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Mary Stayed Out All Night: Episode 10

Episode 10 is vintage Mary: Some incredibly adorable scenes between Mary and Mu-gyul, who do puppy love like nobody’s business, and some repetitive plot conflicts that go around in circles. But no matter, since this may be our last time seeing this kind of storytelling style, since the writer change kicks in with the 11th episode.

I’m not holding my breath for a major shift, but it will be interesting to spot the differences, if any.

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EPISODE 10 RECAP

Mary comes upon Seo-jun kissing Mu-gyul and watches them unnoticed. Mu-gyul hasn’t initiated or participated in it, but neither does he set her straight or push her away. Instead, he merely tells her to go home, unruffled by the kiss.

Spotting Mary, Seo-jun confronts her with disdain for acting all innocent-like while leading two men around in a merry chase. Mary stands up for herself, saying politely that she understands that Seo-jun, as Mu-gyul’s ex, wouldn’t like her, but that she has never toyed with either man.

I sort of see where Seo-jun’s coming from, but can’t help but think she rubs me the wrong way with her attitude, as though this is all an affront to HER, which she masks as concern for the boys. What happened to the cool, ballsy Seo-jun of earlier days? Why has she turned so… petty and sneering?

Mary picks up the discarded guitar-pick necklace on her way in, and is quieter than usual as she prepares dinner for Mu-gyul. He eats enthusiastically, and Mary tells him that she enjoys seeing him eat even more than when he’s onstage. Spoken like a true mother, and he says as much. She laughs, “Yeah, you’re my kid.”

Mary asks if there’s anything he wants to do as a couple, and gets carried away imagining them getting couple rings, and couple T-shirts, and couple necklaces, and couple hats… Lady, be careful what you wish for. With a boyfriend like Mu-gyul, you’re more likely to be mistaken for sisters.

He says that’s kid’s stuff and tells her to up her game. Clearly Mu-gyul’s mind is in sexier places, and he imagines that she’s about to propose a makeout session, which is what the rest of us would do. But no, innocent Mary proposes a romantic campfire in the woods, to his disappointment. And ours.

He perks up again when she shyly suggests something else, something special, something she’s afraid to ask, that she wants to do tonight… Mu-gyul gulps.

Which… ends up taking them to a deserted construction site.

They ride a rickety elevator to the top, and as they climb higher, Mary breaks down in fear and clings to Mu-gyul’s leg, crying, “Dad!” Talk about mixed messages. Mu-gyul attempts to liberate his pants from her death grip, and they make it to the rooftop.

Mary explains that she read in a psychology book that if you have a bad memory of a place, making a new (better) memory in that place can help get rid of the old one. As a child, she’d once been chased up to a rooftop by loan sharks who’d been after money owed by her father, and afterward she had started to have nightmares.

She’s shaken by the memory, and even now tears of fright fall from her eyes. Mu-gyul gathers her close, then gives her a sweet peck on the lips, saying that ought to keep her nightmares at bay.

As it starts to snow, he tells her he hopes her dreams will whiten away, like the snow, and they stand there together, holding each other. It’s adorable.

Mary gets her campfire after all as they huddle together in the snow afterward. Wanting to return the favor for helping her get over her fear, she asks what situation makes Mu-gyul particularly happy, or if has any bad memories needing exorcising.

The first is easy enough — he’s happiest when he’s conditioning his hair. LOL. The second answer requires some explanation, and he relates the story of going to an ice rink as a child one day to look for his mother, and freezing his butt off while she never showed. Mary promises to do both with him — condition his hair, and accompany him to the skating rink.

More scandal follows Seo-jun (sigh, again), because her late-night kiss with Mu-gyul has found its way into the tabloids. Another headache for Jung-in to take care of.

Worse yet, it angers co-star Lee Ahn, who in this drama’s reality is a big Hallyu star. He and his manager threaten to leave the project if filming doesn’t begin on the contracted date.

On top of that, Manager Bang makes good on her threat to pull investors from the project (since it was Lee Ahn’s involvement that brought them onboard), and now Wonderful Life finds itself flailing.

Admittedly, the drama’s explanation for why this is such a Dire Situation is on the flimsy side, but I suppose there’s a certain (perhaps incomplete) internal logic at work: The initial scandal with Lee Ahn and Seo-jun’s “romance” brought out the Seo-jun anti-fans, who resented her for claiming their beloved oppa, and they went to town with an internet assault. In addition to the usual slander, they also started digging into her past, including investigations of her education and family.

This Mu-gyul scandal paints her as a cheater as well as a scandalmaker, turning her into a thoroughly irresponsible, unlikable star. No longer is she bankable on her talent alone, and business entities don’t want to associate with her drama. Now she’s a liability.

That’s the dilemma Jung-in faces when he meets her, but he decides he’s sticking with her. As bad as things are now, it’ll be worse if she leaves the production. Solution? Call a press conference. That’ll show ’em.

Mary overhears the news of the dropped investors when she drops by the office for a meeting with the writer, who likes her story suggestions. Then, she catches the televised press conference as she walks by a storefront on her way home, and stops to watch as Seo-jun addresses the reporters.

At first Seo-jun gives “safe” answers to the press’s questions, saying that she and Ahn are just co-workers, and that she and Mu-gyul are friends. However, a reporter presses on the issue of Mu-gyul, and Jung-in steps in to issue a blanket “no comment.” Except Seo-jun ruins that by declaring, “Kang Mu-gyul… is the man I love.”

Urg.

Mom flounces home to congratulate Mu-gyul on this public declaration from a star, which in turn makes him a star. He has no idea what she’s talking about, so she fills him in on the gossip, which he waves off, calling their photographed kiss as a mere goodbye gesture. Mom remembers he has Mary, so she warns him not to two-time his women, having been the receiving end of that in the past.

After watching Seo-jun drop the bomb, Mary sits in the park wiping away tears, all while knitting a sweater for Mu-gyul. Her friends track her down and tell her to forget that two-timing bastard, then take her for a drinking session, advising her alternately to go for Jung-in instead, or grab Mu-gyul for good and fight off that sneaky actress wench.

Another trio of angry ladies present themselves: Mu-gyul’s student fangirls confront him outside the academy, Love Actually-style, bearing signs that insist that he break up with Seo-jun. He inches away from them warily, then breaks into a run.

His bandmates tease him about the gossip, and their paths conveniently cross with Mary’s group. The sidekicks relocate to get their drink on while Mary and Mu-gyul talk.

If the ignored phone calls haven’t been enough of a clue, Mu-gyul can see from Mary’s expression that she’s upset and explains that even if Seo-jun still has feelings for him, it doesn’t mean he has any for her.

Mary points out that he hasn’t made a decisive break with Seo-jun; he asks incredulously if she’s accusing him of clinging to her. While he turns away to get his frustrations under control, Mary walks away holding back tears. She ignores his call again as she rides home on the bus alone, thinking back to that kiss — she’s been busy defending it to everyone else as nothing, but she can’t shake off her feelings of hurt and unease.

Mary calls her friends to find out where Seo-jun lives and makes an unannounced visit. There, her spirits sink to see the framed photos of Seo-jun and Mu-gyul back in their days as a happy couple.

Mary asks why Seo-jun made that announcement today, saying with an accusing tone that if she still loves him, she should have protected that love back when they were together. She gets back the surprising answer that Seo-jun did — that Mu-gyul was the one who couldn’t follow through. And here Mary had assumed that the relationship ended because of Seo-jun’s failing.

Mary’s here to ask Seo-jun to check herself; don’t put Mu-gyul in any further difficult situations.

Mu-gyul hears from Mary’s friends that she went off to see Seo-jun, so off he goes, arriving too late to catch Mary. He asks Seo-jun why she keeps complicating matters, referring to her public declaration, but she says that she can’t control how she feels. She’d have moved on if she could.

She reminds him that she gave up everything — family, background — so she could have him, but he just ended everything suddenly with her. I’m not sure what her point is, ’cause as far as I know love isn’t about keeping score, and Mu-gyul asks if this is her attempt at revenge. He leaves with one request: “Don’t hurt Mary.”

She notes sadly as he heads out, “You’ve really changed.”

Seo-jun texts Jung-in a request to be dropped from the drama, saying that’ll be best for all parties. He tries to call her immediately, only to find that she’s turned off her phone.

Jung-in receives a call from an investor who is pulling his funding, and sits with his head in his hands, feeling overwhelmed with frustration. And then, he looks to his phone and sees the photo of Mary, which I suppose is supposed to be some big symbolic gesture showing us that she’s the shining beacon of hope in his life, or whatever. Instead, I find myself thinking, Man, this drama has the strangest soundtrack.

Mu-gyul combs the streets looking for Mary. Finally, he heads to Mary’s home, where Dad gives him a far-from-friendly greeting, particularly worried since Mary isn’t home yet and isn’t picking up his calls.

The scandal with the actress has turned Mu-gyul into a full-on playboy in Dad’s eyes, and he insists that Mu-gyul stop meeting Mary and shoves him away.

Mary strolls through the neighborhood, deep in thought, and Jung-in casually sidles up next to her until she notices him. They’ve both had rough days, and sigh over how difficult this drama production is going. He had particularly wanted it to succeed because it was his first business endeavor, but he’s finding that everything is going awry.

She encourages him that he can do it, that the project won’t just die, and he thanks her for her vote of convidence.

As they part ways, Mary slips on the ice and goes crashing to the ground. Jung-in acts swiftly — fast enough to grab Mary, but not to prevent their fall, and he ends up with a cut on his forehead. She’s dismayed to have caused him injury, but Jung-in smiles at this reversal from their childhood accident.

Mu-gyul arrives to see Mary sitting with Jung-in after tending to his cut, and jealously grabs her wrist. Glare-off!

Mu-gyul wants to talk with Mary, but she’s not in the mood tonight and tells him to go home, leaving him outside.

He arrives home to find his mother sobbing — her trip to Paris is on the rocks, thanks to her shaky credit. The credit bureau won’t allow her to leave the country unless she pays the 30 million won ($25,000) she owes after being talked into signing as guarantor for a business venture that went bust.

Mu-gyul realizes with horror that she has used 20 million won from his account to pay back most of the debt — the 20 million he was going to return to Jung-in in exchange for dropping the drama. (Guess who’s going back into the production? Again?)

Frustration bubbling over, Mu-gyul asks his mother why she lives like this, always at the mercy of a man who dumps her or cons her of money. Mom falls back on her old excuse — that she’s an “unlucky bitch” — and those hated words remind Mu-gyul that he’s included in that. And that it was her so-called bad luck that led her to have him. He throws those words at her now, angry to be reminded again that he was an unlucky bastard from birth.

Hurt and angry, Mom retorts: “You’re right, I should never have had you. I’m sorry, for giving birth to you without your permission.” She falls to the ground sobbing that she’s sorry. Mu-gyul is torn between being hurt by his mother’s words and for hurting her.

(This scene is probably the best of the episode, because it brings to the surface some real emotions and is grounded in solid acting. That look on Jang Geun-seok’s face as his mother calls him the result of bad luck? It kills me.)

At home, Mary also battles her conflicted feelings, thinking over the events of the day while knitting her red sweater for Mu-gyul, even though her friends had insisted that he doesn’t deserve it. The sweater is something of a symbol in this episode for her feelings, something she turns to whenever she’s feeling particularly torn or upset, even though she’s not sure what she’ll do with it ultimately.

As threatened, Manager Bang and Lee Ahn present Jung-in with paperwork suing for contract cancellation. They argue that Lee Ahn’s missed out on profitable business opportunities and his image suffered as a result of the scandal.

Jung-in apologizes for that, but his sharp mind has started thinking about the origins of the scandal, and who has most to gain from it. He warns Manager Bang that she’s picked the wrong guy to screw over, having picked up on her habit of signing contracts, only to tuck away the signing fee when nullifying the contract.

Lee Ahn has been a loyal client of Manager Bang’s from the beginning of his career, and while he’s selfish and simple, he’s been unaware of his manager’s nefarious dealings, and this takes him by surprise. Jung-in appeals to his sense of decency and says this may be Ahn’s last chance, and asks him to choose wisely: “Manager Bang — or me?” (…in bed?)

President Jung calls sonny boy to tell him he’s putting an end to this drama venture, deciding that Jung-in isn’t fit to run his own business after all. Jung-in kneels in supplication and says that he hasn’t failed yet — he still has a month to convince Mary to marry him.

This he says just as Mary and her father arrive to pay a visit to the president, and they overhear Jung-in pleading for another month before pulling his drama investment. The president declares that he’d already made this decision when his engagement was called off. He orders Jung-in to give up the production company and start working for him instead.

Mary steps in and asks the president to give Jung-in one more chance at the drama. She kneels alongside Jung-in and defends him, saying that the broken engagement was her doing, not his. She’s the one who deserves his scorn.

Who is the president to deny the girl who looks like his long-dead lost love, whom he desperately wants to marry his son? He agrees to grant Jung-in one more chance.

Mary arrives at Mu-gyul’s studio in better spirits today, to his relief. She confesses that she went to see Seo-jun, and She admits that seeing the photos of them made her jealous — it seemed like he’d already done everything she wanted to do with him, but with Seo-jun.

He understands, but assures her that he’s never gone to the skating rink wearing a sweater his girlfriend has made him. They agree to go soon, and Mary promises to finish knitting quickly. Mu-gyul also promises that while he likes her, he’ll only like her — no looking askance at other women. I’m sure he means this in a sweet way, but his time limit (“while I like you”) sounds ominous, and Mary asks, “For how long?” He doesn’t have a ready answer for that.

Mu-gyul’s jealousy flares when Mary telsl him that she’ll have to help Jung-in again, but he understands that she has her loyalty. Still, when she asks him to join her and Jung-in tomorrow for a coffee date to talk things over, he refuses.

The next day, Mary anxiously looks around the cafe, hoping Mu-gyul will show and disappointed that he hasn’t come.

Jung-in interprets this to mean that they can talk this over just between the two of them — which is when Mu-gyul cuts in, here after all.

Sitting down and leveling a firm stare at Jung-in, Mu-gyul suggests that it’s time to cut the child’s play: “Let’s give this real marriage arrangement a try.”

Booyah!

Oh, wait. He means with Mary. Aw. And here I thought…

 
COMMENTS

When I fired up the ol’ internet machine today, I forgot that Mary was airing two episodes today and started watching Episode 11 instead of 10. I can’t believe I watched it for ten minutes before realizing I had accidentally skipped an episode — and strangely enough, even before realizing my mistake, my thoughts on Ep 11 weren’t, “Why is everything moving so fast?” but “We’re STILL here?” So, sigh. The drama-within-the-drama is in trouble — again. Seo-jun is the source of scandal — again. The contract is on — again.

How much more of this can there be? The problem with all this back-and-forthing, aside from merely being repetitive, is that it creates this lack of faith in the resolution. If the characters are stuck in the same dance, over and over and over, then how are we to believe that the final resolution will stick? In order to have any faith in the characters at the core of this drama, we need some real, organic, authentic character development. Advancement instead of just change. I sort of feel like we’re stuck in one of those children’s puzzle games — you know the kind where you have square tiles that you have to slide around, one tile at a time, until the tiles form a picture. Every episode is like one tile move.

It’s funny that the writer is faltering on this drama, because to be honest I actually quite liked her previous show, Love & Marriage, which was also very low-key, loosely plotted, and romance-centric. I remember commenting on the lack of dramatic conflict, and yet in that drama the rest of the story somehow worked within its framework. I suppose it’s because it had more of a theme (marriage, divorce, the possibility of finding your true love the second time around rather than the first), and the main characters — Kim Ji-hoon and Kim Min-hee — had adorable chemistry together. Although certainly Moon Geun-young and Jang Geun-seok have just as much.

Well, I’ll be eager to see what kind of welcome changes Episode 11 brings. Please, let there be some. And for the better.

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well, i was super hyped over this dramas loving the lead characters and the chemistry, i wont blame the production or the cast and crew i just have blame the writers they have been slacking off and the network should have noticed it from episode 5 and reinvested fresh blood in the production value and actors instead of the circle with lacks drama, intelligence and most of all intrigue which is what keeps ppl like me cumin bck for more time after time and invest in reruns of these shows

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I was so upset when Mary saw her boyfriend kissing SeoJun and did nothing. seriously...??? he was completely at fault. it would have been normal for her to at least get upset or something... I couldn't even finish the episode because it was so boring.

Thanks for the recap!!

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I hope MG and MR be married in ep 13 or 14 so there will be an ep of their story in marriage and birth a child. I want to see the confusion and the cuteness rathe and ends with the happy ending. During the korea drama rarely show the true happy ending makes me really realy happy.
By the way I'm a big fan of korea drama or movie...

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as I read this entire recap I couldn't help but thing of javabeans sighing and yawning while she wrote this. I tried watching it but I have up and now I just read them..but even through the recap the story sounds draggy and like nothing is happening. I miss the Hong Sisters.

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the only thing sustaining the drama at all is the cuteness, so i just fast forward for the cute, but strangely i'm not at all confused about plot, despite maybe really paying attention to ten minutes of each episode. sadly, even the cute isn't really doing it for me anymore...

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I found the cast to be adorable, but I found some problems with it. Don't get me wrong, I love this drama. But the plot wasn't going anywhere. The characters were doing the same over and over again: Mu Kyul warms up with Mae Ri, then Jung In comes, Dads get mad, etc. Hopefully the new writer will solve some problems...? But we're running out of time! I'd much rather watch, say, Boys over Flowers, or You're Beautiful (which, by the way, also starred Jang Geun Suk ;D), or Full House, or Goong.

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My sentiments exactly, except I'd watch Coffee Prince for Kim Jae Wook. =)

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Thanks for the recap!

I'm pretty surprised by how the plot feels so plotless.... the writer's previous works were pretty good: Goong, Hon (Soul), and Love & Marriage. The repetitiveness reminds me a bit of Cinderella's Sister in its low points.

I agree with you about JGS and that scene with his mom. All the scenes with JGS and his mom are great. That when I really feel something.

I wonder if the manhwa is much like the drama....

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I watched finish ep 11 then i found out i left out one episode, worst than you!
I knew I left out one episode when i went to drmabeans today..

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I love the rooftop/what seems to be a gay proposal scenes. I LOVE THEM.

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I love your recaps. They are funnier than watching MSOAN.It's sad that you know that MGY was terrific in Painter of the Wind, JGS in Beethoven's Virus and You're Beautiful, KJW in Bad Guy. I love them and admire their acting ability. So much potential, but unfortunately, they are left with a mish mashed script. Too many BORING scenes with the friends chug- a- lugging soju, marriage contract merry go round, bad father/bad mother (parents) and goofy & ridiculous costuming.
GET OFF THAT BUS!Give us some honest scenes like the one between MG and his irresponsible mother when he finds out she took the money from his bankbook.You can feel the rough childhood MG had to endure. Also, I was aghast when Mary saw Seo Jun kissing MG. Mary just stared and cried silently. I would have preferred Mary do some serious hair pulling and show some real anger.
It's lost it's fun by too much cuteness and not enough substance. It's almost over, but is it too late for the new writer to save this dismal drama?

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I say Moo Gyul should just ditch Mary and run off with Jung In. Now that would be an awesome drama~

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Thanks for the recap!
I also watched more than half of episode 11 before realizing I skipped 10. Now that's just sad when you can skip whole episodes and not feel you missed much. I'm hanging in there but really hoping for some added spice in this drama because I'm fast losing my appetite.

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Argh the soundtrack in this episode bothered me so much! The transitions were off, and they use that SAME dramatic soundtrack whenever anything mildly dramatic is happening to make it seem like everything is a big deal... when it isn't, because not much has changed in the story. *sigh. And yet, here I go, firing up episode 11...

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I haven't been keeping up with the recaps so my comment will be a bit of a long, slightly random spew of thoughts on this episode and others- feel free to skip ;)

I'm writing this and watching the 10th episode.

My thoughts at the beginning of this episode:

Aww, swapping horror stories of their childhood? Yep, they are made for each other.

Totally random but am I the only one who thinks of Lord of the Rings when the My Precious song comes on?
I like the song but 9/10 times the line always makes me think of Smeagol.

A round of applause to Mae-ri for going to Seon Joo's house- took guts, of course she should have asked Moo-Kyul why he just stood there when she was witnessing it but...baby steps, baby steps.

Moo-Kyuls mom just kills me- I don't hate her character- but how does she know to cause trouble on an already crappy day? The scene with her and Moo-kyul is emotional. I could see more of that storyline.

But for the other possible paring of Mae-Ri and the Director Jung..they have matching scars now-form a club. I like Jung, I don't want him to be with Mae-Ri, but I do want his character to be happy...

Oh and Director Jung's father? How many times will he threaten to pull out his investments before he accidentally lets slip the real reason that he wants Mae-ri in the family is not only because he likes her, but that because he couldn't get Mae-ri's mom- he can at least be comforted by Mae-ri's presence.

Near the end of the episode, while Mae-ri is in Moo-Kyul's house knitting the sweater I was oddly reminded of The Odyssey. Penelope undoing her weaving at night to keep her suitors at bay until Odysseus finally comes home.
I don't know- I feel like Mae-ri will leave when she is finished with the sweater.

Oh! Something else I forgot to mention or ask.
Are all K-drama characters equipped with supersonic hearing? Someone is always coming from around a corner to answer or comment on something that was just said- odd.

The ending was...ehh. (When words are too much sometimes sound effects describe a situation well.)

Love Mae-ri hobo chic style- they tamed it a bit in the other episodes but I think I see it creeping back.

--Read this recap after I wrote my comment, seems we agree on some points.--

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Whoa!! Did not know my rambling would take up that much space..sorry ^^

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Seriously, who's the script writer for this drama? Or was this series already like this in the net-comic? Because it's disappointing that a potentially good drama became...this. The cast, plot premise, scenarios...are all put to waste.

I feel bad for Jung In. Even though I like Jang Geun Suk more, I wish Mae Ri would end up with Jung In.

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i will really like it if mary is paired with jung in

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I'm trying to separate out my feelings about this episode from Mary's perpetual Candy Martyr face and I can't. Is she being a Candy Martyr or just looking like a Candy Martyr? Even I don't know. Either way there was just one too many scenes of eye-welling lower-lip quivering Mary dressed up like a 14 year old and threatening to cry while she knits her boyfriend a jumper he may never wear.

Seo-jun dated Mu-gyul for one month a year ago, right? Is that really something to ruin your career over? Girl is about a day away from boiling his bunny.

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🤣

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I'm struggling here @ndlessjoie. I don't really mind Mary's Candy ways, because once in a while she does something unexpected. Going to Seo-jun's place and calmly and collectedly telling her to get over Mugyul was pretty good, though of course Seo-jun doesn't take a hint. *eye roll*

Also, how cute is it that Jung-in and Mary now have matching forehead scars? I almost fell over myself during the scene. Mary slipping on ice and falling on Jung In who crashed into the ice looked like it hurt, YY-style. XD

I hope this drama picks up after the writer was changed, because it's starting to drag... it's kind of ironic that the drama and the drama-within-the-drama have production problems.

Also, I hope you don't mind, but I'm gonna summon ToD if the new writer doesn't write off the Horrible Dads. ToD may slip on the ice too, you never know. My blood pressure went up during that (ridiculous) scene where they went up to the construction site and found out that Mary was kidnapped and traumatised (I think her way of confronting her fears is kind of weird, but anyway, moving on). That father of hers does not care at all about her or her feelings. He makes me so mad... tell me he goes away or slips too and ends up in hospital!

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Well if you don't like the writer of this drama you can just wait till they tap the next one in.

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Jang Geun Suk finished it up very well. He should've written the whole thing.

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So many writers and so little time to fit in ALL the tropes. When I rewatch (I'll never tell how many times) I always skip all the dads.

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I will start skipping the dads or I won't finish this. Their lines are always the same anyway.

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If you must, skip to the last episode, don't just drop it all together. Of course then you'll miss even more tropes, tears, and ridiculously frustrating lack of communication (I'm understating this one).

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