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Queen In-hyun’s Man: Episode 15

Awesome. Such a kickass exploration of the consequences of messing with time and fate. So you defeat the baddies and win your freedom and your love. What else is there to fear? As it turns out, a pissed-off mystical talisman is a helluva lot more scary than mere mortals, and more dangerous, especially when it wants its pound of flesh. It’s enough to make you go fetal, biting your nails helplessly. Gulp. Hold me.

I know the finale has aired, but be warned: If you spoil the ending for me, I will hex you.

SONG OF THE DAY

Yozoh – “동경소녀” (Longing girl) [ Download ]

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EPISODE 15 RECAP

That night, after Boong-do joins Hee-jin for good in the present day, Hee-jin lays in bed awash in giddiness. Unable to sleep, she takes out a keepsake box and looks at the talisman Boong-do gave her earlier, telling her, “I have no need of it now. Keep it for me.” Aw, in Boong-do-speak, that’s about as concrete a promise to stay with you as a person could give.

Hee-jin tucks it away in the box, then wonders if she should put it in a secure vault for safekeeping. She’ll take it to the bank tomorrow.

Boong-do calls from his own apartment to ask her a question: “On a clock, does the long hand have to hit the 9 for it to be 45 minutes past the hour?” She confirms, and he rattles off a whole slew of calculations to confirm more clock-related questions, saying that he’d guessed how to read a clock before, “But I should know for sure now.”

Then it’s on to things like “What is Christmas?” Hee-jin: “It’s the day Jesus was born.” Boong-do: “Who’s Jesus?”

I love that Hee-jin squirms at his questions, which are all very simple things that everybody knows, but which are annoyingly difficult to explain from absolute zero. Like his question about why people changed the direction of writing books from right-to-left to left-to-right.

She complains, “Why are you so curious about so many things?” but you can hardly stay upset when he reasons that he should get used to this world quickly so he won’t embarrass her by acting the fool. She’s adorably frustrated as he zooms along on his quest for knowledge: “This thing called a necktie. It seemed as though most working people wear them. What is the reason? They look uncomfortable.”

She thinks of an answer and chirps that there IS a reason for the neckties, and says she’ll go over in person ’cause it’s hard to explain. Are you going to grab him for a kiss? Hee. Either that, or throttle him.

Hee-jin runs across the neighborhood to his place, though he’s all, I wasn’t THAT curious. She picks a tie and explains that wives used to tie these for their husbands in the morning, and demonstrates. Then she pulls him in and gives him a kiss, HA! I knew it.

Hee-jin’s so proud of herself that she dissolves into giggles, crowing that this is the necktie’s purpose. But Boong-do raises not so much as a single eyebrow, and tells her, “When I listen to you, it seems as though the reason for everything in this world is to enable kisses. What kind of lustful world is this?” Hahaha.

She answers, “I didn’t realize, but you’re right. Why, do you dislike it?” He says in his awesome deadpan, “Why would I? It is lustful, and I like it very much.”

Giggling, she looks around for something else to “explain” and leads him away. He smiles, “I am curious for yet another absurd kissing explanation.”

It’s 3 am when Soo-kyung wakes up and finds Hee-jin gone, grumbling in annoyance. Hee-jin’s snoozing on Boong-do’s arm as he reads in bed, and mumbles sleepily, “Just twenty more minutes.” After all, her place is only five minutes away—a thought that makes her marvel, since it wasn’t long ago that he had to travel 300 years each time to be with her.

As she falls asleep, she arranges a date for tomorrow, telling him he can study in the morning, but after that it’s time to play. The next afternoon she leaves the drama set in high spirits, with Soo-kyung sending her off with warnings to be careful while they’re in public.

Hee-jin finds Boong-do waiting for her at a restaurant and notes his knotted tie. He tells her that his teacher taught him all the wrong things, so he had to resort to figuring it out himself. She promises to order him something tasty, but he says he already ordered: mushroom cream fettuccine. He has no idea what it is, “But surely it won’t kill me.”

Cut to: Boong-do, struggling to choke down his rich pasta. Hee-jin points out cheekily that he ought to have taken her recommendation, ’cause he probably feels like he’s dying right now. Boong-do manages a twisted smile and says it’s good; if his expression looks funny, it’s because he’s agog over its deliciousness.

Cutely, she keeps poking fun (“You’re done eating already? But you said it’s delicious”) and he refuses to admit he chose badly (“It’s so delicious, I am trying to savor it”).

She offers him her tomato-based spaghetti, but he keeps refusing it, determined to see his meal through. Then she feeds him a bite, he registers the difference, and immediately swaps plates. A-dor-a-ble.

They sit there with feet interlocked, sharing a plate, re-creating the Lady & Tramp noodle-kiss. Boong-do notes, “I should eat this every day.”

They’ve had a running conversation throughout the show about going to visit Florence, and now that he’s settling here, Hee-jin wants to take the trip. Say next month, after her drama wraps. As they walk through the park after eating, she notes that their big problem will be the passport—that might get complicated.

Boong-do assures her he’ll take care of it, because he’s doing some reading on how to create an identity. Ha. She says he’s turning into a criminal, and he says there’s no other way.

He wonders at the street cart selling cotton candy, and Hee-jin tells him it’s super-spicy. He knows she’s messing with him again and points out that everyone’s eating it happily, and she returns that it’s ’cause they’re “agog” at the taste.

He gets up to buy one (she requests three), and they send googly eyes at each other, perfectly content. I’m starting to feel uneasy because this much happiness can’t last… and then Boong-do disappears. ACK!

He literally just poofs away. Hee-jin looks away for a second and turns back to find him vanished. Whaaaa?

Boong-do reappears in the forest, registering the change with confusion. Then a piece of yellow paper flutters down from the sky and lands at his feet: his talisman? How’d it get here from Hee-jin’s keepsake chest? A chill just went down my spine.

Hee-jin missed the moment of disappearance and looks around for any sign of him. Her call doesn’t go through, and she starts to feel uneasy. Boong-do tries his phone as well, but gets nothing.

He sees a pair of travelers walking nearby, dressed in Joseon garb, and looks down at the talisman. Just as a dark shadow creeps over it, turning the yellow black. Oh holy hell. That shiver I felt a moment ago? That’s nothing compared to the one I feel now.

Hee-jin calls Soo-kyung and asks her to check her box for her, and confirms that the talisman isn’t there.

Boong-do thinks back to caveats that came attached with the talisman: that it wouldn’t necessarily “obey” his will just because it belonged to him, or Yoon-wol’s will because she requested it, or the monk’s because he wrote it.

He heads to the gisaeng establishment in search of Yoon-wol, dressed in black and hiding his face under a large hat. She’s currently entertaining at a party, though the other gisaengs note that she stepped aside to restring her gayageum and has been away a while.

With that tip, Boong-do heads for a back room, and finds not Yoon-wol but an enormous muthafuckin’ smear of blood on the floor. Oh crap. On the bloodstained step outside, he finds a hairpin. He follows the trail of blood and spots another pin and a red sash on the ground.

Boong-do quickens his steps and continues, until he sees something that makes him drop those clues altogether: Yoon-wol’s body, slumped over, her neck ravaged and bloody. Boong-do registers her death and breaks down in tears.

In flashback, we see what happened: Ja-soo attends one of the parties and is in a foul mood as he drinks alone outside. He spots Yoon-wol walking across the courtyard, carrying her gayageum, and follows her to the back room. He accuses her of feeling complacent now that Minister Min is dead, furiously cutting her down with his sword. Then he drags her body out, leaving her where she now lies.

Boong-do cries as he places the fallen pin back into Yoon-wol’s hair, then gets up with furious purpose. He finds a gisaeng, asking where the guest with the sword is. He bursts into that room with eyes burning, gripping his sword, and removes the hat to reveal his face.

Ja-soo is, naturally, shocked, since Boong-do is supposed to be dead. But he’s not too concerned with the particulars of how this is possible, because at least now he gets to kill him. He charges Boong-do, and the other partygoers run screaming as the two men engage in a knock-down drag-out fight.

Ja-soo’s the first to score an injury, slicing Boong-do across the arm. Boong-do is fueled by wrath and fights back hard, but he sustains a second injury, across the leg.

Their blades lock in a clash, with Boong-do on the defensive… and then Boong-do does something shocking. He lets his blade slide away, so that Ja-soo’s sword is cutting down directly onto his shoulder, and he grabs the blade directly with his bare hand. Ack! What can he mean to do?

Boong-do musters the strength to throw Ja-soo’s sword off with his bare hand, then hurls his sword at him like a javelin. (Ah, he was freeing his blade so he could launch it.) He misses and his sword embeds in the wood paneling instead, but Boong-do is so enraged that Ja-soo is spooked.

Boong-do is unarmed, but charges anyway right at Ja-soo, never mind the fact that Ja-soo’s holding up his sword and shoves it into his side. WHAT. ARE. YOU. DOING. What happened to, I want to live? Boong-do’s charge literally impales himself upon Ja-soo’s sword, but amazingly, he continues his mission: Kill Ja-soo, no matter what.

With the sword still stuck in his side, Boong-do grabs his own from the wall and surprises Ja-soo with a slice across the throat, sending him slumping to the ground. Dead. Well, thank the lord for that, but what about YOU?

Hee-jin paces in the now-empty park, loath to leave it, while Boong-do travels to the temple to see the monk, who is relieved to see him alive after all. Boong-do tells him that Yoon-wol, however, is dead. He was unable to bring her body for fear of being caught, but he feels she would have wanted to be brought here and asks the monk to see to it.

In the morning, the gibang is a crime scene, with Ja-soo and a number of his minions lying dead. The police try to make sense of the bloodbath, and why the killer asked after Yoon-wol, who also lies dead.

The monk warns Boong-do that the authorities are looking for him and urges him to hasten his departure. Boong-do agrees that he should leave, lest the reappearance of a dead man breed new chaos, but wonders if that is no longer a possibility. Taking out the talisman, he shows it to the monk—it has turned completely black.

Boong-do says it changed the moment Yoon-wol died. Ah, so he sensed something of that sort when the talisman transformed in his hand. The monk seems to think Yoon-wol was what called him back, while Boong-do wonders whether the principle of the talisman will still hold, saving him at the moment of death.

Hee-jin is still in the park in the morning, telling herself that he’ll come back while brushing away tears.

Boong-do makes his way to his secret spot in the forest where he makes his time-leaps, finding his modern clothing. He changes, then takes the blackened talisman to test whether it works. Eeeek. It’s not a face of confidence he wears, and he must be bracing for possible death, but what choice has he?

He holds the blade to his throat, which must be how he has been making his leaps all along. (One quick slash triggers the jump.) He closes his eyes and starts to draw the blade… and poof. Oh thank god.

Boong-do reappears in the park to sounds of modern life, and now his phone turns on. Hee-jin answers in tears, and he apologizes for worrying her.

He’s surprised that she’s still in the park and spots her off in the distance, sitting where he left her. He makes his way toward her and says that there was some trouble with the talisman, then asks if she’d stayed the entire night. She cries, “Of course, where else could I wait when this is where you disappeared?”

She sees him now, approaching her, and he speeds up his pace to run the last distance toward her… and then he disappears. NO!

She looks around frantically. He sees his Joseon clothing on the ground, marking his return, and his eyes well with tears like he’s realized he’s in some sort of Time-enforced prison. Resistance is futile—how can you beat a mystical power greater than yourself?

He falls to his knees and cries. So does she.

That night, Boong-do says goodbye to the monk, saying that the head monk is his last hope. He’s making the long journey to find him.

Soo-kyung stews all day waiting for Hee-jin, then storms off to Boong-do’s apartment to confront her, only to find Hee-jin slumped alone in the empty house. Soo-kyung wonders what’s the cause of all her mood swings, then curses “that rotten bastard” for doing this to her, determined to fight this one out. Where is he? When’s he coming home?

Hee-jin says brokenly, “What do I do? I might not be able to see him again. I think that was the end.” She clings to Soo-kyung sobbing, “How can that be the end? How could this be?”

Boong-do rides all day, and the next. And then, we cut to one month later.

Hee-jin goes through the motions of daily life in a daze, while Boong-do rides on, nearly falling off his horse in exhaustion. Finally he arrives at his destination, clinging to his one hope. But it’s only bad news that awaits him: The head monk died last month.

Boong-do falls into despair, thinking of Hee-jin crying for him. He contemplates the talisman; he’d explained to the monk that when it ripped, the other world reset, as though he’d never been there. Uh-oh, are you thinking what I’m afraid you’re thinking?

He’d asked the monk if the same would happen again, and if Hee-jin would also forget him this time. He’d blinked back tears as he explained that there would be someone worrying herself sick waiting for him, “But I have no way of getting there. If it takes a year, or ten, if only I could go there I would. But I can’t go. If she were to wait for me in sadness, would it not be better for her to forget me entirely?”

Now he wonders if burning the talisman would erase all those memories.

Boong-do sits at a desk, putting ink to paper. He writes that this is a letter for both her and for himself, as he doesn’t know whether he’ll even remember that he wrote it.

“When I first came into possession of this talisman, I wanted to know what its cause and effect were. At first, I thought it was the realization of my frustrated dream. Then, I thought that its effect may have been meeting you. After that, I thought that effect could be to start anew in a different world. But now, belatedly I realize that its cause and effect is that for saving my life, I would lose everything. My future, my name, my values, my people. And you too. To gain life, one must pay a price and lose something else—that is obvious logic. That I believed I could keep one of those things was my own foolishness. How much more will I have to lose to satisfy that price? Not being able to meet you again—that such a thing is a luxury is something I have now realized.”

Both are crying now, in their respective times. Boong-do as he writes, and Hee-jin as she sits in the rain, back in the park. He continues:

“Memories. Our memories… Losing them is the final price. I do not know what happens now. Will we forget each other? Or will we live unable to forget, forever tormented?”

Hee-jin comes home soaked from rain.

“If I have a last wish, I want to remember you. In an aimless life, to not even have those memories would be hell. And you… and you… if you should happen to read this letter far into the future, I pray you will not realize for whom this letter is meant.”

Boong-do finishes writing, folds up the letter, and takes out his talisman. It is entirely black, with no traces of writing still visible. He burns it.

 
COMMENTS

Glug… glug… glug… Drowning in tears, here.

I figured talisman issues would be the final stretch for this drama, now that Boong-do has seemingly vanquished all other foes and has only to live out his happily ever after to make the story complete. Or so we think. But I hadn’t expected things to turn so dire. It’s both terrible (for our hearts) and wonderful (narratively). The bigger the ditch you dig for your characters, the more gratifying when they find their way out. Some dramas get overambitious and can’t quite pull off that latter part, but I have faith in Queen In-hyun’s Man.

If the drama had ended with Episode 14, I would’ve been perfectly happy with the resolution, ’cause I would have gotten 14 episodes of taut storytelling and a satisfying romantic conclusion. It may have occurred to me, somewhere in the far reaches of my mind, that the talisman issue hadn’t been entirely explained, and I would have possibly wondered how Boong-do’s faked death would have been enough to satisfy the talisman’s demands, per Yoon-wol’s warnings of calamity. But I would have been, by and large, content to let those slide.

Thus it’s to the show’s credit that it doesn’t rest upon that complacency and pushes further, driving our characters completely off that cliff instead of teasing us with a fall and then pulling them back at the last moment. I’m impressed with how seriously it takes the issue of the talisman’s retribution, and a chill went down my spine during Boong-do’s letter when he outlined the cost required to put things to rest, because it made a damn lot of sense that he would have to give up everything, even as my stomach sank with the realization.

I’m tempted to blame Yoon-wol for short-sightedly giving him the talisman in the first place, only then he’d have died earlier. I don’t feel that his life would have been better without her giving it to him, but the cost is just painful enough to make you wonder. In that sense, it really is an equal exchange; you get away with some stolen time and a wonderful series of experiences, but you can’t have your cake and eat it too. Boong-do may continue on harboring a lifetime of grief, but he wouldn’t exchange what the talisman gave him for blissful ignorance, and for that I respect him and the depth of his feeling.

I love how the drama takes us to the darker side of the fallout of cheating death, in a way that so doesn’t gloss it over in rosier hues. Other stories do that because logic gets in the way of romance, and those that don’t tend to be horror stories (Final Destination and its ilk). I appreciate that this show doesn’t let its characters off the hook in search of that happy ending; yes it tends to put a damper on things, but when you can satisfy both cold logic and emotional gratification is when you really nail the question at the heart of time-travel conundrums. Otherwise they’re not really conundrums, just convenient plot devices.

When the show turned Boong-do’s (comedic) momentary panic over possibly liaising with Queen In-hyun into a bigger plot point, I mentioned being impressed with its thoughtful preparation of such a storyline. It managed not to give away the setup for the future slander by working the issue into the moment, so that when it came back later it was an unforeseen turn, but not one that came as a shock.

We have another of those moments in Episode 15, when Boong-do makes his last trip back to the present/future. I’ve wondered at the exact mechanism of Boong-do’s time-leaping in past episodes, but I’d assumed the drama was sparing us needless repetition and chose to cut those moments out. It wasn’t too hard to figure that he was somehow endangering himself, in the way that he once forced Han-dong to shoot him with an arrow.

But it turns out this was a calculated omission, because only now do we see what the actual act of leaping requires, and it makes this instance incredibly harrowing because we don’t know whether it will work. It’s a nerve-wracking scene, and purposefully so. Great choice by the writer/director to withhold that, because it almost gave me a heart attack in this episode. It’s human nature to want to use our tools right away rather than patiently saving them for delayed gratification, but it’s worth the effect.

A side note: Apparently the drama had completed eight scripts prior to the start of filming. It shows. This practice isn’t always a surefire thing (Thousand Day Promise, for instance, also had about that many scripts in the can ahead of time and that drama meandered painfully), but really, this should be standard procedure. If you must insist on operating within the frantic last-minute live-shoot system to satisfy fan demands, then so be it—revise on the fly. But write beforehand. At the very least, it gives your cast some idea of where they’re going; it’s a lot easier to put your faith in a show when it’s excellent for eight scripts than when you’ve just got an interesting synopsis.

Finally, I have to say I’m super excited that the talisman was burnt. Before this episode, I was generally fine believing Boong-do and Hee-jin could have their blissful ending, but felt uneasy at the idea that they’d have to live their lives fearing for the talisman’s safety. Now that it’s gone, if—when—they reunite, I’ll finally feel that they’ve cleared all obstacles. I have no idea HOW, of course, but I have no doubt they’ll get there.

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Yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay! Thanks for the recap, JB! T_T

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Thank you so much for re-capping this drama. I would never have watched it if not for your re-caps and that would have been such a shame.

This episode just broke my heart. I have faith in an HEA, so I guess we'll just see where the next episode takes us.

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My heart sank when I realized Javabeans would be doing 15, so *hugs* Such a good and painful episode.

So much love for this show. Its going to be hell waiting for the last 2 episodes to be subbed, but there is no way I am watching 15 without 16.

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That is wise (not to watch 15 until 16 is subbed)!

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i need some air... this drama is killing me, but in a good way. =p

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To date, I have only seen 15 and 16 raw. When I had seen 15 but 16 wasn't available, I could pretty much figure out what was going on, but I had no idea what he was writing, of course. I happened on a translation of the letter on Tumblr, and I swear to God my heart broke hearing his words. It was bad before I knew what he said...but after? I was a wreck for this show.

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HELPPPPP PLEASEE!!

There is only one thing i'm confused about.
So only he is able to time travel right?

But then how is it on the second time he traveled, the assassin came with him ??
(the time when he killed the assassin infront of Hee Jin and his blood went on her dress)

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The theory is that the talisman opened a portal - a door - between the two times - whoever was in the portal at the time was swept in with him.
It only happened once, but the potential was always there.

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Thank you, again, for recapping this one.
This drama has been perfect for me at every step because I am completely invested in this OTP's happiness.

I like that neither of them were particularly broken or sad before they met.
HJ could have hooked up again with DM and had a little while-it-lasted-drama-romance (Hmmm sounds familiar...)
While BD's reality was not sunny - headed for disaster because of his family tie to the wrong political party - his life would have been lived honorably with no regrets.

Their chance meeting becomes a complete GIFT from the universe. Nobody deserved it, or earned it. It just happened. That makes it very normal to me, and their romance is very relatable.

They are the most normal OTP in the history of Kdrama, almost mundane. Cute ballsy girl meets smart, polite adventurer. Sparks fly, and their growing attraction becomes something neither can ignore.
Curiosity, concern, giddiness, touching, reflecting on the other, telling other people about their new love. All normal.
(When BD LOL's at the monk's description of HJ as a fairy, we KNEW he was hooked. He was already gobsmacked. Game cutchee.)

Their circumstances are extraordinary, yes, and that is what moved the plot along.

To me, HJ made this romance real. Seriously, BD real? I don't think so. He IS the man of our dreams. He IS who I will forever picture as the character most likely to cheer me up when I am blue. In every freaking scene in every freaking episode he was hot, kissing like master, talking like a the playeriest player that every played EVER.

I lived HJ's soaring moods with her, and I whimpered when she did. I felt BD's loss because of how she cried, wordlessly, through all the sad parts.

When BD disappeared in Ep 15, I screamed with HJ.
When he disappeared the second time, I had a heart attack, too. And when SK was comforting HJ on the floor near the bed, I felt like someone had ripped my heart out of my body and stamped it.

I was sick to my stomach the whole day after this episode.

We often question our sanity for doing this to ourselves, living through these characters, but I have to tell you, THIS was a ride I will NEVER forget. No matter how it ends, I am grateful that I got to share have this story in my brain and heart for two months.

I also think it wonderful that our hive brain experienced it together on this site and all over the interwebs.
What a wonderful lustful Kdrama world we live in!

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so very well said. I love him, of course, as the most perfect man ever: tall, handsome, emotionally available, good kisser, brave, loyal, etc etc etc. But I ADORED Hee Jin. Everything she felt, I felt right along with her. I am as far from a tiny squeeky aegyo-giving Korean girl as they come, and I felt like I was experiencing it all, right along with her, because the universal truths of falling in love were so amazingly well portrayed. I don't know if that's lightening in a bottle or not and she was just playing herself or she's a fantastic actor...but even if this is all there is of them, I'm happy.

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Yes! the universal truths of falling in love were so amazingly well portrayed

I credit the director for the scenes when he allowed us to watch them stare silently at each other.

That was the first thing that drew me in.

Those moments IRL are the ones to cherish. The thrill of catching and holding the other person's eye, the reluctance to walk away, the palpable PULL you feel emanating from the other, coming up with any reason to stay and not break the trance...PD had it nailed.

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Wonderful comment. Always look forward to your comments, jomo! I felt the same way you did.. Thought my heart had been wrenched out after this episode. (All of us are definitely going to go through withdrawal now that this drama has ended..) Like JoAnne and you mentioned, one of the drama's greatest qualities was its ability to portray their romantic relationship in a realistic manner, despite the drama's impossible premise. I'm glad that this drama allowed their relationship to grow organically, and it was such a breath of fresh air to see two young people who were exploring their relationship without stupid obstacles (ie the bickering stage. Though I enjoy that too). Ahhhhhh how I will miss you, QIHM. I could go on and on but I'll save my ranting for tomorrow. (excuse me if this comment doesn't make much sense. I'm grieving over the end of this amazing drama.) Dramas like QIHM truly make watching dramas (and actually watching and being invested) worthwhile.

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You're right. Oh, dear.

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Kudos to the scriptwriter for making every episode exciting and leave us wanting for more. Episode 15 was so darn heart wrenching and both leads were pretty amazing in their respective scenes <3

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One great thing about this drama (of so many other great reasons to watch) is you got 3 ending for the series. You can watch the series to the end of eps 14 or 15 or 16. All those would make a perfect end! Choose yourself! ^^

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Haha woah! You're right!! I didn't think about ep 15 being an ending as well! Very poignant, but beautiful... :D

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I may be just satisfied with 14 too ^^

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Totally :).

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oof. this episode took my heart. all-time favorite episode of any kdrama ever lol

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I think it might be worth noting that the opening scene to this drama that had so much going on in it may be a precursor as to the ending??? I havent watched episode 16 yet as i need english subtitles but since that scene hasnt yet happened maybe its going to? Or maybe its sonething that happened when the story was happening. But why would she meet him outside the palace and not the park as is usual. I dont know im just desperate for a happy ending.

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<3
thanks for the recap!

will you be crazed enough, like the rest of us, to recap the two specials episodes the way you have with Hong Gil Dong?

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PLEASE!!! PLEASE!!! PLEASE!!!

Although i will totally understand why Dramabean will not...

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Wow is all I can say, great episode! Big mahalo's for the re-cap!!! Enjoyed this drama from the beginning now to the end, awwww. Can't wait ep 16 : )

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This drama breaks my heart. T_T <3 In a good way. I just love this drama so much...

I'm going to go to Korea during the summer and I'm planning on buying the DVD. I have to have it. T_T <3

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Boong-do: "Who's Jesus?" I'll never really understand why but that question cracked me up.

*Sigh* this episode basically broke my heart. To say I was a bawling mess when he was writing the letter, doesn't even cover it. It was like I had lost the love of MY life. It was painful and beautiful all at the same time.
It's not the first time they've been separated, but each time it happens it's like a fresh wound, surprising, bleeding, and so damn painful.
I think what made it worse was the desperation of the moment when they were trying to get back to each other. It felt like a mixture of relief to be together again and panic of another instant separation.
I really have to credit the writer for taking ordinary drama cliches and shaping them in a way that they actually enhance the story, rather than make the audience roll their eyes and groan "Here we go again."
Off the top of my head there's amnesia, repeated fate, and now noble idiocy.And by noble idiocy, I'm referring to Boong-do's burning the talisman.

Now I'm not trying to say that his decision to do it was a dumb idea, far from it. But that it goes with the typical set up: Lead couple comes up against seemingly impossible odds to be together (ie. parent's don't approve, living abroad, career complications, etc.) Hero or heroine decides to end relationship to end the conflict, and the significant other will move on. Break up happens, usually over something stupid, like starting a fight, saying he or she hates/never really loved the other person, etc. There are other forms, I know, but this one fit the best.

However, in terms of Boon-do and Hee-jin's case, as of right now, their situation IS pretty impossible. People can go against family wishes, do long distance relationships, find new jobs, whatever, but defying time, hundreds of years of it? Combined with a vengeful talisman that's pissed off to the max? That's pretty much your worst case scenario right there.

So it especially broke my heart when Boong-do made the decision to destroy the talisman. Because he did it in hopes that Hee-jin would truly forget about him. No more memories, nor more missing him, no more wondering and worrying if he would return. He did it to spare her from heartbreak. And yet, even though he doesn't want Hee-jin to suffer, he still wants to remember HER. He'll take the heartbreak of NEVER seeing her again over never knowing they even met. And that's the best kind of noble idiocy I've ever heard of.

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The idea of purposely losing the memories to help avoid the pain of the loss is very Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

And equally heartbreaking film about being in love, ESotSM is one of my all time favorites.

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Dear Javabeans, I have been a fan of this site for many years, and have never posted, but I absolutely loved your recaps. And like many others here I would like to thank you from the bottom of my heart for writing QIHM, without which I would never have watched it in the first place, since I was following er-hem, RTP due to Micky Yoochun. I have been watching Kdrama since Winter Sonata (God I sound old), I have spazzed over many shows from Coffee Prince to Sungkyunkwan Scandal which remain on my all time favourite list. But after watching for so many years, a sense of weariness has set in, seeing the same storylines and elements being churned out ad nauseum with different faces. It became quite difficult to excite me. Then came QIHM.
I did not even KNOW both actors going into the show (me bad) but I fell hard and I fell fast, pretty much like Hee Jin. Boong Do is pretty much my idea of the absolute PERFECT man (much to the devastation of my husband) - a swashbuckling NERD, who is thoughtful and caring at the same time. Die.
Everything about the story was beautifully written, sometimes it is so simple it hurts, so funny I am giggling like a crazy girl of 18 (again like Hee Jin at the necktie scene - is it because we were both lustful??), and so so heartbroken when he wrote that letter (I cannot stop raving about the letter which is PERFECT writing) which I have already memorized. And don't even get me started on the combustible chemistry between the leads.
QIHM - after 10 years of drama watching, you are Number 1.

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I read your comment and it resonated with me so much that I had to reply. You've said what was in my mind and did it so eloquently. A big thank you to you and all the commentators, and to dramabeans for making this drama extra special to watch.

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I can only say arghhhhhhhhhhhh....it hurts so much..but the review is excellent!

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Dramabeans - Javabeans, HeadsNo2, and Girlfriday, thank you for the recaps. I had had no interest whatsoever in this drama until I read Javabeans' first recap. And I am so thankful that I did tune in subsequently. This drama is a gem. One of a kind.

It made me want to return to academia, just so I can write about this stuff.

I'm now having QIHM withdrawal.

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Me too!!!

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The Boong-Do Factor™

It will affect EVERY drama I watch from this point on ~

* lead male gets pissy and grabs wrist
(says to myself, "Boong-Do would never do that")

* lead male intentionally causes lead female to endure public humiliation
(says to myself, "Boong-Do would never do that")

* lead male oogles other women or flip-flops around with former/first love
(says to myself, "Boong-Do would never do that")

.....and so on.
Respectful, yet willingly accepts Hee-Jin's (aka KissBandit) made up stories about how virtually everything leads to giving or receiving a kiss. (giddy sigh)

There's just NO OTHER comparision....it's ONLY.....

Boong-Do. (っ˘з(˘⌣˘ ) ~ ♥

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'tis too true.

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yes i agree.. K-dramaland should stop creating chaebol, arrogant characters who bullies & is harsh towards the female lead...thank God the writer created none of these nonsense in Kim Bongdo, in fact he protected her, and love her in the best way he can..i still remember he told Heejin "You are not dumb, just that u did not try harder" wahh i melted

if i could have another character that could match Bongdo awesomeness, it would have to be Park Kyu (Im Juhwan) from Tamra the Island but then,now Kim Bongdo is my num 1 fav
character

I guess maybe sageuk characters r much better created :p

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Well, sallyb, there were quite a few hands on wrist moments,
although not pissy ones.
Both characters got all handsey moving their counterpart around willy nilly.

LOVED that she did it as much as he did.

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“Boong-Do would never do that” Sageuks often include scholarly quotations from Confucius. The samurai lived by the bushido code. Will future dramas include references to the Boong-Do code? Some future chaebol will be acting like a jerk and the plucky girl will cite, “Boong-Do would never do that”.

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김붕도의 서신은 정말 감동적이다.
김붕도 안녕!!!

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I LOVE this drama...thank you Dramabean for the recaps cos I onlay started on it after reading 2 recaps..Gosh..what would I have missed out!!!

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Omg yay, another recap, thank you so much JB! :D

This episode was just epic. I knew that the last two eps had to deal with Ja-soo and the talisman and I knew that the cute wasn't going to last because I watched the preview, but I had NO idea that they actually had the guts to go so far and do this. Man, Boong-do completely breaking down into tears was heartbreaking. And when he wrote that letter...and when he said he hoped she would never know that it was for her...I just started crying. And Yoon-wol, lying there all bloody and crumpled...gah. This whole episode just killed me. In a good way.

"...we see what the actual act of leaping requires, and it makes this instance incredibly harrowing because we don’t know whether it will work." - agree, so much. I was biting my nails frantically in that scene, and then when he jumped, I let out this HUUUGE sigh of relief...only to have him disappear again. The things this drama does to my heart.

And I'm still completely devastated that QIHM has ended. It's ended. No more episodes. WHY. T_T At least there's still one more recap to wait for. Really excited for all your thoughts on the finale!

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Hi JB, what do you mean by 'completed 8 scripts'? Did the writer rewrite/revise her script 7 times?

Thanks for the super fast recap btw! Looking forward to your take on the final episode!

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Maybe that means scripts for that many episodes.
So the first part of the story was not influenced by the live shoot system - lack of sleep, pressure from viewers/network, and the temptation to go back and revise something that may have been just fine in the first place.

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i see... thanks for the clarification!

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Cried buckets of tears watching this episode.. T w T

But it turns out this was a calculated omission, because only now do we see what the actual act of leaping requires, and it makes this instance incredibly harrowing because we don’t know whether it will work. It’s a nerve-wracking scene, and purposefully so.

One of my favorite scenes of the episode. I had been wondering whether those scenes would ever be shown (and was a little confused cause it never explicitly showed him coming to the future with a weapon in his hands), but I'm glad they withdrew those scenes from us. It had a lot more dramatic impact as a result.

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I love this drama, this is my favourite drama so far currently ranking no 1. there is nothing to hate, and i fell in love with Kim dong Bo character. he is such a natural player, he wont admit it. every word that he utters and every steps that he takes is the right thing to me. but that name kinda remind me of the psycho character in K2H. i am hesitate to watch this at first becoz of YIN, i dont hate her but i am not a fan. but i am so glad i tried to watch it, this ji hyun woo guy just made into my top 10 kdrama hero list .JB and GF i dont know how much would u rate this but probably wont less than 9 right? coz for me its 9.5 /10.

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Sorry RTP fans, i thought Yigak letter to park Ha was touching, but Kim Bongdo's letter was awesomely breath taking - its touching, romantic & heart breaking at the same time, my tears welled up every time i reread the letter he has given to Heejin...his love to heejin makes him wish he will never forget her even if it is tormenting him but he just wish heejin will live to see this beautiful piece of letter without knowing it is for her as he does not want her to live a life suffering from a lost love. The sacrifice of true love

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I felt relieved that Yun-Wol is dead,
it means , she doesn't have to live her life in longing of
a person that is alive but she can't have.

I felt justified for Yun-Wol, what a good turn out of events for her, now it Boong-Dos turn to feel and live what she has live all her life. She can't have Bong-Do, and Bong-DO cant have his girl either. Isn't it sweet.

So it is just appropriate or right, that the Talisman must lost it's power , when the writer as well as the requester are dead. It's really good that it happens now rather than waiting for these people to live their lifetime when Bong-Do Hee-Jin already invested a lot of time together, might have some babies in the process and all of a sudden, POOF!

Of all the characters I hated Jasoo, but out of the character, he is HANDSOME, more handsome than Bong-Do. squeeeelll

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OMG They were BOTH so hot in that last fight scene, weren't they?
I kept flipping between fangirling and wincing.

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Who else thought Payphone would've made a great addition to the soundtrack??

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Only one thing to say about this episode: DAEBAK!!!

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Omg I'm totally in tears right now... Got to watch the finale now!!! Thanks for the recap!!!

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Thank you for the recaps JB.
Waiting for your thoughts on the finale though...

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Since everyone fells in love with Ji Hyun Woo, I find this link featuring him singing "I bring sexy back" . Hope you enjoy this. I think he is very cute in this performance.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVWAgboUvT0

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I love the necktie kiss and the way Hee Jin giggles and the facial expression of Kim boong do. I watched it raw for several times, and am dying for waiting the English sub to to come out in kimchidramas or dramacrazy. Glad to know that I'm not alone to think that Boongdo - Heejin is the best couple in dramaland for this past 10 years. Me too tired of that so called childish chaebol. And then there comes Boong do, with all his trait that fits him perfectly. Though ep 14 was quite a satisfying ending, yet I'd not complain for additional 2 episodesas long as it ends happily.

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I am emotionally drained after watching this episode. I believe the recap saved me from rolling on the floor crying endlessly. The scene where Yun Wol is killed and dragged across the floor broke my heart. I was never super invested in her, only wished her well but for her to meet her end like that was so cruel; Ja So killing was too swift! He needed to suffer a thousand needles of poison to suffer a slow, excruciating death. Watching both Hee Jin and Boong Do fall to their knees in tears...the scene is indubitably etched into my soul! Ms Song, whatever you come out with next, I am SO going to watch!

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Thank you for awesome recap, JB!

I finally managed to watch this today. One more to go.

This episode is a total emotional roller coaster. How could they get from such cuteness overload into sobfest in just 45minutes?? Aaargh!

How I love HeeJin and her cute giggles in the "Why Men Wear Necktie" and her constant needling in "Do you regret what you order?"

And then... bloody Yoon Wol... that's damn shocking! Most drama will just show the blood, but this... blood on the floor, on the pathway and the act of ja-soo dragging her body... speechless...

And of course the suicide act, finally my question on how he travel back and forth from episode 7 is answered and it's indeed harrowing. How can a man be this determined?

And, the desperation at the end. At this point, I just hope they could find another way to cross the 300 year time, but how?

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God, I cried like a baby when Boong-Do was writing that letter. And when he was going to slice his throat just to get back to Hee-Jin I was literally going NO NO NO NO NO! Ah christ, this drama is going to kill me. Show, please let them be together in the end. I don't think my heart can take any more of this.

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javabeans~

Thank you for the recap, all of you have done a wonderful job.

So much packed in to this episode. I'm anxiously awaiting the subs for the finale.

The necktie scene.. I thought someone was going to get tied up.. Think of the possibilities there fans.. Tsk tsk, shame on me.

This drama is such a treat. Comedy, romance, drama

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John - Stop putting exceptionally good ideas into my head!!!!!!!!

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i was thinking of something more.. kinky. the kiss is adorable anyway~ =p

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This show is freaking awesome!!!
It's been so long I find myself so immersed in a drama, and the lives of the characters. Thank you for reviewing.

And one more thing I wanna say, I don't know why DB doesn't have a music category. I ALWAYS play the music recommended when reading the reviews, and the piece chosen for this ep...Man, I cried buckets reading the part when KBD was writing the letter while listening to the music in the background.

Yet again, another fine choice of music. ;)

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it feels so good to watch a drama where the male lead isn't some immature or arrogant brat who doesn't have the slightest idea about love or how to treat women.

both the leads are equally grown up, (though not intellectually, teehee) they fell in love, naturally, because they need each other. they appreciate the existence of one another and treasure it every time they have the chance. it's poignant, and sooo swoon worthy.

boong do will remain as one of the few characters i love to insanity in k dramas. he's up there with city hunter, kim seung yu & lee se ryeong (princess' man), and chwa chi soo (ramen shop, because chi soo is just awesome no mater how immature he is. he's my only exception mwahaha). his purpose remains to achieve justice and never wavers even in the face of fate and when he can so easily leave his messy, nothing but trouble joseon for 2012, where he can reunite with his dearly beloved.

he stands tall in the face of, anything, like seriously anything, he's just so cool and composed, and he doesn't fool around (except with heejin, sometimes, hee)
i think it's safe to say that almost everyone caught the boong do withdrawal syndrome after watching QIHM, deservedly so.

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This show rocks. It was evident early on and it it never faltered, didn't waiver, no WTH (F) moments .

An instant classic. This keeps you wanting more from start to finish. Hats off to all involved. A job well done.

Thanks go out to our hosts. Thank you, javabeans , girl friday, headsno2, gummimochi, and kaedejun. Thanks to all DB posters for making this site what it is.

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Utterly depressed that Yoon Wol died. She was an innocent bystander in Minister Min's conniving game of politics, and after her master left, she was merely trying to live out her unhappy gisaeng life. I can understand why the talisman turned black, like a rose wilting at its creator's death, but I wonder why Boong Do wrote he lost his values in killing Ja Soo. In my eyes, avenging Yoon Wol's death is not betraying one's values.

I was swooning at all the lovey-dovey~ Hee Jin smiling while drifting off to sleep is true bliss. Dammit, how did I not know their happiness would be short-lived? Boong Do's self-sacrifice ("If I have a last wish, I want to remember you.") kills me. Burning the talisman is the only way to find out whether our couple even has a remote chance at staying together. I also appreciate this episode for answering my burning question of whether Boong Do was attempting suicide in order to time-warp.

Another wonderful recap, javabeans; thanks!

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Awaiting anxiously for your comments about ep16. With your recap, hopefully comes final closure for me!:D

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No, you never do. All romances shade in comparison. They have to have something different about them to be good. Boong Do becomes the male template which we may not see again for a very long time.

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I think that's the best recap I've ever read. Yes yes yes a thousand times to everything you said. Thank you, javabeans!

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Vote for your favorite 2012 drama @ http://polldaddy.com/poll/6291076/

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i am checking every hour for ep 16 recap... i enjoyed , loved the drama but i have this mix feelings about ep 16..so looking forward to read your recap..

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Me too but after reading a lot of different blogs, my mind is satisfied.

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I have yet to watch the last 2 episodes. I would have been satisfied and happy if it ended at Epi 14! LOL Now I have to brace myself for more tears!

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Thank you javabeans, girlfriday, headsno2 for all ur hard work on qihm recaps u guys rock! QIHM is my all time #1 Kkdrama of all time and I will miss Boong Do and Hee jin's lovestory but I will cherish the memories and take it out and watch it whenevr this life is too harsh because I know it will warm my heart again :) ty dramabean bloggers 4 sharing this awesome and best otp ever :)

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I love this drama especially the couple. I can so believe it when he says that he likes Yoo Inna! great chemistry and I definitely like the cause & effect explanation =)

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this is the best drama I've watched this yearrr !!!

and thankkssssss to all of your compliments and opinion that I've finally put interest in this drama.

I've never thought that this drama will surpassed RP and doubt that this is the best time travel drama compared with others.

but after watched the whole series and also read the recap over and over, I can say that this is the best time travel drama and has reach highhh place in my favorite dramaa all timeeee !!

thanks ladies for the recap and comments

I enjoy everytime I read your comments, those are just the same thing as I thought !

and the best part,

the OTP is FOR REAL !
How much I love both of them

just hope InNa will take care of his man, well. eventhough he's now on military service.

2 years is short compared with 300 years !!!

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