206

School 2013: Episode 15

Waaaaah. I almost never feel this way, but I don’t want this show to end. There’s so much warmth and goodness packed into each hour, and I just want to be with these characters till they’re old and gray. What, bromance is FOREVER, okay? Don’t you dare tell me otherwise. If I refuse to watch next Monday’s finale, will I be able to pretend it didn’t end?

 
EPISODE 15 RECAP

After the cell phone theft, Heung-soo gets hauled away by the cops as their prime suspect. Se-chan asks In-jae all the right questions, and we find out that Heung-soo has a prior record, and combined with his skipping gym class at the time the phone disappeared, it makes him look mighty guilty.

In-jae panics, not knowing what to do, and just says that Heung-soo didn’t do it. Se-chan says matter-of-factly, “Of course he didn’t,” like it’s a foregone conclusion. Aw.

He says a kid who just barely started patching things up with his best friend wouldn’t have time to let his life go sideways. “We’ll just go get him back.” Look at you, having faith in people and everything.

He adds that they should keep Heung-soo’s record a secret from the other teachers, and this time In-jae outright gapes at him, “You’ve… changed.” Ha. He adds defensively that people have been known to evolve. Clearly you don’t remember what an ass you used to be.

Nam-soon paces the hall, thinking of nothing else but Heung-soo, and asks In-jae where they’ve taken him. He looks so lost.

She promises to go get Heung-soo back and tells him to go back to class. He begs her to come with, but she reassures him that if Heung-soo didn’t do it, she’ll have him back at school in no time.

The police don’t have any evidence to charge Heung-soo with the crime, so they let him go. Whew. In-jae takes him to a coffee shop to drink something warm (I love this recurring motif with her—just warmth.) and she asks if he’s okay.

He says the moment he saw the police car this morning he figured he might be taken away. He doesn’t say it bitterly, but just like it’s the obvious conclusion to anyone, even to him.

She asks carefully about the incident on his record, and he says that it was a fight with the jjangs at a neighboring school, and he put the other kid in the hospital. In-jae wonders how it got blown up into a criminal charge, but Heung-soo says it was probably for the best: “I got my head on straight after that.”

In-jae smiles and says he’s grown up, and tells him he did a good job getting through a really hard day. She asks hopefully, “Will you be at school tomorrow?” He nods. Aww.

Yi-kyung sidles up to Jung-ho to try asking one more time where he got the money. He swears he’s not suspecting him, but is still worried he went off and did some other reckless thing. You and me both.

Jung-ho finally admits that he sold stuff he had at home, and Yi-kyung scoffs that he has nothing of value to sell. Then suddenly something dawns on him: “You sold… IT?”

Yi-kyung: “Are you crazy?! How could you?!” OMG WHAT IS IT? Nothing could be worse than the things I’m imagining right now. Jung-ho refuses to let him recover whatever it is he sold.

Se-chan announces to the class that Heung-soo was released and isn’t guilty, and gives the class one more day for the culprit to hand over the phone, because now that the police are involved, it won’t end here.

Nam-soon is still in soulless zombie mode in Heung-soo’s absence, and Se-chan has to call him to attention to get up lead the bow at the end of class. He still seems worried, especially in light of the ongoing investigation. In-jae texts him after class to say that Heung-soo is okay and that he went home, but Nam-soon doesn’t look any happier.

Yi-kyung drags Ji-hoon out of class to tell him that Jung-ho’s in trouble again—he sold IT. Ji-hoon’s eyes bug out. Yi-kyung begs him to help, wanting to keep this between them.

They head out and hit jewelry store after jewelry store, asking for the thing that Jung-ho sold. Okay, it must not be that bad, if it’s jewelry. Uh… unless it’s not his. Hm. Now I’m back to being worried.

They finally find whatever it is at a store and beg the owner to give them a week to buy it back from him. They promise that it wasn’t stolen, just that it’s something very important.

Meanwhile, Se-chan stops short when he sees Nari sitting alone in the empty classroom when school’s already out. He realizes belatedly that she wasn’t even at school that day, and sees that she’s crying… and holding two cell phones.

He takes her to the office and asks for the story, and when he promises to keep it a secret, she finally tells him about her best friend Hye-sun ignoring her when she was so upset over her grades and the fact that Se-chan told her she couldn’t go to college.

It’s kind of adorably childish that she blamed Hye-sun’s new phone for the fact that Hye-sun was snubbing her. She swears she was just going to hide it for a while, but then the thing just snowballed and it was understandably difficult to undo it.

Se-chan takes a page from the In-jae playbook and thanks her for doing the right thing and promises to keep her secret. He tells her that she will have to be punished for what she did, and lets her come up with her own punishment by tomorrow. Se-chan just texts In-jae that the phone was returned, without naming names. She sighs to realize that the culprit was someone in their class after all.

Nam-soon waits and waits for Heung-soo to come home that night. He tries to give Nam-soon the brush-off, but basically gets ordered to follow. All Nam-soon says after that is that he wants ramyun.

He leads the way… all the way back to his house. Heung-soo hovers in the doorway, wary of going inside. Nam-soon, vampires have to be invited in! Oh right, wrong drama.

He says the magic words, and Heung-soo takes a slow, careful step inside, squirming in his socks for some reason. I know it’s not actually a vampire barrier, but it does feel like a best-friend barrier that he just crossed.

Nam-soon makes a pot of ramyun, and Heung-soo just sits there, watching Nam-soon eat and wanting him to get to the point already.

Finally Nam-soon asks shakily, “How recklessly did you live?” No answer. “Why did you live recklessly?” Oh god, I can feel the tears starting to form.

Heung-soo: “Because, would there ever be another bastard like you?” Well, there go my tears.

Nam-soon wonders what he’d do with another bastard like him: “So you could beat him up?” Oh, silly. Heung-soo makes it clear: “That I could grow attached to, you bastard.” [He says literally, “stick my heart to.”]

The tears come spilling out as Nam-soon hides his face grumbling, “Idiot. After everything I’ve done to you?” Heung-soo cries too, and counters that Nam-soon has endured his own share of pain.

Heung-soo: “Have you ever once told someone that you were hurting, you pitiful bastard?” He adds, “You, me…” like there’s no difference anymore. “So Nam-soon-ah… stop being sorry.”

Waaaaaaaaah.

Then they wipe their manly tears and get back to eating their make-up ramyun without a word, as if they didn’t just spill their guts all over the table.

Heung-soo sleeps over that night, finally comfortable enough to take off his socks (or one) and Nam-soon smiles to himself before falling asleep.

In the morning they run around like headless chickens, bickering that the other didn’t wake him up and they’ll be late for school. Gah, can this be every day?

Heung-soo steals Nam-soon’s socks to wear, and then reels when he takes a whiff of his shoes, remembering that he stepped in a wet puddle of snow last night. Naturally, he blames Nam-soon.

So Nam-soon heads back into his room and takes out a shoebox hidden under his bed. He brings out a brand new pair of shoes and shoves them at Heung-soo, who complains that Nam-soon’s shoes won’t fit him.

“They’re not mine; they’re yours.” He reminds Heung-soo that he wanted this exact pair and had made Nam-soon promise to buy them for him when he got scouted to play soccer, so he wouldn’t be teased by the big city kids. Seriously, could you two be any cuter today?

Heung-soo complains that shoes from three years ago won’t fit him now, and Nam-soon nags him like a mom that they’ll stretch eventually, hurrying him out the door with reminders of Se-chan’s wrath.

In-jae returns the cell phone and asks Hye-sun about why she thought Jung-ho was the one who took it, and Hye-sun spills the beans about Nam-soon and the tardy pig. Damnit.

At the same time, the mean girls are busy gossiping about the mysterious phone’s reappearance, and Kyung-min the Instigator spreads yet ANOTHER nasty rumor—that she saw Ji-hoon in class before anyone else today. They all whisper that he must be the thief.

The real thief Nari is busy writing her apology to Se-chan with particular gratitude about keeping her secret. The bell rings and she runs to class and discards the early drafts in the library trashcan. Um, not a good idea…

Class starts and Nam-soon and Heung-soo come barreling in together. Se-chan docks points for being late, though he adds with a smile that twin tardiness must mean they’re really friends now.

In-jae calls Nam-soon out of class to ask about the tardy pig, and gives him a rather lenient two-page apology as punishment, likely because he knows it was wrong. He apologizes, and she muses that the kids must really trust him, if they covered up for him.

He says it was really because they didn’t want to cause her any grief when she had just decided to return. She asks why he saved Jung-ho of all people, and Nam-soon just says, “Because he would’ve gotten kicked out of school.”

She wonders what benefit there is in coming to school, and Nam-soon says you get meals: “If you come to school you get fed, the same exact thing as all the other kids.” She realizes that’s true, and then stops to make sure that’s not why HE comes to school. Nam-soon smiles and says no, it’s also for naps. Pfft.

Nari brings Se-chan her written apology, and decides to do extra homework every day as her punishment. Hye-sun is back to being friendly with her, though Nari clearly feels guilty about letting it blow over like that.

Jung-ho is still on trash duty, and gets nagged by the security guard that he has to unfold the recyclables to do it properly. Oh no. Sure enough, he discovers one of Nari’s written confessions.

At lunch, Jung-ho sits down at Heung-soo and Nam-soon’s table, and this time Heung-soo tells him to go sit with his own friends. But he doesn’t budge, so then Ji-hoon and Yi-kyung come sidling up to join them.

Ha, the looks on Nam-soon and Heung-soo’s faces are priceless. They’re like, What’re we, the Babysitter’s Club? They both dart up.

Ji-hoon: “What, are you ashamed of us?” Without a word, they split up and sit with their backs turned to the other boys.

Hahahahahaha. I so enjoy the lunch time politics.

The other girls tell Hye-sun that Ji-hoon stole her phone, and Nari squirms in her seat. Please do the right thing. I’m pretty sure Jung-ho will out you either way.

Ji-hoon asks In-jae to be excused from evening classes because of a new part-time job, and promises instead to come in early every day to study. He says super-proudly that he was the first in class today, and she pats him on the back like he just climbed Everest, which is just so cute. He beams, and she promises to come early to help him from now on.

Yi-kyung comes by while he’s working, and the two boys pool their money from their extra jobs, all to buy back whatever it is that Jung-ho sold.

They both ask each other why they do all this for Jung-ho, and their answers are the same—to keep him from becoming a gangster. Ji-hoon muses that it’d be awesome if the three of them could run a little store like this someday.

Ha-kyung finds out that Kang-joo won the essay competition, and she didn’t even place. In-jae asks if she’s okay, and she admits that she’s mad. She feels terrible about being so petty, but she hates that Kang-joo won and then she feels sorry about thinking that way.

In-jae figures that if she feels more sorry than anything, then it’s okay, and tries to encourage her to focus on her own performance rather than comparing herself to others. Ha-kyung knows it’s what she should do, but says it’s not that easy.

Yi-kyung and Ji-hoon present Jung-ho with IT—his mother’s ring. Aw, you guys are such good friends. But Jung-ho lashes out at them, saying that this is exactly what he didn’t want to happen—he doesn’t want to keep being indebted to them. Or you could just say thank you?

They argue that there’s no such thing between friends, but Jung-ho says he’s the only one ever incurring debt, so how are they supposed to be friends? He stalks off angrily.

It’s an ass-backwards way of saying it, but basically the boys realize that Jung-ho sold the ring in the first place so that he could be friends with them. And people say girls are complicated. Yeesh.

Ji-hoon asks Min-ki to borrow some more notes to help him study, and Min-ki sweetly tells him to borrow them any time. But then one of the mean girls sees him with the notebook and snarks that he must’ve stolen that too.

He gets defensive and confronts her in front of the whole class, and Min-ki backs up his story. But she just says it was a natural assumption, since everyone knows he stole the cell phone.

He starts getting angry, and then Jung-ho gets involved to defend him. Ha-kyung, ever the badass, pushes Jung-ho back before he does anything stupid.

The mean girl doesn’t let up with her biting accusations, and Jung-ho roars and kicks a desk in frustration, and Heung-soo jumps up to hold him back.

The desk happens to fall right on top of Ha-kyung. Crap. Heung-soo runs to her side to take her to the nurse.

Hye-sun and Nari walk in, and the air is thick with tension. The mean girl demands to know who stole the phone, if Jung-ho and his buddies are so innocent. Jung-ho hesitates, and then names Nari as the culprit.

Her best friend laughs, only to realize that it’s true, from Nari’s guilty look. She just grabs her bag and scurries out, scared of the social wrath.

Nam-soon and Kang-joo were elsewhere this whole time, and he fist-bumps her for the essay competition win. Suddenly their conversation comes to a screeching halt.

Errrrrrrrrr! Ruh-roh.

Well that’s awkward. Ha, it looks worse when they unlatch their hands awkwardly, like they just got caught doing something bad.

The girls head to the nurse, while Heung-soo tells Nam-soon about Jung-ho flying off the handle again. Oy.

The kids don’t say anything, but the teachers can sense that something’s going on. The next day they find out it’s worse than they thought: Ha-kyung’s mother is there to complain that Ha-kyung was hurt (she didn’t even know until that mean girl’s mother called her). And of course it’s Jung-ho who did the deed.

Uhmforce questions Jung-ho, who rails that they were being accused of stealing. He does seem a little bit sorry that Ha-kyung got hurt in all this, but mostly he’s defensive, as usual. At least this time it was actually an accident.

In-jae asks the mean girl what happened, and asks her to help Jung-ho out and give a statement about the facts, if it was an accident. But she just tells In-jae that she doesn’t much care.

In-jae remembers that her dream is to be a news announcer, and reminds her that she should care about other people. The girl breezes that she just wants to be an announcer because they marry well, and she wants to snag a chaebol. Excuse me while I vomit.

Se-chan sees that Nari isn’t in class again, and sends her a text. He chuckles at himself for being that kind of teacher now.

In-jae follows it up with a very cute request for him to go talk to Jung-ho, pointing to the counseling office where he’s waiting. Se-chan sighs that he’s really not good at this counseling stuff, but gets right up and goes, leaving In-jae smiling to herself.

On his way, he runs into Nari, who came when she got his text. She asks if he has a minute to talk, but because he’s on his way to see Jung-ho, he asks her to wait in the teachers’ office.

She hesitates, and then says nevermind, and heads in that direction. Something makes him stop in his tracks, and he looks back down the hall. He has a flashback to a different girl walking down the hall alone, and then sees Nari doing the same.

It gives him pause, but then he turns around to go talk to Jung-ho, since Nari promised to come right back. Jung-ho is refusing to fight expulsion because the alternative is to bring his dad to school, and he’d pretty much rather die than do that.

Se-chan knows it, and asks him to bring Dad once, and when he refuses, he just shrugs: “Okay.” Jung-ho looks surprised. Se-chan says it’s that easy for anyone else to stop caring, and if Jung-ho isn’t going to care enough to hold onto his own life, no one else will.

Se-chan returns to find that Nari never came back, and he stops by the classroom to ask Hye-sun if something happened. And that’s when he finds out that the whole class knows about Nari taking the cell phone.

He panics and starts calling her right away, and tells In-jae about the cell phone and the class finding out. She tries to reassure him, but then a text from Nari freaks him out even more: “I’m sorry, Teacher.”

Flashback to the same exact situation at his first school—a girl asks him for a moment to talk, and he tells her he’ll talk to her later. The thing she says in return: “I’m sorry, Teacher.”

He runs like crazy and stops just outside the girls’ restroom. Back to the flashback, where he’d found that girl on the ground in the bathroom, with a jumprope on the floor.

He’s about to run inside when In-jae reminds him he can’t go in there, and he stands outside while she checks. No one’s in there.

That just makes him search every single bathroom and every single stall. As he does, we get another flashback to just moments before the last one—when he’d opened a stall door and found the girl hanging there. Whoa.

He runs through the school with this crazed look in his eyes, checking every single room he can think of and growing more panicked by the second. We catch up to that first flashback that we’ve seen before—Se-chan carrying the girl out and her dying on his back.

In-jae comes running up with news…

Nari’s mother called, and she’s at home. Oh whew. The relief washes over Se-chan like a tidal wave. That sigh of overwhelming relief and gratitude just says it all. In-jae looks up at him, shocked at his reaction.

He sits down, heaving and sweating bullets. He starts to cry as he tells her: “Her name was Yoo-jin. The one who went cold on my back. She was my first student, and I killed her, that child.”

 
COMMENTS

Poor Teach. I’m just glad he finally got to tell someone. There were things about In-jae’s arc as a teacher that left a lot to be desired (in the resolution, mostly, since the development was handled well). But Se-chan’s evolution has been consistently good throughout the series—his subtle changes, his moments of begrudging care for the misfits, and his dramatic confrontation with the trauma that started it all. Inasmuch as In-jae was the catalyst for his changes every step of the way, perhaps her finest achievement is getting Se-chan to be a teacher again.

In some ways it was a heavy episode leading up to the finale—all about people’s inability to forgive themselves for the things that weigh on them. Nam-soon and Se-chan are the poster boys for this, of course, all self-flagellating tough guy guilt and savior complexes gone awry, but go figure, it’s Nam-soon’s journey that actually gives a glimmer of hope this time—he gets a second chance with Heung-soo.

It makes sense now why Se-chan was always so insistent on them mending their fences, and why he once expressed how lucky those boys were, to have a chance at righting their wrongs. It’s the one thing he doesn’t have. I hope he’ll come out of this with a sense of purpose, and maybe he’ll discover that even though he can’t save Yoo-jin, he can help Nari, and Jung-ho, and start to slowly patch that gaping hole in his heart.

I’m just glad we got some levity to balance out all the pain, because this show really does a number on my insides. When Heung-soo got hauled away I thought they might actually get separated, but thank ye drama gods it was only for an afternoon. You’d think it was ten years, from the way Nam-soon was acting. Gah, their story just gets me *right here.* I finally feel like they got their full resolution in this episode, complete with forgiveness, tears, and sleepover hijinks. And now that we got to see them truly happy together without unresolved issues, I want a whole new drama where they just get to be besties without the angst. Spinoff, anyone?

I do appreciate that romance never took center stage in this drama, and I wouldn’t want that to change, but now that the friendships are mended, more accidental run-ins with handholding and awkward looks would be a welcome breath of fresh air. Don’t be stingy, Show. You’ve only got one episode left. Bring me The Cute!

 
RELATED POSTS

Tags: , , , , , ,

206

Required fields are marked *

It seems redundant to say how much I enjoyed this episode. Everyone else has basically already said what I was thinking. Plus, there was just so dang much in this one....

So, I'll just say these...

1. I don't find anything gay about the HS/NS relationship. No, it's not something you see much of in western culture...but it's Korean. Not western.

2. What's the problem with sleeping in your clothes from time to time? Change them in the morning when you get cleaned up. Okay, don't sleep in those "dry clean only" clothes. That's just going to get expensive.

3. Se Chan's trauma was actually introduced in prior episodes through flashbacks. While we didn't get the details, it seemed pretty obvious to me that someone died, and given the emo surrounding, suicide also seemed pretty obvious. I felt like this episode just stated explicitly what we'd implicitly known all along. In Jae (okay, and the rest of the school) were the only ones that didn't know.

4. Although this is counter to Korean culture, I really wish someone would say to some of these parents/students "Are you f$%ing crazy? Do you seriously have absolutely no regard for anyone other than your own child/self? Is it really beyond the capability of your small mind to find anything worthwhile/valuable in a child who has not had all the privilege/support you/your child did?" At this point, Minki's mom seems like the most sympathetic parent out there.

*slowly getting down from soapbox while muttering "damn people."

Deep breath.

5. I just about lost it from laughing at the lunchroom scene. At the same time, I wanted to hug them all and smack NS and HS in the back of the head (just sit there and eat....can't you tell that he's trying to be human?).

6. (and finally) I really like this arc with Na Ri. Some of the things that she said - perhaps because she tends to be fairly quiet in the storytelling - were so poignant. Although I understand that this arc was being used mainly to get Se Chan to face his past, I think the damaged friendship over a cell phone is just so dang realistic and important. As much as anything else, I'd like to see these two girls reconciled in the next episode.

0
5
reply

Required fields are marked *

I accept they're not gay (tho my mind went, kiss? ;-P) even though the shoes buying thing threw me, but heck, that's why I asked.

As for the sleeping in the clothes thing, that's not great. Change to sweats or better yet, go to boxers ... Oh dear, there I go again...

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

lol, you just wanna see 'em in boxers (and why not?) I really think the whole "sleep-in-clothes" thing has to do with the heating in Korea. Power and fuel are just so much more expensive and, from what I've seen (not just in dramas), insulation isn't as big of a deal.

And, yeah...I kept thinking...er...kiss? But yeah.

I dunno why the shoe thing didn't even phase me. I guess I just remember when I was a tween/teen, my friends and I shared just about everything except underwear. We didn't have a lot, and it was a cheap way to expand one's wardrobe. I guess we didn't actually buy stuff for each other, but it wouldn't have seemed strange (other than us being poor...so we didn't buy much of anything).

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thank you for the mention of heating. So often I see pictures of idols practicing dancing or singing and they always seem to be in heavy coats which made me wonder if heat was available.

I did feel sorry for Nam Soon and Heung Soo sleeping on a blanket on the floor with no mattress and no blanket over them. Didn't look very comfortable. Is that common?

I think the romance will be with Heung Soo and Ha Kyung. He jumped to her aid with what sounded almost like panic or certainly a great deal of concern when she got injured by the chair. I wanted to interpret Nam Soon's reaction to them on the stair mainly to surprise, not jealousy, but then, I like a Nam Soon / Kang Joo pairing. I have visions of a lovely, fun double-date between two pairs of best friends.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Why do you care so much what they sleep in?

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Because they're our babies and we wuv them.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I have never loved a bromance as much as Heung Soo and Nam Soon. They are absolute perfection. I'd take them over nearly every romance I've ever seen in a Kdrama. I'm with you, girlfriday, I don't want it to end either. I just want to keep watching these kids grow up and live forever. They feel so real. This drama has never blown me away or even made me panting in anticipation to see the next episode, but what it has done is quietly and subtly created a world of characters that feel so very real to me that I truly care about them. I have cried totally unexpectedly some many times while watching this show. It has the ability to pull tears out of me before I even know they are there. Not many shows have ever managed to be that sneaky awesome. It has wormed into my heart and I hate to see it end. What a great show!

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Exactly. I can watch these characters interacting with each other all day long and I wouldn't be bored. They feel so real to me that I kind of wish I can be with them to give out bearhugs when they need it.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

You've articulated all my thoughts perfectly. :') This show may not have any dramatic plot lines of love or revenge, but it does have characters who feel real and honest, with their relatable problems and their quiet struggles to overcome them. And that's what makes this show so poignant and hopeful. I am going to miss it so much. :(

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

One of my favorite parts of this episode (which was one of the best so far, I think) was after the mean girl tells In Jae that she wanted to be an announcer to marry rich, the wise, old teacher comes by and "tsk tsks" kids and parents these days. He pointed out that they're only taught to study and treated like kings and queens at home as long as they study so they don't learn how to be people. Another teacher chimed in and said soon these people will be the successful ones since they do have the credentials and grades and the country will be full of people who only care about themselves.

At that moment, I really hoped that many Korean parents were watching this. I grew up in Korea for a large part of my childhood and still have many friends and relatives there and this is one of my biggest gripes with the schooling/parenting system.

I love how the show not only touches on the problems of LACK of parenting, but paints the problems of too much parenting and other types of parenting as well.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Nicely said. In which other drama can we see such a relevant and piercing bit of social commentary? It could have been preachy but it didn't really feel that way.

And growing up in Korea! Jealous :)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Wow... I love that each episode seems to get better.

The editing in the end, with the flashbacks placed in seamlessly with what was going on in real life, was exquisite. I was actually spoiled because I saw the recap here before I saw the episode, and I couldn't resist. (I have got to stop clicking links, haha.) But anyway, my heart was still pounding. And the music was awesome, too.

Just out of curiosity, do specials tend to get subbed, too? I've just recently gotten into watching kdramas as they air... I don't think I've seen a special watching an older show, but maybe I've never seen a show with a special.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I've recently saw the special of Gentleman's dignity and it was subbed (at least you can download it with subs), but since it aired quite some time ago, I cannot say if it was subbed straight away after airing.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ok, thanks! Guess I'll have to see if anything pops up next week.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Today , rather than the kids taking the focus, I liked that we got to see more of Teacher Kang! I suspected something like this but the ending still made me tear. T_T

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This is one show where I would have welcomed an extended extension if we could have followed the five former thugs, Min-Ki, Ha-Kyung and Kang-Joo through the rest of high school.

0
7
reply

Required fields are marked *

Maybe there will be a spin-off drama featuring Jung Ho's crew opening up that store they were talking about. It can be "2nd-generation-former-gangster-mart" and can feature their kids and grandkids running around trying to go from shop owner to chaebol. :-\

I do love this story. I think there's a definite reason this has the alternate title "School 5." Apparently the other 4 were well received.

0
6
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think they ought to open a butcher shop.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Perfect!

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

lol!

0

You know, getting to chaebol status probably involves a bit of thuggery, at least in attitude. :-)

I'm going to miss these kids so much and they're fictional! On the other hand, my heart does need a bit of a break. By Monday mornings I'm all jumpy like an addict needing her fix. I don't know what other show is going to fill the gap.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I desperately hope that IRIS 2 isn't going to suck, and goes heavy on the action and light on the romance. Like you, I just need an emotional break. and Jang Hyuk. I need Jang Hyuk.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Must check out Jang Hyuk.

I really really hope this last episode is extra long.

0

DOES ANYONE KNOW WHERE THIS DRAMA WAS SHOT, LIKE WHERE IS THE HIGH SCHOOL LOCATED. IS THIS JUST A SET? OR IS THIS SHOT ON LOCATION? I'M VISITING KOREA AND WANTED TO KNOW IF THERES ANY WAY I CAN GO VISIT THIS LOCATION. HAHAHA.

THANKS!

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

the school is yulcheon high school. all outdoor scenes & some indoor scenes were shot at the school. but they also have sets where most of indoor scenes were shot.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Se-chan... :( At the beginning of the ep. he felt so happy of being THAT kind o teacher again, while at the end - so horrified to become THAT kind of teacher again...

I'm feeling so grateful for the writer and the crew that they made such scene and at last opened Se-chan's secret in such a manner.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

My favourite, favourite, favourite high school show ever! So true and heartfelt!!! This is the only way I can experience my would-be adolescence, had my family not moved to Europe..

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think that there is romance, just not blatant. Anytime a male and a female acts uncomfortable around each other, please give it a second look. From the time that HS got to class he and Class vpresident were on egg shells.. these two are going to end up together.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ooh, nice point. Because especially with my HS fandom (is that the right word?), I like that idea.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This drama makes me cry! Gah. Spin-off, please?

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I can't believe there's only one episode left. It hurts me on the inside.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

how is this the second to last episode... :O it seems like there is so much more to be answered and many more things to happen..IT CANNOT END YET :((((

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Aigoo, Jihoon! Even if this is second to the last ep, I think this is my favorite! i loved almost every scene here (except the ones with the mean girls). srsly, those kids give (smart) girls a bad rep.

I love the whole story about NS and HS but the fact that they built up other characters too makes the drama interesting and believable. It doesn't just go around the two or the teachers even, but it's like all of them is a catalyst for change one way or another. Jihoon's change really touches me and that part where Minki says he can borrow notes anytime...major nice boy points for Minki-ya <3

Also I really admire Hakyung's arc. Her story as a student is relatable. While everyone else sort of drifts w/c really does happen in high school, hers is different but very true also. And Nari finally being a central character in this episode is also a nice change. It doesn't only bring out Sechan's issues out but the fact that she really IS a forgettable character because she rarely stirs up anything and points it out to Sechan. In some ways, as a teacher, it's real work to be involved with all of the kids in your class. Kids that age want to be significant and I think Nari made that issue understood without going into too much detail. Hakyung and Nari represent 2 kinds of kids in the class for Sechan: the ones who step up and the ones who stay on the sidelines. He finally gets to engage both, w/c was in the beginning only something Injae could do.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Good point!

Initially, I was wondering when did Nari's arc start developing during the drama... then you hit the nail. Nari represents those kids, in the real life, whom teachers (and hence the audience too) tend not to notice because they are neither the troublemaker, nor the underachiever, nor the overachiever. Yet, it doesn't mean that they are without issue or insignificant.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

love to see Goo Namsoon n Park Heungsoo back together as best friend, forever. this two actor are so GOOD. Luv them so much.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ahhh..... tonight is the last episode ... :(

Going to miss the kids in Class 2-2 of Shengri High~

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I saw the preview and I'm not too happy that the show is ending like it is. Either the Nam-soon/heung-soo bromance should've been extended over 16 episodes, or they should've gone on with life lessons and everyone learning to get along for another 4 episodes.

Anyway. Lets see how it all gets resolved.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ugh saw it too. Why does that mean girl take up a lot of screen time on the final episode?? didn't even see Kang-joo or Ha-kyung anywhere.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

i feel bad as the drama is going to end.it is very beautiful and i think i ill never see any other couples as beautiful and lovely as namsun and heungsoo.damn jang nara1s schedule....i love ns and hs.i wish lee jong suk a best future with more nice dramas

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I like your recaps very much. They are very emotional and full of life.:)
One thing I would like to request: what is the name of the song played when Se-chan teacher remembers his past? I was looking everywhere but I am enable to find it. Can you help me, please?

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

i love this drama of korea

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *