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You From Another Star: Episode 6

I just really love this show. There’s genuine funny at play, but even as you’re laughing, the show slips in all these doses of heart, many of which catch you unawares because you’re still laughing at that drama parody or cheeky pop-culture reference. Like a sneak-attack of pathos. This episode gives us the full picture on the tragedy in Min-joon’s past, explaining why he’s simultaneously so determined to protect Song-yi while keeping his distance from her. He isn’t, however, in denial about how he feels, which explains why I spent so much time squealing into my pillow.

(Ratings keep climbing; this one brought in a 24.6%.)

SONG OF THE DAY

Thomas Cook – “아무 것도 아닌 나” (I’m not anything) [ Download ]

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RECAP: SIXTH RECORD

Stuck in traffic with Detective Park, Min-joon makes a break for it even though that makes him look even more suspicious. His flight into the streets is partly a necessity of logic—he can hardly do his vanishing act in front of the detective—but also driven by an emotional reaction, as the scenario makes him think back to his Joseon experience:

Following the death of Yi-hwa’s father, Min-joon struggles to chase after Yi-wha, still weak from the poison. She cries for him to leave her, because she’s the one being chased by authorities and she doesn’t want him further hurt because of her. But he persists, “Did I not tell you I would protect you? I don’t want you to be hurt. So let’s go together.”

Min-joon holds out his hand to Yi-hwa, who takes it. They resume running together.

The second the cop loses sight of Min-joon, he teleports himself, landing in the lobby of his apartment building. He literally drops out of thin air, which naturally draws the attention of the security guards on patrol. Their backs are turned so they don’t see the moment of re-entry, but they’re still mighty suspicious of his abrupt appearance. They stop him for questioning, to his chagrin.

At home, Song-yi prepares coffee for Jae-kyung, who’s doing his creepy prowly thing. Granted, even his neutral face tends to be creepy, but you know. I’m not worried for her life because as far as he knows, she merely has Yura’s incriminating USB drive, and he casually wanders into Song-yi’s closet to look for it. With only a second to look, he finds nothing.

To explain his visit, Jae-kyung feigns concern for Song-yi’s condition in the wake of Yura’s death, and Song-yi wonders the same of him. Uh-oh. He pretends not to know what she means, but she says that she knows about their relationship—she heard them arguing on the boat and thought they were going to announce a wedding. She was worried that oppa would be feeling devastated for fighting with Yura just before she died.

Jae-kyung checks that she hasn’t told anybody that, then asks if Song-yi’s insomnia is improving, telling her to take care of her health. Aaaaah, it’s the kiss of death!

Hwi-kyung drops by, and the sight of men’s shoes in the front hall has him bristling jealously: “Is it that jerk next door?!” He relaxes somewhat to see that it’s his brother.

Upon confirmation that Min-joon is a resident, the guards let him go with apologies. He catches a glimpse of Jae-kyung in the security cameras and hurries away; the minute he leaves, the guards notice that all of the motion-sensor-triggered lights have suddenly flickered on for a dark floor. It’s too fast to be anything but a ghost, or a glitch in the system. Orrrrrr another thing.

Min-joon jabs Song-yi’s doorbell repeatedly, worried for her safety. I love that he’s losing his cool. It’s Hwi-kyung who answers the door, and he’s not pleased to see Min-joon, who has no time for trifles. He shoves Hwi-kyung aside with a burst of superhuman force, letting himself in (and locking Hwi-kyung out, HA).

Song-yi’s surprised to see Min-joon there, but he’s fixated on the threat and asks whether she’s okay, and whether anybody else has been by. She describes Jae-kyung oppa, then moves to open the door for Hwi-kyung, who has been pounding on it the whole time. Min-joon does that angry-relieved thing of lashing out at Song-yi when he really means to protect her, asking harshly if she’s “the kind of woman” to just open the door to any man who comes knocking.

That ticks her off, and she agrees that she must’ve been wrong to let him in then. He clarifies that he means everyone but him, but she retorts, “Why exclude you? Leave! Now!”

She shoves him out the door, where he and Hwi-kyung resume their pissing contest. (Hwi-kyung: “Just looking at him I can tell. He isn’t all that.” Min-joon: “Psh, in all my long life that’s the first time I’ve heard anything like that.” Hwi-kyung: “Oh, I’d think you would’ve heard it before.”) Fed up with both boys, Song-yi asks them both to leave and slams the door on them.

Hwi-kyung offers to buy Min-joon’s apartment, which gets flatly denied. Then he warns Min-joon that Song-yi is his woman, to which Min-joon asks whether that decision was arrived at mutually (Hwi-kyung stammers that it’s in progress). Hwi-kyung says he and Song-yi are “very special” to each other, citing their long friendship: “I’m going to do everything together with her in the future. I’m going to take responsibility for her entire life, until I die.”

Min-joon’s mind flashes to his lecture series on mating, when jealousy is the topic of the day. He calls it a childish reaction, experienced from infanthood when Mom pays attention to another child, born of a fear of losing something. Thus adults who act on it are regressing to a childish state.

Hwi-kyung warns him against dropping by Song-yi’s home again, and Min-joon declares childishly that he only dropped by because she’d left a hair tie at his place. Pwahaha. And then when Hwi-kyung wonders if Song-yi was drunk again, Min-joon clarifies, “Don’t misunderstand. She was completely sober when she slept the night at my house.”

Back to the lecture, where a student asks whether he gets jealous when he’s dating someone. Min-joon states that jealousy is a base emotion, felt by people with low self-esteem or inferiority complexes: “I have never felt it.”

Song-yi tries to visit Yura’s funeral, but her van gets pelted with eggs from angry fans, preventing her from paying her respects. She goes to her agency next, where she finds her mother raising hell with CEO Ahn for being reluctant to renew Song-yi’s contract once it expires at the end of the month.

Before she can get dropped again, Song-yi speaks up first—the agency has done such a crappy job of managing this mess that she’ll have to reconsider the renewal. She offers to pay the penalty for the recent CF cancellation (instead of the agency, as per the contract), which makes CEO Ahn vastly relieved to be let off the hook.

Stating that she intends to take a hiatus, she tells Bum he’s no longer her manager. Aw, I do love that while CEO Ahn is about to do a jig for this neat ending to his troubles, Bum shoots him a disappointed glare, since they all know Song-yi’s just doing this to save face.

Se-mi and her mother walk in, and the latter wastes no time gloating about Se-mi’s recent rise to leading lady status. Se-mi says she doesn’t want to go along with the story change: “I don’t want it this way.” She can’t be the person who swoops in when her best friend gets kicked to the curb. “If I wait, another chance will come my way,” she says optimistically. “And if it doesn’t… I can’t do anything about that.”

That’s sweet of Se-mi, as befits a true best friend, though I wonder if this is a martyr ploy to prod Song-yi into doing what she does next, which is to tell Se-mi to take the part and not feel bad about it.

As she leaves, Song-yi asks Se-mi’s mother pointedly whether she’s okay wearing high heels given her ankle injury (which was Se-mi’s excuse the other night). Se-mi freezes, knowing she’s been caught lying.

After Song-yi leaves, Se-mi admits to her mother that she already agreed to take the role, and that she lied because she felt bad for Song-yi. And yet, more than anything this encounter has stirred Se-mi’s long-simmering indignation—Se-mi finally got her big break, and Song-yi wasn’t even happy for her. Mom fans the flames, saying that Song-yi only ever thought of her as a bridesmaid—she should take this chance and show her.

Song-yi comes home to find a birthday gift at her door from a fan. But inside the box is a funeral photo of Yura with blood smeared to resemble tears. Badly spooked, Song-yi drops the box and pounds on Min-joon’s door, but he’s not home. She fumbles with her phone to call him, then recalls that he doesn’t have one.

At the prosecutor’s office, Detective Park is still trying to make sense of how he lost Min-joon in the blink of an eye. Seok has done a background check and knows that he’s “no ordinary person,” starting with his “chaebol level of wealth.”

To explain that wealth, we cut to a fishing trip where Lawyer Jang wonders how Min-joon amassed so much money (and Gangnam real estate). Min-joon explains first buying land in 1753 from a famous Hanyang real estate agent. (Aw, it’s a cameo from his Moon Embraces the Sun best buddy/eunuch Jung Eun-pyo. I loved them together so much.) That land is now some of the priciest real estate in Seoul, though at the time it was cheap stuff

Min-joon asks Lawyer Jang to slowly dispose of his holdings. Lawyer Jang muses that his impending departure is only now starting to sink in for him, and Min-joon admits that he had envisioned being able to leave readily when the time came, but there’s a hitch: “I leave a person behind me. And also unsolved curiosity, lingering attachment, and sadness.” He adds, “Death is the end, it is disappearance. That’s what I believed. Might that not be true?”

Min-joon comes home to a Post-It note on his front door, on which Song-yi has instructed him to buy a cell phone: “In an emergency, I can’t call you.” He wonders, “The person I had believed to be gone forever—has she come back after these long years to appear before me?”

Jae-kyung drops by the vet’s office, where he volunteers weekly. Quick, somebody hide the puppies! True, he’d wanted to be a vet before taking up his chaebol duties, and he does seem to show care for the animals. Onnnnn the other hand, he pets a poor dog that’s beyond help, saying that its suffering will soon be over. Back to creepy serial killer. He gets An Idea upon mention of the dog’s anesthetic, propofol. And we know him, all his ideas are bad ones.

Hwi-kyung gets more dating advice from Song-yi’s mother, who prods him to do something special for Song-yi’s birthday. So Hwi-kyung puts in a personal day at the office, which his brown-nosing supervisor accepts readily.

Song-yi finds a Post-It on her front door, a terse message from Min-joon reminding her that her finals are today, and absence results in an F. She calls her brother Yoon-jae to mock-complain about his lack of birthday wishes, and he comments on her jobs being cancelled. So she says somebody insists on a meeting today—she means the exams, but he doesn’t have to know that.

Without a manager, Song-yi decides to chauffeur herself, enjoying the drive as she takes up two lanes on the road and leaves her purse dangling outside. (A parody of a Jung Hyung-don bit.) Keeping in mind that chun means thousand, she raps about her big sister named Man Song-yi (Ten Thousand Song-yi) and her little sister named Baek Song-yi (Hundred Song-yi). It’s hilarious.

Cars honk angrily, which she interprets as loving greetings from fans. Haha. When the honking continues, she harrumphs that somebody must be menacing the streets with their terrible driving. She drops by the gas station for a fill-up, and when the attendant asks her to sign the receipt, she hands over an autographed photo of herself. Last but not least, she pulls into campus and asks the ticket booth operator to valet her car.

She manages to park (a miracle), just as another car rear-ends her. She recognizes the driver as a reporter and hurries to cover her face, telling him it’s fine and he can go. Naturally he doesn’t, and then a news van pulls up and cameras surround the car, trapping her inside.

Min-joon checks his watch throughout the exam, disappointed at the no-show. But as he glances out the window, he sharpens his senses to hear the commotion outside Song-yi’s car, where the reporter is getting increasingly aggressive with her.

Min-joon shows up to confront the reporter, using precise legal terminology to cite all the reporters violations. Asked to identify himself, Min-joon declares himself Song-yi’s legal counsel and lists the hefty penalties the reporter may have to deal with if he keeps this up. That gets the news team to back off, and Min-joon informs the smartphone-wielding crowd that circulating videos without consent opens them up to civil lawsuit.

Then Min-joon assures Song-yi she’s safe to come out. “Hide only when you’ve done something wrong,” he tells her. “Don’t just hide anytime.”

Song-yi musters up her haughty actress shield again (calling Min-joon her manager, lol), but she takes his hand (to his shock) before leading him away. That’s a sight the reporters can’t pass up, but the VJs find that the cameras no longer work. Aha!

Song-yi’s already missed her exam, so Min-joon takes her to the museum (“the place in this school with the least number of people”). She asks for some lenience given her extenuating circumstances, but he says she would’ve failed even if she took the exam, ha. He hushes her when she starts complaining loudly, and she mutters that this is why she hates museums—you have to be quiet and they put her to sleep.

But then she catches sight of that crystal hairpin—once Yi-hwa’s—and it captures her attention. Min-joon clocks her strangely emotional reaction.

Se-mi drops by her brother’s room as he sleeps, and can’t resist looking over the case files on his desk. She sees the photo of Min-joon on the boat and furrows her brow in recognition, flashing back to an encounter in her own youth:

Teenaged Se-mi buys an album for Hwi-kyung’s Christmas present, and walks by in time to witness Song-yi running off crying and Hwi-kyung chasing her. From a distance, she watches as Song-yi runs into the path of that truck. One second later, Song-yi is safely cradled in a stranger’s arms. Half in shock, Se-mi raises the camera she’d been carrying around and takes a photo.

Now she digs around to find that photo, and compares it to the one from the boat. The faces are grainy, but the resemblance is undeniable.

Min-joon drives Song-yi to her dinner date, and she takes a call from Hwi-kyung. She wonders why he picked an amusement park and says he’d better not be planning an event there, which of course he is. Flowers, lights, signs, hearts—the whole shebang. Hwi-kyung nervously says of course not, then sweats bullets when she complains about the guy who once showered her with a thousand roses (song-yi is the counter for flowers, so chun song-yi means a thousand flowers).

Hwi-kyung swears he’s not doing anything of the sort, then runs around telling everyone to get rid of the roses and balloons.

Song-yi almost calls Bum with a question before remembering that he’s not her manager anymore, then asks Min-joon if he’s up for a part-time gig while school is on vacation: How about he be her manager? Or legal counsel, or bodyguard?

He remains silent and she sighs, “There’s not much I know how to do. Since the age of twelve, all I’ve done is stand in front of a camera and laugh when they tell me to laugh, or cry when they tell me to cry.” As an example, she says that she loves coffee but hasn’t had any recently without a manager to buy it for her. Not because she can’t go into the stores, but “because I don’t know how to order.”

Min-joon asks, “How much will you pay me?” Awwwwwwww.

Hwi-kyung bristles when Min-joon escorts Song-yi to their date, balking when she suggests including him in dinner. Min-joon just tells them not to stay out too late and goes off alone.

To explain why he called her here, Hwi-kyung points to a Ferris wheel, which she always rode on her birthdays as a child. She remembers happy rides with her father, and on one particular occasion Dad had asked whether she found her work schedule too tiring. She had said she liked working: “Now that I’m making money, Mom doesn’t get mad at you anymore.” Dad had told her not to worry about money, but she had assured him it was fun.

Song-yi confirms the story, but wonders how he knew it. Ah, so that was Mom’s tip. Hwi-kyung takes her hand and leads her along… and from the far end of the amusement park, Min-joon can see them walking hand in hand using his super-vision.

Now he thinks to the museum trip earlier, and Song-yi’s reaction to the hairpin. She’s teary-eyed without knowing why: “Why does seeing this make me feel sad?”

He narrates, “That is a story like a sad dream. A story that is now like a faraway star, like a dimly remembered legend.”

Joseon. Holding hands, Yi-hwa and Min-joon run through the fields, but the torchlights of their pursuers get closer and closer. They come to the edge of a cliff, and Yi-hwa gives him her hairpin, telling him that her grandmother had told her, “Farewells should be made in advance. Because if it is truly the end, you cannot make farewells.”

Yi-hwa reminds Min-joon of her confession on the day of the first snow. “Before I met you, I had no hope for the days I had yet to live. I felt only resignation and resentment. After meeting you, for the first time I felt happy for my future. For the first time, I wanted earnestly to live.”

Yi-hwa rises to her feet, then sinks down in a formal bow. “I was thankful, and more thankful. You must return to your home. I will not forget. I cannot forget. After death, in whatever world I come to, I will not forget you.”

The officers arrive and encircle them, weapons at the ready. Min-joon steps in front and musters his powers, sending some soldiers flying back with his mind, then drops to his knees. That only convinces the men that he’s an evil being, and the chief gives the order to fire.

Arrows fly at them, and Yi-hwa throws herself in front of Min-joon. He sharpens his mind to stop them, but he’s weakened. Two land in her back.

He narrates, “There is a moment I wish I could stop forever. The moment a person I loved met death.”

Yi-hwa falls, dead. He continues, “It’s a moment I don’t want to see, I don’t want to believe, where I can’t do a thing, where I am helpless.”

Horrified, Min-joon sobs with Yi-hwa in his arms. Aaaaah, these two actors are so good together—I’m so sad that we’ve come to the end of her tale.

So now, he looks up at the Ferris wheel, which has started moving. Inside, Song-yi thanks Hwi-kyung for bringing her here, a comfort given her recent troubles. Hwi-kyung says he’ll prepare himself to be hit for saying so, but he likes that she’s been in difficulty lately, “Because now there are things I can do for you.” He knows it’s wrong (and she agrees), but asks, “Can’t you think of this as love?”

He tells her that he’d played off all his confessions jokingly because he feared losing her friendship if he’d been earnest and still been rejected. “Can’t you think of these pathetic feelings as love?” He reminds her that she’d told him she doesn’t feel bad crying in front of him or showing her bad sides, because she’s so comfortable with him. “That, too—let’s think of that as our love. Just come to me. You, your family—I’ll take responsibility for them until I die. Do all the things you want to. I’ll make it so you can.”

Min-joon hears these words from afar and turns away to go. Hwi-kyung asks her to take her time replying, but Song-yi is ready to answer now. Song-yi says, “My answer is—”

And at that moment, everything freezes. Min-joon starts walking away, thinking, “There is a moment I wish I could stop forever. And even if I must do this to prevent it, there are words I don’t want to hear.”

 
EPILOGUE

Song-yi opens her door to find a sad Bum there with a letter. He sniffles, “Noona, be healthy,” then runs off crying.

Song-yi opens the letter, which is addressed to “The Next Manager.”

In it, he warns that Song-yi can’t drink more than three drinks, because she turns into a dog and bites you. (HA, this time it’s an Answer Me 1994 parody.)

He also cautions against her using social media, and lists all the genres Song-yi can’t do: Medical dramas, because she can’t memorize the terminology. Legal dramas, because she can’t memorize long passages. Sageuks, because she dislikes the Joseon era.

Song-yi notes, “He knows me well.” Then she wonders why she dislikes the Joseon era. “For some strange reason, I dislike it.”

 
COMMENTS

Aww, he loves her! I love the echo of his reaction to Yi-hwa (the moment he wishes he could freeze) in his reaction to Song-yi, which somehow avoids the thing I usually dislike about these kinds of reincarnated-lives stories where you’re not quite sure which person he’s in love with. Perhaps it’s because Yi-hwa was so young, or heck, that he was young when he knew her (relatively speaking), but I see that story as more of the cautionary tale, the one you learn from. The parallels of Yi-hwa’s story and Song-yi’s aren’t Fate-driven—Min-joon is spurred by the first one to bring about a happier outcome in the second—and for that reason, this feels like an active romance. (Passivity and fatalism don’t really do it for me.)

I also really love that he’s arrived at love first, though clearly she’s heading there too. We could argue that he had a 400-year head start, but I definitely feel the connection between them as people in the here and now. Song-yi’s resemblance to Yi-hwa is what aroused his curiosity, but after that point Min-joon becomes responsible for his own choices, like all the times he has huffed that he doesn’t care and then does things for Song-yi anyway.

So while I’m sad to say goodbye to Yi-hwa (I suppose she could always come back in a flashback, but chronologically we’ve come to the end of her story), I appreciate that this opens the door to a new chapter in the story. Min-joon may have relived some similar beats with Song-yi that he experienced first with Yi-hwa, but this is where their paths diverge. I mean, they sure had better.

Because while the fateful reunion and the alien-who’s-afraid-to-love elements are strong and compelling, I’m eager to see what happens now, once the alien has admitted to himself what he feels. That’s, sadly for him, not where his conflict ends, because whether or not he loves her, his comet’s on his way, and is anything (or anybody) worth losing his first shot in 400 years to return home? He might get love now, but man, there’s a lifetime of loneliness after that if he keeps outliving everyone he cares for. And that’s something fresh in dramaland that I want—I need—this drama to explore and resolve for me. (Happily, of course! That goes without saying. But it’s still worth saying.)

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I've liked JJH since My Sassy Girl. I've seen pretty much all her movies and this is the first kdrama I'm watching her in. Each episode is like opening Christmas presents. It keeps getting better and better, and the more thrilling it gets! And I'm sorry but that epilogue was totally a My Sassy Girl parody!

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Thanks for the recap~

Loving this episode except where's the next ep preview??? T_T
Looks like Semi about to step into the dark side.. Hopefully it won't turn her into the standard shouty bitchy 2nd lead. And I wonder whether Songyi know that SeMi had photo of them from years ago... Interesting that she kept that photo imho..

And why do I have a feeling that SongYi will finally say yes to HwiKyung's proposal??

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i think so too...because at the promotions of this drama Hwikyung's character was introduced as SY'S fiance... but i think it has to be this way in order for the real conflict of the love story to start....

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KIM SOO HYUN my super star. u just rocking. Anyway drama is of new test and being interesting in every ep. Soo Hyun hard working we can clear see it. KIM SOO HYUN ur so precious. Love u ever more

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KIM SOO HYUN oppa ever good drama love it n dying for next ep

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i find it funny how SY mistaken propolis with propofol in the earlier episode and now the evil JK want to use propofol against her.

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The short exchange between Song Yi and Se-Mi is seriously daebak. Immediately after her agency abandons her, the betrayal of a supposed best friend digs deeper into Song Yi's realization that she is all alone; the growing isolation will make her, hopefully, treasure anyone who stays by her side thereafter.

Although Song Yi should have been a better friend to Se-Mi during her glorious billboard days, especially by showing genuine happiness for Se-Mi's smaller successes, Se-Mi's teary justification for her own actions is lopsided.

Two circumstances crafted by Se-Mi's own hands makes it difficult for Song Yi to show sincerity: 1) Se-Mi should have been truthful about the agency call, which then would not have led to Song-Yi's unpleasant discovery of the lie. 2) Since Se-Mi wanted the offered role, she should have accepted it openly instead of hedging that under the circumstance of putting up a show about loyalty till death, Song Yi would be "bro" enough to give her the role without resentment. Song-Yi's realization of the first lie (broken ankle) reveals Se-Mi's second lie, which is the pretense show of friendship. TL;DR: Se-Mi ah, it's okay to want things (fame, men, moneyz, power). Be sweet and put up a fair fight. Don't be sweet and manipulative at the same time. But wait, the world is not fair...thus begins the downward spiral of a typical second lead in a K-drama. Boo!!

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I really don't want Se-mi to go down the route of the typical evil second lead. So bored of that, which is why I was happy that Se-mi was nice so far and not all that pleased that they are hinting she will go down the evil route.

Her justifications for her actions are indeed lopsided – at least, if her friendship was genuine so far.

The fractured ankle lie seemed lame from the start. How was that not going to be found out by SY? Sprained ankle maybe, but fractured? SM knows that SY is likely to run in SM's mom, or hear the gossip about SM's mom from her own mom. It's almost like SM wanted to be found out.

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I think also it's pretty selfish of Se-Mi to want Song-Yi to be so happy for her when it's coming at Song Yi's expense.

Think for just a second if you knew your bestie (who she claimed to be) was being kicked in the teeth and you were rising up from her pain. Would you seriously expect her to be jumping for joy for your success right then? When it's because she was being kicked down?

I think THAT reaction shows how shallow her friendship to Song-Yi really is - she doesn't stop to try to understand why Song-Yi might not be doing cartwheels for her right now.

Meh Se-Mi was never particularly interesting to me as a character anyway so if she goes bad the only downside will be the final kick to Song-Yi at losing her (said in the chicken restaurant) only friend.

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i cant wait for them to reveal the connection between songyi and yihwa. is it wednesday yet? haha and about that jaekyung being an alien, that would be a nice twist! cause i was also wondering why he was looking at the camera in that scene

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Finally the show pulled me in with this episode. I've loved the visuals and the premise. But I've been wanting to fall in love with the characters. Now I'm hooked.

But Jae-kyung seriously continues to give me the creeps. I hope I'm wrong about this, but they might have just started skimming the surface on that character. The fact that he's a sociopath who was always interested in animals; and now volunteers at an animal shelter. Seriously!?? (Most serial killers start killing animals at a young age.) And this episode, did the vet pointedly remind him to give that cute little dog an aesthetic before giving it the euthanasia? *shudder*. I sure hope that was just an idiosyncrasy of the subtitles. This character really isn't this dark, is he?

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The animal shelter is obviously where he gets the stuff to kill people with from. It's convenient, really, a much better cover story than if he bought substances in a pharmacy – the police will have a much harder time figuring this out.

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The idea of him anywhere near a small furry animal gives me the shivers!

But the little dog didn't freak when he was being held by Jae-kyung - so maybe JK isn't an alien?

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Finally the show pulled me in with this episode. I've loved the visuals and the premise. But I've been wanting to fall in love with the characters. Now I'm hooked.

But Jae-kyung seriously continues to give me the creeps. I hope I'm wrong about this, but they might have just started skimming the surface on that character. The fact that he's a sociopath who was always interested in animals; and now volunteers at an animal shelter. Seriously!?? (Most serial killers start killing animals at a young age.) And this episode, did the vet pointedly remind him to give that cute little dog an anesthetic before giving it the euthanasia? *shudder*. I sure hope that was just an idiosyncrasy of the subtitles. This character really isn't this dark, is he?

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I've noticed this director using alot of the bgm of his last sageuk, Tree With Deep Roots, in this show. I get major flashbacks to that show (which i thoroughly enjoyed).

Like everyone, all the parodies and meta is so entertaining and adds to my enjoyment of this show. This writer is doing a great job at offering up a balance of humor and heart while the director lends his hand at offering the slick and the pretty. Together, they make a show that has the drama package. I just can't wait until the writer starts to explore the mystery and dives into the juicy conflicts.

Kim Soo Hyun is just one of those actors that when you see crying, you can't help but feel like the worlds come crashing down on a puppy who's already hurting.

The knee-slapping laughing-my-ass off scene in this episode was definitely the song yi rap and driving. Ya know, without Jeon Ji Hyun this character would be no where near as funny. The engrish we get each episode is cute but hilarious, the exaggerated voice and the dragged out words... lol. She's a natural at acting diva -- sometimes i can't help but think if Jeon Ji Hyun possesses the same quirks as Song-Yi -- she said Song-Yi was too much of a carbon copy of herself to not accept this role.

24.6% ratings by episode 6? I think this is probably the fastest ratings any weekday show has reached within that amount of time in a WHILE. the only other time i remember that happening was TMTETS, and there seems to be a pattern there..
I wonder how things will shake out once Age of Feeling starts to air after Pretty Man's finale next week -- those kind of dramas tend to do well too.

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Dangit. i hate it when i don't properly close off a font effect..

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the engrish is killing me too LOL

ever since Han Yura nuuuuurmal hahaha

i think she gets it from her mom, too who throws random ebglish words especially when she's talking to Hwi Kyung.

It makes me wonder if JJH is being directed to act this way or if she's just really owning this character. i love it so much!

ooops. thanks Hahaha

i'm rewatching it so many time already

http://youtu.be/pldWYPJd9Zw

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the bgm are from tree deep roots?? no wonder i keep thinking why the bgm sounds familiar.. love tree with deep roots too!!

i want this drama to do well.. the ratings are keep getting higher.. hope it wont be affected even after age of feeling is aired...

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So sorry for the double post. Got a 'database connection' error message the first time it was sent.

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i get that same message often, too. :( something wrong with the back-end of the site?

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This stands for pretty much every episode, but HOT DAMN, KSH.

Slayin' me.

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What do you mean by jung hyun don parody?

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its the infinity challenge collab song between him and gdragon

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that song was also parodied in ep 8 of A Word From a Warm Heart, it must be really hot in Korea right now.

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This episode is too epic for words!

I'm satisfied that now I know why Min Joon feels so protective and his need to get involved with Song Yi's life because he might've felt guilty about losing Yi-Hwa before. The way she died was so unexpected– I always knew that she was going to die a tragic death– in that she was the one who protected Min Joon from the arrows. His reaction afterwards was so heart wrenching that even I felt deeply sorry for him.

Hwi-Kyung keeps getting more sweet, because it is admirable how far in length he is willing to pull out his efforts for Song Yi.

Evil Hyung is suspicious, I wonder if he might be an alien too because the way he stared at the CCTV camera in the elevator just sends chills down my spine.

I can see how Se-Mi is walking towards the ex-best-friend road and how she'll betray Song-Yi in the future. It's so sad, actually because I kinda like her as the sweet and supportive friend.

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i cant wait for the next podcast. im expecting jb to fangirl x3

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"He might get love now, but man, there’s a lifetime of loneliness after that if he keeps outliving everyone he cares for. And that’s something fresh in dramaland.."

Not really. Just look at the movie Werewolf Boy. There, the male lead also does not age at all and he meets the female lead years later, when she is already old and gray and with children of her own.

I think the idea of having an epic love once in a century and living the rest of your life in loneliness (or should I say, alone-ness) has not been very much explored, but the writer could take a hint from (I hate to say this, there it is) Lord of the Rings.

In that movie the elves outlive humans so when the female elf fell in love with a human, the dilemma of this one-time epic love is there. But it gets resolved by the idea of having children. For them, having children means you leave a part of yourself with your children so even if you die, a part of you remains. So whoever outlives the other won't necessarily be alone. A part of the other remains.

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OMG I'm already praying for a HEA, it's classed under melo as well as rom com so i really really really hope we get a happy ending >.<

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Waow, I'm in love with this show!
I really like your song of choice for this entry by the way!

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Min-joon asks, “How much will you pay me?” Awwwwwwww.

awwwwww too... omgg

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i reall wanna know he liked a kid in joeson period???? i hope he liked her as a kid not as a woman..... i hope his first love is song yi not that kid....

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Well, the kid was... not sure how old? 13? 15? In any case, she had already been married off, as per custom in Joseon times.

We've got no real idea how old Min-joo is, he could have been her age in alien years (even if he looked a few years older than her), or maybe hundreds of years old already then.

This is one story where I think I'm not too concerned about the appropriateness of Minjoon liking JiHwa.

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personally i'd like to think that the love for Yi Hwa was not the romantic kind of love...perhaps its just like in the book he read, about the rabbit and a little girl, just like pooh and piglet - that kind of love

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Did anyone notice the kind of dramas that So-yi won't do is the same as jung ji hyun? I'm her avid fan. Watched My Sassy girl, Il-mare and Windstruck gazillion times.

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I wonder how much of Song-Yi is based on Jeon Ji Hyun.
There's just too many similarities between the two so sometimes reel becomes real with the overlapping. Oh well, because i'm loving Jeon ji Hyun that much more after this role.

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Nice catch :). Love the fact that she isn't just a rom.com girl. She can really kick ass like in her last 2 movies.

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I died laughing at Jun Ji Hyun's attempt to sing G-Dragon and Jung Hyung Don's Infinity Challenge song while she was DRIVING. IT WAS HILARIOUS.

Also died CRYING when YiHwa said her farewells :(

This drama is giving me so much feels - JJH be kickin' PSH's ass (if I were to compare both SBS heroines)

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I, too love this drama.

The still above where she is driving her car to school (and the whole car drive) reminds me of Alicia Silverstone in Clueless; where she is practicing driving and her "brother" says "hey James Bond in America we drive on the right" and she's driving in the center of the road. He takes her to parallel park and she says "what's the point? everywhere has valet"

She even kind of looks like Alicia Silverstone (Cher) in that still above.

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At least Cher didn't leave her handbag a-hanging off the side mirror! :D

Love the Clueless ref - one of my fave remakes of all time!

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I love love this drama so much! The epilogue that was a parody of My Sassy Girl had me laughing so much.. And the scene in Joseon when Yi Hwa threw herself in front of Min Joon to protect him - when KSH burst out crying I just felt this sudden overwhelming sadness in my heart too. He really is one of the best actors of his generation.

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" if he keeps outliving everyone he cares for."
I want also to see how they will develop this part. It's the vampire story motive without the turn-in so the dramatic part should be stronger. Will he live \close to\ forever without love or will he choose to live with the sweet memory of 3 months love... Or will there be a way for them to be together longer - as she turning in or as him giving up immortality? I want to know how things will be played from Korean point of view because mine is the western one and I've seen so many variations \mostly in vampires stories\.

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This show is simply beautiful.. It's been really beautiful but I need to emphasize it after seeing the last scene in the amusement park. The picture starting from when it moves and freeze one by one. Awwww

The show itself is not slow, but it gives time for beautiful detail.

This show is really a complete package of everything beautiful, starting from the artist, visual, plot.

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does anyone know where can i get the picture of black colored photos of Song Yi/ Jun Ji Hyun which displayed on the walls of her agencies? The one where she has this beautiful expression and messy hair.

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i'm freaking love this drama..... omg... i was literally sitting in front if my laptop watching 2 eps back to back without moving an inch.. i didnt listen to my playlist.. i always listen to songs while watching other dramas... stars is just different.. i had the urge to just focus on this drama alone without doing anything... i cant wait for me.. it keeps getting better...

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I've already figured out how this will end ...

The alien dude will leave without her, She will end up with the other guy, even though he knows she doesn't love him.

The end scene will be her many years from now, perhaps on her deathbed, and Min-Joon returns to her one last time.

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Say it aint so! say it aint so logan!
That's just too sad of an ending. I don't think i can take that kind of ending since i just love this show so.

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it's the only thing that makes sense ... think about it ... she can't go with him, if he stays, he'll watch her die and because he doesn't grow old, he can't be by her side or people will ask questions.

other than him dieing to save her life in some way, I see no other ending possible.

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what i'm worried about is the him-dying-to-save-her part...

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it's possible. He did feel indebted to yi-hwa who sacrificed her own life to save his. perhaps he'll do the same for song-yi in the future.. who knows.

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As much as I LOVE this drama, the crazy evil Jae-kyung and his naive brother are just a campy subplot that the writer seemed to put in for fear there wasn't enough "story". Bleh.

I like the idea that he too is an alien, but it would be hard to see how he could have fit into a family as an adult, since I don't think alien babies are dropped off on outer planets - WAIT - maybe he was an alien baby abandoned by alien parents and that is why he is so bitter.......heh, heh, heh.....

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does anyone rmb the evil bro from wgm? he was paired up with this chubby cute mc like 5 years ago and i rmb thinking he was nice albeit a little quiet-man i nearly couldn't recognise him with his evil guise on. that's really good acting to me (who knows maybe he was acting on wgm too its all possible)

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What did i get myself into (again)!? Now my days are once more filled with waiting around for wed-thu to come. Gosh i squealed so hard when MJ acted out as SY's lawyer.

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Ok here is a crazy thought that popped in my head - do you remember MJ saying he can't eat with anyone because of the whole blood and saliva thing? What if MJ and SY do swap whatever and she turns into an alien. Crazy thought or nah?

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The Joseon era part is like a prequel to the Joseon X-files. It would be so awesome if we get a cameo from Kim Ji Hoon and that the original secret files were actually written by our mysterious alien himself.

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I really am nervous at the fact that Jae-Kyung knows that Song-Yi takes sleeping pills. One of the dead victims before died via pills taken for his diabetes.

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I want him to take her with him. I want them both to leave. Then he can have this cake and eat it, too, lol. Plus there was a hint that Song Yi "disappears" from the fortune teller that Semi's mom saw. God I love this drama. Such a good one. It's been a while since I've so avidly awaited each episode release of a new drama. I've enjoyed a lot this year, but this show brings out the mania, haha.

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Thanks for this observation Holly... I think that would be the perfect end for both of them. Did anyone notice that Song Yi's "luck" changed when she met Min-Joon? I mean she had problems before but nothing at the level of which she's experiencing now. After they met, everything started shutting down for her, and I would extrapolate in preparation for her leaving with him. She's already fallen in the public eye, her contracts are pulled and there is really no reason for her to stay on earth - if she loves him enough to leave with him. It's just a shame that he is leaving all that MONEY. Ha Ha! I hope he donates some of that wealth to charity before he departs.

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The letter for the next manager is My Sassy Girl parody. Lol

Is this JJH first series?

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haven't watched a "crack" drama in awhile. This show is beyond that though, it's actually very good. I LOVE THE FEMALE LEAD SO MUCH TOO. Her english is perfection.

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The hairpin and the painting are both reminders: the hairpin of Yi Hwa, and the painting of what happens when he tells someone where he is from. He put the hairpin in the museum because that's not a story he wants to remember every day. However the painting is a constant reminder to keep his walls up and not get attached to anyone.

I want to know how Lawyer Jang found out he's an alien.

I think Song Yi, for all her flaws, is at least honest. We see a contrast with Se Mi, who is always maintaining a sweet and perfect persona but lies so easily.

And that driving scene was amazing... They should add her rap song about her sisters to the official soundtrack.

Thanks for the recap!!

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This drama is literally the best!! It has everything!! I just want them to get together already!!! I want couple moments. Every character is important and plays there part and I just love this. The writing team is doing a great job and developing the story. I must admit, I find the pacing to be a tad slow.

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Can someone please give me the link to where I can watch this drama translated to english on viki.com, I can't seem to find it :(

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The tittle is different there. My love from the star.

http://www.viki.com/tv/20503c-my-love-from-the-star

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What a cliffhanger. I want to know what she said! I also want to know what the big deal is about not mixing blood and saliva. I expected something to happen because of the kiss or them eating together...but nada. Did the writer forget about that little detail?

This drama is soooo good. Thanks for the recaps!

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I'm just wondering... was the epilogue a parody of Reply 1994 or a parody of My Sassy Girl? If you listened to the song being played on the background, it was a soundtrack from Jun Ji Hyun's My Sassy Girl and the scene of her manager enumerating the things about Song Yi was also the same with the part where Cha Tae Hyun enumerated those "To Do" list with Jun Ji Hyun's character on the film. Maybe javabeans made a mistake on this one? Kindly enlighten me please.

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It's a parody of both, actually. As everyone's already picked up, the epilogue scene is definitely My Sassy Girl, even down to the song (gee, that brings back memories!).

The Reply 1994 parody that jb pointed out is the first item in Manager Beom's letter, about Song-yi's drinking habits (it's a reference to the main girl in R1994, Na-jung - when she gets drunk, she starts winking ... and then she starts biting whoever happens to be next to her).

I'm really loving these little meta jewels scattered through the show! The writers have really thought this through and woven the details in so nicely. It's nice to have a good driver behind the wheel - I can sit back and enjoy the drama without unduly worrying about the WTF factor!

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love them!!!!!!!!

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I adore every bit of this drama. Min-joon's sobbing felled me, especially since he had been so blank-faced and slightly baffled up till then.

I can even get on board with the Death Hyung idea, because we *know* he's not going to succeed in offing the main actress, plus things are under control thanks to our practically omnipotent (except perhaps in the emotional realm, ha) resident alien. So it's just a delightfully creepy subplot which also moves the rest of the plot forward — e.g. the suicide controversy makes for a compelling reason for Song-yi to turn to Min-joon practically and emotionally, as opposed to some other random silly controversy conjured out of thin air.

Also, I can't get over how sometimes Gianna Jun looks strikingly like Rui En, a Singaporean actress (Google image her!)

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Love the show, but I did come up with a great new idea for a sequel merging 'King of Dramas' with 'Queen Inyon's Man.' In 'King of the Drama Queens,' Louie goes back in time and assassinates whoever wrote that song with "you arre my desstinnnyy" in the chorus. To save Kdrama from endless, multi-series, mind-numbing repetitions of it's banal phrase.

Because a series this good doesn't need to drench every sweet romantic moment with musical corn syrup.

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No kidding. Hearing You are my destiny over and over is getting on my last nerve.What the heck is it with K-dramas and the frequent repetitions of it's theme song? Once or twice is enough.

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Fun drinking game: when you're going back through the episodes enjoying Song Yi's shennanigans, take a sip every time one of those flimsy studio set doors goes "thwapp-p-p-p" and vibrates like a reed instead of going "crump" and "click" like a real door. I've noticed that before in 'Coffee Prince,' among other shows. The actors seem to be holding the door up instead of leaning against it, like it will bounce open if they don't hang on.

Hallyu wave, people! Invest some of those tens of millions of overseas profits in sturdier sets and furnaces for the studios, so you can't see the actors' breath on cold days!

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Anyone else worried about Hwi-Kyung and his promises to care and love for her until his death?

Now it could be just a sweet commentary from him but in a show with a rising body count it makes me paranoid. Just me?

Also his speech on the Ferris wheel was heartfelt enough (and really he's always been caring of her) that I'm kinda getting first male lead AND second male lead syndrome. *sigh*

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I'm not sure if its a good thing or bad thing but if he ends up staying on earth for her, they might solve that pesky problem of him living longer than her by him sharing blood and saliva with her and somehow that will change him so that he will age like humans. I know earlier he stated that he doesn't share blood or saliva with anybody so maybe that's why.

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Superb acting and writing. What more can I say? And good job on the production team as well! I am so glad they chose the right cast for this drama!

I did a little research on the older brother, Shin Sung Rok (Lee Jae-kyung) and I'm very impressed. This dude was active in Theater untill 2011 (or maybe his wiki is not that updated.)

He really did a great job in portraying a role that has a chilling "secret". From the first few eps we can see his character play with his ring as well as his scheming eyes. Must be a hard character to play eh?

I'd like to see why Jae-Kyung became the cold blooded murderer that he is. There should be a reason why he snapped like that?

Yoo In Na did a great job in slowly fleshing out what a bitter best friend Se-Mi is. LOL. Wow this is the first time I saw her play this kind of character. I do hope that they also redeem her character and still be the best friend that she is to Song-Yi! I can't wait how they all resolve these conflicts to the very end.

Eek! This is what I hate about watching a new drama, you're hooked and you don't even know what's going to happen next! Thanks to that cliff hanger ending for this episode.

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