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Heirs: Episode 17

Everybody, meet Rock Bottom. Rock Bottom, everybody. He’ll be sticking around with us for the next hour, making sure Tan suffers appropriately for daring to dream the impossible dream, which is to say, a relationship with the girl he likes. Too bad Despot Dad has other things on the agenda, like tyranny and misery for all. Apparently once you wear that crown, you also have to give up all claims to humanity—happiness is for the plebes, don’tcha know?

SONG OF THE DAY

Lee Min-ho – “Painful Love.” I’ll say. [ Download ]

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EPISODE 17 RECAP

Chairman Dad outsmarts both his sons and puts them in their places with his stockholders’ vote maneuver, reminding them that he’s the one pulling the strings. Dance, monkeys, dance. While Won chafes to discover he was toyed with, Tan has bigger heartbreak waiting for him at his love nest, which is empty—Eun-sang is gone, just like Dad said.

He staggers home in a daze, while the song helpfully blares, “You’re crying again, you’re crying again, powerless, you send her away.” This is perhaps the most on-the-nose soundtrack ever.

He returns home and asks his father what he’s done with Eun-sang. Dad gives him the classic abuser line—This is all your fault, you made me do this—and warns him not to go looking for her, because he’ll really ruin her life then.

Chan-young worries about Eun-sang and asks whether his father knows anything. As it happens, Manager Yoon was tasked with facilitating her exile, though he can’t share much with his son. He just says that Eun-sang will call once she’s settled and that Chan-young can hear from her directly what happened.

Chairman Dad arranges for Eun-sang to be withdrawn from school, but none of the kids know that and wonder at her empty seat the next morning. Bo-na worries that Eun-sang hasn’t replied to her chat message, but balks about calling directly “because calling makes it seem like we’re friends.” Then she shoots a glare in Rachel’s direction and mutters, “Is she being harassed someplace where I don’t know?” Aw, there you go unconsciously playing Eun-sang’s protector again. Bo-na is a delightful ball of contradictory statements, and I love that about her.

Tan storms in and beelines for Chan-young to ask if he’s heard anything. Chan-young blames Tan for being the source of Eun-sang’s troubles, and then Young-do storms into class and beelines for Chan-young too. I don’t blame Chan-young for being annoyed with these two for causing trouble and then looking to him for help, and he leaves them to their frustration.

Determined to track her down, Tan asks Madam Jung to refrain from withdrawing Eun-sang from school. Young-do heads off on his own search, starting with the broadcasting club’s member records. Hyo-shin wonders at all the fuss, but agrees to help when Tan asks for help searching the flight records for departures abroad.

The Jeguk moms have a meeting, and Rachel’s mother receives barbed congratulations for her upcoming wedding—one mom drops the stinger that her fiancé’s Zeus Hotel is facing investigation. Hyo-shin’s mother (the prosecutor’s wife) says she knows nothing about this, but her smirk indicates that she’s lying.

Chan-young’s father gets promoted to vice president per his agreement with Won, so I guess we’ll call him VP Yoon now. Now he’s picked a side, and Won teasingly warns him not to two-time with his loyalties. They shake on it.

Tan combs through security footage for clues, while Hyo-shin works his connections and reports that Eun-sang wasn’t listed as leaving the country. Tan breathes a sigh of relief and calls Young-do right away to fill him in (cute), figuring two heads are better than one. It’s too bad those two heads are both at the bottom of the class, but I guess points for quantity.

Footage from the front gate shows Eun-sang loading a moving truck, and then turning to the camera to send up a wave at Tan, knowing he’d be watching. Sweet, or disturbing? Always the question with this romance.

Young-do lights up to hear Eun-sang is still in the country, then hatches a plan: He logs onto his hotel’s homepage and posts a message under Eun-sang’s name. He manages a few compliments toward himself, but mostly it’s a complaint against him. I’m not quite sure what the plan entails, but he calls it “setting a trap” so I suppose he’s trying to draw a response.

Tan collects car black box footage from his neighbors for more video clues, then goes to a cell phone store to reconnect Eun-sang’s old number. Upon logging in he links to her chat account, and finds a message from Young-do asking where she is: “I miss you. I’m just talking to a number that doesn’t exist.”

Tan calls Young-do from that phone, and I almost feel sorry for Young-do’s excitement at the incoming call from “Eun-sang.” He calls Tan’s plan smart but feels clever enough about his own… until he hears that his lawyer hasn’t been able to find any trace of Eun-sang.

Tan gets a clue when Eun-sang’s number receives an automated text acknowledging a credit card purchase. So he starts calling every store with that name, trying to find a matching payment, which takes him all night—imagine trying to call every 7-Eleven in range. After a night of dead ends, he gets a match and bolts up to head over immediately.

It’s only now that Chairman Dad hears that Eun-sang hadn’t left the country as planned, because Chan-young’s father had pulled a fast one on them. She was seen entering the departure gate, but VP Yoon must have made other arrangements, and now Chairman Dad receives the photo evidence that shows Eun-sang and Mom in some beachside town.

Mother and daughter put on brave faces as they settle into their new lives here, assuring each other that they’ll be fine. Eun-sang picks up a job at a bookstore and forces a cheerful expression, but the moment she’s alone she bursts into tears. (Man, there are so many long flashbacks in this episode. Struggled to fill airtime, did they?)

Tan races to Eun-sang’s town, first spotting the familiar “I heart California” shirt hanging from a clothesline. Then Eun-sang comes into view, and he reels with the force of both relief and… guilt, perhaps? Dread, fear, recrimination? Anyway, point being: Emotions are mixed, and he can’t bring himself to approach.

Thus while he follows Eun-sang to the beach where she sits alone, he keeps his distance. He takes one step toward her, but ultimately turns back.

Eun-sang receives a call from the police, because Young-do’s lawyer has finally gotten a lead on her whereabouts (thanks to her taking out a new cell phone contract). He heads right down to see her, and when she comes rushing into the police station, he’s so overwhelmed with feeling that he grabs her tight and says gratefully, “Thank you—for being safe, and for showing up.”

They take a walk on the beach, and Young-do keeps up a steady stream of chatter while she remains silent in her worry. She confesses that seeing him frightened her, because it’s proof of how easy it was to track her down. He teases about running away together, but as she’s not in the mood for teasing he just asks her not to tell him to stay away, and promises to come back again.

With that he heads back to Seoul, steeling himself to face his disgruntled father, who has to deal with the gossip stirred by his online post. Young-do informs his father that he wrote the message, and that Eun-sang is the girl he likes. His father scoffs at him stirring up all this trouble just to track down one girl, but Young-do admits, “If I couldn’t find her, it felt like I’d go crazy.”

Young-do is clearly still a bit afraid of his father’s reaction, but nonetheless he orders Dad to stay out of it, because where women troubles are concerned, Dad has no right to interfere. Amazingly, his father concedes that point without rancor. He declares that Young-do is still incapable of defeating him head-on, but he will take this to mean that Young-do has learned how to negotiate deals.

Young-do and Rachel find themselves dragged to another family dinner, and tonight Young-do’s father is in good spirits and toasts to the upcoming union. A phone call interrupts with bad news from Prosecutor Kim, and it’s obvious to all that it’s serious business despite Dad’s insistence that all is under control.

But Rachel’s mother surprises everybody by stating her intent to call the wedding off. She takes Rachel out and says that the hotel family isn’t going to crumble over the investigation, but neither does she see the need to suffer along with them. Rachel actually sighs in relief, not for the broken engagement but because Young-do won’t be ruined. It’s not the reaction her mother expected, but Rachel calls him a partner in suffering throughout this whole mésalliance ordeal.

Tan goes back to his empty apartment, and takes down the dreamcatcher. He’s finally accepted that he’ll have to let go, and goes to his brother and dully offers to do whatever hyung asks—give up his stocks, live in exile forever—if only he’ll help him in this:

Tan: “Save Eun-sang from Father, and from me. I ruined her. Because I liked her, she was driven to the edge of a cliff. Home, school, friends, even the future she dreamed of—I ruined it all. I did my best to stay with her, but why is this the only way to protect her? Why does leaving have to be a solution?”

Tan says this is Won’s chance to steal everything away from him, if only hyung can restore Eun-sang to her life from before. Tan intends to see her once more and then no more, so it’s with a sense of defeat that he returns to Eun-sang’s town.

She sees him standing across the way and reacts with alarm, telling him to leave because if he continues to track her down, she’ll have to keep running away.

Tan tells her that he’s sorry and promises to restore her life to how it was without him in it. She declines the offer, telling him that she’s fine here and doesn’t want to return. And when he asks whether he has been a source of trouble since the very start, she answers yes (since cruel lies are better for cutting off lingering ties).

Tan promises not to come back and apologizes one last time: “For asking you to hold out your hand, for asking you to have courage—I’m sorry. Goodbye, Cha Eun-sang.”

He leaves the umbrella in her hand and walks off into the rain, leaving her to break down into sobs behind him.

He returns home looking like a zombie and concedes defeat to his father. Dad wonders sneeringly at his foolish care for one girl, and Tan bursts out, “Because my heart hurts! Because I’m in pain and lonely! Because living sucks!”

Chairman Dad looks at him sharply. Is it too much to hope for a flicker of human sympathy there?

Tan shakes off his mother’s concern and locks himself in his room. She grows increasingly panicked at the sounds of destruction behind his doors and begs him to let her in, but he just screams and destroys.

He makes it to school the next day but doesn’t last very long; he stalks out just as Hyun-joo arrives to start class. He ignores her flatly, so she calls in Hyo-shin to ask about Tan’s recent issues, saying merely that he’s “someone’s” kid brother. Hyo-shin picks up on that immediately and guesses that she dated Won, and feels stung to realize how trivial he must’ve seemed by comparison.

Tan descends into a depressed funk—and worse, gradually escalating self-destructiveness. Won is called (away from a perfunctory date with the heiress his father is pushing him to marry) to the police station in response to Tan getting caught speeding without a driver’s license, and he chides that Tan is going about his rebellion in the wrong way. But Tan says he’s just living like his brother wants him to—because if he’s the reckless troublemaker, he can’t challenge Won’s place.

The adults may be inclined to dismiss Tan’s acting out as an adolescent tantrum, but we know it’s more like a nihilistic bender. So Won is taken aback to realize how far gone his brother is, and tries to talk to their father, which is like trying to reason with a brick wall with spikes. Dad, for instance, sniffs that Tan should’ve toughened up before crumbling, seeing this as proof of his weakness.

Won, however, sticks up for little bro and says that Dad doesn’t realize just how tough Tan was. He cites the eighteen years he spent ignoring Tan, and how Tan steadfastly kept coming to him anyway, stating his mind frankly. Won asks his father whether he doesn’t feel anything watching his son breaking down like this, and whether it wasn’t bad enough to have ruined Won’s relationship. I… think that presupposes a lot, like the chairman having emotions.

Rachel runs into Hyo-shin in the nurse’s office, and is just as discomfited this time as she was the last. He notes how flustered she is, which she denies, though she asks him to forget about “it” happening the other day. He agrees, but she’s still so uncomfortable that she yanks the curtains shut between them to avoid the awkwardness.

Tan’s behavior deteriorates even further with more fights, and at the Jeguk anniversary event, his battered appearance is the point of interest, drawing murmurs and speculation. Then late at night, Young-do walks by a nightclub entrance as Tan staggers out and gets into an altercation with a bystander. Pretty soon voices are raised and fists start swinging.

Young-do steps in to drag Tan away, and Tan starts swinging at him instead. Young-do returns the blow, telling Tan to get his act together, and the boys exchange blows out there in the street.

After going at it a bit, they fall down exhausted. Young-do exclaims that if Tan wants to see Eun-sang so badly, he should just go see her already. To which Tan says that he won’t be seeing her anymore.

Young-do looks at him in surprise, seeing a tear trickle down Tan’s face. And Tan tells him, “You take her.”

 
COMMENTS

Ughhhhhhh. You just had to end on that note, didn’t you? “You take her”? Thanks for reminding us yet again that the girl is something to be passed back and forth between men, whose ownership is determined by the rich guy who decides her fate for her. There there, li’l lady, don’t you worry about a thing, let the mens tell you how to live your life.

Tan’s self-destructive breakdown was probably a necessary turn, so while this episode was a lot of misery with few fun beats to lighten the angst, I can see how we needed to show the fallout of him being crushed under Dad’s heel. That’s especially true if the story is going to go in the direction that I think it’s going to go in—that is to say, Dad changes his mind and backs the fuck off. Which on one hand is a valid way for this conflict to end, particularly if we’re going to look at it in real-world terms: Dad learning to grow and accept his sons’ feelings is the most efficient and clear-cut way for this conflict to resolve.

I can’t find much satisfaction in that as a dramatic resolution, however, because it’s such a weak way to wrap up a story that was already wafer-thin to begin with. The series has set up a huge power struggle all this while, with multiple players jockeying for dominance and ready to elbow each other out of their respective paths, and Tan has transitioned from an apathetic slacker to somebody with a will and a goal, desperate to move the heavens and the earth to fight for what he believes in. So I want to see the actual power plays amount to something, I want strategy and alliance and meaning—not just an omnipotent Dad playing puppeteer. Because what is the point of crushing him, then having God-Dad wave his hands and lift the problem away? That is a literal definition of a deus ex machina.

One silver lining in this episode of pain: It was super short. This was one of the emptiest episodes of Heirs thus far in terms of plot, and in addition to long silent scenes and musical montages, we had a ton of flashback sequences dropped in to take up airtime. I’m going to take this as a sign of hope: Because if they devoted a whole hour to breaking Tan’s spirit and still had to pad it with all that filler, then surely the next episode brings about a change. I mean, they can’t just fill three more episodes with pain and flashbacks, can they?

On second thought, don’t answer that.

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I am from Nigeria, i finally watch heirs because episodes 1-10 was released on dvd in my country. I dont know why people call the show boring. I watched it because of lee min ho,though i am not his fan. I read some comments that said lee min ho is boring in this show, to me he is not boring, that is just the character he is playing. This is my first time of watching kim woo bin in a drama, though he is good at his job but you cant compare him with lee min ho because they are playing different characters. Kim woo bin is tall but not handsome,damn he is so ugly and has weird eyes. Sorry to his fans.

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Agree on those weird eyes on KWB
But his genteel smiles wins you over!

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LMH I love and agree with you on but a bit harsh with KWB. He is also a pretty good actor from what I have seen. I mean i am a huge fan of LMH and the way he lights up the screen whether the drama sucks or not, but KWB also has his own flair. They both carried this drama.

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KWB is honestly not that great looking in terms of his facial features, but that boy carries himself in a way that just makes him so damn sexxxyyy.

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ditto!! :D :D
I wholeheartedly AGREE with U!!
U hit the nail on the head about "The eye" of KWB

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To be perfectly honest, Kim Woo Bin’s eyes cannot be considered ‘attractive’ in the conventional sense, but I think it is unkind and unfair to call them ugly or weird.

I salute Kim Woo Bin for proudly and happily living with the eyes God has given him. That is a mark of a good and mature person, someone who deserves respect, not scorn or ridicule.

May I suggest that we remember the following truths :

1. That nobody and nothing is perfect except God, so do we have the right to be unkind towards one another about the physical flaws we are born with?

2. Kim Woo Bin is someone’s precious son, grandson, cousin, friend, boyfriend. In other words, he is someone that is loved, who has loved ones, someone precious and irreplaceable to his loved ones. We all have someone like him in our lives. We all have loved ones, who are precious and irreplaceable in our hearts and lives, no matter how flawed they may be. So would we want to hear anyone criticise our loved ones by calling them ugly and weird? Do we have the right to do that?

I respect and admire Kim Woo Bin for being comfortable, happy and accepting of the eyes he was born with and living proudly with them.

I do not respect or like people who try to attempt the impossible – getting plastic surgery to change almost every single physical feature to become perfect plastic, artificial beauties – because perfection CANNOT be achieved in this finite world, no matter how hard we try.

Whats more, the facial features gained from plastic surgery will not last forever. As we age, we will all look old and wrinkly but it would be worse for people who have had plastic surgery because the artificial means of changing one’s physical feature will take its tool on how the body ages. In short, people who have hard plastic surgery will look worse than those who have not had plastic surgery as they age. I know from having seen people who have had plastic surgery and how they looked when they grew old. It is NOT a pretty sight.

It is a sad, sad world indeed if we all have plastic, artificial looks.

No amount of plastic surgery can change who we are on the inside.

If we are ugly on the inside, it will show on the outside, no matter how hard we try to hide it.

But if we are good on the inside, no matter how imperfect or ‘ugly’ we may be physically, our goodness will shine through nonetheless.

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Correction :

...the artificial means of changing one’s physical feature will take its *toll* (not 'tool) on how the body ages...

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I saw picture of him as a child, and it is obvious he had some work done.

I too agree that KWB is ugly cute lol. I love when he smiles, and even though he is hard to look at some times, he has charisma, and good onscreen presence.

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"Kim woo bin is tall but not handsome,damn he is so ugly and has weird eyes. Sorry to his fans."

It's like stabbing somebody and saying sorry afterwards. :D

Yes, he's not the conventional good-looking Kdrama guy but that's what makes him interesting. Besides he himself already knows that fans think he looks like a dinosaur. I think it's great though because people now appreciate him because of his talent and not just his looks. Besides I think the perfect flower boy look is so boring. KWB reminds me of Benedict Cumberbatch. He looks like an alien (or a lizard) but he is such a great actor that a lot of people have already taken notice of.

and 1+ @koreandramalover / kay :)

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In the beginning of the drama, I didn't quite find KWB attractive. But as I kept watching, I began to find him oddly attractive. Like you said, he doesn't have the traditional flower boy look - but he is still very attractive...in a weird way. His appearance is unique, and he has that masculine appeal. His eyes also seem as if they can right through you. To add to that, he's just so charismatic. He really brought YD to life, while the rest (KT and ES) are just shells of characters.

Furthermore, I bet all these girls calling him ugly will drop their panties in the quickness if he were to approach them. Don't even lie to yourself, ladies. KWB has this power to drawn you in, and before you know it, you're under his spell.

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Drop their panties? Ewwww. I am not being harsh, but I would never drop my panties with someone I would not want to procreate with, and let me just say, I would not want babies running around with his face. I am sorry, but he just does not do it for me facially. However I do think he has good on screen presence.

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Lol. You are being harsh, but it's cool. Different strokes for different folks.

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I think it's hilarious that so many responses here have been basically suggesting that KWB's eyes are a facial quality that he has had to endure, and that no one is perfect etc.

What the?? His eyes are his BEST feature. Those striking eyes are why people are looking at him in the first place. They get your attention and keep your attention. His eyes are what's putting money in the bank for him.

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Kim Tan isn't breaking down just because he lost Eun Sang, it's because he already lost everything else and Eun Sang was the last straw. He started out the series without much hope for his future already, but Eun Sang inspired him to dream that maybe he could do something with his life. He put everything on the line for this relationship, including his birth secret, his relationship with his father, and most importantly his relationship with his hyung. When Won told him to get lost a couple episodes ago and it finally sunk in that he couldn't have the family he always wanted, he decided he would stop trying to win bro and dad over and give his all just to protect Eun Sang. He put all his strength and hope in the possibility that he could have ONE relationship that truly matters, but then that hope was swiftly and summarily crushed. I can totally understand that now he's lost Eun Sang he feels like its the final defeat in a long string of defeat. His utter cynicism in throwing his hyung's comments back in his face at the police station really shows how much he's given up on having any kind of family at all, not just a girlfriend. :(

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What kind of person are you?you have been complaining since episode 1. Nobody told you to watch this drama, why do you keep watching what you dont like? I think only a mad person does that. Are u not tired of complaining on every post and spreading negativity?

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So the best part of this episode was when Young Do hugged her like a human being and told her it hurts when she calls him "Young Do-yah"

That is all.

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Oh yeah, this moment's great too! Yound Do's become a great character, unlike the main ones who are just annoying and boring!

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~le swoon

I bet no one saw that one coming. And I reckon all those who hated YD at first are now fawning over how awesome he is.

Sorry KT, YD has outshine you in this one!

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I actually thought that scene was quite contrived. Every scene that led up to that had YD basically grinning, and not really missing ES at all. He was entertained by the email he wrote, and grinning while talking to his lawyer. Not one time did I believe that YD missed ES deeply. So when that scene came around I was confused.

Like, when did they show him missing her so much? Never happened.

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This episode was sooo boring I sighed at least 3 times and skipped some useless parts (LMH crying - I am very sorry, he really can't act - and flashbacks). Aaand I watched the episode with accelerated speed lol.

The best part of the episode was the moment at the infirmary, with Hyo Shin sunbae! That's all.

I am just looking forward to the following drama with Kim Soo Hyun and Jeon Ji Hyun!

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Ok let's just get real here...I'm watching this drama for the boys. No other reason. Lee Min ho is a damned good cryer and so what about the ugly turtleneck he'd look good in a Glad bag. Kim Woo bin, I challenge anyone to come up with a more charismatic young Korean actor right now. Go ahead try. Kang Ha Neul, seriously sexy boy, can we get him in a 1st lead position sometime, please? Let's not commit him to auxiliary hottie forever. Choi Jin Hyuk, what's not to like. Kang Min Hyuk I have a strong opinion about this, he has more on screen charisma in his little toe than Yonghwa has in his entire body. Take that Yongwha fan girl crazies the helped f*ck up Mi Rae's choice.

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strongly agree I watch for the boys too, the main love story is boring as hell.

I can't even think of what would have happened if younghwa was the 2nd lead instead of KWB

I think war would have been declared!

and they totally f*cked up MHIYD

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Best possible outcome for the last episode: Eun Sang turns out to be a North Korean sleeper agent. After someone accidentally reads her trigger phrase off a baby shampoo bottle in English "No More Tears," she turns into a fem fatale, and, disgusted with being such a doormat for seventeen episodes, wades through a half-dozen bodyguards to take out Evil Daddy Chaebol in hand to hand combat.

The police arrest her, but once she starts crying in court, the judge refuses to believe someone that wimpy could have done the crime. She whisks both brothers off to California, where her sister has been preparing a mansion with state of the arts electronics to run their capitalist empire on behalf of the Peoples Republic!

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WoW... Love this ending ..you just made my day.

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I always love your alternate scenarios why can't you write some kdramas? They have been so upsetting lately, these people neeeddddyaaa!

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I would go with that ending. It would make more sense than the current writer.

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Yeah, baby!

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Finally watched episode 16. Why does lee min ho kiss like a hungry lion or is it because of park shin hye? He sucked hell out of her lips.

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That's the way he rolls. Usually, it is fun to watch, but PSH had her usual Pained Expression so we would all focus on that all-important Tragic Plotline. I wish they would pair LMH with someone who shares his zeal for the finer things in life, like YEH.

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"Finer things in life"?????

Omo! Where is my mind going?....why is it going down to the gutter.?....

....to the gutter.....

down it goes.....

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Thank you so much.. this drama is very interesting

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Drama creators, i wish for a Kim Woo Bin - Park Shin hye drama.. pretty please!!!

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Just please no. I am so tired of her constant tears and timidity and worried frowns and her stiff neck and her inability to let go. KWB needs someone with a similarly fiery personality.

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I never want Woobie wasted on Park Shin Hye again.

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This writer does like to make even the ordinary things seems like world problems (though in this characters' own small world, they are). Like in gentlemens dignity, I always thot the conflict was underwhelming and trivial yet every character make a big deal out of everything. I want to sympatize with the characters but instead I just feel frustrated. When compared to other characters in other dramas who face bigger problems yet remain positive, they make the people in these series relatively weak and ungrateful and spoilt. I dunno. I guess different groups of people have their own scale of pain and when normalized they seem equally big. But then it makes it hard to take the series and the characters problem seriously.

I suppose I dont watch this one for deep meaning. I just want to enjoy the pretty faces and pretty picture, and the cute and silly when they come around once in a while.

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but in a teen's world, everything is a big deal. i think all of the characters in this show have their own level of childishness. Only HS seems to be a step more rational than the other kids. But everyone else is just a kid.

I don't watch it and try to make sense of what they do either. But I honestly feel everything they express is normal of a teenager. I would be more surprised if they acted so mature at a very young age considering their experiences in life isn't so much. And first love...ah first love...if you haven't experienced the passion of teenage first love then most probably you won't be able to relate to the craziness of how this show narrates it. or you just weren't K-drama-ish enough.

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auwww,let's not talk about crazy first love. haha. agree, for most teenagers, love problem is a big deal. maybe because i've phased out and realized that it's not the end of the world, i just wish these people grow up quickly. In that sense, i appreciate Won and his lady. even though i still don't get why he's so paranoid with Tan (i feel like the justification is lacking, or is mentioned in passing remarks or something thus it lacks weight and sense), I like the fact that he didn't get so caught up in love that he lost his bearing on his true path as an heir. it's obvious he likes her. i hope they will stick together in the end.

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you get what i mean right? crazy first love? Lol. and yes, i think the reason why they can look stupid is because, for crying out loud, they are stupid. but stupidity is the luxury of the young and the restless. it's better they act that way young than when they are older. then it becomes annoying. but let the kids be kids and learn from it.

See, Won is in the same state but since he is more mature he rationalizes everything and uses is brains more often than not, but is he happy? I mean, really happy? No. Even an older and more mature man knows that money can't completely buy happiness. But he doesn't act like Tan because apart from that he is a different person, he also is not 18 anymore. I think it is more courageous to follow your heart sometimes.

But even with Won and his woman...if you were in the woman's place, would you like a man who can't make up his mind on what he really wants? Who puts you in a cage and tells you to go to the US for 3 years and he will get you there when time comes? Who, time and again, chooses his position in society over his love for you? Who keeps you guessing and hanging every time and even doesn't show up on an appointment because something important at work came up? Ugh. I would still rather be in the position of ES...where the boy who likes me shows it, says it and fights for it. It may be stupid in some level but hey, at least he makes her feel she deserves all of it. He doesn't make her wait. He doesn't give her false hopes. He, and because it is just right, follows his heart.

Won is paranoid because he grew up seeing relatives fight for the position he holds now. He doesn't trust anyone because no one has ever trusted him either. You learn it when someone has shown it to you.

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@xanti Seeing the way ES and KT's relationship turned out, Won's approach seems to make more sense.

Have you ever wondered what would have happened to Hyun Joo if Won had gone the KT route and forsook everything for his "love"? His father would have made mincemeat out of Hyun Joo. She is an orphan doesn't even have the support that ES has (at least ES still has her mom).

Won is more jaded, more aware of how destructive his father can be, so he is exercising more caution in his dealing with his lady love. He has made it clear to her that he still cares about her, even told her to pick up her phone when he calls occassionally.

I would argue that Won, being older is living and acting in the real world and KT is in some la-la fantasy land. Reality bites, though, and now that he has come crashing down to earth, he can't handle the pain.

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Granted that trivial things may seem a lot more important at 17, most of these characters seem to take that idea to new extremes.

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It's fiction. And a drama. Of course everything's taken to new extremes.

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@AdAl --- you are correct. I agree with what you said. KT is indeed in lala land. but that is where first passionate romances usually head towards and that was what i was talking about. What I am saying is, I do understand KT's reactions and emotions and passion in a level he is right now.

Re: Won...I, too, understand the reactions and emotions and passion (or lack of which) he is in at the level he is now. What does not make sense to me is, if he knows his destiny and the weight of the crown he bears, why play with a woman's feelings because you cannot make up your mind? If he had chosen one path, stick there, stop bothering the woman because you can't give her the love she deserves. For as long as Daddy Evil is alive, it will be that way...and for how long?

They are both right and they are both wrong. It is a matter of following your heart or following your mind. I guess the only reason I agree with KT yet is because at the end of the day, it is better you did your best, loved till it hurt, fell down and persisted than to not do much and wonder one day what could have been.

Basing on the relationships of the older people in the show, not one of them is honest with their feelings. They all lie about it. They get married for business. So they end up having empty lives and mistresses and as for Esther --- a college love that she can't get past from anyway. I don't see how any of that is mature or right or makes sense at all.

Still, like I said, KT is young. She is acting young. She is supposed to not worry about tomorrow. Young people think they know everything. That is what he is doing. But seriously, it is only when you are honest with yourself do you live life to its full. So for whatever it's worth, I am happy for the two foolish hearts that are standing by what they feel. I think they are the only ones really happy in the show (apart from Bo Na and Cy)...or at least...the only ones given the glimpse of what it is really like to be happy in the real sense of it.

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ooops...sorry for the use of "she" on KT lol...i meant, HE...of course...

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So, Tan tantrum-ed, Eun Sang cried, Chan Young worried, Bona feuded, Hyoshin and Rachel angsted, and Young do? What does he do again?

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Thanks for the recap! Does anyone have the translated lyrics to the song that LMH sang in this episode ?

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I don't know if Park Shin Hye spoils her characters in her dramas OR she doesn't choose a suitable character for herself OR her facial expressions & features are always this much depressing & gloomy that she cannot act well no matter what!
If the problem is with her features,she had better think about Plastic surgery!!
I cannot warm 2 the character of "Eun Sang" AT ALL!!!!
I know that the heroine in Kim Eun So dramas are generally wasted & don't have interesting personalities,BUT THIS TIME the scriptwriter hasn't focused on the heroine AT ALL!!
I think this time,the scriptwriter didn't even spend time creating the heroine for an hour!! She must have TOTALLY FORGOTTEN HER!!
Bo Na,who is a supporting actress & doesn't have much scene is MUCH MORE engaging!!!

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The scriptwriter is obviously an anti Eunsang.. I feel sorry for PSH... Her talents was absolutely wasted with this character.

Eunsang is a heroine that was overshadowed by two childish and immature heroes.

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Many have commented that the writer is very much anti-feminist, despite being female herself. Seems to be that she simply does not like strong women, so she makes ES look like some throw-away spineless rag doll to be passed back and forth between the two lead guys.

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KES is a writer of fiction and Eun-sang is a fictional character. Shin Mi-rae in The City Hall is also a fictional character and is the strongest female lead in any Korean drama I've ever seen. She's smart, worldly, knows good advice when she hears it, fights her own battles and wins on her own terms. So KES can obviously write strong female characters. The big difference is Shin Mi-rae is a 36 year old woman with a lot of life under her belt and Eun-sang is a teenaged girl.

This is exactly the same as stating that the actor Park Shin-hye is a lousy kisser in real life because the fictional character she has been cast to portray, Eun-sang, is awkward and inexperienced when being kissed by Kim Tan. Just as we can't assume anything about Park Shin-hye's real life kissing abilities because *cue outside voice* IT IS NONE OF OUR BUSINESS, so we can't assume to know KES's personal pro or anti feminist stance by the characters she writes about. It's as if we assume a male writer must be a serial killer because he's written about them which, everybody agrees, is ridiculous.

This is a real double standard and is insulting to female writers everywhere. A male writer is free to create a wide variety of problematic characters without being accused of having similar issues yet a female writer is somehow "working through her own issues" by doing the same.

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I remember watching City Hall and finding Shin Mirae pretty weak very often, I guess I have different ideas about strong women. If the writer always writes weak passive, masochistic women, I guess it's only logical most people would begin to assume she has a few issues in that area.

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That's interesting. I would never use the words weak, passive or masochistic to describe Shin Mi-rae. Sure she starts the drama as a low level civic worker with no hope of advancement in her job and burdened with the credit card debt of a slimy ex-boyfriend but it's not really a indication of her so-called "weak" character. These are her circumstances, not her character. She is never a passive participant; she sees her chances and she takes them every step of the way. She sets the agenda with Jo Gook. She battles and defeats the scary political boss and the mega-corporation, as represented by the heiress fiancee, in her own way and on her own terms. She's smart and capable of running a city the way she wants it to be run.

Just as we don't know what Mi-rae was like at 18, we have no way of knowing what Eun-sang will be like at 36 unless we do a flash forward or go ahead in time 18 years. Also Kim Tan "gives" Eun-sang to Young-do. We don't know yet what either Eun-sang or Young-do's reaction to this oh-so generous offer will be. But one thing is clear, by doing this Kim Tan regards her as somehow his possession to be disposed of at will. This is a refection of his character, not an example of how KES "always" writes weak, passive, masochistic female characters.

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But she's not creating problem characters: she's holding up Kim Tan (Lousy Friend, Abusive Boyfriend, and All Around Spoilt Brat) and Eun Sang (All Around Wet Fish Peeing On Everyone Else's Territory) to be some sort of ideals.

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Some sort of ideals? That's your interpretation of these characters but it's not mine.

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I don't know that she is setting up those characters as the "ideal", but it sure seems to me that they are being portrayed as the "norm.

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Tan and Eun-sang are being portrayed as some sort of norm? I think her teenaged characters are pretty diverse. Chan-young and Bo-na are just the cutest teenaged couple in love; every high school has them. Myung-soo is the perfect party animal and likes photography. Hyo-shin is the sensitive artist-type who has fallen for an unattainable older woman. Rachel is the resident mean girl who soon just might be too busy with her own romance as opposed to a Mommy engineered fiancé to keep it up. Young-do is the mean boy who lets aggression hide his true sensitive, intelligent nature. These are all pretty standard characters for this type of genre but KES has made them interesting.

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I never held her circumstances against her, on the contrary, I really liked that she was not ashamed of having lived a full life and the way she talked about it. Shin Mirae was eons ahead of ES but yes, I still considered her weak at many points in the story and contradictory. I wish I could remember all the specifics but I can't right now, it's funny now that I talk about CH something came to my mind. Wasn't JG engaged or close? And he cheated, also AGD had a charming cheater and KT pretty much cheated too. Three leads and all cheaters. One would assume writer has issues hehehe.

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Jo Gook is a cheater alright because he is engaged. He is essentially traded by his father, who has never acknowledged Jo Gook as his illegitimate son, in order to further his own political career which has been stalled. Jo Gook agrees to this engagement because he has spent his whole life trying to please his father and he is a 39 year old man at this point. It's pretty clear that he is sleeping with his fiancé in the beginning of the drama but not so clear if he continues to sleep with her once he starts his affair with Shin Mi-rae. It's a political and business arrangement and both parties accept it for what it is.

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i am a woman too but i don't see it that way. i think what you see and how you interpret it depends entirely on your sensitivity. there are lines crossed where you feel you weren't treated right and there are some that you can ignore because they simply are just that --- a thing to be ignored.

ES is just a character anyway and she represents a lot of women too. I don't see her being passed on by the two boys. One is in love with her, the other is also in love with her...no one is passing one over to the other and back. I think that last line at the end touched some sensitivity to a lot of female viewers. It wasn't like ES was given the chance to say, Hey, I am not any of your little toy so don't talk like that. No. It was a line one boy in pain said to convince himself he can make it without the love that was causing that pain. It wasn't like there was some deep meaning on what he said.

It's funny how we get so touchy and say --- Oh how anti-feminist --- or whatever...but we don't say the same about Esther kissing Yoon while she is engaged to someone else. No guy here says...ugh so not right. Lol.

Everyone's reaction is welcome though. I'm just speaking for myself. :)

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The writer is awful and pretty misogynist, and Park Shin Hye's acting is ghastly, so there's a double whammy going here.

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Really painful episode, and I feel so bad for Tan. And Eun-sang who gets passed around like a hot potato. Eesh.

Chairman Daddy sucks. Big time. At least Won is starting to see his brother as a person and not a roadblock.

And Young-do has somehow taken major steps forward to being a human.

Rachel likes Hyo-shin who likes Hyun-joo. Eesh, again.

Bo-na is adorable, and Chan-young is the best friend I wish I had.

Thanks for the recap, JB!

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LMH...Please be more careful while choosing the next project...hope to watch u acting in better drama rather than remake of boys over flower...Heir...for me is the failure..

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I wish I could say I enjoyed this episode, but there was a little too much BOF plots in it for me to truly enjoy it. I get that this is KES montage to LMH via Kim Tan, but I think she should ease up on it a little, it feels too cliche and not original at all.

A whole lot of crying and angst in this episode, a little too much for my taste and while I will say that LMH's acting is stellar as always, the one who really stole my heart was Young Do. That hug and the way he stood up to his father on ES's behalf. Bravo! (claps hands). I'm still shipping them together because YD and ES have awesome chemistry together compared to the pairing of KT/ES.

KWB's performance is awesomely amazing as always. He brings such nuances to his character. It's simply breathtaking to watch.

Can I hope for a tertiary pairing between Rachel and HS? I think HS is begining to realize how faraway HJ is from his reach and maybe he'll start to develop feelings for Rachel and vice versa.

There was a whole lot of bromance and friendship in this episode that thrilled my heart. I can truly believe that YD and KT were besties - the way they worked together and the caring that YD showed when he noticed KT staggering outside the night club was good to see. And Rachel sticking up for Young Do was also good to see.

One of my favorite scenes is the friendship between CY, BN, MS and YD all sitting down and joking. I'm glad that Heirs has lighthearted scenes like this. It was really cute!

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Are people not tired of writing the same negative comments every episode. I dont think i will watch what i dont like but what bothers me is that they come back every episode to call the drama crap. But they still watch the drama and read recaps. Some are busy over analyzing the drama as if it is real life, please there is a difference between drama and real life.why not enjoy the drama and move on and not coming back every episode to type the same comments. Some of the things that happen in drama dont happen in real life.

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They have endless energy and lots of time to waste apparently. At least it's less negative now (if that's possible) and more or less a little rational and not that tactless (i.e. not that offensive). But still repetitive. Anyway, just resign yourself to seeing them until the 20th episode. Or the next drama they choose to watch and hate.

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Ditto,Ditto

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People, can we give YD is own spin off? He's the ONLY reason I keep watching Heirs - the true HERO of the drama. I've lost interest in the KT-ES couple, and I've about had with all the ugly sweaters LMH has been made to wear. Aiiiissshhhh!

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So cynical! Speechless!
I think you are s.o who hasn't even watched this drama.
All you can say is about the sweater?
EXTEND UR views and don't just look at ONE SIDE of the drama
analyse the drama as if you are watching a 3D movie. I mean,looking at every aspect & quality of the drama

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Everyone in here has been expressing their views, so how exactly was the post cynical? For the past 17 episodes, DB and most posters here have been analyzing this show and I would take the liberty of saying that a majority in here are expressing dissatisfaction and disappointment with the writing. Just like PhantomPain, I'm still watching this now just for YD and the other side characters, though unlike her I haven't lost interest in KT/ES because I had none to begin with. We're now down to the last 2 episodes and frankly I think it's hard to change anyone's opinion at this point.

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This.

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@ Shana. You're being ridiculous. It was also a big mistake of yours to assume I haven't watched the drama, when I've been following it since it aired.

And the sweater bit holds true. I love LMH and his wardrobe in this drama is nowhere near aesthetically pleasing - so what if I complain? Deal with it.

Why don't you take your own advice and EXTEND UR viewpoints? Not everyone shares the same beliefs as you. And nowhere am I looking at the drama at one side (whatever the hell you meant by that). This drama is watched by different people, so expect criticism.

And just for your information, your analogy about the 3D movie makes no sense to me. Good grief.

@ Thanks Potatoluvah. Appreciated the support and elaboration.

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Agreed.

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No.

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I am an avid supporter & fan of scriptwriter,Kim Eun Sook.
I think some of those who make comment here should have a better look at her dramas. why so many negative views?
Kim Eun Sook is famous for being QUEEN of romance comedy. I am dead sure that you have figured this out by the quick,fast flying,clever & amusing one liners & banters.
It is CRYSTAL CLEAR from the lines & dialogues that the scriptwriter has done her best. the lines are not the ones which ANY scriptwriter can easily come up with the idea.
I hold this view that everything is refreshing in this drama despite the fact that it is said 2 be "gossip girl-BOF esque".
The characters are so interesting that u wanna eat them up.I myself have always LOVED the lead actor of her dramas! They are different & KES creates them in a way that are UNIQUELY REMEMBERED!
My last words,U may know that the reason why actors seize the offer in her dramas,even if supporting,is that KES pours a lot of details 2 the supporting cast as well.

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Sigh..this show has hit rock bottom. I feel cheated. Hopefully tonight will prove to be of some substance or is that wishful thinking!!?

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ES character is boring and flat. Tan is actually pretty one-dimensional. i get that they love each other to death but its a bit scary. the way they developed their love, i didnt see it as the greastest love of all time so too me Tan is a total maniac. crazy. not the sweet crazy in love, just simply crazy. AND OBSESS. ES all she does is cry, more over Tan than her life. I dont get why they love each other soo much when both of them arent that great individually.

Im more interested in Won/hyunjoo love story, the developing loveline between rachel/hyoshin, and seeing snippets of bona/chanyoung moments. Heck, even young do is more interesting alone. The two main love story of ES/Tan is the most boring.

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Although I appreciate all the effort and work put into the recaps by DB, I really wished they picked up Empress Ki instead.

I came into this drama rooting for ES and KT, but I ended up rooting for the side characters; the likes of Bo-Na and Chanyoung, Won and Hyun Joo, and hell, even Rachel and Hyoshin. And let's not forget the ultimate OTP: Young Do and me.

LMH's acting is stellar in the last few eps, but KWB is addictive all around, even while YD was a bad boy. I think he's the most fleshed out character in the entire show.

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I am not a huge fan of Empress Ki either, but part of that is due to the length of the series. I am watching it, but as of ep10 I don't think it would place it in my top 10, but probably around 15th for the year. But I have a bias against saeguks, so I may not be totally enamored with it just for that reason.

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Hahaha. I'm the opposite. It's the first time I am actually glad that a drama will last 50 episodes. It's down 12 eps now, and still going strong. The only thing I worry about is that it might get repetitive at some point, which is probable.

I like how the writers are building up the love triangle in EK and it's so well done as opposed to Heir's. With Heirs, I've had the worse case of second lead male syndrome imaginable, but with Empress Ki, I'm jumping between ships. I don't know who the hell the main male lead is supposed to be. Ha Ji Won, Chang Wook Ji, and Joo Jin Mo are a marriage made in heaven. That's how you write a love triangle. EK too has a strong set of actors, but their characters are simply well written, and that keeps you in tune to whatever circumstances they have to go through, in my opinion. But if saeguks aren't your thing (it's not mine either), I can see why you aren't as into it as I am.

And I can't really say the same with Heir's Eunsung and Kim Tan. The exception is Young Do - the only character I look forward to every time. I've lost all interest in whatever drama ES-KT are embroiled in, but I anticipate how Young Do fits into the the picture. I'm like everyone else who disliked him for being an ass for the first half of the drama, but now it's a complete 180. He's shown so much growth and still has so much potential. It's a shame he's been condemn to being the person who will bring ES-KT together, unless the writer switches it up and instead have YD end up with ES. That's not likely to happen, but hot damn that would blow a few lids up. :D

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qA8btjvIM6o

Looks like the person who uploads onto the SBS youtube agrees with your sentiment! This made me laugh so hard.

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Urgh, BBF all over again. And LMH is not a sweet teen this time. Hope next time he is going to try something different!

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My ideal ending for this show would Eun Sang stay with KT until sometime in college, when they would of course break up because their relationship was based on nothing more than teen angst. Then, in her 20's, she runs into Young-do, who has been hanging out with Buddhists and learned to manage his anger, and they get together. I call it, The Dawson's Creek ending.

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This. In their 20s, ES and KT have already broken up. ES has already started building a career while KT still gets allowance from dad and hyung. Meanwhile YD is already primed to be the next CEO of Zeus Hotel. ES sees YD again. She takes interest and wishes to "rekindle" what might have been, but YD has definitely moved on and is already happily in a relationship. ES says to herself, "What the f*** was I thinking back then?" YD turns out to be the one that got away... :D :D

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Is it only me who loves all the designer coats and turtlenecks, and shoes and sweaters, pullovers etc on KT.
Sorry but I adore it.

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javabeans you must be glad Heirs is coming to an end. it seemed like it was a rather disagreeble task for you to recap this drama.
for all its flaws it did keep the attention of many to the very end.

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Does LMH actually sing a song on this episode? The song plays as he is alone in the empty apartment and removes the dream catcher. If it is him, I think he has a good voice but unfortunately I cannot say he is a great singer. He should stick to his acting profession. I mean if you hear the other singers singing the other songs in the drama, and if you listen to it objectively, you will find our beloved LMH's voice pales in comparison. For example, Lee Hong Ki of FT Island - his voice is amazing. LMH's voice is only suitable to sing certain type of songs.

Don't get me wrong guy, I love LMH, but I think as a singer he still needs to improve a lot. But acting wise he is great. If fact, I love his acting and I think he is better than Jang Geun Suk. He seems more honest and transparent.

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Yup he did, go to the top of this recap:
SONG OF THE DAY
Lee Min-ho – “Painful Love.”

He is a decent singer, nice tone, in pitch, but obviously lacks power and control. No worries, LMH said so himself he will stick to acting.

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Wow..it took about 12 eps for me to get this drama and where it stands when everything kinda came together in my mind lol! One thing is sure is Lee min ho is one amazing amazing actor, not even exagerrating. Not just in this episode. Great acting, portrayal of emotions! The acting in this drama is superb!
The past eps have been really really emotional, korean dramas or korean writers have a perfect way of drawing emotions from the audience, it's remarkable!! They just hit right there! ...3 more eps to go :)

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What's the song playing on the background when Young Do and Cha Eun Sang hugged each other during the jail scene? pls reply

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This drama is getting under my skin. No plot development, just a bunch of naive, gossiping and immature lunatics fighting about over a girl and making superficial threats about exposing her identity. Like boohoo, what kinda drama relies on these so called complications to steer the drama. Seriously high school students have way too many exams to worry about then these school yard pussy conflicts. And this oligarch run by the jeguk dad, what age are we living in? This ain't some goryeo era where the king decides the fate of every human being. Get fucked, I can shit in your house if I wanted.

If it wasn't park shin hye I would jot have tolerated this drama any longer. The heirs has been an absolute disaster

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If only someone had kisses rachel 5-10 eps ago. I wanna see Rachel /hyo-sin more than the main couple
Hyo-sin must be one toe curling kisser to

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I think it is abundantly clear throughout the episode that leaving was her decision, and there was no chance for Tan to turn it around, not when she left and not at the end. So the line “ you take her,” is not a serious comment concerning his control over her her fate and more a sign of resignation delivered in a way to tweak our fear over what might happen next. She is ultimately in control of her fate in this relationship as she proved by leaving. She has distanced herself from a harmful relationship, and that should please anyone who wants to see her take control of her own destiny independent of the man.

What bothers me throughout this episode , having watched it twice is that I never understand her reason for leaving. I can guess that it was too scary or painful, but that is only a guess. She never reveals her reasons to the audience. Likewise, we never know exactly why, after finding her, Tan chooses to leave her alone. We can presume he realized she might have wanted this, but we never hear him clearly verbalize his reasons and so we are left guessing. In my opinion both are serious flaws because how can you understand what happens next in a bad situation if you never know exactly what created it in the first place?

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Struggled to fill airtime, did they?

At least it's only this one episode, unlike some other shows...
#faithmultiplepoisonings #everyansgstyseparationornobleidiocyever

Why does leaving have to be a solution?

Because kdrama?

One silver lining in this episode of pain: It was super short.

:)

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Although in this show, I don't mind separation. Especially if it's the separation of body, mind and soul of some of these characters.

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Wow. Reading the above reminded me of a scene from the movie One Crazy Summer...involving fluffy bunnies who’d had enough. Have you seen that movie?

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No. I don't think I have ever watch movies about evil bunnies. Then again, I probably did and erase it from my memory. 😋

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One Crazy Summer is my favorite Demi Moore film.

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You're still here! I though the leveling-up game has been transferred to the Park Hae Jin post!

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Stuff happened, I don't know why.

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Tan crying, the several flashbacks to their "precious"memories, eun-sang crying, I just feel nothing. It's dead boring and lena park's beautiful voice is doing nothing to feel anything for Tan or Eun-sang.
Young-do who is now using words to communicate instead of fists- would have liked this to be as a result of his own growth and not just because of eun-sang. He and Tan are friends but not really? Confusing.

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This episode was a fat load of nothing.
The icing of the cake was Tan giving Eun-sang to Young-do.
Haven't you learnt anything from what your father is doing to you?
I'm glad Won stood up for Tan - would have been nice to see this from the beginning.

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I don't see the purpose of the dreamcatcher. It was a useless and frankly hideous prop.

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