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A Love to Kill: Episode 1

After discussing Rain’s post-vomit lizard kisses in the latest podcast, this blast from the past was just a matter of time. So here we have it, a first episode recap of 2005’s A Love to Kill (also known as This Cursed Love, aka This Love I Want to Kill, aka The Love of Death, aka Detestable Love, aka Knock Out By Love). I’m not joking about those titles, but I’m holding out hope that KBS was.

There’s no use trying to fool anyone that this show isn’t a melodramatic bedlam that mostly skews ridiculous. It’s a lot of cliches rolled into one and it’s certainly not a lot of things – like very good, for instance. But we all have those dramas that hold a special place in our heart for whatever reason (Rain, The Gateway Drug), and A Love To Kill is one of mine. Sometimes you just can’t help what you love.

[Note: This is a one-off first episode recap, not an ongoing recap series.]

 
EPISODE 1 RECAP

Two people in two different places reach for each other across space and time, with the scenes intercut to give us the idea that a metaphysical tie already exists between them. (Is it fate? It’s probably fate. I bet it’s fate.)

Our anti-hero hero, KANG BOK-GU (Rain!) lies alone in a grassy field while our heroine lies – wait for it – alone on a beach, the waves crashing softly around her. She’s CHA EUN-SEOK (Shin Mina), and she opens her eyes and reaches out her hand toward the camera while Bok-gu does the same. It’s like they’re reaching toward each other. (That’s deep.) He closes his eyes, and a tear falls down his cheek.

Now we get the official(?) start to the episode, as Bok-gu’s friends are having a party near the river. One of them is startled to see a woman in a red dress poised at the top of the nearby bridge, looking as though she’s ready to jump. He hurries to find Bok-gu (calling him ‘Dog’ Bok-gu) and alert him to the situation. From that far distance they can recognize the woman as a banker’s daughter who suffered Bok-gu’s rejection.

Bok-gu, too cool for school, ignores the problem even as the girl in red sheds tears. Suddenly, though, we see him sauntering toward her with a lollipop in his mouth and a vicious dose of apathy on his face. The first thing he tells a girl about to commit suicide? That if she was going to show her panties to all the guys standing below, she could at least pull her skirt up to give them a better show. Ouch.

She threatens that she’ll jump. “Tell me that you love me,” she pleads. He continually acts dismissive despite her plethora of sorrows. “Say, ‘If you wait for me, I’ll love you.’ Please say that to me,” she begs. But he doesn’t. Instead, he tells her to go ahead and jump off. When he turns his back, she jumps. He just keeps walking afterward, but maybe some part of his conscience niggles at him, and he jumps in after her.

We cut back to Eun-seok, who’s crying out for her oppa on a beach. She begins to walk into the water as a director yells “Cut!”, and we soon realize that we’re watching a show within a show. It turns out she’s an actress, but it doesn’t seem like she understands the word “cut” since she keeps heading straight into the water. I love this little moment where her manager, CHOI MI-SEON (Kang Rae-yeon), stops someone from retrieving Eun-seok with a shake of her head as if to say: Girl be crazy.

She dives into the water at the same time as Bok-gu dives into the water wherever he is, and the scenes are intercut to make it seem like they’re swimming toward each other. Beneath the surface of the water it looks like Bok-gu grabs Eun-seok, but when he emerges, it’s with the girl in the red dress.

Bok-gu’s saved the Girl In Red’s life, though that doesn’t mean he has to be happy about it. He tells her that he won’t save her if she pulls this stunt again, and leaves her on the shore to cry. Ding! We have a winner on our hands.

After going for a salty swim, Eun-seok finds herself in her actress’ van with her manager. As fate would have it, the van that ends up driving next to them houses Bok-gu and his friends – and at the sight of what must be a celebrity car, they all begin waving frantically to gain her attention. She’s all smiles until she sees Bok-gu through the open window, asleep in the back. His face brings to mind a song she once asked her oppa to sing, the same man she thought aloud to while she was swimming in the ocean.

He’s not that asleep, it seems, as his hand begins reaching out of the car window just as Eun-seok’s does the same – and soon they’re reaching toward each other, their fingers inches apart.

It’s only now that we cut to the opening sequence introducing the actors, and I’m noting it because I really like it as a plain view of the underlying conflict for the series – Eun-seok is just minding her own business in the middle of a crowded street before she comes face to face with Bok-gu, holding a gun to her head. (He’s out to kill his love! I get it!) It’s everything I wanted the drama to be – dark, visceral, stylistic. One tiny opening sequence and I was hooked just based on potential. Couldn’t the whole drama just be this sequence?

Eun-seok goes through her daily routines, photo shoots and the like, though whenever she’s not actively on film her eyes seem distant, her mind clearly somewhere else. It sort of seems like she’s just going through the motions.

A man in a baseball cap watches her from afar, and the sight of him puts Eun-seok into a state of shock. Though he turns to go she calls after him in voiceover, “Please don’t run away. Please don’t go. Please… Don’t go! Kang Min-gu, you bastard!”

And just at that time, Bok-gu turns suddenly, as if he’s heard her voice. For reasons unknown this scene is in black and white, as we hear someone saying to him in voiceover not to resort to violence no matter what. The source of the voice and memory is his brother, KANG MIN-GU (Kim Young-jae), and it seems as though Bok-gu’s gratuitous use of violence was the reason for their estrangement.

We slowly fade to color as a bloody Bok-gu prepares to continue a K-1 match, having obviously chosen a life of violence despite his brother’s words of wisdom. It’s a brutal fight that ends with Bok-gu on the ground, though it’s not because he’s been knocked out – he simply chooses to lose. Why? Because titles are for winners, and he’s a loser. (No joke, he really is a professional loser.)

His opponent calls him out after the fight, wondering why he’s a K-1 fighter if he never wants to win. What’s his purpose in life, anyway? Bok-gu doesn’t answer, and instead smears the gum he was chewing over his opponent’s face.

Eun-seok has gone straight from a fancy gala to a poorer district of town, determined to track down Min-gu. She tries to find him at his old place to no avail, as his former landlady tells Eun-seok that he ran away with some unpaid rent. Why is a top star looking for a man without a penny to his name, anyway?

In order to comfort her, the landlady gives Eun-seok a bottle of soju, which Eun-seok drinks like a bottle of water. It’s in this state that her manager finds her, but it’s useless to chide Eun-seok, who could care less about her career.

Regardless, she gets dragged back to the same party while a CF of her plays for all the honored guests. She’s the company spokesmodel, and she’s got about five glasses of empty wine sitting in front of her. A kind man sitting across the table slides his half-empty glass over, and she thanks him drunkenly. That kind man is KIM JOON-SUNG (Lee Ki-woo), filling his second lead chaebol shoes perfectly.

Eun-seok is nowhere to be seen by the time the video dims and the lights go up, having excused her wasted self to a stairway in order to call Min-gu. Of course she gets his voicemail instead, and leaves him a sad message about how she’s called over one-hundred times. Eun-seok: “I can’t break up with you, why should I? I can’t break up with you like this. Over my dead body!” She begins sobbing into the phone.

Meanwhile, Joon-sung continues to give the presentation to possible foreign investors, showing off his prowess in multiple languages. He finds Eun-seok passed out in the stairwell, and his attempts to rouse her end up with him falling on top of her. He didn’t mean the affront, but when she wakes up she immediately starts screaming – and someone with a camera phone records everything. Oh noes.

Eun-seok stumbles back into the party a drunk mess, with Joon-sung following behind. In view of everyone she calls him out for being a pervert and gives him the arm-equivalent of flipping him the bird.

HAN DA-JUNG (Kim Sa-rang) makes a living as a small-time moneylender, and when money is due, she’s not afraid to resort to violence. In the case with a fruit-stand-owning ajumma, she begins upheaving all the fruit in order to cause a scene. When the ajumma doesn’t relent Bok-gu appears to let her know that if Da-jung is threatening to kill her, then she really will. “She’s Han Da-jung and her nickname is ‘crazy dog,'” he tells the woman, in an effort to scare her.

When that doesn’t work, he puts the fear of God into her as he shows off his knife-wielding skills, and Da-jung eventually gets her money. He follows her around for the night as they go from venue to venue, with Bok-gu acting as Da-jung’s frightening backup to intimidate debtors into paying their dues. Even when they encounter a group of gangsters at a hostess club (is Da-jung a pimp too?), Bok-gu disposes of them like a boss.

He’s clearly a rebel with his unshaven appearance, Nelly cheek-bandage, and that lollipop he always has in his mouth. But he’s a rebel who’s afflicted by his past, as he covers his ears in an attempt to un-hear the strains of the same song his brother used to sing to him.

Sad violin music plays as Da-jung views a wedding dress through a store window, and we get a closeup of her neck where a minor cosmetic burn remains. Well, that explains why she always wears a neck scarf. (I guess being former Miss Korea doesn’t count for anything when plagued with what looks like, at most, a second-degree sunburn.)

Da-jung recognizes a man in the street who once poured hot soup on Bok-gu, and wants to kill him in order to take revenge for Bok-gu’s humiliation. Gentle words from Bok-gu don’t work to get her mind off the revenge train, and it’s only until he shouts at her that she listens. He tells her not to do anything for him anymore, whatever it is. Hmm. I smell a guilt complex.

As he takes her home on a motorcycle, we get small flashbacks into their past. Bok-gu was trapped in a burning building, and Da-jung went to save him. Ergo, the burn mark, and their current connection to each other that seems fostered out of Bok-gu’s guilt over the scars she sustained saving his life.

The video of Joon-sung falling on top of Eun-seok has gone viral, and it looks much worse than what it was. It’s effectively blown up into a scandal for both Eun-seok and Joon-sung, who’s the youngest son of his chaebol family.

Joon-sung’s father watches him while he gives a perfectly good presentation, and decides that the perfect time to rant against the scandal with his son is in front of a group of foreign investors. Nice. He tells Joon-sung that he has no need for him in his family – he has one good son, and that’s enough for him.

Unfortunately, Joon-sung finds out about the video through one of the French investors. They’re more up on tabloid gossip than he is, apparently.

Eun-seok’s manager sets to berating Eun-seok for having drank too much on the night in question, while her overdramatic mother stakes out in the middle of the living room, having refused to drink or eat anything all day. When Eun-seok’s sister remarks that this scandal isn’t the end of the world, Mom offers a contrary opinion. “Yes, the world has come to an end. It’s all over now. It’s over.”

Mom then starts crying to her husband over what they’re to do with Eun-seok now that her reputation is ruined. Eun-seok’s brother quips that she’s always wanted to end her acting career anyway, so what’s the fuss? It’s clear that her brother has some resentment for Mom’s money-grubbing ways, considering that she doesn’t seem to be their biological mother and has instead married in for Eun-seok’s money.

Joon-sung calls Eun-seok out for a meeting to discuss the scandal. She’s still under the impression that he tried to molest her, but he protests his innocence. He tells her that he doesn’t put his hands on food that isn’t his, which she takes offense to. So what, she’s food to him? Who’s his dessert?

Frustrated, he chides her for calling him out on something she knows he didn’t mean. Joon-sung: “Weren’t you educated in college?” She blinks at him like he’s speaking a foreign language and tells him that no, she never went to college, but since he’s the college graduate he can come up with a solution to their problem.

Joon-sung then asks if she staged everything on purpose to net herself a chaebol – he heard that actresses do it all the time. Eun-seok nearly snorts. “Hey, Tall Boy. Do I look that easy to you?” Ha, I love his nickname. Very fitting.

We get a montage of shirtless Bok-gu taking out his frustrations at on a punching bag. The punching bag, of course, being a clear metaphor for the inner turmoil his survivor’s guilt has caused him as he toes the line of life and death, the swaying motion a symbol for the vicissitudes of fate and the loss of his brother’s love as Bok-gu plays the role of both spectator and master in a poststructuralist world that threatens to engulf him at every turn. (Because this scene wouldn’t just be here for Rain’s abs, right?)

Even though Bok-gu is a tool, he certainly has no dearth of ladies following him around. But the one who meets him near his house is an interesting case – his demeanor toward her is much different than the way he was toward the girl in the red dress. She wonders why he never called, and tells him that she’s getting married tomorrow. Like the girl in red, however, she too offers to drop everything in her life if Bok-gu would only tell her not to go.

He tells her that she can’t cancel her wedding just because he says so, but it’s clear that he does want to say so. They had something special going on, but he let her go because of Da-jung. She knows this too, and tells him, “You can’t love somebody out of loyalty.”

Da-jung is nearby, and hears those words. Ouch. To further drive the point home, his past girlfriend tells him that she knows Da-jung got her burn scar because of him, and that’s why he devotes his life to her like a debtor paying back his debts. But here’s the clincher: “Why do you go through hell with a girl you don’t even love?” Double ouch, because Da-jung can still hear everything. She crumples to the ground with her groceries.

Bok-gu’s demeanor goes cold as a means of defense, and he tells the girl that he never loved her. There’s more going on to this scene than what’s being said, but the crux of it is that Bok-gu did love her but is willing to let his own happiness go for Da-jung’s sake, which is a heck of a guilt to put on a poor girl.

He becomes aware that Da-jung has heard everything, but acts as if nothing is wrong. She does the same, and that’s how they cope with their responsibilities toward each other. Da-jung knows what she’s doing to him, but it’s not with any malice that she keeps doing it.

Bok-gu goes off on his own to cool down, and Da-jung looks at her scarred back in the mirror, remembering that girl’s words loud and clear. She knows she’s being loved only out of loyalty.

Bok-gu’s roommate, MI-SOOK (Na Yoon), is out of breath by the time he tracks Bok-gu down. He’s got some good news and some exposition: he’s found Bok-gu’s brother, Kang Min-gu, who Bok-gu hasn’t seen in ten years. Eun-seok’s CF plays in the background as this realization sinks in.

And then, suddenly, we’ve skipped the reunion stage to find Bok-gu hanging out with his long lost brother at his rooftop apartment. They share a beer and some feelings, with Min-gu apologizing for leaving his younger brother alone to face the world for so long.

Bok-gu tells Min-gu that he still resorts to violence, and in fact, it’s what he does for a living now. Is Min-gu going to run away again?

But Min-gu apologizes again, saying that he was completely in the wrong. Well, I guess that’s easy to say after ten years. But if he knows he’s in the wrong now, then why did he stay away so long?

He brings out the playful side in Bok-gu as they splash each other with foam from their beer cans and play like children on the roof. Aww. Moments later, Min-gu sees Eun-seok’s face on a nearby jumbotron with the accompanying headline that she’s now engaged to chaebol son Kim Joon-sung. Ruh roh.

Min-gu reaches out his hand as if to cup Eun-seok’s digital face, lost in his own world. Bok-gu jokes that if Min-gu is her stalker, he better give up the ghost now. He should think of his age…

…But Min-gu disappears right in front of Bok-gu’s eyes, falling off the edge of the roof in the blink of an eye.

 
COMMENTS

Any and all snark for this drama comes from pure love, because I find this show in the category of being entertainingly bad with flashes of brilliance, rather than just bad. I certainly didn’t feel like I needed sixteen hours of my life back after watching it – because I’m pretty sure that in 2005, at the height of my Rain-love, I thought this was the best drama that ever happened ever in the history of ever, ever.

Speaking of, Rain’s performance pretty much carries the show as this sort of revenge-seeking broody monster who’s actually a pretty bad guy with some really unforgivable moments. Somehow, though, he still remains sympathetic – even when we lose all understanding of why he’s doing what he’s doing when he doesn’t want to be doing it. I don’t think anyone can accuse Rain of phoning this one in – he really gives this role his all, and it shows. In a lesser actor’s hands Bok-gu could have easily been unwatchable, and though the character still toes the line, Rain is a saving grace. (I’m seriously not just saying that as a fan.)

As for the conflict, I don’t think it’s a spoiler at this point to say that Bok-gu holds Eun-seok responsible for his brother falling off the roof and seeks to bring an unholy scorched-earth massacre of vengeance upon both her houses. We’re dealing with a revenge tale, but the revenge is based on a Big Misunderstanding and not really a wrong, so it’s hard to get behind Bok-gu’s journey in that regard.

So that’s the premise, but if you’ve ever watched a drama, you know that that little thing called love is going to get in the mix and rile things up. I was initially drawn to this series because of how dark it seemed to skew, and because a love story set in the background of revenge sounded epic (at the time). There’s also something about an anti-hero being the focus of a show that hits all the sweet spots for me, since I love flaws in lead characters and normally loathe perfection. In that regard, Bok-gu certainly delivers. There’s almost nothing in this first episode to really sell him as a likable character to us, other than that he’s unselfishly living his life for others rather than himself. He always chooses to lose in fights. He worships the ground his brother falls on. He might have thought about letting a girl commit suicide because of him, but he saved her in the end. (See, there are some good things here.)

A big plus for A Love to Kill was the directing (and the soundtrack, which was exceptionally addicting and made me feel even when scenes didn’t call for it. Seriously, listen to the soundtrack and try to not be moved.) Now that I’ve seen Padam Padam: The Sound of His and Her Heartbeats, I can recognize the special flair Kim Kyu-tae has and that he’s honed it over time while still staying true. (Some of the shots between A Love to Kill and Padam Padam are eerily similar, like the underwater scene.) He has an intimate way with cinematography that puts us both in the thick of action and keeps us far removed from it at the same time – sometimes we see the characters as a dot on a big, beautiful landscape, and sometimes we’re close enough to them that it looks like the camera glass will smash into their face at any moment. This isn’t too flattering for HD cameras circa 2005 – because even the ever-beautiful Shin Mina doesn’t look her best here, when every pore on her face can be counted and named.

Even so, the shots remain organic and interesting, lending A Love to Kill more of a movie-like feel that I really enjoyed. It’s withstood the test of time and can hold its own with modern dramas in terms of visual sharpness and flair, which still amazes me.

It seems almost counterintuitive to suggest that this drama, which aims to be a melodrama of melodramas, can actually be pretty fun if you know what you’re getting into. There are a ton of repeated actions and reactions by characters that can be made into one of the easiest drinking games ever – and one that will land you on the floor pretty fast. (Every time Bok-gu cries only one tear, every time Eun-seok breaks a heel, every time she collapses, every time she limps, every time poor Lee Ki-woo has nothing to do, every time someone ends up in a hospital – and yes, every time someone has an eating disorder.) That’s not to say that you can’t take this show seriously, because you can (and I did), but it’s a show with a lot of qualifiers. And one of the most puzzling endings in drama history, for that matter.

But really, you’re coming to this show for one of two reasons: Rain, or because you loved writer Lee Kyung-hee’s previous works (Sang Doo, Let’s Go To School, I’m Sorry I Love You) and are craving some melodramatic, revenge-laden romance. Or just Rain. I can enumerate all the points against this drama while still having that one all-encompassing embarrassing fact remain: I still loved it. It’s a series that doesn’t ask any big questions, one that doesn’t really have any mind-blowing scenes, and one that stays mostly quiet, save for the occasional sound of sobbing. It’s certainly not a love I want to kill, but one that I don’t quite know what to do with, either.

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HeadsNo2, now I'm singing Cloud repeatedly. That song doesn't even have many stanzas!

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I`ve finished this drama in few days (I`ve been practically glued to the TV for 3 days). It`s still one of my favourites but with time I started to see some flaws in it.

Nevertheless Rain`s acting and the OST saved the day.

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I thought I was having a dream when I saw the header for this recap on the site. I had just rewatched this drama yesterday and thought maybe my mind was playing tricks on me in my sleepiness.

I had a lot of the same feelings about this drama as you did. I looked forward to it back in 2005 for the writer's previous dramas and my love of Rain. I loved the premise of the drama (I was such a melodrama junkie at that time) and it seemed liked a drama made for my id.

This drama is not one of my favorites but for some reason, I cannot forget it. The plot is very flawed with characters acting borderline crazy and dumb. Most of their actions just don't make sense, from the most melodramatic to the most mundane. But I still unexplicably love Bok-Gu and Eun-Seok.

I think what I love about this drama is the premise of it and the emotional struggle of the characters. I like the "fantasy" of love this drama portrays, which in being so unrealistic, does seem to transcend the actually plot and appear so epic.

I loved, loved the opening credits. So much is told in that short sequence and made me fall in love with the potential of this drama. The color of her scarf against the background! Alas, that love did not last.

Oh, after following Rain throughout his whole career, his hairstyle when he is a bodyguard, is HIS BEST HAIR EVER.

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shin minah looks sooo different in her. in a bad way....

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i had such high hopes for this drama. i remember people went crazy in soompi when the first teaser pics were posted.

i dropped this a after the first episode. it was too ridiculous - and i happen to like melodramas.

OST > drama.

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And can I just say that mah boo looks incredible in pretty much all of these screen caps. Hallelujah to the hey, but he looks damn fine scruffy, clean, asleep, awake, angry, happy, whatever. Baby boy is just beautiful.

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This was my second drama, I watched in a vacation all in one... I only watch the drama for 5 days?... one week?.. I do not remember, but I remember just waking up... watching the drama, eating, sleeping (if my anxiety to watched it let me) ... I honestly recommend it... The reason I am drama addict is this drama. Just amazing.... so, unusual ending.. Just loved it!... Watch it if you haven't.

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I have a love hate relationship with this drama... some times it's more love, but mostly it's more hate... the only thing I love is Rain... ah boy, he's definitely the gateway drug- the same thing with Sangdoo Let's go to school... gaah.

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I also wanted to watch this drama because it seemed so epic and I love drama (back then!). It seemed so haunting, too. Then I tried watching it and I died of boredom.

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Also, I wish someone would make an Episode 1 recap of I'm Sorry, I Love You. That's one depressing Kdrama that made me incredibly happy.

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What kiss? Ah, that kiss... :) Didn't pay too much attention to it at the time, but now that I think about it, Yuk! :)

The main pull for me was of course, Rain (I admit, I'm a fangirl). But this drama killed me. As I was watching it, my thoughts were "these people sure love being miserable." I wanted to scream at them to get over it and be a little bit selfish and make a grab for what they wanted!

The cinematography was excellent... as HeadsNo2 mentioned, it gave it a movie feel to it.

And then, of course, the music. Uwaah! Talk about slit-my-wrist angst.

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My father loved this series, he first watched it in Korean language with no subtitles in cable TV. then when it aired in local TV dubbed, he watched it again

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I absolutely love this drama. I specifically watched it because of Shin Min ah and fell for the scruffy looking Rain. He has got to be the hottest guy I have seen who barely showered :) The way some scenes seem to be independent from the rest MTV-esque somehow allowed me to savored it separately. I love the kiss, I totally forgot she was retching prior to it. That part where he sheilds her from the gangsters and took the beating was epic worthy :) cinematography is beautiful it was almost dream like. and I may be the only one who appreciated the ending being open ended. As such, it allowed the viewers to end it as they wish. Did they die together? Did he die, willing her to live on...it wasn't perfect but it was good enough to elicit a reaction.

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i rarely enjoy open-ended ending in a drama or movies. I always thot it's lazy writing or something, or never having direction in the first place to give something conclusive. hehe. I always feel cheated when that happens

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This was my first drama, I watched it for the love of Rain.

It started out interested but I swear the last 5 episodes were nothing but crying. Then that ridiculous ending. Still I appreciated watching Rain play the hot bad boy. I felt sorry for pillar and Shin MinAh

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In 2005 when I watched this drama... I hated it to the core but couldn't stop watching because I wanted it to get better.... I was young and naive...

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I remember being addicted to this drama when it first came out, too. Nobody else gave a shit because it was too emo/random but I ate it up like it was candy, which was surprising because I generally seem to be interested in the hyped up dramas and get bored/ambivalent within ten episodes. A Love to Kill had me marathoning through a stomach flu and a raging fever. Plus I'm not exactly what you would call fond of Rain or his acting even but for some inexplicable reason I adored Bokgu and saw him as a character completely seperate from his actor. Him falling apart in the hospital hitting his heart repeatedly (with snot running down his face) was heartrending, to say the least. Not to mention the legendary romantic scenes like the night beach kiss and the flashbacks and that one bit where he shielded her body with his own... shivers just thinking about it.

Of course objectively I can see where the drama failed and how random as fuck it was but damn if I wasn't spellbound. Still one of my favorites to this day.

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lol I was reading this post while listening to Seoul fm and suddenly it started to play rain's If you want a lover...

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one of those dramas with awesome cliffhangers, at least for the first few episodes. I really dig this drama for the first 8, but really wanted my hours back that I used to finish another 8. haha.

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Can't read right now, but I love you for recapping this <3 It's been on my to-watch list since forever but now that there's going to be recaps I can just read it instead xD

Kyaaaaah! Super happy. Thanks hun ;3

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I loved this drama, and I hated "I'm sorry I love you." --comparatively. Sometimes I'm in the mood for melodrama, I suspended a lot of belief for this series, became too invested in watching it to not allow it to crawl into my heart. lol I fell in love with SMA and Rain because of this though, and MGIAG sort of sealed her place in my heart. I'm too scared to watch any of Rain's other dramas though... the opinions are so divided. lol

==========SPOILER===============

I thought dying of hypothermia was much more plausible than whatever THE HELL happened at the end of "I'm sorry I love you." That felt like a rip-off, where I was EXPECTING tragedy for A Love to Kill.

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Would it be too much to ask for a drama that's as insane as this one with a HAPPY ending? Y/N?

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Im with you, im not too big of a fan of "I'm sorry I love you" as well, I mean I LOVE the leads.. the music was OKAY.. but yeah. I found the constant flashbacks so so so so so so so annoying!!!! ... every episode there would be a flashback.. and it got worse towards the end.. sigh..

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A ' no' from me. I'm a sucker for happy endings

If Kwon Sang Woo's Cruel Love can take such a big twist and end happy, I dont see why ALTK can't

:)

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Watched this at the beginning of my K-drama craze. Not a fan girl per se of Rain, but definitely LIKE him very much :)

This is a "love it but don't know why" drama for me. Yes, it was full of cliches and stupid plot devices, but it is still a drama a go back to time and again.

The scenes I like to repeat:
- The football scene and lying down in the leaves
- Rain saving drunk Minah in the hotel room
- Rain and Minah's date at the winter place
- Rain's despair when he realised Minah has gone deep into the forest and his failure to save himself and her (SOB!!!)

There are many more - Rain's conflict between revenge and falling for the subject of his revenge was the gist of it and he did a good job. Even though the plot was padded out with way too much melo, all the little moments between the OTP made up for it.

Thanks for the recap, I enjoyed it very much!

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Ooooo........forgot to mention one more fav scene:

The part where Rain brings Minah to a basketball park to sober up. She asked him several innocent but pointed questions where at the end they both end up crying.

God, I'm such a sucker for this drama...

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one of the first kdramas i ever watched....i kinda hated the story but was awed by the cinematography....it was the drama that made me realize how technically superior korean dramas where...

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oops..i meant"...dramas were"

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I honestly thought this drama was one of the most BEAUTIFULLY choreographed dramas of the time. The soundtrack really did make me love it for what it was. I'll admit, I loved the first half of the show, it was fast and full of cliffhangers and definitely got me hooked. Yeah, after his brother got out of the hospital.. no more like towards the show. But i still love it nonetheless.. sigh... i love the song during the part they swim "towards each other". or the part he's slowly driving behind her as she slowly walks home. there's honestly so many beautiful scenes that make this drama unforgettable (well the first half) .

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"Rain, the gateway drug" LOL. You got that right.

I watched about 10 minutes of this but it seemed so bad that I lost interest. Maybe I'll give it another shot sometime, if only to see the vomit-kiss.

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I loooooove this drama! I wasn't such a huge fan of Rain but his acting has completely converted me!

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Thank you Dramabeans for deciding to give this drama a proper recap. Thank you, HeadsNo2, for being the brave blogger to take on this challenge, considering this drama is either well loved or hated with a passion. I, myself, am in the former, and I still love it to this day.

I went into this drama as a Shin Mina fan, and somehow came out as a Rain fan. Rain's acting drew me and I enjoyed the rollercoaster of emotions. It's a shame that there are Rain fans who have not watched this drama. If a non-Rain fan can be converted, how couldn't an existing Rain fan not fall madly in love with him more for it?

I watched this drama when it aired, back in 2005. I was ashamed of the behavior of some fans regarding this pairing(even before the drama aired), especially all the bad mouthing and mud slinging targeted at Shin Mina. It made me a fighter for this actress, and continue to be a devoted fan. Yes, her complexion was not the best, but only the very lucky, with only 5 hours sleep in 3 days, can come out looking like doll. Unfortunately, Mina is not one of those actress who can look put together in the midst of exhausion, but I like her more for that, that she is 'human' with bad skin. (In 2005, Mina released 3 movies and this drama, so it was a very busy year for her.)

I was fine will all the flawed characters, and all their nuances, their obsessions, and the psychological instabilities because it made it more real for me. As for the ending,it didn't bother because in my mind, they could not be together, not with the white elephant of MinGu, still lingering there. We have to remember that Bokgu was devoted entirely to his brother, no one else mattered. Mingu was the catalyst for all the tragedy that came to follow. EunSuk was a pitiful character who was misunderstood by everyone, the girl could not get a break.

As for the kisses, I relished in all the shared kisses for this drama. Their kisses were never just a peck with pursed lips, but full on action, so I appreciate the realism. (and Rain confessed on Strong Heart, that the ramen kiss was his most unforgettable/memorable)

I have learned to view this drama from the prospective of the love between brothers, then you will understand motivation of Bokgu hatred and revenge, and later the motivate of Mingu to forgive.

I cannot wait for the recaps of the other episodes. Thanks again, HeadsNo2!

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wow it's currently 2:14am and i totally MARATHONED this drama. it has been a few hours since i watched the last episode and i still can't get over the fact that the ending...was just "that". i just couldn't understand bokgu's character but partly because i wanted him to throw everything away. perhaps he kept thinking to himself that everything will be "fine", love is not "everything", but ultimately he was only lying to himself. shin mina knew what was going to happen; she wasn't denying the fact that rain took over her entire life. it's just SO SAD. i understand the guilt factor but rain....WHY???

anyhow i'm a shin mina fan, but boy do i love rain now. he better get his hot ass out of the army soon cause this fan girl is going insane right now. i seriously LOVE this drama and i haven't felt this way since city hunter and 49 days. screw the ridiculous plot holes lol, i was sold by their chemistry!

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We get a montage of shirtless Bok-gu taking out his frustrations at on a punching bag. The punching bag, of course, being a clear metaphor for the inner turmoil his survivor’s guilt has caused him as he toes the line of life and death, the swaying motion a symbol for the vicissitudes of fate and the loss of his brother’s love as Bok-gu plays the role of both spectator and master in a poststructuralist world that threatens to engulf him at every turn. (Because this scene wouldn’t just be here for Rain’s abs, right?)

Burst out laughing when I read this haha. XD so true though.

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Thanks 4 the recap. When I watched it yrs ago I was a fan. Now yrs later and a hundred dramas later, I'm still a fan.

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Omo... I just find this one! A Love To Kill.. My Favorite Drama!!

It's definitely my favorite since I dunno whether I love it more or hate it more... Yeah love and hate in exact time..

I love the music score! epic.. really glued to its story!
I love Rain and Shin Mina, and their kiss... wakakakakaka.. for that time drama it was DAEBAK! hahhaha..
I love the cinematography.. it's beautiful..
But I do hate to story... and how they both so stubborn not to fight their love and happiness..

But please... continue to recap this one.. I do love it..

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Thanks for the recap! :)

I had just discovered K-dramas when I watched this back then... and this was one of the very first one I watched. And it will always have a special place in my heart.

There was SO MUCH angst in this drama. I cried buckets throughout the drama, and seriously, my heart ached so much for the lead couple. I was SO MAD about the ending, but I really admire Rain's acting in this drama. *sigh* :)

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"Nelly cheek-bandage"

I don't think I have ever laughed so hard in all of my life.

This drama is next on my list (I am new to the kdrama world), but have heard from friends that it is good and bad and addictive.

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Garbage!

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I liked A love to Kill and it was Rain who made it for me, what a gorgeous man . if you like Rain it wins you like 60% in advance I bet. handsome Rain laying and siting quitely while music playing. and is like he lives this things while doing them, I could see the tireness and bitternes on his face, the pain and everything.

I love the episodes where he and Shin mina were together, and his caracter made sence to me, they made us care for him even when he was an ashole.
there where lots of things that I didnt like of course like the worthless ending or the fact that Shin mina didnt look like a famous actress at all, she didnt had that feel to me except for one scene when she had bangs , looked very pretty , fine and went to look for Kang Bok goo to the gym.
that thing in the plot was weak we should be able to notice right away the class diferences and that would of made the love story more apealing.

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O.M.G. Blown away. You commenters are very articulate; me I'm at a loss for words. The series starts deliciously with his raw fighting and the show ends with me in severe tears. For TWO DAYS! Obviously the Koreans have a way with telling a story, because it does not get any better than this show. holy cow.

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To be honest, I was attracted to this drama just because of Shin Min Ah. After I saw her in MGIAG, I wanted to watch all her dramas. And even though some say that there were time where she didn't look good, I think overall she was so pretty here.
Anyway, knowing that this was a melodrama, I still watched it just because of SMA. But after the 1st episode, I was hooked on the story because there were a lot of cliffhangers which would make you want to watch the next episode. I thought the concept was great and the buildup was okay at first. But as it reached the ninth episode i started skipping some parts because I just cant handle a pure melodrama for how many hours straight. I know it was a melodrama but man it is tough watching a marathon on a melodrama. I was just waiting for Bokgu's big reveal and it took 10 episodes for him to reveal that. I think it's not good for a melo to be dragged too long because it could easily bore audiences due to the fact that there are no comedic moments which would alleviate the depressing mood of the series. And after that I think the whole story fell apart for me. I think it climaxed in the 11th episode and I was disappointed about the progress of the series after Bokgu revealed all. I felt so sorry for Eun Sook (literally) because she didn't do anything to deserve what she got. I mean she was a really good person and I was just affected on how she was treated.
And after the 11th episode, I continued to skip parts just because the story was getting out of hand and I just wanted some kind of new buildup for Eun Sook and Bokgu's love but I didn't see any of that. I was just annoyed by the blind idolatry that Bokgu has with his brother. I mean really? Even though his brother died he still can't confess to Eun sook? Then skipped some parts some more only to be greeted with a WTF ending. Bokgu could have saved her had he went to the hospital when he found her and nobody could have died. I know it's a love story but can't they have some common sense?
And I just didn't feel the air of love between Eun Sook and Bokgu because I think there was small buildup on their love story. It just happened too fast and the next thing you know Eun sook wanted to elope with him.
I really can't express how disappointed I was of this drama in the latter parts because it started so good.

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