin-ju is treated and watches suspiciously as a patient darts outside with her face covered, hides behind him, then tries to reach inside a locked car via the open sunroof. Yeah that’s not obvious at all, lady.

Turns out it’s jilted bride and top star Yi-ryung, trying to grab a change purse from her own car for a snack despite not having the key. Kang Woo takes over the task and does the smooth version of her failed sunroof break-in, but since her wallet’s practically empty he ends up buying her snacks.

He notes that soju’s part of the order and Yi-ryung cops to faking her hospital stay (to rustle up pity in the aftermath of her jilting). She warns him not to pity her, and he points out that pity was the point of faking her hospital stay. Touché. Yi-ryung asks for his number to pay him back later, which he declines, which makes her sputters indignantly. Oh, princess.

High Heeled Ghost turns up in corporeal form at the site of a car accident—she was driving with only one shoe on, which makes the officers wonder whether she was drunk. She’s taken to the hospital, where her husband is informed of her death. He sobs over her body in a display of grief—and then his mouth twists into a smile. Creepy.

Joong-won may insist he doesn’t believe Gong-shil and her ghost-seeing powers, but I notice he drives her to the hospital anyway to follow up on the corpse. She walks out with one foot stuck in a tissue box, since she left her own shoe in the stairwell, and assures him that she’s not embarrassed to be seen this way. I think his concern was more about his own embarrassment, but yunno.

Gong-shil is immediately on edge as they walk into the ER, since she can see the ghosts of recently dead patients lingering around their bodies. The Shoe Corpse gets wheeled by, and Joong-won notes it with shocked eyes, although he stubbornly sticks to his line about not being scared of things he can’t see.

Gong-shil does an impression of the High Heeled Ghost limping after her to insist how scary they really are, and he averts his eyes and backs away reflexively. She gets him to admit grudgingly that she probably was scared, and explains that if she grabs him, they disappear. She’s totally working this situation, playing on that tiny bit of sympathy, and it cracks me up.

She insists that it’s not because he’s rich or attractive, and that she’s no gold digger. It’s just that the ghosts are so relentless with her, not leaving her alone until she does as they say. This woman, for instance, wants her to give the shoe to her husband with the message that she’ll be watching over him.

Joong-won recognizes the husband as his employee, so Gong-shil figures the wife was on her way to meet him when she died. But when she approaches with the shoe, she finds him cackling into his phone that it was a miracle she died and took care of that all on her own.

Joong-won excuses himself from the proceedings, ready to let Gong-shil handle the rest on her own, and she protests—she needs him with her to prevent other ghosts from clinging. He withholds his hand from her grasp, though, to ask if the ghosts ever offer up “useful” info, like say stock market predictions or lotto numbers. At her no, he declares them utterly meaningless to him, and therefore he has no need for her.

Gong-shil argues that he knows she’s telling the truth, but he counters that he’ll continue to only believe what he sees and consider her a crazy person who doesn’t realize that walking around in a tissue box makes her look nuts. Off he goes.

And so Gong-shil takes the walk of shame home, braving snickers from strangers and stumbling along in her broken-down tissue box. Joong-won does discover a pair of slippers in his car and briefly considers them, then figures the tissue box is sturdy and comfortable enough.

On the upside, Kang Woo is also heading home from the hospital, and assures Gong-shil that using a tissue box for a shoe was a sensible move. He hails a cab for them, and Gong-shil swoons… then shakes off an unseen arm and hisses, “Shhh!” Haha, is a ghost going to play cockblocker?

Aw, and then Joong-won drives along the road looking for Gong-shil with a pair of shoes on the seat next to him, only there’s no sign of her. (He grumpily talks back to the GPS lady too, which I can totally relate to.)

Once back at the apartment, Kang Woo asks whether Gong-shil meant Joong-won when she referred to having a “special person” at Kingdom, and whether they’re in a “special relationship.” She says yes, but adds that she’s not “that kind of special” to the boss—he thinks of her as just a crazy woman.

That makes Kang Woo smile, and she giggles to herself. Her sister Gong-ri drops by and suggests that this ghost problem could be caused by her lack of energy and stamina. Thus, she encourages her to get closer to Kang Woo and build up her stamina by taking some of his. Ha, there are a couple ways to interpret that sentence.

Gong-shil wonders if strong energy is the reason Joong-won is special to her, but unni advises her to focus on Kang Woo first. Lol, she makes her sound like a vampire.

The next day while at work, Gong-shil comes to the shop owned by the husband to High Heeled Ghost, which is temporarily closed. Joong-won also makes his rounds with his team and tells his team to look into the owner, who seems untrustworthy.

Our chatty security guard gossips with his teammate at the café (where unni Gong-ri works) and notes that the husband was known for being devoted to his wife. And he had good reason, since the wife was wealthy and set up the shop for him, and her mother owns buildings in Kangnam, which means he’s about to come into lots and lots of cash.

Gong-shil overhears this and glumly supposes that nobody would believe the one person who called him a bad guy if the rest of the world thought he was a decent one.

Gong-shil checks with employee Jin-ju to retrace where she first found the high heel, and begins the reenactment. She checks with the ghost to make sure she’s got the right idea, and it’s here that Joong-won finds her, sprawled on the ground.

She reminds him that he knows exactly what she’s doing and why, though he replies that she’s looking crazy again. Just then a woman walks by wearing the same heels, and she heads off to ask her about them.

The woman heads into the closed shop, followed by the husband, and Gong-shil peers in through the window to watch. Her view is obstructed by a wall of bags on display, so she imagines herself wearing the heels (as the wife) and tiptoes herself into the perfect vantage point to see the two of them getting awfully chummy.

A flashback to the night of the death confirms it, with the wife overhearing her husband sigh that he has to play the part of the doting partner, and that his wife enjoys hiking… “because she’d never guess she’s looking for her place of death.” Ack, so he was gonna literally kill her?

The husband had seen her looking in the window and run after her, chasing her through the empty mall. She’d driven off in tears, swerving along the road as her husband chased her, and in her attempt to outdrive him, she’d run into a parked truck.

Gong-shil huddles in shock, and the cheating husband goes on to assure his mistress that his mother-in-law will die soon and everything will become his. Do you mean ‘cause she’s old, or ‘cause you’re gonna kill her? He doesn’t see, of course, the angry ghost standing right next to him, shedding tears of blood.

Joong-won takes his daily look through his golden telescope at the progressing construction of Giant Mall next door, and Secretary Kim advises him to take care with Cheater Man’s store, because it’s one of their higher-earning ones. He worries that Gong-shil may make a mistake with the high-heeled woman she followed, who turns out to be that store’s employee.

High Heels’ grieving mother visits the shop with some food for Cheaty, who plays the part of the dutiful son-in-law to the hilt. They’ve only got each other now, he says gently, and suggests a hiking trip on a trail that High Heels loved. I guess murder’s back on the table.

Gong-shil steps into the store to return the shoe and confront Cheaty with his misdeeds, which naturally puts him on his guard as he tells his mother-in-law that she’s totally wrong. Unfortunately he remains calm and collected, which contrasts with Gong-shil’s mounting hysteria as she tells Mom that he’s a bad person, and that just gets her dragged away by security as she yells, “I have to protect her!”

Kang Woo is alerted to the disturbance, which blows up pretty quickly as a crowd gathers outside the store. Yi-ryung recognizes her and is happy to confirm that her old rival (“You mean the one who was prettier and smarter than you?”) has been thus reduced.

Gong-shil gets shoved to the ground and registers that everyone’s looking at her like she’s lost her mind, her eyes tearing up as she’s made the sideshow. It’s now that Joong-won arrives and orders her to stand up—and then offers her a hand. He asks if she found the shoe owner, then listens as she points out the husband who’s lying about it.

Cheating Husband counters that she’s crazy, so Joong-won calls him on the bluff: Let’s see who’s right. He holds up the shoe that was on his wife’s foot when she died—the one Cheaty threw out at the hospital. And wouldn’t you know, the sizes don’t match. And the one Gong-shil holds is a perfect fit.

Joong-won spots the mistress watching around the corner and has her brought out, wearing only one shoe.

That’s enough proof for Rich Mother-in-Law, who realizes the truth. And now Gong-shil delivers the wife’s message: that she would watch over him for the rest of his life and join him in his final resting place. Shudder. Now there’s a way to keep a guy on edge for life.

Gong-shil returns the shoes to the grieving mother, and the ghost gives her a tearful final hug before making her misty exit.

Yi-ryung wonders idly at Joong-won’s rather heroic defense of his employee, since he’s definitely not the kind of guy who does things like that. Just then, she sees Kang Woo walking by and flags him down—only to get her arm twisted in a swift martial maneuver.

She drops to banmal right away, acting high and mighty and noting his name. He cuts her off to return to work, and she sputters again. Hee. I could really watch that happen over and over.

Kang Woo arrives at the shop after the fuss is over—which, by the way, is why you’re only the second lead here, always a step behind—and finds that the president settled things personally. He overhears one of his security men worrying that he offended the prez by grabbing Gong-shil too hard, since she’s his secret girlfriend and all, which he swears he saw on camera. Kang Woo’s jaw tightens, but I’m still not sure if it’s out of jealousy or something else. He’s entirely too inscrutable.

Gong-shil thanks Joong-won for helping, and he curtly informs her that he did it for himself only. She had nothing to do with it—it’s just that the guy betrayed him by signing a contract with Giant, so this was his revenge. She wonders if he kept his eye on him at the hospital because he felt sympathy, and he sticks to his line that he just happened to see things he had no intention of seeing.

A flashback takes us back to the night he was driving himself home from the hospital, only to be led back to the hospital by either an errant GPS or a terrible sense of direction. It was then that Joong-won had seen the husband throwing away the shoe, which he insists now was just coincidence.

Gong-shil smiles and says that people often find things in completely unpredictable places or end up in strange locales, chalking it up to random luck or misfortune. “But it’s not coincidence,” she says. “It was a right turn.”

He starts at that—you can practically see that his blood just ran cold. A right turn was the strange direction his GPS lady had issued, and now we see that High Heels had been sitting next to him when that happened.

Nervously, he tells her to stop with the useless talk, just as Gong-shil recoils at something up toward the ceiling. Joong-won’s gaze darts around furiously, and she chuckles and says she’s just found her special use to him.

She can see Hee-joo, after all, and would be conveniently on hand to pass along messages. She leaves in high spirits, while he looks a lot less thrilled at the prospect of encountering Hee-joo again.

Joong-won’s aunt takes Uncle VP off-guard by wondering whether he saw her for her money first, but reassures him that it’s okay with her. After all, pretty women age and perky boobs sag (his eyes flick downward at that, ha), “But my money will never dry up.” So all he has to do is remain loyal and steadfast, and she’s happy. Uncle VP sits up straight and insists his love has never wavered. She accepts that, with the reminder that it had better stay that way. She draws a line across her neck to remind him what betrayal would mean. Heh.

Gossipy Security Guard invites Gong-shil to a work dinner that night, thinking to suck up to the boss’s secret girlfriend. She lights up at the thought of participating in such a common work experience, but glumly declines—she can’t get drunk, she reminds unni. But Gong-ri urges her to go and “receive that energy” (heh) from Kang Woo.

So both sisters join the security team at their drinking party, where Kang Woo keeps a particularly close eye on her. Gong-shil sticks to cola but gets an accidental taste of some liquor, and unni hastens to put her next to Kang Woo.

Despite the headache that encroaches, Gong-shil informs him that she’s not drunk, because it turns her into another person. He says that’s the case for everyone, but she says meaningfully that it really does turn her into someone else. Ha, now I’m picturing the Hulk. She turned into a parrot for Best Love; what does Master’s Sun have in store?

Joong-won sits thinking of Hee-joo, which brings us to another flashback:

Teenaged Joong-won asks Hee-joo if she likes him just because he’s rich, and she hesitates before answering. He asks if she’s doing it to make him feel bad, and she says she’s doing it to make him feel better—since it would be worse for her to admit it straightaway.

He starts to walk off in a huff, but she knows him well enough to know that just calling his name three times will be enough for him to get over it, and proceeds to demonstrate: “Joo Joong-won! Joo Joong-two! Joo Joong-three!”

He calls her pun lame, but laughs all the same.

In the present, he stalks through his mall in a dark mood, calling her a bitch, and heads out of the building. Drunk Gong-shil recognizes him standing outside, and then spots the ghost standing behind him. Hee-joo turns around and clocks Gong-shil standing there.

Kang Woo makes another one of his suspicious phone calls to report that Gong-shil does appear to be “specially connected” to Joong-won. However, he hasn’t yet ascertained whether she has a link to Hee-joo, and will look into it further. Hm, so are you working in Joong-won’s interest, or against it?

Gong-shil walks all the way (presumably having followed Joong-won) to his apartment and rings his buzzer. He comes out in annoyance, wondering at her boldness, offended when she calls him the very familiar “Joong-won-ah.” Ohhh.

He fires her and orders her to get lost. Gong-shil asks, “If I call you three times, will you let go of your anger? Joo Joong-won. Joo Joong-two. Joo Joong-three.”

He freezes. She smiles.

He tells her this isn’t funny, and asks what her deal is. She replies, “It’s me. The bitch you hate.”

 
COMMENTS

Ack! Is she possessed now? Is that her alcohol-induced weakness? Okay, I’ll give her that—it that happened to be my drinking habit I’d never taste a drop again either. Perhaps it makes her susceptible to body takeovers, or maybe the ghosts are just more able to make her their literal mouthpieces by feeding her words to say. In any case, it’s a way to make her already terrible curse even worse.

It’s also a way to make literal the romantic conundrum of the whole first-love-makes-way-for-new-love conflict, isn’t it? Way to juice up that issue on a whole new meta level by possessing the body of one with the soul of the other. Albeit only temporarily, and for entirely unromantic reasons. Still, it’s the kind of symbolic layering I’ve come to expect of the Hong sisters, and at least in this case it’s a positive expectation.

True, Joong-won’s baggage with Hee-joo isn’t the straight-up scenario of the unforgettable first love (and thank god for that), and it’s mixed in with a hell of a lot of resentment and hurt. But it’s fair to say he did love her, so I think it’s fair to say he’s heading into a world of confusion and romantic angst, which I look forward to.

So far Master’s Sun isn’t rocking my world, but I do find this familiar story to be handled with enough of a fresh twist that invested in how the story will shake out. I don’t expect amazing things of second leads or the ghost-of-the-week storylines, which are thus far merely serviceable, reminiscent of the client cases of Dating Agency Cyrano—some will manage to tweak heartstrings anyway thanks to strong character moments and good acting (like the soccer player) and some will be so simplistic as to make it hard to care (the schoolgirls), but they’ll mostly be there to advance the main couple’s progress.

And that’s where I think the show has got me, because I’m really enjoying Gong Hyo-jin and So Ji-sub together. I have to admit I find his performance a little too close to Cha Seung-won’s in Best Love to get absorbed in his portrayal fully; it feels a bit mimicked, with his clipped delivery and line readings. And on that score I really do hope So Ji Sub finds a way to make this more his own, because man is he great at being the smoldering ass and I love his rapport with Gong. Storywise I like how she’s already rubbing off on him, in the way that he keeps insisting he doesn’t care and is only in it for himself, while his actions completely contradict what he says. It’s pretty great.

And the skinship! So many excuses to touch, and I am A-OK with every single one. A drama that builds in the need to get touchy-feely to its premise? You win all the brownie points.

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So far, Gong Hye Jin is knocking it out of the ballpark. I couldn't relate to the heroine of The Greatest Love, but I just adore Gong-shil.

I am kinda warning up to SJS, but I find his portrayal of jackass Joong-won cold and off-putting. In comparison, I find CSW's Dokko-jin hilarious even though I thought he was the bigger jackass.

Thus far, I am not that impressed with the second leads. I like Seo In Guk in Replay 1997, and except for a few awkward emotional scenes, he held his own pretty well amongst the young caste. Here, his acting seems rather stiff compare to the experienced cast.

I am not totally in love yet, but will probably be once the OTP romance get going. Agree with many that the episodic ghost stories are amateurish and cliche. Thus far, they serve to bring the OTP closer, but hoping that eventually they'll disappear. This drama does not stimulate my brain cells the way Arang did, but it's a nice fluffy watch.

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Me too. Although writing has a huge part to play in his Joong-won as well. While DK was a jackass, he was a funny and immature jackass with AJ playing as his straight man. In this case, SJS's character is playing the jackass AND the straight man. Which makes it harder to relate.

At least GHJ's AJ had issues and characteristics that made me root for her (I liked both leads off the bat and were rooting for them right from the start in TGL), but I honestly can't say the same for the OTP in MS :(

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I thought about what I have seen up to the current episode, and discovered that I could barely remember a thing about the 2nd leads, or anyone else besides the mains.

That is probably not a good sign.

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They really should have played down the ghost per ep storyline and focus on the side characters who I assumed have important roles to play in the overarching storyline (of which at this point in time, seems a lil... disentangled).

That's what happened in IHYV as well as DAC, even in the earlier eps - the semi-episodic format worked in both cases and the supporting cast gets ample time to shine.

Random ghosts + relative, friends, ex-es not integral to the story... I want less of that. But if the writers insist on keeping them in, give more body to their stories instead of slapping every death with some car accident or unknown illness.

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Yeah. IHYV gave us the case of the week storylines but still managed to fully flesh out even our side characters which i really appreciated.
If she can do that, then no excuses for Hong Sisters.

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IKR. A major part of the reason why I like IHYV is because of the supporting cast - everyone stood out and had a story to tell, regardless of how small (and sometimes, illogical) the story was. Most of the time, the stories relate back to the main character, just like cogs in a clock.

I think it would have been better for both series if MS ran before IHYV cos' the latter, even with its glaring imperfections, managed to set pretty high standards.

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IHYV was not the most riveting storyline of all time, but the writing, directing, and acting made it into one of the best of the year. What could have been yet another run of the mill revenge story was made a lot better because you really felt that most of the characters were real people, not just props set up to spout lines on cue. Even the evil bad guy seemed like a real person.

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@Windsun33:

In other words (for me, at least): Jang Hye Sung. I like the whole gender reversal here because she's somewhat the female version of the typical stuck-up douchebag male lead, albeit with redeeming qualities. LBY played her so so so so perfectly.

Yeah, and the way the dialogue flows, characters make their decisions and how the series was shot (my pet peeve: overuse of lingering shots for EVERY key moment) kept the show as realistic as it could possibly be. The supporting cast was awesome balls even down to the rookie actors esp. the Mechanic/Manicurist pair.

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Quote: "He holds up the shoe that was on his wife’s foot when she died—the one Cheaty threw out at the hospital. And wouldn’t you know, the sizes don’t match. And the one Gong-shil holds is a perfect fit"

Just wanted to point out something: Joong Won did not prove that Cheaty was lying because the shoe sizes were different. It was because both shoes (the one that Cheaty threw away and the who he borrowed from the mistress) were for the right foot. They didn't match as a pair.

Thanks for the recaps, javabeans! :)

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I have yet to watch ep 3 but it's safe to say the episodic ghost format isn't luring me in as much as I like it to. I have just started watching Dating Agency Cyrano and their episodic client arcs are FARRR superior to those in MS because at the very least they don't try too hard to drive some cheesy message and are actually pretty entertaining (the fantasy setup is, for one, interesting).

I am stuck at the teen idol highschooler case and while I don't really super like it, it certainly beat the last week's high school story out of the water. Like most have already mentioned, perhaps putting more weight into the backstory of fewer ghosts would make MS much more enjoyable.

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That's what I was saying previously about Cyrano.
They didn't try too hard with their couple of the week storylines. Some were actually very subtle and lowkey, like the one with gong yoo and jung yumi. The message was relatable and touching. Cyrano's messages were heartfelt and not in-your-face(whereas in Master's Sun it is). It's also because in Cyrano the couples were unique in some way so circumstances and methods were different depending on who they were dealing with, but in Master's Sun it's all cliched and without depth. That's what happens when you try to drive home a message in one episode. Yes, these ghost stories were not meant to be the center of attention, but if they choose to dedicate this much time to it, then they should be putting in more thought/time into these stories. Either that, or tone down on the ghost stories and focus more on the good stuff.

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Precisely. AND they managed to weave in the supporting cast's personalities and back stories (I'm halfway through ep 5 for DAC) without the cases taking too much precedence over characters that WILL BE with viewers throughout the series. Like DAC's treatment of Moo-jin for example. He practically is silent for most part but ALWAYS in the background with his half-smiles, nods, random twerking of techy gizmo stuff and so forth. Can't they do the same with Seo's character to a certain extent? Or that female supporting character?

I suspect it's because they really don't have much material to work with, with regards to the main storyline, so the sisters are dragging it out with mini-ghost stories - just cos' they are dead doesn't make it necessary for their earthly attachments to be this contrived. So I agree, put more thought into them, gals!

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I enjoyed episode 3 more than the other two. I'm still not sold on the series but I can see myself enjoying this drama even if I don't love it just yet. The ghost story was predictable but I can overlook that since it served a purpose to have Joong Won believe in Gong Shil. I'm going out of state for a week so I'll miss today's episode. I'm praying I enjoy that one as much as I did this one when I come back next week.

Am I the only one, but I do not feel any chemistry between the two main leads. I like their interactions and think they are cute, but I'm not obsessed with them being together either, like I am with other lead couples. It could be because of the fact that I'm still not sucked into So ji Subs character. He's an awesome actor but Joong Won is not Dokko Jin(loved him instantly), I think he's still too much of an unlikable asshole...sorry. I do love his little "go away" thing he does though. That kills me every time. LOL. the leading lady Gong Shil is cute to me though. I loved the scene when she was walking on the street and yelled at the ghost to tell her the winning lottery number before asking for help. LOL. I still think that the scenes they have together are cute so hopefully once the real romance kicks in I'll fall head over heels for them.

Kang Woo is still a mystery, but I love Seo In Guk so I pay attenetion evevrytime he's on the screen. He's doing an excellent job as Kang Woo IMO. I loved the scenes between him and the 2nd leading lady, and I can see myself shipping those two later if she's not too much of a conniving bitch to Gong Shil. This might be the second time I've preferred the 2nd leading couple over the main leading couple, the only other time was the drama Capital Scandal.

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I am enjoying the show so far. Although its a bit creepy for me and when I rode the elevator this morning, I was kinda scared and I laughed at myself! Joong-won's line delivery is little Dokko-jinish at times, which makes me miss him.

I like that So Ji-sub's picked up this kind of character compared to his 2 dramas that I've seen, "I'm Sorry, I love You" and "Something Happened in Bali" which frustrates me. Gong Hyo-jin is fantastic as usual!

I hope that one way or another they would stop the ghost episode of the week thing because all 3 shows that I am watching have that theme, though its essential, I just hope it will somehow end.

Thanks for the recap!

Oh! I like the possession thing when she's drunk!

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As the hero said in the latest episode of "Two Weeks": "Humans are a lot scarier than ghosts" (if you believe in ghosts, I don't).

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I was more creeped out by the characters in White Christmas to be honest. Master's Sun is like... as scary as Teletubbies (which might be scary to some, lol).

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EEEEEKKKK!!

I fear Teletubbies so much that when my nephew wanted to watch it, I massacred him and fed him to the zombie sheep in my back yard.

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Aha. Yeah, when i heard Tae San say that i was like Joong Won said something like that too!

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I LOVE THIS DRAMA ! OM G the tist is so cool ! And this possession was the best cause for him to believe her powers ! Yayi cant wait for the rest of ghis ! Thanks guys ! *fighting *

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I made the mistake of watching episode two right before bed two days ago and had a very vivid, terrifying dream that a ghost was rushing at me in my bed. It was one of those ones where I was conscious of the fact that I needed to wake up, but I just couldn't open my eyes. That was terrifying and needless to say I won't be watching Master's Sun at home alone right before bed anymore.

Loving this show, though. It's entertaining, gripping, funny, scary. And I really love the characters.

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D'aaaaw, I have this strange fascination with the paranormal that has this drama piquing my interest. Plus who can resist the charmer that is So Ji Sub, gotta love him and all his amazingness ^^

Also, Kong Hyo-Jin, oh how I adore that woman; she is just so aDORAble to the point where I just love her when she comes on screen. Daebuk!

Can't wait for ep 4 xD

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Ah! Fun show, really. Birth secret spoiler coming up! I found this clip from a future episode, in which, apparently, a hotel Kingdom and Giant are contesting has a ghost haunting the lobby who turns out to be the spirit of Joong-Won's real father, a former nightclub entertainer. Heck of a cameo, I thought.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCDIYvFmgW8

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Gong Hyo-jin is irresistible as usual !
There's a great chemistry between the 2 leads and I wonder if it's not Gong Hyo-jin's very own magic at play because in each of her dramas I've watched, there always was.

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creepy jump-start for episode 3! waah! I am really loving this drama! It gives me new perspective to horror genre. Though the drama is really entertaining, I have to point out Hong Sisters repetitive traits of the main characters of their story.

Have you noticed? Most of their main characters have patterned traits. Might as well say that it could be their ideal lady character and their ideal male character in their stories

1. Poor Girl, Super Rich Boy
2. Clingy Girl, Mean Boy
3. Aegyo Girl/Comedic Girl, Poker Face Boy
4. Girl fall in love first, Guy later on

Am I right? or if you disagree I can give my opinion right? :)

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I commented earlier on that despite the Hong sisters reputation, I found a lot of their stuff was just repeating the same themes over and over. But on the other hand, the 4 things you listed also apply to a lot of other K-dramas, pretty much standard fare (and one reason I am watching a lot more J-dramas this year).

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they don't stand out with the characters but you can't deny the magnet of the drama when it comes to the plot.

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Shoot....I want to watch this show so bad as I love all the leads, especially SJS but I'm a scaredy cat. Even the pictures of the recaps looks so scary....gulp.

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As Celery noted above, they ghosts are less scary than Teletubbies :D

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Thank you javabeans and girlfriend for demystifying the show! I'm also crossing my fingers and toes, I hope GHJ and SJS have enough chemistry to keep me watching! Viva la skinship!

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This show may not be reinventing any genre, but I have to say I am loving this as my Wed/Thursday fix... Thanks to the awesome recaps which I curiously started to read, then I went to watch ep1 and 2 and am sold...
I agree that the ghost stories are really quite simplistic, and the format is kind of like Ghost Whisperer, but with a over arcing story for the main lead and his past, I find the drama quite enjoyable watch, mainly because of Seo in gook ( my residual love from Answer me 1997) and the crackling chemistry between the OTP.

I still always cringe and look away at the screen whenever I know the ghost is going to just appear ... and I really don't get it why does the ghosts always look so horrible when they look for GS, but later on become all nice and human-like once their mission gets done... isn't it common sense to look at least un-scary to the person you are hoping to help you? Not scaring them off and chasing them whilst crawling on the floor *shudders* And esp in this case, why is the ghost looking like half her face is gone, but her corpse was relatively OK looking... the intentional gore factor is a bit... hmm..

I was LOLing at the sister's reference to the martial arts dramas and the yin and yang energies... So funny... In some Chinese beliefs, women have yin energies ( darkness ), and guys have yang ( light ) energies, so her sister was really literally telling her to have relations with men so that she will damage her 'powers' and get balance hahahaha... hilarious... naughty naughty drama!

I am waiting anxiously for ep 4! Now that Hee joo can literally áppear' to JW, that really propels GS to an important person to him... =D

Thank you so much Javabeans and Girlfriday for bringing us the recaps! ♥ And for braving the scenes and screen grabbing the scary ghost stills even though you are probably scared and don't really want to look at them a 2nd time.

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I, too, felt it was too early for the love ballad and the slo-mo pan shot of the hug. I groaned when that happened.

The main leads are great together. I love Gong-shil’s lack of shame in her pursuit of skinship with Joong-won. I imagine she has been frightened for so long that societal mores mean nothing to her.

I was delighted with the introduction of the concept of “male energy” to dispel her sixth sense. What a great secondary motivation for skinship!

Wait! Did Gong-shil get to go into Joong-won’s office? I thought that was off limits.

I love the term Javabeans used “smoldering ass”. I love it and I shall make it mine!

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Just watched Episode 4.

This show is officially my new crack. awesome

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Episode 4 is the best thing I've seen in a really long time. My stomach aches from laughing so much in the first five minutes. Daebak.

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This show is getting so good. If she gets possessed by a ghost every time she gets drunk, then I'm all for that. Hehe. It actually puts me in mind of 49 Days with the whole possession thing. Which is cool. I like that in a ghost story, especially when it's a love story. I just can't wait to see how this all effects Joong-won. Hehe.

Yi-ryung is still annoying with her superiority-inferiority complex. I do like her interactions with Kang Woo since he's the second lead, and will undoubtedly end up not winning Gong-shil's heart. Sadly. I just love Seo In-gook.

I'm not getting the CSW-SJS similarities. Granted, I haven't started actually watching this show, but I'm planning to soon. Also, I do not speak Korean. I only understand a very limited amount of phrases and words. So I don't know if I'll see the similarities when I do watch it. But I loved CSW in Best Love. Dokko Jin remains one of my favorite drama characters to this day.

Anyway, thanks for the recap, JB!

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Love love love this drama. Please be good. I love the recap, as always :)

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I LOVE this show. The CHEMISTRY. omg the chemistry. And all the touching? loves it. I am a sucker for ghosts so for me the ghost story of the week are just added bonuses to an already fun show. Gong Hyo-jin is such a joy to watch. She is nailing her role. Two episodes a week is just not enough. And i must add this is the first show in a really LONG time that I am actually watching and not just reading the recaps. So that says a lot for this show.

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great drama , I like two lead .

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I too watch both "Master's Sun" and "Who Are You?" even tho I prefer drama's by the new wave of women writers. Women who wrote "Arang ATM" "Queen IHM and Nine:NTTT" and "I Hear YV"

Those women now makes me groan at MS and WAY
when I saw, "Embarrass me. Belittle me. Humiliate me, all in front of people and I'll fall in love with you." It's the traditional Korean mateing ritual on TV & movies. Why can't they think of any thing new?
Don't they know real people who meet as strangers and how they fell in love with each other?

WAY seem to hold more promise because it's written by a woman who only has one drama to her credit and I'm curious if she will be one of the new wave of women writers.

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LOL! "..“Embarrass me. Belittle me. Humiliate me, all in front of people and I’ll fall in love with you.” It’s the traditional Korean mating ritual on TV & movies.."

that line is so funny, yet so true. Yet there is some basis for it - women in Korea are still fighting the Confucian mind-set about male dominance. I think that is why you see so many dramas depicting the heroine as a Candy Girl Airhead, while the male never is.

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I am looking forward to ep4 because at the end of this scene, they're both wearing clothes in teasers where she was seen sleeping with him in bed, waking up holding hands.

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So that is why she want to sleep near him. Why she's always so tired. She doesn't sleep because when she does, she get possessed. I would have troubled sleeping too.

Anyway, super interesting drama!

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So ji sub is trying to find his shoes for this role I hope He can find it He is sexy and nice person but he is not a great actor He is charismatic and camera love it but is something physical not about acting skills.
She is another matter She is a good actress,both have great chemistry and So ji sub dind,t devour her like Cha seung wong in Best Love...

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I am sorry but I was laughing so hard when the ghost was chasing her. They were both just limping along and it was just a great visual gag.

Can someone please tell me why she dresses like Scrooge? All she is missing is a night cap and a candle. The ghosts are already there. If anything it makes her look more like a crazy escaped from a hospital. Very "ring" girl dress.

Loving the show! Thanks for the recaps!

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Very enjoyable drama :) Not used to see SJS in a comedic lead role, but drinking it in all the same... just look at him when he is being serious and not scolding/taunting/rattling someone... awesome!

Empire of Gold, Master's Sun, Good Doctor - are certainly what I love in that order now... onward march!

Thanks GF! ilovemangoes pun of leaving brain at the door while watching this drama really had me loling... this drama is such an enjoyable ride with of cause certain parts i only watch through my fingers... scardy-cat - that's me! kekeke the premise of the ghosts not scarry after initial "jumping out"/suddenly there intro - truly helps my nerves pwhahaha

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:) glad to make you laugh!

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The actress that plays Cha Hee Joo looks a lot like Kim So Hyun

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This drama is definitely scarier, partly because of Gong Shil's reaction to all the ghosts who suddenly pop up! The highlight is definitely when the two leads are together but I am enjoying the side scenes with the celebrity and Kang Woo! Pretty funny. And I wonder how many takes he required for the sliding into the sunroof scene!

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why bother comparing WHO ARE YOU and MASTER'S SUN ?
Just enjoy both shows. If u like serious scary genre, go for who are you .if you like more comical scary drama , go for master's sun.

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I'm really enjoying this drama. It's easy to watch and I like that there is something to distract us from the upcoming run around when the two leads discover they have feelings for each other. Also....Does anyone know the name of the song that is playing in the parking garage when she's running from the ghost and he let her hug him?

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Hi, anyone who knows the song that played during the hug scene in the parking lot? Thanks in advance! :)

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the link for the song don't work.... I want this song ;_;

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Noticed a small mistake the production team has made: Taeyang supposedly lost her right shoe, but she was wearing the tissue box on her left leg around 15:30.

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Personally, I LOVE Master´s sun!!!
Best korean drama I ever watched.
And I think, it´s a little unfair, to say, that So Ji Sub plays his character like Cha Seung-won was playing Dokko Jin, because besides the very strange hairstyle, I don´t see much similarities. Cha Seung-won´s exaggerated his role in many, many ways, whereas So Ji Sob does not. SJS is much more subtle and yet fresh. Always a bit of the old pain behind his smile and always the loneliness behind his coldheartedness and rejection of others.
The characters - Joo Joong-won and Dokko Jin - may be similar in their narcism, but their actor´s are not.
It´s just a personal opinion, but for me So Ji Sub does his job a hundert times better.
Sorry. ;-)

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who knows what is song played at cafe when gossipy security guard invites GS to work diner?

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Thanks for the recap! I'm liking that this episode introduced some valid reasons to be afraid of the ghosts (I obviously wouldn't last long in a zombie apocalypse since my general reaction to monsters and horror ranges between "eh, definitely CGI" and "wow, that make-up is /fantastic/"). Even the well-intentioned ghosts are capable of being grabby, and possibilities of possession don't do much for one's sense of comfort. I'm waiting for the second leads to gain individual personalities (right now they're very much stock characters), and the main lead's relationship is still more in the practical rather than emotional area but I can dig slow burn, and there's lots of fun stuff to play around with.

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Its been 4 years since it has aired but whenever i see this Kdrama i can still fell the freshness of this drama.. This is the love i was expecting, falling for her everyday day by day... Goosebumps.. Master's sun is my all time fav Kdrama..

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