257

Master’s Sun: Episode 8

Things are getting better and better, which warms my heart. You wouldn’t think one terrible drama would be enough to make me lose faith entirely, but it definitely has made me gun-shy, so I’m feeling perhaps a slower burn with this show than I might if it were my first time with these writers. But my favorite aspect about Master’s Sun is that the emotional ups and downs feel rooted in genuine feeling, so that when the plot twists to throw wrenches into the works, I’m not cursing the show for using cheap tricks, and instead feeling my heart pinch in sympathy.

SONG OF THE DAY

Hyorin – “Make me crazy” from the Master’s Sun OST [ 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 8 RECAP

Joong-won places her hand on his heart and tells her that he’s not made of marble, and that it isn’t that he feels nothing when she touches him. Gong-shil makes a vague motion to her heart region and asks if it feels funny too, and he admits, “It always did.” Not in a grand confession sort of way, but as a matter-of-fact explanation that she touches him too freely.

He says he didn’t say anything because she seemed so unperturbed—but now that her reactions are taking a more “normal” turn, he asks her to be more circumspect. You know, so that bystanders just think they’re friendly, not weirdos attracting strange looks.

To demonstrate, he holds her hand—that’s friendly. He places her hand on his face, then his chest—that’s “What the heck are they doing?”

Gong-shil says that before, she’d been too overwhelmed with fear to think about anything when feeling him up, but agrees to start being more careful now. He motions to her forehead scrape and tells her to be more careful with her safety, too, and not get hurt like that anymore. Because that kind of worrying is friendly. Ha, I can’t wait for the day you make out like bandits and excuse yourself as being friendly.

Then he steps waaaaay closer to her to demonstrate another example of WTF behavior. He’s enjoying this way too much, isn’t he? Yes, “friend,” keep explaining what exactly it is she shouldn’t do. How will she know if you don’t show her?

Joong-won offers to take her home and hold her hand, but she pushes away his hand and declines—her radar is acting all funny. He misinterprets her reaction as fear that Kang Candy will see them together, and in a flare of jealousy he grabs her hand and declares he has nothing to hide, and if they should happen to run into Candyman on the way home, he’s just gonna tell him they’re “friendly.” Lol.

Kang Woo makes his latest report to Daddy Joo, now having regained his previous focus on the task at hand. He informs him that Gong-shil does in fact have some sort of connection to Hee-joo (based on the photo he saw in her desk) and that his emotions briefly clouded his reactions. Daddy Joo directs him to looking for a potential link in Hee-joo’s orphanage past, since she has no parents or family. And also whether Gong-shil has ever been to Europe, since he has a photo of Hee-joo amidst a European backdrop.

Daddy Joo speaks to him familiarly and even warmly, wondering whether Kang Woo will be okay investigating a woman he’d been interested in. Kang Woo says he’ll be fine, but Daddy Joo advises him not to put on a strong front—if you repress your feelings, you’ll end up in pain. “Do you think it will hurt?” Daddy Joo asks. Kang Woo promises, “I will end my feelings.”

With that, he takes the Dooly and Gong-shil stuffed dolls to toss in the trash, just as Gong-shil gets dropped off by Joong-won. He asks about her funny-acting radar, and she assures him that it’s not because of a ghost, but just something she has to give a good scolding.

Joong-won goes home and finds a plate of cheese in his fridge, which reminds him of Gong-shil’s advice to eat some tofu (tofu = white and pure = what you eat when you get out of jail to prevent future transgressions). He’d scoffed at the tradition, but gets out the cheese nevertheless. Close enough.

Gong-shil talks to her stuffed doll, eating tofu, about how touching Joong-won on the face amounts to sexual harassment and how it’s no different from a perv copping a feel on the subway. She figures it’s something that comes with not being scared so much of ghosts anymore, so when one of her ghost regulars pops up in her apartment, Gong-shil asks granny to give her a good scare to knock some sense back into her.

Aunt and Uncle drop by Joong-won’s apartment for a visit, and also to chide him over recent events. Auntie Joo isn’t too concerned about the jail stint since it came from a good cause, but she points out that he’s been acting out of character ever since Gong-shil started hanging around. It’s a fact his father has already heard of, as he has asked after the girl.

That news makes Joong-won bristle, saying that his father hasn’t once showed interest in his 34 years. Aunt says that Dad’s probably mellowing out with age and wanting grandchildren, and Uncle VP encourages him to give it a good go this time.

Gong-shil runs across Kang Woo in the lobby, who is now stony-faced and cool. But thanks to his candid nature (you know, when he’s not sneaking around investigating you), he decides to make everything crystal clear and tells her that his liking her was a misunderstanding. He explains it away as a joke said to the boys that she believed, which he felt too apologetic about to correct. But now he needs to set things straight and let her know.

Gong-shil is embarrassed to have thought otherwise and says he should’ve told her right away, but he points out that even though she liked his attention, she didn’t like him. After all, hearing this now doesn’t bring her pain, does it?

With that, Kang Woo goes out for a punishing run, trying to shove aside his own pain.

Time for a new ghost story. We find a party in full swing at a hotel pool, but as soon as the camera goes underwater the tone turns ominous. A ghostly hand reaches for swimmers’ legs, and latches on to one girl as she wades out to retrieve a beach ball. Immediately the swimmer starts thrashing as she’s dragged under, even though to everyone else’s eyes there’s nothing causing it.

As the girl goes under, she comes face to face with a terrifying sight (we only see the ghost from the rear) and screams. A lifeguard dives in and pulls her out, and while all the swimmers look on curiously, the ghost goes in for a second target…

This marks the third time Kingdom Hotel has had a complaint of a mysterious leg-pulling attack in the pool, and they’re bound to lose clientele to Giant Hotel. Joong-won can’t have that, and decides to dispatch his radar to the pool. Then he gasps to see something alarming through his telescope: “Giant Mall is… taller than mine!”

He finds Gong-shil in her office, and notes that she looks “even more like a zombie” today (she explains being haunted by ghost ajumma all night). At the mere mention of water ghosts, though, she shudders at the memory of almost being drowned in the river and cries that she never wants to see one again.

Joong-won offers her his hand, but even that’s not enough to dispel her fears. He sits back to figure out a way to solve this dilemma…

And sends Secretary Kim to give Gong-shil a vacation package to Kingdom Hotel for her day off. HAHA. You can’t make her go, so you’ll trick her? You, sir, are kind of a clever meaniepants.

She’s giggly and thrilled, though, thinking he’s being thoughtful after seeing her dark circles. She decides to use it the very next day, inviting her sister and her friends along.

Kang Woo calls Yi-ryung out to inquire into Gong-shil’s background. She gets huffy at the idea that he’s still interested in Gong-shil, but cheers right up to hear it’s just more investigation. I do love how she’s always inviting him to things with backhanded excuses (“I’m not inviting you to lunch, I’m just saying it’s lunchtime so I’ll let you come along”) and how he declines her half-assed explanations when in fact she’s gone all-out and made reservations in advance. Maybe you’d have some luck if you were actually direct, honey. But Yi-ryung is basically harmless so I can’t help but find her amusing.

Gong-shil’s unni wonders whom to invite with the extra gift certificates, and despite Gong-shil telling her not to include Kang Woo, she decides to do some matchmaking of her own. So unni takes the vouchers to Gossipy Guard (fine, his name is Han-joo) and tells him to bring Kang Woo along so she can set up the couple. Ha, something tells me there’ll be a couple, but not the one she’s thinking of.

Han-joo wonders for two full seconds whether Gong-shil’s activities constitute reportable intel to Uncle VP, then dismisses it in favor of a fun vacation. Ha. He’s a dim bulb, but an amusing dim bulb.

Gong-shil heads to the hotel first and marvels at the luxury, looking wistfully at a sign about the fireworks festival. It’d be nice to go, but venturing out alone at night isn’t exactly her idea of fun. She gets a call from Joong-won, who turns out to be right behind her and whisks her away to dinner. She’s confused at all the fuss, but goes along while his employees guess that he has a romantic event planned that would explain why he reserved the whole pool for himself.

Auntie Joo drops in on Hee-joo’s orphanage, which she has helped support since Hee-joo’s death. She explains to Secretary Kim that she’d considered cutting ties after the kidnapping, but decided to keep up the support out of consideration for Joong-won, who met Hee-joo here.

And then Secretary Kim notices another visitor arriving: Kang Woo. This is definitely fishy.

Kang Woo’s errand means he doesn’t join unni or gossipy guard Han-joo, who stop for gas on the way to their hotel visit. Unni Gong-ri deflates to recognize another customer, glowering and calling him the jerk who ripped her off and disappeared. So when the jerk pulls out of the lot, Gong-ri revs her engine and peels out after him.

Joong-won is attentive and considerate through dinner, which makes Gong-shil blush and me groan at the impending kabloomy. Because there’s only one way for this to end, right? He asks whether she has a change of clothes (she’s dressed plainly in a T-shirt and shorts), thinking that she’ll need a dry outfit following her dip in the pool. Eeeek. My heart is cringing for Gong-shil already. I hope you know how to grovel, dear sir.

Making it worse is how Gong-shil overhears employees in the bathroom talking enviously about the romantic plans their president has prepared for his date. After dinner he makes plans to meet later in the evening, saying that he has something “very important” planned, adding, “Even if you’re surprised, don’t get too mad.”

He sends up a gift box to her room, and inside she finds a dress and heels, and that sends her heart fluttering even more.

Gong-shil finds him waiting poolside, and he directs her attention upward just as the fireworks show begins. But when she steps aside, she returns to hear him on the phone talking about solving the issue with the pool, and her face falls. She recalls his question earlier about the water ghost, and hurries away feeling stupid. She tells him she’ll be back, and heads up to change out of her pretty designer dress.

Back in her T-shirt, she sighs that she dodged a bullet—this would have been terribly embarrassing. “Why do I feel so upset?” she asks, fighting tears. Kang Woo’s comment reminds her—pain is what happens when your feelings are thwarted.

Joong-won waits a while by the pool, then figures out that she must have gotten the wrong idea. Gong-shil returns to the lobby and gets a few snickers from employees who figure that there was no event after all. Yet Joong-won grabs her hand anyway, shutting them up, telling her that even if there are no scary ghosts around, there are still people’s eyes—equally scary, those.

Gong-shil points out that it’ll affect his image, and he replies, “I don’t care at all what those things chatter about. I’m looking at you, who is upset by those chattering things.” He guesses that her feelings were hurt, and she admits that they were, and that he should’ve just told her to be the radar instead of inviting her to luxury and buying her things.

He says, a bit uncomfortably, that it’s because she was scared and he felt sorry about it. That makes her feel a bit better, and he insists on holding her hand all the way to the pool.

Kang Woo meets with Yi-ryung, who has done as he requested and asked around about Gong-shil’s family background. As usual she’s gone way overboard and has voice recordings all prepared, but he just tells her to send them over and leaves right away, to her frustration. Heh. What’s a top actress-model gotta do to get a date around here?

Yi-ryung follows him out and offers him a ride home, to which he says he’ll take the plebeian subway instead, which she’s welcome to try. Y’know, it occurs to me that this might really be her one shot at becoming a decent person. So for that, kudos to Kang Woo.

Gong-shil and Joong-won wait poolside for the ghost to appear, and the longer they wait the more nervous he gets. Finally she decides to just go into the water anyway, even though water ghosts are frightful and don’t like to let go once they’ve grabbed hold, asking him to at least fish her out if that happens. Joong-won orders her not to, though, deciding that they’ll just drain the pool and wait it out.

Just as he stalks off, though, Gong-shil hears a splash and looks into the water, which starts to ripple with an unseen force. It barrels toward her and leaps out to yank her in—just as Joong-won returns and pulls her back, poofing the ghost into smoke.

Gong-ri follows her money-owing jerk home, intent on giving him what-for and getting her money back. But before she can confront him, his pregnant wife steps out and the jerk turns doting husband, sapping her of all her resentment.

Yi-ryung is rather proud of herself for taking the subway after all, though her mood sours a couple of passengers start gossiping about her and how she’s an over-the-hill, talentless has-been, destined to eat the dust of younger, prettier stars like IU. Kang Woo sees her face fall and takes her hand to guide her to the exit, but Yi-ryung shakes it off and reveals her face to her slanderers. With a bright smile, she informs the lady that she’s doing quite well, thank you, and sings a line from an IU song.

Fan mayhem ensues and Kang Woo leaps into bodyguard mode while Yi-ryung smiles and waves. Once out of the subway car, he tells her that her singing sucked, and she chirps, “But I looked pretty, right?”

Kang Woo sighs, “You really are cracked, aren’t you?” She replies, “Yup. So I’ve decided—let’s date.”

He flatly says no, leaving her to get mobbed by more bystanders. Only this time it’s not quite so fun and she hunches over nervously while they accost her, and Kang Woo barrels through to grab her hand. Off they run, and I’m pretty sure he’s enjoying at least part of it.

By the pool, Gong-shil observes as the ajumma ghost sits poolside and reapplies her makeup, then heads into the bathroom to shower, do her hair, and even knock on stall doors before entering. Gong-shil guesses that this is not a water ghost after all, and that she doesn’t know she’s dead.

With a puzzled Joong-won following along (and taking her word for what’s going on), Gong-shil watches as the chic lady ghost “dines,” reads, and enters the hotel’s most expensive suite.

Gong-shil and Joong-won wonder why this ghost who acts like a human would be dragging people underwater, and he instructs her to inform the lady that she’s dead and that it’s time to check out. The lady just reaches into her purse and presents a voucher—she was selected to receive the gift, so she’s allowed to be here.

At least that gives them a way to find out her identity, and an employee confirms that she was a memorable guest. She was a common-looking ajumma who enjoyed her stay so much that her pleasure at everything was notable. Don’t you just love Joong-won’s reaction, which is that his hotel is so awesome that a guest would be loath to leave it even in death. Ha.

But the employee corrects them: She’s not dead. She’s in the hospital, unconscious but alive. This is a first for Gong-shil, who’s never dealt with a case like this. Can you be a ghost if you’re not dead?

A glimpse of the woman’s hospital room shows us that she has a bickering family, and one where she perhaps was overworked and underappreciated. Which may explain why the ajumma has no desire to leave, as she ignores Gong-shil as though she can’t hear a thing she says.

But at the mention of her daughter’s name, the ghost reacts. Gong-shil urges her to think of her family and return to life, and gets her to agree. She just wants to see the fireworks show before she goes, and changes into an evening gown. So Joong-won encourages her to do the same and match the occasion, and Gong-shil changes back into her pretty dress.

By the pool, the ajumma watches the fireworks, Gong-shil watches the ajumma, and Joong-won mostly watches Gong-shil. The ajumma is near tears thinking of how nice her dream was, “But it’s time to wake up now.” Off she goes, and her family greets her with tears.

Joong-won asks how the ajumma liked the show, and Gong-shil relates her words: that it felt like a dizzying midsummer dream. “It felt thrilling and happy, and painful too, because what she saw here was so nice.” I’m pretty sure we’re not talking about ajumma anymore, though Gong-shil makes it sound like ajumma was here until just now, saying those things.

The show ends, and Gong-shil notes that tonight she shattered somebody’s nice dream. They aren’t pointed at him, but I think he feels the barb nonetheless.

Meanwhile, Yi-ryung smiles to see the news of her subway show and the photos with Kang Woo. Unni Gong-ri has a harder time of it, crying that she hadn’t thought her ex would be married. Guard Han-joo sits uncomfortably next to her and pats her comfortingly.

Kang Woo sighs upon his return home that night, because those dolls he tried to throw away have been rescued by the neighbor boys, who waste no time making them kiss. Ha.

The next day, Joong-won watches Gong-shil as he finalizes his plans for a weeklong business trip to China, and wonders if he should tell her. Secretary Kim informs him that she knows already, and he’s maybe a little miffed that she’s so fine with it, as though he expected her to be upset.

Secretary Kim relays her words: that to her, Joong-won is like a special voucher that she won. It’s a huge gift, but not a place she can stay forever. “If I want to live well on my own, I have to get used to being places without him.”

Joong-won denies being affected by it, saying he feels better to hear that she doesn’t need him. Secretary Kim repeats Gong-shil’s words about pain telling you the answer when you’re not honest with your heart, and Joong-won’s jaw clenches—he’s heard those words before, when they came from Hee-joo. (Innnnteresting, because Kang Woo heard it from Daddy Joo.)

In flashback, we see teenage Hee-joo telling those words to teenage Joong-won, who boils it down to the question, “So you’re saying that if I want to like you, I should hurt?” She smiles and says, “Yes, I’d like it if you hurt an awful lot.”

Joong-won asks Gong-shil where she picked up that saying, and his eyes narrow when she sources it back to Kang Woo. He orders Secretary Kim to look into Kang Woo’s background with a fine-toothed comb, which is when Secretary Kim offers up the tidbit about seeing him at the orphanage.

Tracing Kang Woo’s origins further, Joong-won asks Uncle VP how Kang Woo came to be hired, and hears that he was recommended for his outstanding record. Uncle hedges, but Joong-won guesses the truth, that it was his father who made the recommendation.

Joong-won heads to security next to confront Kang Woo about working for his father. Kang Woo is honest, saying that he was instructed to investigate those around Joong-won, particularly anyone related to Hee-joo—because Daddy Joo believes Hee-joo was a co-conspirator, not the victim.

Flashback. After the kidnapping, Daddy Joo asks Joong-won if he truly didn’t see his kidnapper’s face. Joong-won is fully of suspicions himself and asks whether Dad truly paid the ransom—because why else would he be afraid Joong-won might have seen the kidnapper’s face?

So Joong-won suspects his father refused to pay and thereby killed Hee-joo, while Daddy Joo suspects Joong-won lied about his kidnappers’ identity. They find themselves at impasse, and have been for the past fifteen years.

Keeping his temper at a low boil, Joong-won has a few messages for Kang Woo to convey to his father: that he’s looking for the necklace, and that he hopes his father won’t get his hands on it.

Just as Gong-shil wonders what Kang Woo’s relationship to Hee-joo is, the ghost appears. We don’t hear what she says, but Gong-shil falls to the ground in response, which is how Joong-won finds her.

So Gong-shil now knows that Hee-joo was in on the kidnapping, and Joong-won asks to know who her co-conspirators were. But Gong-shil shakes her head—Hee-joo can’t say. Or wouldn’t say, because she has to protect whoever it is.

He tamps down his reaction, struggling to deal with his emotions, and as Gong-shil turns to leave him, he stops her. “Don’t go. Stay here,” he requests. “I don’t want her to see me like this. Since you can see her, stay with me and protect me.”

 
COMMENTS

Aw, I loved this episode. Just everything that happened, and what it means for our people. We’ve been on a nice streak so it’s not like we haven’t had good episodes before, but there was a lovely balance of emotion from both leads in this one, as both Master and Sun find that they both want and need each other in deepening ways.

Plus, we also got development for multiple side couples and a ghost tale that was pleasant for its understatedness—it mattered, sort of, but not so much that it overtook the plot. As a bonus, the ghost’s trajectory had a thematic resonance with the main storyline; I felt that pang when Gong-shil realized that this was a temporary bliss, and that she ought to get used to life after it’s over. In a simpler drama, I think we might expect the hero and heroine to stay in denial and convince themselves that what they had was purely a business arrangement, but I like that both characters are willing to admit that their feelings can’t help but get mixed up in matters. It’s just not going to become the basis of their relationship, or change why they need each other. At least not yet.

The makeover scene was one of those subverted cliches that I really liked, even though it was also a heart-twister. The heroine gets her Cinderella moment as the hero lavishes her in gifts and attention, and for a moment Gong-shil allows herself to bask in her hopes. All the while Joong-won is thinking in plainly practical terms and just getting his wires crossed in the communication process. I liked that we’re dealing with subtler characterizations here than the setup might lend itself to; it would be all too easy to keep everyone in their diametrically opposite molds. But no, he feels apologetic even as he’s using her, even as he knows it’s okay to use her because that’s the nature of their radar-shelter deal. And it’s for that reason, that he doesn’t feel so great about it anyway, that smooths things over and eases her embarrassed hurt.

Baby steps, yes, but as long as they’re baby steps headed toward each other, I’m all good.

RELATED POSTS

Tags: , , , ,

257

Required fields are marked *

I thought in one of the very early episodes it shows the necklace being looked at then put back in the safe when Daddy is on the phone with KW. So the necklace is with Dad all this time? For insurance purposes maybe he needed some cash at that time?

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

I missed that. I will go back and watch again. Daddy is going to turn out to be a real nasty character... abusive maybe?

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

The actor always plays villains or evil people so I won't be surprised if he turns out to be one lol. I hated him in Arang and the Magistrate, for example.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Really?
I have to go back and check.
For some reason, I thought when they showed the necklace it was a flashback...that could be me just assuming.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I love this show more and more. I got mad at Kang Woo this episode, so if he falls for Yi-ryung now, I won't mind. He doesn't deserve Gong-shil now. I love that Joong-won and Gong-shil are getting closer, and that neither is afraid to admit that their feelings are getting mixed up. Heh. Loving where this is going.

Thanks for the recap, JB!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Kang woo saving Yi Ryung totally made me LOL out loud, and I kept thinking of The bodyguard somehow hahah

I am really LOVING this drama. Its what I look forward to watching, even late at night, despite my fears of nightmares after being scared to bits... hahaha
SO.WORTH.IT.

Thank you, thank you for keeping the recaps coming! Love them so much. I wouldn't have started watching this drama if I hadn't read the recap for ep1, me not having seen anything Gong hyo jin was in, and I was one of those not quite charmed by SJS's turn in Ghost, which I found so painful to follow, and I find his chemistry with the lead here so strong and the romance really managed to reel me in.

And perhaps I am a big softie, because so far most of the ghosts all make me tear up when they are happy and move on, even the hilarious ajusshi jogger who just wanted the simple joy of making it across the finish line.

Can't wait for ep9!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thank you, Javabeans! Your recaps and the comments will help tide me over until Wednesday.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thanks for the recap. I love reading during lunch at work. Later when watching an episode, I am more attentive .

I must say regarding each episode .. I do enjoy the whole of it. I can't seem to get into an analysis ... just too much for my brain these days.

Also, I am loving Who are You? Totally different storyline and great fun.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I don't want to believe this but what if Gong Shil is Hee Joo's sister and she'll want to exchange her soul with her? I'll cut my hair LOL (that would be more like BIG the second)

And what if for the sake of Joong Won, Gong Shil would want to exchange her soul for Hee Joo?

I don't know. I've gone into a huge potty.

Tell us more, Hong Sisters. We're ready for more surprises in store.

BTW, I actually think Joong Won's character is not similar with Dokko Jin, but rather, with Joo Won (Secret Garden)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

It's official, this drama is not really for me. It has so many plot holes and over dramatic scenes(I do enjoy some of them lol) that just take me out of the story. I'm not a fan of the weekly ghost stories either, most of them are just cliche and boring. I feel like the story line is moving too slowly and I don't feel any chemistry between the two main leads. In fact I fast forward through most of their scenes together. This has never happened to me before someone please help!!:( Everyone is shipping them and going crazy over this drama but it leaves me a little lukewarm. I guess this will just be the popular drama that everyone loved but me, just like Nice Guy was last year.

I will keep watching MS though because I do like the 2nd leading couple, and I gotta get my dose of Seo In Guk every week. I don't know maybe I'll change my mind about MS when it ends, but right now it just doesn't seem possible. I'm happy that it's getting good ratings in Korea though, It's funny enough even if it isn't that enjoyable to me.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

It is not just you. I do not hate it but I don't love it either. I do not feel much chemistry either, but both leads are good actors. SJS is not my favorite, but that does not mean I do not think he is without skill sets. It does have some entertainment value, and I like several components, just nor the whole.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Same here. Not feeling the chemistry at all. However, they do have oodles of chemistry off screen though, just in case you wanna check their bts and interview clips out. I'm actually hoping for the two actors to get together. Can't say the same for their MS characters though >.<

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Never seen a So Ji Sub work before this... always thought he is good because why would he be so famous, right???? But I am loving him here.... I also love Seo In Gook.... He is practically a newbie and So Ji Sub can just eat him alive but yey to him...

Hong Sisters, there better be a good story with the kidnapping and Hee Joo and the Dad... you better not give us crazy no-sense story... you two are in probation after giving us BIG so you better not fail us here!!! be warned, be very very warned.

So far so good...

Chemistry between Hyo Jin and Ji Sub is so hot. Just kiss already. and So Ji Sub, be a man. We don't want a frozen kiss with camera going in circles. Be a man and kiss like a man.

0
6
reply

Required fields are marked *

rofl at "Be a man"

Unfortunately...I don't remember any hot kiss in a Hong Sisters' drama...

Fortunately...this director did City Hunter and if you recall that episode 10 tongue-sucking-makeout kiss from Lee Min Ho...

Hmm. Methinks the characters and atmosphere here totally fit a City Hunter-ish kiss.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

His kisses in I'm Sorry I Love You weren't half bad. So if it's a bad kiss it won't be his fault.

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

So Ji sub kisses are good enough but she when Cha/Dokko jin go out half body from his car to reach her lips and give her a good kiss she looks a frightened nun instead of a real woman in front oh this hunk man who has been top model LOOOL

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

CSW is a great kisser, and in my opinion he did his best in Best Love too but it takes two to tango, and for me it was GHJ that appeared to be timid. That kinda suck because she such a great actress. Maybe because he’s married and she had a boyfriend back then, lol. Let’s hope we get better kisses in this one.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I don't think GHJ (or any actress, really) is to blame for less-than-enthusiastic kisses onscreen, Korean tv tends to be weirdly conservative about letting women show desire and GHJ's character in Best Love was kind of.....subdued, for lack of a better word.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

More to the point, let the PD give SJS and GHJ directions for a kiss that lives up to all the skinship they've had, please!

(My Girl had some ok kissing between Lee Dong-wook and Lee Da-hae, but by and large Hong Sisters heroines aren't really allowed to be super responsive to that level of intimacy - though they broke that pattern a little bit with Shin Mina in Gumiho, and hopefully our Taeyang's open acknowledgement of lust = some decent kissing for our OTP)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Maybe Hee Joo saw ghosts as well.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I like it when Gong Shil talks to her stuffed doll, and acts out what happened that day with Joong Won. It's cute yet hilarious at the same time. She did that in previous episodes too.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I love it when she chides herself through the doll. The scene after the accident hug is one of my favorites. She slaps the doll to knock back some sense into herself. :)

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I liked that scene too. She was tallying up how many won she spent after hugging the doll lol.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Hmm my guess is that the aunt and the father is behind the kidnapping plot. Isn't there a scene where she goes to hee joo's orphanage? I guess probably they wanted hee joo to leave joong won and threathened her to trick joong won but something happened along the way thus she got killed, making joong won think that she had only loved him for his money. But ultimately, i guess she just wanted to protect him (from the truth ), before and after death, Thus she's still lingering around him and watching over him. To me, the aunt and uncle do not really play a significant role but i believe the hong sisters must have had a bigger plan for both of them. And i think kang woo might be hee joo's childhood friend or had liked heejoo. I guess there will be a part where joongwoon has to choose between saving the necklace or saving gong shil's life. This is probably the only horror show id watch lol

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This was another strong episode. I really felt for Gong-Shil this episode, first when Kang-Woo told her he didn't fancy her and when she realised all Joong-won wanted was for her to use her radar to find the water ghost.

I loved what she said about the midsummer's night dream, both wonderful and painful, because after the initial euphoria has worn out, she realizes that what she found in Joong-won could go away at any moment and she has to become re-accustomed to life as it once was without him being a safe haven for her.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

In this episode not even once, he told her to get lost! Call me sadistic but I always find it funny everytime he does that.

And yeah, the first sequence about the fireworks was just a fantasy of hers.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I forgot to mention this hahahaha!! It was really an episode where no "GET LOST" was uttered by Joong Won...I love it when he's doing it LOL

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Some late thoughts:

- After the last episode I had wondered when JW was going to open up to GS about Hee Joo. I wasn’t expecting her to discover the truth from Hee Joo herself. Now that she has all the groundwork is laid for JW to talk to GS about her.

- I do like the twist on Hee Joo being one of the culprits of the kidnapping rather than the innocent unforgotten dead love. However I am not so sure about the sob story orphanage background given to her to justify her actions. She might have have loved him in the end, I believe she did, but nothing justifies her betrayal and I don’t want her to turn back into the innocent lost love. Her love also is very cruel. As a girl from an orphanage she must have gotten a kick out of a rich guy falling for her so hard but the way she wants him to suffer is not normal. I just hope she is not trying to protect JW (that would be the expected) but her real lover. That would make a better story for our hero and heroine.

- I am a bit confused about JW’s connection to ladies. Early episodes gave us the impression that he stayed away from women after Hee Joo but there were a few comments in this episode that made me reconsider. First of, there was a mention of all the women he was supposed to have dated with marriage prospects that his father didn’t show any interest in and secondly the reaction of the hotel staff to seeing him with GS. They acted as if it is normal for the big boss to bring a date to the hotel, close the pool, try to impress. What surprised them was the hand holding. So I am wondering whether JW is a ladies’ man after all. :p

- Since the beginning I never got the feeling GS liked Kang Woo as a man. She liked the idea of a man liking her, but that was all. She wasn’t that disappointed when he told her it was all a misunderstanding. She didn't even tell JW yet. But the misunderstanding with JW was an entirely different matter. She was truly disappointed. To me the biggest contrast between GS’s relationship between JW and Kang Woo is the openness and honesty between her and JW and the secrets and lies between her and Kang Woo.

- I’m curious to see what purpose the Chinese trip is going to serve other than getting them to miss each other. GS getting in a dangerous situation and her knight in shining armor coming to her rescue? I hope some of the guesses I read here about the possible mayhem that may arise in his absence doesn't come to pass.

- Many funny moments and lines in the episode:
* GS asking the supermarket grandma ghost to scare her to come to her senses about her lustful thoughts about JW (Ha! Good luck with that!)
* JW’s face when he discovers “Giant Mall building is taller than mine!” (inferiority complex?)
* GS’s line “He says that when he hasn't seen a zombie in real life” when JW likens her to a zombie
* JW's command to GS: "Tell her 'you died', and tell her to check out of this hotel"
* And last but definitely not the least JW's thought to himself: “It's not even weird seeing her do that anymore.”

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

Love all your points.
The throw-a-way lines are the best with this cast. The actors are genuinely funny, and it feels like they are improvising.
Good directing, I think.

As far as the "event" at the hotel, I think the staff was caught up in the whole romance of the idea, because they do that in dramas, wink wink, but I didn't get the impression JW had done that before. Maybe in their fictional world, it happens for important rich clients all the time.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I love all of these items also. GHJ is really great with throw away lines like the zombie comment.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I don't think that Hee-Joo being an orphan is meant to make us feel bad for her. I think it's setting up some kind of future plot point. I think that with Hee Joo, things aren't black and white which is what most people within the show's universe don't understand. Most people see her as an innocent victim, Joong Won sees her as a bad betrayer but there's clearly more to the story that we haven't yet learned. I don't think we're meant to love or hate her but when things are finally revealed, just to try to understand what led her to do what she did because it does seem like part of her really did care for Joong Won even as she used and betrayed him.

As for the references to Joong Won having dated previously, I don't think those were normal dates but arranged marriage-style matsuns like the one he had with Yiryung that his aunt was at. He has clearly met with several women with a few to marriage but it's obvious that he didn't take any significant interest in any of them which is why his aunt and uncle were so scandalised by the idea of him having a casual physical relationship with Gong-Shil. (It's not true, obviously, but the insinuations he makes about her to them are meant to give them that impression.) Imo, the show has basically set up the idea that since Hee Joo, Joong Won has not had any serious romantic relationships and that the only thing he focuses on is work prior to meeting Gong Shil. That's why he hasn't gotten married yet. He goes on the arranged dates to please his aunt but clearly doesn't actually have any interest in marriage outside of possibly expanding his investment portfolio/stock holdings.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

i must be crazy,, i find KW & RY so cute 2gether. and i replay thei scene so muny times..

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Why do I feel that the disguised person who held teenage JW hostage and forced him to read from that creepy book, was Hee Joo?

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Very well could be. Good guessing there.
There still needs to be someone else, since HJ was in the passenger seat in the car accident.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

For the last part, in JW's office, could GS be lying? HJ actually told her about the co-conspirators. But GS is too shocked to accept it. Which is why she falls to the ground?

I mean, GS didn't tell JW that the ajumma at the hotel left a while, instead she told him "She left just now." Then JW saying that he could not see ghosts so he trusted that whatever GS was telling him as the truth.

Also a theory I heard, the kidnapping was orchestrated by JW himself. But he had amnesia (*groan*) so he forgot about it. Just sharing a theory I saw. Like others here, I gave up guessing the outcomes with Hong Sisters' work. They always surprise me. ^^

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

If Joong-won doesn't like his dead GF roaming around him, maybe he should ask Tae-yang to move in with him. Pretty please Hong Sisters...

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

After the mess that is Big, the Hong sisters are back!!! I just started this series and I'm officially hooked!! The hong sisters are the only one that can combine comedy/fantasy/romance/drama into something memorable. Can't wait to watch the rest of the series.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I enjoyed this episode a lot. These last two were much stronger than the previous week's.

I really like how honest the characters generally are with each other. That whole 'Candy' setup at the hotel could have been a big dramatic blowout but instead Gong-Shil and Joong-Won just talked about it, acknowledged the misunderstanding, he apologized and they moved on. I LOVE THAT. It's so rare to find a drama that's so conflict-free and which allows the characters to be open and honest with each other.
That's what I enjoy about the Yiryung/Kang-Woo pairing as well. Yiryung is the one person Kang Woo is totally honest with and they're both better off for it. I know Kang Woo isn't romantically interested in her yet but I'm happy to see her acknowledge her interest in him finally and just ask him out for real. I'm looking forward to seeing him fall for her too.

Finally we get a concrete link between Hee Joo and Daddy Joo. It does seem like the show is pointing more and more towards his father somehow being involved with the kidnapping but I feel like there's got to be more to it that we still haven't figured out. After all if his father orchestrated the whole thing, then how is it that he doesn't know where the jewels are? I feel like there are definitely more surprises about this to come.

Although I felt like the editing was choppy and a bit confusing in this episode, I liked the little interludes between Gong-Ri and Gossipy Guard. I think those two make a cute couple and I want more elaboration on Gong-Shil's relationship with her sister.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Did anyone notice the City Hunter song they played when Gong Shil was walking towards Joong Won at the pool the first time or was that just me....? o.O

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

great show and recap too. Thanks jb.
really, what is in GS's accident that enable her to see ghost? there' really nothing revealed about it yet and am wonderin if something sensible will be showed though. hopefully there is/are. and what i'm most curious about( i just dont know if the reason was shown and i just missed it. hopefully not but if i did please enlighten me) is of all people that might help GS or make the ghosts 'poof' why it has to be JJW? yeah i know he's the lead but aside from that, why? what's their (GS & JW) connection? what does he have that every skinship they have the ghosts go poof?

well that's for now(hehe) .. GO GHY, i was never a fan of her then, now? no doubt. For SJS, he's so hoooot! I want some ghost-poofing-hug!

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I have a crazy theory about it, well two. One, there can be a huge twist to this drama and he is dead just like in the movie The Sixth Sense, there is no other explanation unless the Hongs are going to give it later. and two.. they are in a coma both of them and all of these ghosts and actions are the only way to wake up... remember on ep 1 when he told the owner of the house if a thunder struck him he will not buy the house and he opened his eyes waiting for the thunder to struck him what if it did...

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Is it just me who smiles indulgently at the thought that when Joong-won decided to get Gong-shil a change of clothes because she'd probably be going in the pool, he chooses, of all things, a pretty designer dress and shoes? Looks like Mr. Practical I-Only-Do-Things-For-Myself isn't all that practical, after all :)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

He was miffed at her reaction after learning about his trip to China.

If we're counting tell tale signs of his deepening affection for GS, then his reaction on the length of the trip was a dead give-away. He was not okay with it.

Also, his emotional pleading for GS to protect him makes me think that from hereon they will be inseparable. He just might find another excuse to bring her along his trip.

The problem now is that GS has decided to keep her feelings well in check and by now has probably built a veritable fortress around them. Best of luck to JW then.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

So in love with this drama!! It's so funny and heartwarming at the same time - the Hong sisters have really pulled themselves up from the Drama That Cannot Be Named.

Really loving the unconventional second leads - they nipped the potential triangle/rectangle in the bud, and I really hope they pair the second leads together. I think they're destined for that since there are so many good moments between them. It's nice to have a fun second female lead who isn't a complete b**** but is actually hilarious and adds to the comedy.

I've actually been interpreting the actions of the leads in a more romantic light, so I've been getting so many feels. I like that it seems both of them are developing feelings at the same pace, but I hope we get more jelly shenanigans from him!

I really hope they can keep the storylines up, and I'm PRAYING that they keep moving the main plot forward and don't drop it - the warning that the creepy matchmaker gave them...I hope it makes for some really good drama and is a good source of angst.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Does anyone know what brand or wear to buy that dress that So Ji Sub's character gave to the Leading women in this episode? I really like that bird print dress.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Cant wait for the next episode XD SJS totally won me over! Love both our leads <3

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Waaah, this is my first time to post here. Thank you so much for the recap javabeans! I sooo love your site. I just recently got addicted to kdramas and your site is a minefield of info. I'm currently hooked in this Hong Sister's drama. Looking forward to the next ep recap.

Just a thought though, I really think that the culprit that was with Hee Joo in the car accident was a woman. Any ideas as to what happened to Jong Won's mom?

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yay! I really liked this episode, mostly because of, as my cousin says "all the feels!!!" Thumbs up to this drama, definite thumbs up. :-)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Does anyone know the song that played in episode 8?
When Gong Sil was getting ready to see Joong Won at the pool?
[IMG]http://i1058.photobucket.com/albums/t413/javabeansdb/drama/2013/taeyang/master1/master8-00259.jpg[IMG/]

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

just started watching this drama & liking it to da max, oh thnx for sharing this beautiful ost! i luv the ost of this drama as well! i never thought SJS could pull out a role which is a bit comic in more ways than one, his facial expression makes me crack and the lead actress (name?) is so hilarious i luv their chemistry!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Did anyone here know what is the name of the hotel which these episode been casting? :)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I cannot remember the nitwit that posted about him and his friend who is deceased. Why don't you read what you write. First of all, his friend was an actor, singer, model. I do not know how anyone would ever know his financial issues when all of that is inconsiderate, hearsay. I know his friend's name and I live in the USA. Number 1. He had his own fan base, 2. He was a sensative sweetheart. 3. His fans, friends, family would find that statement hurtful and affensive. No one knows what actually happened to him except he and the Lord. His friend was rolling in the money because of a concert tour, when he accidently died. Please read what you write. How would anyone know who paid for his funeral. He may have had the plot. The paparazzi should mind there own business. There is a God up there that listens to everything you say!!! Any comments refer them to me.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I cannot remember the nitwit that posted about him and his friend who is deceased. Why don't you read what you write. First of all, his friend was an actor, singer, model. I do not know how anyone would ever know his financial issues when all of that is inconsiderate, hearsay. I know his friend's name and I live in the USA. Number 1. He had his own fan base, 2. He was a sensative sweetheart. 3. His fans, friends, family would find that statement hurtful and affensive. No one knows what actually happened to him except he and the Lord. His friend was rolling in the money because of a concert tour, when he accidently died. Please read what you write. How would anyone know who paid for his funeral. He may have had the plot. The paparazzi should mind their own business. There is a God up there that listens to everything you say!!! Any comments refer them to me.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

5 stars for this episode

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thank you for explaining the tofu thing.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *