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Hyde, Jekyll, Me: Episode 1

SBS’s new Wednesday-Thursday series Hyde, Jekyll, Me got off to a good start today, with solid character introductions, a mystery, and a touch of whimsy. As expected, it’s the Hyun Bin Show, but he doesn’t disappoint, managing to be funny, grumpy, assy, and swoony all in one episode.

I’m pretty happy with this drama’s presentation of the split-personality premise because it’s rooted in an interesting lead character, and more importantly because it flip-flops the Hyde-Jekyll expectations that the dormant personality is the monster inside. This drama asks, What if the Hyde that Jekyll wants to keep desperately hidden is in fact every nice, wonderful, amazing thing about him?

 
SONG OF THE DAY

The Film – “누구시죠” (Who Are You) [ Download ]

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EPISODE 1 RECAP

An overhead shot takes us through Wonderland, an amusement park where children laugh and play, with every corner decorated in colorful lights. A child runs with a red heart balloon in hand and runs smack dab into a stone-faced man, who coldly knocks the balloon out of his face and sends it flying up into the rafters.

The child cries, while the man watches the balloon and suddenly notices the giant mirror ball fixture overhead begin to shake. He looks down in alarm to see a woman walking right into its path, and at the last second, he grabs her out of the way and they go sliding on the ice rink below, as the giant mirror ball crashes behind them.

He wakes up with a start. It was a dream… or was it?

This is our hero, GU SEO-JIN (Hyun Bin), who looks rattled as he sits up in bed and scrambles for his glasses. They’re super hi-tech glasses that give him a digital reading of his pulse, along with other biometrics. His rapid heartbeat seems to freak him out more than the dream itself.

He gets out of bed (omg, what are those crazy pants, and why do you look better in them than I would?) and walks through his palatial house to go meditate in his greenhouse garden. He chants, he breathes, he clutches the necklace he’s wearing (which appears to be in the shape of the Big Dipper), but he doesn’t seem satisfied with how fast his heart is still beating. Something tells me stressing about meditation is not an effective strategy, but what do I know.

Seo-jin’s secretary rushes to find him while chatting on the phone with Seo-jin’s doctor. Clearly other people are hooked up to his biometric alerts as well, because Chief Secretary Kwon approaches with trepidation to ask if he’s okay.

Seo-jin remains calm as he finishes his morning yoga, gets Secretary Kwon to confirm that his heart rate is back to normal, and then yanks his monitor off. After showering (thanks for wasting no time with the requisite army abs!), he’s quick to put the monitor back on, and worries that it’s the first time in five years that his numbers have been this high.

Secretary Kwon says that as long as they stay under 150, they’re safe. But Seo-jin says he did go over 150… in his dream. He looks into the mirror and adds, “It wasn’t me.”

His chauffeur arrives, so Secretary Kwon whispers as they head out, wondering if he saw Robin in his dream. Seo-jin snaps, “Don’t talk about that bastard.”

At the airport, a woman arrives and spends her time on the moving walkway showing a little girl a magic trick. This is our heroine JANG HANA (Han Ji-min), and she lights up when she passes by a sign advertising Wonderland.

It turns out that Seo-jin is the boss at the theme park, and he makes his morning rounds with a team of security guards scurrying behind him. He stops in his tracks at the sight of a stray balloon flying towards him, reminiscent of his bad dream. He catches it and refuses to give it back to the little girl, making her erupt in tears.

He barks at Secretary Kwon that balloons are banned for the day, and bans everything even remotely balloonish—the inflatable dancing clown, the spinny hot air balloon ride—with no concern for lost revenue.

A group of children holding the red heart balloons grabs his attention, and Seo-jin smirks at the man who’s with them. This is some sort of publicity stunt for Wonder Group, the chaebol conglomerate that owns the theme park, and Seo-jin faces off with the man, speaking to him in banmal.

His name is RYU SEUNG-YEON (Han Sang-jin), and all we know for now is that his managing director title is equal to Seo-jin’s, and they dislike each other immensely. Seo-jin asks if he got a permit for this event, and kicks them out of the park, confiscating all the balloons.

Seung-yeon gapes, “You banned balloons? At an amusement park?” Seo-jin just snipes back that this is HIS amusement park, and the balloons give him a bad feeling. Seo-jin calls this stunt ridiculous and says he feels bad for the children who are being used, and notes sarcastically, “You know I have a weak heart.” Hur.

When they leave, Seo-jin decides to invite ten thousand children to the park for charity. Secretary Kwon guesses exactly what his intent is—to show up Seung-yeon in their never-ending pissing contest.

As the tram takes Seung-yeon away, one stray red balloon flies up into the sky. Uh-oh, it’s the bad omen that Seo-jin was dreading. And on cue, someone starts screaming in the distance.

Seo-jin whips around and his eyes widen to see the crowd behind him part… as a giant gorilla (seriously?) stomps down the main causeway. Everyone runs screaming, and a woman runs up to Seo-jin to grab his arm and scream her head off for him to do something.

But he just stands frozen in place. He’s so terrified that he can’t move, and looks over at the woman like she’s crazy. He tries to pry her off his arm, and when she won’t let go, he bites down on HER arm to wriggle free.

HA—and then he pushes her to the ground right in King Kong’s path, giving him time to run away like a coward. His security team surrounds him while he scrambles up to the roof of a street stall, and Secretary Kwon hurries up there to give him headphones.

Seo-jin races against his racing heart to put the headphones on and meditate, and it’s pretty hilarious to watch King Kong run around and scare people while the mediation track plays.

Hana is stuck in traffic just a block away from Wonderland, and she perks up to hear the park mentioned in a radio broadcast. At the same time, Seung-yeon gets a call from one of the workers at the park, who reports with a satisfied smirk that Seo-jin is seconds away from passing out.

Seo-jin manages to get his heart rate down and braces himself to face King Kong. Now that he’s calmed down, he asks for the walkie-talkie and makes sure that the security and animal control teams are on the way.

They arrive looking pretty scared, and one guy fires a tranquilizer dart with perfect precision… only it bounces right off of King Kong’s chest. Um, what? That just pisses off the gorilla, and he starts charging right at Seo-jin.

Suddenly a voice calls out, “Bing Bing!” The gorilla skids to a halt and the crowd parts to reveal Hana, waving and calling for Bing Bing like they’re friends. The gorilla turns around and starts running at full speed for Hana, and Seo-jin notices that his heart rate suddenly shoots up into the danger zone.

He asks what’s happening, and starts convulsing and choking. The gorilla goes for Hana and takes a flying leap right at her, and Seo-jin’s heart rate spikes, nearly at 150.

But then he hears laughter, and looks up to see the gorilla dancing in circles around Hana, who’s smiling and dancing too. Immediately Seo-jin’s pulse slows, and he wonders what is going on with him.

He goes to his office and yanks his heart rate monitor off and tells Secretary Kwon to have it fixed, because it must be broken. When he says he neared 150 just now, Secretary Kwon takes a step back and asks suspiciously, “Robin?”

Seo-jin snarls and tells him not to overreact, but Secretary Kwon sneaks a taser out of his pocket and asks what they had for lunch yesterday. Seo-jin rolls his eyes but says they had bibimbap, and Secretary Kwon lunges with the taser, only to be reminded that he’s the one who’s misremembering.

It’s extra amusing because Secretary Kwon speaks to Robin in banmal, and hurriedly switches back to jondae the second he realizes his mistake.

Secretary Kwon guesses that Seo-jin’s heart rate spiked because he was scared, but Seo-jin says that’s the confusing part—he only went up to the 130s when he was in immediate danger, but it wasn’t until the gorilla was lunging at the mystery woman that he went up 148. He decides that this is about her, and asks for her to be brought to him.

Outside, a reporter interviews Hana about the gorilla scare, and introduces her as the daughter of the late circus troupe leader of one of the country’s last few remaining circuses. She asks the reporter to please include the fact that Wonderland failed to reconstruct the cages after multiple requests from the circus to do so.

Secretary Kwon arrives to interrupt and take her to see Seo-jin, and since she’s just arrived, she has to be informed that he’s the boss. Seo-jin straps his monitor back on just as Hana arrives in his office, and she introduces herself as the new Wonder Circus leader.

He just stares at her without a word, and then all of a sudden yanks her close. Really close, like kissing distance, without so much as a word of explanation. She squirms and asks what the hell he’s doing, but he just holds on and looks right into her eyes.

What he’s really looking at is his heart rate, of course, and smirks that lopsided grin of his, satisfied that it must’ve been a fluke. She’s not making his heart race anymore, and he just rattles off his current physical state aloud to himself, as if she’s not even there.

Hana grows increasingly agitated, especially when he just dismisses her. She wants to talk about the gorilla, which he sort of remembers as an afterthought and just cuts her off with, “The circus is fired.”

She argues that he can’t fire them when they have a contract, but he counters that the circus brings in no money anyway, so paying them the fee to break contract is better business in the long run.

But Hana refuses to be kicked out so easily, and tells Seo-jin that the Wonder Circus is part of this park’s history—it was there at the start in 1975, and her father played a big part in making Wonderland what it is today.

She demands that he take back everything he said about the circus sucking, and it’s infuriating the way he takes it all back just like she asked, but with zero sincerity behind his words. Hana says that she came from Cirque du Soleil and has all sorts of plans to update the circus act and make it better, and Seo-jin encourages her to do just that… anywhere but here.

Hana asks how a person can just decide something so monumental at the drop of a hat, and Seo-jin says matter-of-factly that he’s someone who can. She leaves his office fuming mad. Secretary Kwon brings back the first heart rate monitor and reports that nothing’s wrong with it, and Seo-jin is left wondering if maybe it was just the gorilla after all.

Hana trudges back to the circus with her shoulders slumped and overhears her troupe members worrying about whether they’ll be out on the street. The eldest of them sighs that his kid’s got some new tutoring thing to pay for, and another of them says that if Seo-jin fires them, she’ll get her revenge by releasing that super embarrassing video of him during the gorilla incident.

That gives Hana an idea and she asks for the video. Moments later Seo-jin is watching said video with a look of horror on his face. It’s him pushing a woman into the gorilla’s path like a giant wimp, and he stammers, “I-I didn’t know it was this bad… that I looked this… pathetic.”

He looks near tears as he trembles and watches the video on repeat, and Hana goes from smug to sorry pretty quickly. She says that she didn’t want to go this far, and that it’s a natural reaction to have when you’re afraid. All she wants is a new contract and the video will disappear, and Seo-jin calls for a new contract to be drafted immediately.

He asks her for a moment alone, still looking distraught, and she tries to pry the phone out of his hands. But he’s just so upset and fixated on the thing that she decides to tiptoe out and gives him a moment.

Secretary Kwon shows her the new contract that he’ll bring over soon, and Hana returns to her troupe with the good news. They’re all skeptical though, because they’ve dealt with Seo-jin directly for a while now, and he’s not exactly the type to cave so easily. The cutie pie maknae (named Eun-chang) argues that Seo-jin is a sociopath who doesn’t have an ounce of sympathy or compassion.

The unni who took the video sits down with Hana to discuss Seo-jin, not having gathered much about him other than the roundness of his ass. Lol. Hana found him to be surprisingly remorseful for being such a jerk, while the unni says that’s the appealing thing about bad boys—to the right girl, they become the nicest guy in the world. Hana scoffs that that’s ridiculous.

In Seo-jin’s office, Secretary Kwon gets another dressing down for missing the fact that it was all an act, and he has no plans to sign a new contract. Seo-jin just wanted to keep the phone so he could erase the video, and Secretary Kwon cringes as he watches it, sighing in relief that it isn’t all over the internet.

Seo-jin asks defensively why it would matter. He counters that this isn’t about chivalry—it’s because it’s a woman that he had to bite her to get her off his arm. He asks Secretary Kwon if he’s forgotten why it is that he lives like a zombie (“with a body like this!”), and reminds him of the rules: No women, no skinship, no arousal, no lust, otherwise his heartbeat goes out of control.

OH. Oh, you mean you can’t… get excited. Suddenly finding it in my heart to feel sympathy for you. Seo-jin finally says the thing he hasn’t been saying outright: When his heart rate goes above 150, “that bastard Robin appears.”

Secretary Kwon’s reaction tells us that this would be a terrifying development. He cries that that can’t happen, especially after all the effort Seo-jin has been putting into maintaining control, practically living like a saint.

Seo-jin slams his fist into the table, “LIKE a saint?! You mean totally, completely a saint!” He’s not talking about good deeds either, and sighs that he’s a man too. Poor, frustrated buddy.

Hana shares all her ideas with the troupe about revamping the circus act to be a big musical performance stage, and they’re all eager to get started, grateful that she’s come back at a time when they really need her. But they hear commotion in their theater and find people tearing it apart, with the order to vacate. The phone gets returned to them sans embarrassing video, and Hana realizes that she’s been played. Behind her, the maknae Eun-chang mutters that Seo-jin is two-faced.

Of course they have no idea how close to the truth that is, and we cut to Dr. KANG HEE-AE (Shin Eun-jung) giving a lecture on split personalities with an example from Primal Fear and the real-life case of Billy Milligan. Dr. Kang explains how early trauma can lead to the creation of alternate personas in the mind, leading to dissociative identity disorder, where it’s possible for one personality to have no memory of the others’ actions, even in the same body.

After the lecture, Dr. Kang checks her voicemail and is alarmed to hear an emergency message from Seo-jin. He finally relaxes when she calls him back, and she tells him to listen up because she has good news: She’s found a treatment method that’s safe for him. He asks if it could be dangerous like the time they tried five years ago, but she assures him that it’ll be different: “You’ll be free, Gu Seo-jin.” He lights up, genuinely moved, and rushes off to go see her in person.

Hana shows up just in time to try and stand in his way when he’s in a big hurry to see Dr. Kang, so Seo-jin tells her to get in and then tells his driver to take off without her. That just makes her more determined to ruin his day though, and she follows him in a taxi.

Dr. Kang records her notes on Seo-jin’s case, which conveniently gives us the exposition we need. He’s a patient with dissociative identity disorder, with an alternate personality named Robin. Robin first appeared 15 years ago, and she says that while most patients have a violent Hyde to their rational Jekyll, Gu Seo-jin and Robin are the opposite of that.

A mysterious visitor in a long black coat visits Dr. Kang unannounced, and when he enters her office, she quickly closes Seo-jin’s case file. We never get to see Long Black Coat’s face.

Hana follows Seo-jin all the way to the hospital, where he just waves his chauffeur at her to keep her away from him. She challenges him that this isn’t his land and she can step foot wherever she wants, but the driver points out that actually, Seo-jin owns the hospital too.

It’s clearly a big deal that Dr. Kang has found a treatment method that she’s sure will work this time, but Seo-jin douses his face with water in the bathroom and tells himself not to get his hopes up again.

He walks down the corridor towards Dr. Kang’s office, when a crazy sight catches his eye: It’s Hana, crossing from one building to the other in midair on a zip line. This is your way of not setting foot on the grounds? Appropriately, he calls her crazy.

She climbs her way into an open window with an apology for the intrusion… but when she looks around, she finds Dr. Kang dead (or just unconscious?) and bleeding on the ground, surrounded by broken glass. Eep.

Worse yet, her attacker is still in the room. Ack, ruuuun! That’s exactly what Hana does, and Seo-jin rounds the corner to see her running for her life from a masked man in black (and it appears that this is a different man in black, not Long Black Coat).

Seo-jin immediately turns and runs and reaches the elevator just ahead. His heart rate rises dangerously high as he looks back out to Hana, but even when she reaches the elevator before the doors close, he purposely pushes her out. Dang.

He’s struggling to breathe and clutching his heart the whole time, but even when he’s out of immediate danger, his heart rate only goes higher when the attacker goes after her. Just like the gorilla moment.

The elevator doors close, and soon Seo-jin is overtaken by his pounding heart. He falls to his knees and clutches at his throat in pain, gasping for air. His last thought is, “No!” as his head falls limp.

The hitman takes Hana to the rooftop ledge, where he holds her over the edge, choking her. Her last thought: “Save me, somebody…”

Back in the elevator, Seo-jin’s fingers twitch and he suddenly stands up tall. He ditches the jacket, the tie, the heart monitor, and the glasses. The camera slowly pans up from his feet, revealing a totally different man—this is Robin, who notably wears his collar open, showing the Big Dipper necklace that Seo-jin otherwise keeps hidden under his clothes.

He walks down the hall and looks out the window to see Hana being strangled out on the ledge, and runs to her. Though he manages to pull the hitman away with a swift move, it also sends Hana flying off the ledge.

She falls in slow motion, and he takes off in a big hero run. Suddenly so very hot.

I’m fully expecting him to catch her, but she’s already too far out of reach, and he doesn’t hesitate a beat, launching himself over the edge after her. It almost looks like they’re flying, and they fall slowly enough for me to wonder if he’s crazy.

He grabs her into an embrace midair, and they land with a splash, ohthankgoodness, into the lake below. He cradles her gently in his arms, and Hana opens her eyes and looks up to see him before passing out.

She wakes up in the hospital some hours later, with her circus members fretting overhead. She’s fine but doesn’t remember how she got here, and slowly recalls the hazy memory of coming here and discovering Dr. Kang’s body.

Her friends ask how she got into the lake, and she’s surprised to find out that it wasn’t a dream.

Seo-jin shakes in his hospital bed, as Secretary Kwon nervously tells him it’s been six hours since he left for the hospital. His last memory is of the elevator doors closing after he pushes Hana away, and his heart rate reaching 150. After that, he has no idea what happened, and that thought terrifies him.

He gnaws on his finger and asks, “Could it be… Robin?” Secretary Kwon jumps to say that nothing’s been confirmed yet, but then Hana enters the room and looks at him curiously. She asks carefully, “Was it… you? Did you really jump into the water and save me?” His eyes grow wide with fear.

As we see Robin open his eyes underwater and hold Hana close, we rewind to the rest of Dr. Kang’s notes, where she describes Robin as a personality born out of Seo-jin’s guilt. She says a phrase that can be taken two ways: That Robin saves and protects others, or that her intention is to save and protect Robin when she cures Seo-jin.

Back in the present, Seo-jin asks in disbelief, “I… saved you?” He looks over to his reflection in the window and thinks to himself, “Robin has appeared.”

The closing caption asks, Have you ever come face to face with another you?

 
COMMENTS

Pwahaha, okay, that gorilla was ridonkulous. Unintentional CG hilarity aside, I actually really liked everything else about this first episode, which is a nice surprise given that the premise made me really wary. But the setup is rooted in a believable character—Gu Seo-jin—who makes it abundantly clear that he’s spent most of his life in a desperate attempt to control everything because his worst fear is losing control of his own body. The yoga, the heart monitoring, the insistence on his rules—everything about his control-freaky nature is driven quite believably by his condition, and though he appears to be your standard-issue assy chaebol type, there’s a nice complexity to the character that makes me sympathetic, even if I think he’s being a rude and selfish prick most of the time.

But turning the Jekyll-Hyde setup on its head is a great twist from the start, because it makes us want to meet Robin and draw him out. It’s basically taking the general metaphor of a cold Darcy hero who hides his mushy marshmallow heart behind walls to a fantasy-driven extreme, where instead of a walled-up heart he’s actually created a second personality to lock away completely. And I totally buy that when you do that in an effort to protect yourself, the other personality finds a way of coming out. I’m pleased that the explanation for his condition doesn’t make my mind jump through too many logic hoops, and that it sets us up for a potentially heart-tugging romance with an alter-ego who seems (so far) to be pretty awesome.

It’s funny that the mean one is so terrified of the nice one coming forth, but that sets us firmly on the rom-com side of things, which I like. The tone is a happy medium—not too broad, not too serious—and the slick production value sure does make it easy on the eyes. Or was that just Hyun Bin and Han Ji-min? A strong case could be made for them looking this sparkly on any camera, but it’s always nice when the show is as pretty. They were pretty cursory about many of the introductions in this episode with a lot of lazy exposition, so I’m looking forward to more character interaction that doesn’t need to go through as much obvious setup dialogue. I already like the leads together, and Wimpy Seo-jin makes me laugh out loud (the gorilla WAS good for that one thing).

The most clever device is the heart rate monitor, which is reminiscent of Best Love and Dokko Jin’s obtuse inability to connect heart to love. Here it serves as a constant gauge for Seo-jin’s control over his own body, because we get a clear trigger for Robin: cross the magic heart rate threshold and he appears. So it makes sense that Seo-jin runs from the first sign of fear or stress, but the poor guy also deprives himself of any pleasure, excitement, or joy in life, essentially keeping both personalities locked away from the world. But of course Hana is the anomaly, otherwise we’d never have a story. What is their connection, and why does seeing her in danger raise his heart rate into the danger zone? Does he subconsciously remember her somehow? And is Robin just a hero, or is he saving Hana because it’s her? I see a lot of potential, and I’d say curious about two Hyun Bins is a good place to be for a start.

 
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the leads do not have chemistry... but i still love binnie

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I hope this drama has more to offer in the next episodes. Episode 1 was pretty meh especially since I felt like his character is a rehash of his Secret Garden character (complete with having an episode inside an elevator). Nothing in this episode really stood out for me. With the cold chaebol schtick to the mental illness premise, it all just feels like the same old serving of familiar things to me.

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Whhhat? Who says he hasn't been working out? Those abs are fine! I rather have that then his anorexic look in SG. Dude looks healthy and mightily handsome! When robin appeared with the white shirt and no tie, I hyperventilate. There's no alpha male in kdrama like Binnie, thank the drama gods that he is still willing to do dramas.

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Hear, hear!!!

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Binnie!

<3

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Hi, are you the samsooki who recapped My Name is Kim Samsoon? Because those recaps were wonderful.

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Yes - I LOVE your recaps for KSS! (if this is the real Samsooki)

Although I'm hesistant now on this drama - based from the opinions here and there it's kind of a mixed bag. Maybe too much expectations going for Binnie? I still have to wait until tonight to watch on Viki. If it's not as impressive as everyone says, am not even sure if the power of his dimples, army abs AND Sung Joon is enough for me to stick around for the ride.

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*waves madly to samsooki* hi from another of your MNIKSS recap fans! Glad to know you are watching this.

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Cray cray flowery pants! and even crazier gorilla. But it's just the beginning =)

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Let's face it, while I don't mind either of them seperately, put together HB and HJM have little to no chemistry at all which is never good for a rom-com and this is the show's biggest weakness. I don't know how they can fix this but the drama needs to step up its game on other aspects to make up for this gaping hole

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I can agree with the chemistry lacking comment, Bennie is so passionate that's his strength as an actor. He can make women melt by the way he looks at his female leads and pines for them. But this is just the beginning so let's hope things are deliberately "designed" that way due to the characters initial dislike of each other...Hopefully by the time their love story kicks in, we can see sparks flying high :)

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I'd argue that chemistry is something that you either have or you don't meaning that even if they don't like each other, we should still sense a lingering tension (the good one) between them but I'm really hoping to be wrong. Sparks, yes please, that's all I'm asking for.

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No I actually agree with you, chemistry isn't something that can be held off even if the two are at each other's throats! I haven't seen HJM in anything before this so i can't judge her devices for portraying chemistry with her leads..I have seen HB establish death grip connections with all his leads in all the roles he's played so i can't fault him for the lack of chemistry in this...So in a sense, I had to blame it on the fact that the story is yet to develop that romantic angle, but yeah I don't really feel it in my bones sort-o-speak, so like you I can only hope it gets better as the show progresses...Here's hoping for HUGE sparks! :)

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Thanks so much for the recap girlfriday:) I'm relieved that your thoughts on this were generally optimistic/positive since I really want this show to be a success. Nevertheless, I admit the writer could use some extra help in explaining a few stuff (I won't enumerate the areas I found questionable), and hopefully the creators of this show will realize this and go do what they can to save the plot while it's still in its first few episodes.

I love Hyun Bin and Han Ji Min together. The first episode was relaxing, enjoyable, and pleasing to the eyes. I also found Secretary Kwon's character so adorable. He was the one who made me smile a few times in this episode.

I cringe when I read comments comparing this unfavorably to KMHM. I've never seen it, and even though it may be better in some aspects, it hasn't captured my interest for now so I can't say more. I hope the next few episodes of HJM will be enjoyable as well. After all, we could all use a light romantic comedy to cheer us up once in a while.

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Thanks for the quick recap. Although it was a slow start, I'm liking this show. I'm curious to find out more about Robin, why does Seo Jin find him such a threat? Wouldn't you want a heroic alter ego?! Robin seems cool and suave me.
Watching both this and KMHM.

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It cracks me up that I now scream "what are you WEARING?!" in utter horror at Hyun Bin at least once per drama. I'd say it's a reflex, but somehow he's mastered the art of sneak-attack horrible fashion: it's something that at first you don't notice because he mostly looks good, but then the offending fashion item swoops into your peripheral vision and then totally overwhelms you until you can't see anything else.

WHY ARE YOU WEARING THOSE PANTS?! AAAAAH!

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If the doctor is dead, someone is trying awfully hard to make sure that Gu Seo-Jin will not be healed. I wonder if it is for business, political, personal, or monetary reasons. Knowing k-dramas, probably all of them...

I do like that neither persona is "evil." It seems like his first persona is just such a butt because he's had to struggle for 15 years in order to control the other side. I wonder what exactly is so bad about Robin. Does he make bad business decisions and they are all afraid the company will drown or what?

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My expectations with this drama were high, I'm not watching HMKM which is good because I don't want to compare.
That gorilla, seriously?? that aside I like it, is true this first episode not fulfill my expectations but I think it would improve.
I would watch this only for Hyun Bin, he is the guy to brought me to dramaland and have a big and special spot in my heart but I like the set up, Seo Jin is the worst but I feel a bit sympathy for him, living like a saint for 5 years wow he is a man too!!!
Robin, I'll love this personality but I get why Seo Jin is so frightened and careful with heart.
I don't love it, but I also didn't love secret garden as many others, I enjoyed the show and had more of Hyun Binnie, if this show can give me that I'm ok with it.

My love for Healer is all I need right now :)

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@GlaSS - if you were watching KMHM, there is no way you could continue with this drivel. No way.

And I agree, Healer is SO GREAT!

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It was a good start. I found the episode to be short, suddenly it was over! I guess it is a good sign, that they know how to write a good script. Plus they have Hyun Bin, so I think I will give this a try :D

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Hyde Jekyll, Me - most certainly watching for Hyun Bin. Excited to see Hyun-Bin (aka Binnie) back on tv in another kdrama. It's been a 5 year drought since Secret Garden (2010).

Escaped Gorilla - CGI, not the best. What was that? Expected better.
Han Ji-Min's character Jang Ha-Na - Liked the wardrobe styling.

Questioned the sequence of events because they seemed to be stretched out to last longer than it should have. On the rooftop ledge the attacker is holding Ha-Na over the edge and choking her. With time ticking away, I couldn't help but notice how long a couple of things took...
(1) Tme it took for Seo-Jin to switch to Robin.
(2) Time it took for Robin to run down the hallway and reach them.
(3) Robin pulls the attacker off of Ha-Na.
(4) Slow motion shots of Ha-Na dangling over the edge.
(5) Robin leaps to save Ha-Na and they both fall into the lake.

Meh, was kind of my reaction to episode 1 but I'll continue to watch and give it a chance to establish its setup and settle into its own.

Like others here, I'm enjoying Kill Me, Heal Me immensely.

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dddddddd

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What a mess. It made me cringe. Not faulting the acting but the story line a bit out there, a gorilla?! I won't give up on it but I wanted to savor not shudder.

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HUGE DISAPPOINTMENT! :o
I was expecting something really awesome especially because of the casting, I love Hyun Bin and Han Ji Min but this first episode wasn't catchy at all :s
A gorilla?? seriously? Who thought that this scene would be catchy? plus the gorilla-thing seemed SOOO FAKE! I am truly disappointed not sure about it.. I hope that next episode would be more interesting!
I thought that this drama would be better than ' Kill Me Heal Me' but no.. At least 'kill me heal me' didn't put a gorilla or any other kind of crazy animal on scene!

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Not very original. A mishmash of "Despicable me" with "Superman? Robin hood?" whatever. The bad CG and wire stunts aside, the appearance of Robin was way exaggerated (every time).
However, I could still relate to the main character's struggles with self control. It's just when the surrealism tries to blend with realism, that the show scores major negative marks. Overall it's a bit dry... no aigoo, no mushy love X( :'(
Hyun Bin's cutie dimples are not enough.
Hope it gets better next week.

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I can't watch this. I'm sorry HB.
Why?
1) The gorilla. 'nuff said.
2) No chemistry with the lead actress.
3) Terrible acting by HB (sorry!).
4) HB's bad haircut. Those pants!
5) Terrible dialogue.
6) Can a woman really fall for a man who would push her into mortal danger? Why? Because he's rich, powerful, handsome? Okay, no. Just no.

Mostly, though... the gorilla.

For unending awesomeness, KMHM. JS is AMAZING. I love love love love him. And he's more than a pretty face, he's a terrific actor.

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I really disliked some of the things in this episode. I will watch at least the 2nd one but if it remains this stupid, I will give up. I blame the writers and directors for the stupidity-- the gorilla--yes it was ridiculous. What is asinine about the scene is that the crowd forms a circle around it to watch what happens. Puh-lease. Everyone would be running for cover --especially the families with kids. I could see him pushing away the woman, but biting her? stupid. After he pushes her, she somehow becomes unconscious and they all leave her there. stupid. He thought his heart raced when the gorilla was about to "tackle" Hana because of romance? MAYBE IT WAS BECAUSE THERE WAS ALMOST A DEATH AT YOUR PARK AND THAT WOULD BE A HUGE ISSUE AND PROBABLY A LAWSUIT. Maybe that explains your heart racing!?! They threatened him with a video but didn't make a copy of the video? Crazy stupid. The ziplining?--incredibly stupid. I enjoyed Modern Farmer even though it was really wacky. But this was sometimes serious and then incredulous. The tone didn't sit well with me. But I will stick with it a bit.

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The flaws in writing and directing are indeed obvious in the scenes you mentioned above. I also wondered how a supposedly blackmailing adult can be so gullible as to leave the evidence (I still can't believe she left the phone in the first place!) without making a copy of it. Oh, and in addition to the "how did she set that up?" zipline scene, how did she know which floor he was going to be on?

It's quite frustrating because those details/mistakes are hard to miss that I can't help wondering if somebody proofread the script at all. Hopefully the creators will do something about the writing to prevent the series from going bad because I really, really hope Hyde, Jekyll, Me will turn out to be one of those unforgettable Korean series.

BUT I'm going to watch this all the way because the cast make the viewing experience pleasurable. Despite the first episode's flaws, I honestly found it relaxing and enjoyable. I hope episode 2 is even better. I hope you'll like it, too :)

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As much as I was looking forward to Hyun Bin's comeback, episode 1 was pretty... meh for me.

I'll watch the 2nd episode though and hope it is better. And I've just missed Hyun Bin a lot.

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they actually used the same heart device in the greatest love. this time though they're glasses and not a watch. hahha

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"Suddenly so very hot"
Yesssss! I thought the same thing too GF.
Only few minutes and Robin, I fell in love with you, or maybe its because of Hyun Bin!
Some people comparing this drama to Kill Me Heal Me, but I love both of them, because its Hyun Bin and Ji Sung!! Gahh, I couldn't ask more than that.
Thanks GF, miss you since Pinocchio's recaps, and its only a week ago... Love you...

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Two Hyunbins! What more can I ask for?:-)

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You know, nobody's talking about the elephant in the room:

How can Hyun Bin have less defined abs than he did before he went into the Marines?

Not that I'd kick him out for eating crackers, or anything - I'm just sayin'.

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LOLOL he wanted to break the mold! That's so funny, "the elephant in the room". I think he's gained back some weight since we saw those abs in SeGa.

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Looks promising. Has a different feel to it than most kdramas. Kinda has indie vibes.

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Ugh at all the stupid "Gorilla" comments! Who gives a rats ass if the scene was perfectly done or cheesy, it's NOT the focal point of the damn show, it was just a comic moment that wasn't well thought out...Think outside the box ppl dangnabbit! Why are ppl so nit-picky about absolutely irrelevant shit sometimes?!! I just don't get it!

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Back at you!

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Sorry to say this but only extremely limited ppl can argue that both HB's characters in HJ&M and SG are the same, those two ppl are NOTHING alike, they only share the same facial/physical features and nothing else..

His chaebol here is an uptight jerk with no sympathy or concern for anything other than himself, due to reasons that remain unknown to us as viewers "as of yet", while his chaebol there was just a traumatized struggling soul who was trying to figure out why, when everyone hid all sorts of shit from him! SG's chaebol was caring, sincere, playful albeit confused, and needed to find "himself". While this one is calculating, distant, hateful, and knows all too well who BOTH him-selves are (while we the viewers are struggling to find all the whys and hows)

Stop trying to compare, as there is no comparison whatsoever IMO.

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I just realy realllly wish they had cast a different main female lead. Otherwise this show is awesome.
Am I the only one who kinda wanted to see another Ha Ji Won and Hyun Bin pairing (^_^) ??

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Re: the video that was deleted. Am I the only one that has their phone automatically back up photos and videos to a cloud account? Seriously.

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THIS. Who doesn't make a copy of stuff, let alone stuff you're going to use to try and blackmail somebody?!?

(Yes, I can forgive a runaway gorilla, but not an idiot would-be blackmailer.)

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I think this show is laughably horrible I couldn't even finish the whole episode,"kill me heal me" is not great either but this absurd and boring storyline,hyun bin's cliched character and han ji min are enough to get me to glady stay far away. I am surprised anyone could finish watching this and like it but to each their own.

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This episode did seem a bit slow and boring, but I'll still tune in for 1. Hyun Bin, of course (I miss Sam Shik ah!) 2. Lee Seung Joon (the secretary here; loved him in Nine, Discovery of Romance and even his small role in Misaeng! And hello to Ms Sun from Misaeng too)
Some dramas didn't have a good start but they could end up being some of my favs, e.g. Vineyard Man, Babyfaced Beauty.

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Interesting drama. At first I was like "WTH is this?" But after I finished episode 1, I think I got an idea of what is going on with SJ. I think im starting to get hooked on this. Thank you for the recap!

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I heard that this is a good drama.

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