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Master’s Sun: Episode 14

It’s a good thing we have two episodes this week, because last week sure felt like a tease, didn’t it? This is not the first time I’ve wondered how I ever made it through the one-episode-a-week format of American television, but it definitely is the most potent reminder in recent months, if not years.

I do think that Episodes 13 and 14 work better as a pair, and while I actually have little complaint about the content of the recent plot turns, I suspect there would have been a smoother acceptance of the memory loss and separation angst if we’d been able to watch the two episodes back to back. Hopefully by the time they got to writing and filming the next episodes, they’ll have worked out the rhythm to fit the new episode pairings. Which is to say: Nobody’d better die tomorrow! Well, Hanna can die maybe. She’d be okay. I wouldn’t cry.

SONG OF THE DAY

Kim Ye-rim – “잘 알지도 못하면서” (You don’t even know) [ Download ]

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EPISODE 14 RECAP

Despite the big Taeyang-shaped hole in his memory, Joong-won shows up on Gong-shil’s rooftop, driven by burning curiosity and the persistent feeling that she’s the important thing he’s forgetting. (Can I say I kinda love this amnesia turn? I hate amnesia when it’s a last-minute Hail Mary tactic, like a plotular band-aid to stanch the bleeding in a dying story—but when it’s built in meaningfully, it pushes all my story buttons. He shouldn’t feel any different after the Great Memory Reset, only everything’s different because she’s not there. Ahhhhh!)

Gong-shil, however, believes that she was too careless with Joong-won’s safety and has been badly shaken by his near-death. So now she does the nobly idiotic thing of downplaying their involvement, telling him to see things exactly as they appear. She recounts the story of their meeting but paints it in the light of how an outsider would see it: They met on a stormy night, and when she realized he was the president she decided she had to hang onto him and chased him around, et cetera. (Can I say I haaaate this turn? Amnesia works for me because it shows the romance working its way back to each other, so there’s this secondary layer of gratification in watching them circle back to love. Pushing people away because you think you should? Is dumb.)

The explanation doesn’t ring true for Joong-won, and he can’t reconcile the idea of their supposed Candy-like romance. She’s being deliberately vague with the allusions, even invoking that earlier pun of how he was seduced by her special yook-gahm (sixth sense/sensuality), which he naturally interprets the other way. She says that following his injury she decided to part ways, and thus she will consider the large sum he deposited into her bank account as her send-off payment.

She gives him a curt goodbye, which he doesn’t accept. He says that money isn’t the whole of it: “In the time I can’t remember, a lot of things changed. I’m confused by it, but I don’t dislike it. Was all that because of you? I feel like I’ve lost something huge. Is that something you have?”

All she has of his is the six-pack of beer he’d put in her fridge, which she returns and points to as “evidence” of their light, fleeting relationship. (As in, they had some fun and now it’s over. Shrug.) He’s puzzled because that’s what she’s saying, but it feels all wrong in his heart.

So Joong-won goes to his uncle to ask for his accounting, and Uncle VP’s version is hilariously skewed because of his limited perspective. Like when he describes Gong-shil breaking Joong-won’s engagement vase, she talks with the swagger of a homewrecker. Joong-won agrees that his behavior was dangerous and alarming, when you put it that way.

Uncle VP reaches for a beer, which Joong-won guards possessively, ha. He shoves the cans back into his fridge telling himself that he must’ve lost his mind to be with Gong-shil, and therefore it’s a good thing he forgot everything.

Still, Joong-won wonders if the stab wound in his back reached all the way through to his heart, because it sure feels like it’s missing something. “I think I gave it to that woman, but she said she had her fun and threw it away. Don’t go back to her looking for it.”

On the rooftop, Kang Woo chats with Gong-shil over a beer, which makes her wistful for all the drinks she can’t have. It would be nice to hold hands with Joong-won and drink safely, she sighs. Kang Woo worries that Gong-shil will now revert to her former terrified ways without her emergency shelter around, hiding herself in her room.

But Gong-shil says that the scariest ghost she’d ever seen in her life was that day at the hospital—Joong-won’s. So she won’t drag him into her world anymore, saying that if she can ensure that, she can endure all the other ghosts. She won’t become a shut-in, either, assuring Kang Woo that she’s thinking of returning to school. She used to be at the head of her class, you know, and could have gone far. Kang Woo encourages her to become an important person, offering to be her bodyguard.

They make a toast, and Coffee Ghost appears to make a futile grab for Gong-shil’s soda. At her mention, Kang Woo shoots an uneasy look at the space next to him and bravely says he’s getting better about the ghost thing (while cringing like a scaredy cat). There’s a curious lingering shot as Coffee Boy smiles at Gong-shil, which makes me wonder where this is going. Could Coffee Boy actually have a dramatic purpose other than PPL?

Now that Joong-won is alive and (sorta) well, it’s time to revisit Gong-shil’s deal with the spirit-matchmaker, who comes to collect. She sends Gong-shil to the cemetery to gather unmarried ghost ladies, to continue her business of arranging spirit marriages. Phew, the arrangement isn’t as terrible as I was fearing—Gong-shil’s being forced to work, yes, but as long as she doesn’t have to give up her body or soul to the woman, I’m relieved. Granted it’s still a scary job, and Gong-shil wanders the grounds clutching her sun necklace in particularly frightening moments.

Gong-shil finds a suitable ghost bride, who is then brought along to a meeting with the dead groom’s parents. The man’s ghost looks pleased at the match and the case is a success.

Yi-ryung entertains the possibility of shooting a movie in the States (with acclaimed director Peter Jason, ha—making his triumphant return after Best Love?). I love that Yi-ryung plainly states that she can’t act, and her manager assures her all she has to do is look pretty.

She tells Kang Woo, fishing for a reaction, and he replies, “But you’re a terrible actor.” LOL. She says that the movie he saw was particularly bad because it was a melo and she hates crying, which actually makes him feel bad to recall seeing her crying because of him. He tells her to study some more and become an international star, adding that she’ll do great.

She says that Gong-shil will end up rejecting him just like he rejected her, and mentions seeing Gong-shil just now meeting with those rich parents. She assumes Gong-shil is on to her next gold-diggy target, but Kang Woo has a more accurate understanding and asks Gong-shil if she’s working with that scary shaman lady again. She tells him not to worry, then heads back out to the graveyard for more scouting.

Joong-won throws himself into his work with gusto now that he’s literate. Secretary Kim is still off in England, so Joong-won fishes out his recorder to refresh himself on the documents—and hears Gong-shil’s voice. It was from the day Secretary Kim had a cold, and she reads the documents in a funny, warm voice peppered with personal asides.

Joong-won’s eyes widen, and he finds himself making his way back to her now-empty office. But still, no memory filling that hole in his heart. It’s so sweet. He KNOWS, only he can’t actually know because of that mystical mind-eraser. Bah! His aunt does, however, come by and note him standing there.

Gong-shil and the matchmaker take a meeting with a man who is about to be married and has been dreaming of his previous fiancée—the ghost sitting next to him. Gong-shil explains that he’d promised to be with her forever, and he scoffs that they’d been empty words, earning him a dirty look from the ghost, ha. Gong-shil offers (well, is pushed by the matchmaker) to persuade the ghost to move on—maybe they can set up the ghost with a ghost partner. Pfft. There’s something so shyster-y about this setup (taking advantage to push their own matching business), but in a good way—it cracks me up.

Aunt Joo walks into the same restaurant with Hanna, and recognizes that Gong-shil is in the company of a ghost wedding planner. She asks the matchmaker whether her interest in Gong-shil has to do with ghosts, and gets a confirmation.

Joong-won arrives to join his aunt for lunch and spots Gong-shil sitting with the client. Assuming they’re on a date, he tells himself to continue on, but at their laughing rapport he ends up sidling up to her and making pointed reference to their very recent breakup. When he puts his hand on her shoulder the ghost fiancée disappears, and Gong-shil shoves his hand aside growling, “I’m working. Don’t touch me.” LOL. I love these kinds of misunderstandings. The client wonders if Joong-won was like him, and Gong-shil replies, “Yes, he was in a situation like yours.” Which sounds to Joong-won like a very bald admission of gold-digger-ish intent.

So when the client asks if Joong-won had much time getting rid of “her,” Joong-won replies that it took a near-death experience and getting stabbed with a screwdriver to get her to leave. So if the guy doesn’t want to die, he’d better get lost, and the client scurries away.

Joining his aunt, Joong-won notices the sun necklace Hanna’s wearing and asks whether they’d met before. Of course she plays it up, saying that she felt very close to him from the outset. Agh, you.

Secretary Kim meets with Hanna’s friend in England and furrows his brow at a recent photo. It’s the Hanna we know but not the one he remembers, and her friend clarifies that Hanna got plastic surgery, saying she hated her own face. Aha! I’d been bumping on the issue that nobody seemed to recognize Hanna, even with the time lapse, because surely her uncle and Joong-won would have had some flash of recognition if she’d aged normally. Plastic surgery is a bit makjang as an answer, but at least it explains things.

Aunt Joo mentions the rumors of a ghost hanging around Joong-won (his “curse”), but assures Hanna that she has found a way to address the issue. Oh no, is that why you’re so smug about Gong-shil?

Sure enough, the matchmaker enters with Gong-shil in tow, and Aunt Joo pointedly introduces her as a seer of the dead, which is why Gong-shil had been hovering around Joong-won. It sounds ridiculous, and it’s meant to—Aunt Joo’s tone is definitely tinged with condescension, all, Isn’t that quaint? What a cute crazy person.

Gong-shil doesn’t shrink, though, and declares that it’s all true—a statement that takes the others by surprise. She then addresses the ghost of Hee-joo directly, who is standing right there, and asks her not to appear before her anymore. If she has something to say to Joong-won, Gong-shil will convey it now, but she doesn’t want to see her again.

Joong-won gets increasingly worked up about it until finally he bolts up and grabs her arm—making the ghost disappear—and drags her off. The matchmaker notes, “Now I understand why he’s special to her.”

Out in the hallway, Gong-shil comes clean(ish) about their history—how he’d hired her and paid her handsomely to deal with ghosts, calling her his 10 billion won radar. However, she decided his injury was the signal to quit, and now she doesn’t want to see him ever again. It’s closer to the truth than the Candy story, but she says everything in such a blasé tone that he remains confused, especially when she snaps, “Don’t touch me. I don’t like it.”

Joong-won heads back to her empty office that night, mulling over these revelations. Gong-shil goes home in tears and reminds herself not to cling or ask him to be her shelter.

Hanna takes out that diamond necklace and wonders whether it’s true that Hee-joo’s hanging around. Speaking aloud, she asks if Hee-joo’s next to her: “If you are, then I’ll apologize. I’m sorry, unni.” Only she says it while smirking, in the tone of “Whoops, too bad.” Gah, you deserve to be haunted.

Kang Woo presents Joong-won with the photos in the Hee-joo case, confirming that he’d suspected Hee-joo’s twin of being the other kidnapper. Joong-won doesn’t remember any of these details but they do make sense, and he supposes that’s where Gong-shil and her radar fit in. Kang Woo asks if Joong-won is fine being without Gong-shil now, and adds that he hopes that she will likewise be able to be without him. The comment leaves Joong-won wondering, “Why does that make me feel so bitter?” Heh. Nice to see some metaphors transcend amnesia.

The screwdriver stabber is still at large, and he shows up at Kingdom’s offices looking for Gong-shil. Kang Woo clocks his suspicious presence and follows him to Gong-shil’s office, and the stabber immediately panics and starts fighting. He’s no match for Kang Woo’s combat skills and gets taken down readily, though he then resorts to begging to meet with Gong-shil. This time it’s not murderous intent driving him but a fixation on her comment that he has a boy’s ghost hovering around him, which has been driving him crazy.

Joong-won storms in to confront the man, though he has no recollection of him personally. The man blubbers that he didn’t stab him intentionally, that Joong-won got stabbed because he rushed in to protect that woman.

Joong-won’s mind races to put the pieces together—he was told he went to the garage to meet Gong-shil, and he got hurt saving her… so that means he was willing to die for her?

Kang Woo confirms it, to his shock.

This makes even less sense (how could he love so deeply and not remember) and he asks himself, “How crazy was I over her?” He wonders, “Can I really be without her?” Then, “Bitter! So bitter.”

Gong-shil’s new job is taking its toll, since she’s back to working nights and lacking sleep. Plus, she complains to the matchmaker that when ghosts get matched up with the wrong partner, they come to her at night to complain. Aw.

Gong-shil asks why she can see ghosts in the first place, and the matchmaker replies that if she was asleep for three years, that means her soul was wandering for that time. Thus it makes sense that she carried over the ability to see ghosts.

Security guard Han-joo is poking his nose around to get at the details of Gong-shil’s accident, and her unni explains that she had been lost in the woods for ten days. Curiously, her physical condition was fine for the next three years, but she remained unconscious.

At the next table in the cafe, a man sets down an extra coffee cup (why hello there, Lee Chun-hee) for the ghost sitting in front of him. Huh! So we’ve got another ghost-seer, and somehow he knows all about Coffee Boy’s relationship to Gong-shil.

Chun-hee (Imma just call him Chun-hee) muses, “But she shouldn’t just be left to her own devices. Keep watch over her.” Coffee Boy agrees, and Chun-hee wonders if it’s time to meet her: “Do you think she’d recognize me?” Gah, why does Lee Chun-hee do such a good job toeing that line between sympathetic and creepy? You just don’t know what he’s up to, ever.

When Gong-shil comes home that night, Kang Woo notices her increasingly tired appearance with concern. She’s happy to have heard about the criminal’s arrest, while he encourages her to call his name the next time she’s scared. The statement refers to the fact that he knows she’s been scouring the graveyards, having followed her out one night. He’s ready to provide a comforting shoulder to lean on, but keeps his distance while wishing she’d call his name in her moments of need. Which is why you are a second lead, m’dear.

That night, Aunt invites Hanna over to keep shoving her at Joong-won, while he sits in a sulk by himself. His uncle joins him to share additional information about Gong-shil (despite Aunt warning to keep silent), such as how she came to the hospital every day while he was asleep and cried a lot. None of it rings a bell, but the sight of that sun necklace niggles at his mind.

Gong-shil is called to the office by Secretary Kim, only to find that Joong-won had faked the text to bring her here. Haha. He’s so proud of the fact that he can read (and text) now, and orders her to sit while he works through everything.

He lays out what he knows, curious most of all to know what he was thinking in his last moments. She was at the hospital while he was in surgery, and he died on the table, and she sees ghosts, ergo: “You saw me, didn’t you?”

He figures that if he almost died because of her, he would have sought her out as a ghost. She says he did. He guesses that his final moments were honest and frank, and that whatever he said scared her off. Again she agrees. He asks if he’d blamed her for sending him into death, or begged her to go with him. She shakes her head no.

But if he went that far for her, if he was that crazy about her, then shouldn’t he be able to remember when looking at her? Something, anything?

She tells him not to worry, because his memories won’t come back; they’ve been “safely sealed away.” He prods, “Are you really okay without them?” She nods yes.

Miffed, he huffs that he won’t go looking for her anymore then. She says that’s what she wants, and heads out to leave. But as she goes toward the door, he mutters, “If it’s not true that you can be without those memories, look back. If you do, I’ll go after you one more time.”

Gong-shil keeps walking, and Joong-won curses, “Dammit.” Then he grimaces at the fresh taste of bitterness.

On the other side of the door, Gong-shil reaches for her necklace and tells herself it’s over now.

Kang Woo coordinates security for an upcoming art exhibition, which is directed by Hanna. Flipping through a pamphlet, he finds a clue—a handwritten note signed with her name. Comparing that with the Hee-joo postcards, he realizes the writing is the same.

Kang Woo rushes to inform Secretary Kim (of Hanna being Hee-joo’s twin) on his return, only to find out that Secretary Kim has arrived at the same conclusion. Secretary Kim admits that he is the girls’ uncle, and that is why he has stayed with Joong-won all these years.

Gong-shil and the matchmaker attend the wedding of their client, where Gong-shil persuades the dead fiancée to move on. And there she spies Joong-won arriving with Hanna for an official function at the hotel. They freeze.

He stares at her in his intense way, while Gong-shil shrinks back. Finally he continues onward… and Gong-shil comes face to face with Hee-joo’s ghost. She’s back with another plea to use her body, which Gong-shil isn’t exactly thrilled about.

Joong-won is joined by his uncle, who brings up Gong-shil’s name. Joong-won sniffs, “I don’t care,” only to add, “Continue.” Lol. So Uncle fills him in on the “strange lifetime contract” Gong-shil has entered into with that matchmaker, which is odd enough that he seeks out the matchmaker to demand to know the terms of their deal. Can it be bought out with money?

She guesses that he wants to find his memory. He asks if it can be found, and she replies that it can—all he needs to do is think of what he’s lost the moment he wakes up. She makes a gesture with her hand that makes me think the necklace must be involved somehow (particularly since she noted earlier that Gong-shil hadn’t given it back to him).

But he’s still smarting from Gong-shil’s refusal and insists he doesn’t want to know, arguing that they’ve already decided that they could live without “it” (his memory, their relationship). Still, he orders her to name the price for Gong-shil’s contract. The matchmaker replies, “That woman gave all of herself. Calculate what that is worth and then try negotiating.”

He reels. Aunt Joo asks if he’s unwell, and he answers that he’s in great pain. Seeing the necklace around Hanna’s neck, he muses, “From the start, it drew my glance. I kept seeing it, but did I want to pretend I didn’t know?”

He looks at his empty hand, triggering a flash of that moment at death’s door, when the necklace had disappeared from his grasp. Deciding he has to find what he’s lost, he heads out.

Hanna asks whether she’s not the thing he’s talking about. He declares, “It looks the same, but that’s not the real one.”

Outside, Gong-shil tries to reason with Hee-joo’s ghost, insisting she and Joong-won are over and therefore the ghost should stop seeking her out. She tries to fling her necklace into the river, but can’t do it the first time. She winds up a second time… and a hand grabs hers. Hee-joo wisps into thin air, and Joong-won whirls her around.

“Did you really think you didn’t need your emergency shelter?” he demands. Omo omo! She gapes, asking if he remembers now, and he says, “I really didn’t want to, but I did.”

They fling lies back and forth about how she was fine without his memory returning, and how they would have been perfectly happy living in their separate worlds, which might be more convincing if they weren’t both on the verge of tears.

He declares that she’s lying: “Tae Gong-shil, you absolutely shouldn’t be okay living without me. Without me, you’re supposed to feel like you’re dying.”

 
COMMENTS

Eeeeee, his memory is back! I think. We haven’t been given the details of what happened so I’m still fuzzy on the details, but I’m totally cool waiting to find out the mechanics of the amnesia-break. The important thing is that they’re through the bullshit protection cover and back to talking about how they really feel, rather than how they want the other person to think they feel.

All that is well and good, and I think the writing supports the behavior pretty solidly. Joong-won made the ultimate sacrifice by putting his life on the line for her, while Gong-shil reciprocated with an even more ultimate-r sacrifice—not just her body for his life, but the very memory of her importance in his life. She all buts erases herself in exchange for his life, and the show has done a good job of painting the circumstances to support the action. He would have lost his life had she dragged her feet, and she had to agree to the matchmaker’s terms to get his soul to return to his body, and once the memory is gone, well, what’s the point in reliving history if there’s a big chance it would play out in a similar way? I get that on an intellectual level. What this drama does is take that trite, overused case of rom-com idiocy (usually when a meddling parent or outside force convinces one side to leave for the other’s own good) and build its mythology to force it, so you really can’t fault Gong-shil for sacrificing herself. It’s just really frustrating to hear her spouting lies about how she totally doesn’t love him, when he’s doing his best to reconcile head to heart.

I do think Joong-won’s reaction is sort of sweet in its bullheadedness because they’ve reverted right back to their old pattern—he’s trying to get her to admit she needs him, and she’s protecting them both by denying it, so then he huffily clings to the lie with hurt feelings. I love that he tells himself over and over that he’s totally NOT gonna care anymore, and then seconds later he’s telling himself, “Just one more chance.” He doesn’t even know he loves her but his reaction is still the same, and that’s amnesia in its best form. I do really enjoy it used in this kind of capacity.

And while her reaction is the more frustrating one (although again, I understand the reasoning behind it), what the lost memory scenario does is allow her to feel the full brunt of having and losing his love. Before the death, I’d felt that Joong-won’s love was the stronger one, that hers was genuine but understated and hidden to protect herself while his was out there and open and vulnerable. And in taking that away from her, at least we got to see that she really does love him, because it takes a helluva lot of love to make the choice she does, and to withhold herself thinking he honestly is better off having never known her. Aw. Tears.

As for the new plot threads, hm… Hanna is a character I’m still trying to figure out, because I don’t understand what the hell her deal is with her Joong-won OR even her sister. It’s one thing to be the one person left behind in a disaster, but she seems pretty unrepentant about it, and maybe even smug. How come Hee-joo looks so tortured all the time, and Hanna seems like she thrives on all things evil? I hope there’s an explanation for her behavior, because right now all I can think is that this is more support for the theory that one twin is always evil.

Chun-hee and the coffee boy… well, we’ll have to wait on that one. I suppose I much prefer having new complications introduced, in light of the episode extension, rather than merely dragging out the events to fill the extra space. We’ll have to wait to see where this is going, but it does have me intrigued.

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Thanks for the recap.
Everyone has said everything, but I want to add my thoughts to the "It's not Hanna, it's Heejoo..."

It doesn't matter - whoever survived is evil - I don't care how much someone loved JW in the past and I don't think JW will either.

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Sure he will. Knowing that he wasn't deceived and betrayed will do him a world of good.

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One thing just struck me..if GS can see/communicate with ghosts n help them, why doesn't hee joo's ghost straight up let GS know what exactly is going on? Or get her to help pronto instead of hanging around looking melancholic. .I know it's dramaland and writers have a lot of licence but still? Anyone care to enlighten me? ;)

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Because then there wouldn't quite be a story to tell anymore would there? Built on suspense it delivers with mystery but then again, the Hong sisters would probably be able to come up with some intelligent answer when [if] our darling gets possessed once more and maybe does something that would never have been accomplished without the taking over. But then again, the possession has happened already which doesn't make it unique or perhaps because then the twin hasn't turned up yet IDK I guess then it's to serve the need for the 10 million dollar radar and just our anticipation to what really happened.

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Although.. in the story it's mostly because of Ghost-Heejoo's strange indecision and stupidity to protect her twin and GS's inability to conjure up as and when she needs answers. Shouldn't Ghost-Heejoo be burning with hate and the desire for revenge towards a sister who took everything she had away? She looked pretty angry anyway through the mirror to Hanna but then looks decidedly sorrowful and weak at others.

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I think Han Na being so nice must have felt so sorry for her sister who grew up bitter and alone in an orphanage. Even in her dying moments she looked sad but not angry. Because the culprit was not just anyone but her twin she couldn't reveal it immediately. She was protecting her sister. But because she was in love with Joong Won she was also protecting him. So she was torn.

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I'm so happy the amnesia was quickly resolved, too and that the new twist with the coffee boy and Chun Hee will at least make the final episodes more interesting... crossing fingers... I was afraid they would drag the amnesia and noble idiocy plot until the finale and so grateful they didn't!

I've come to realize that Hong sisters' do a very good job of engaging the heart and emotions while watching the actual drama drama even if an actual analysis of the plot doesn't bear well under scrutiny. I guess that's why there dramas are so addictive, good or bad.

Thanks for the speedy recap!

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I hate to say this because I'm looking forward to Heirs after MS just a tiny bit, but your description of the Hong Sisters' work fits Kim Eun-sook dramas to a tee. SG did that to me. Engaged my emotions (mainly coz of Hyun Bin's character), made me laugh and cry, but afterwards there's so many holes in the storyline that I never bothered to watch AGD. Well, I don't know if that describes Big as I skipped that, but for me their other works' plot was good from start to finish. Falters a bit when the angst comes into play, but I can see that they planned ahead and they knew the ending unlike some writers who after the second half just throws anything they can and makes everyone crazy and ends with a pfft.

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YEEKS HAHA CANT FRIGGING WAITTTTT OMGGGGG
Thanks so much for the recap! OH the extent of my futile desire to study this instead of Great ex as a lit text ahha. [Shouldn't quite be watching buttttttt WHO CAN STOP WATCHING AWESOMENESS RIGHT RIGHT? MUAHAHAHHA]
But geez, isn't the self-pitying orphan rather over-used by now? It would be interesting to have another reason other than the usual jealousy self-righteous complex. But this drama's hooking me up like madame black barbel whale on misterr small-aquarium haha hehe I'M SORRY I JUST.. you know :( It's the same as the URK Romeo Juliet DONKEYSENSE.
I am hoping and crossing my toes, kidney, everything that they wouldn't make this a modern Romeo Juliet though because it clotted my blood upon hearing the 'pay me what you think she's worth' line again. [These frickin trip-ups URKK] Valiantly hoping that it's the necklace, but seriously to offer up his life for hers... that's way past monetary value isn't it? IF she ends up with his ghost, and they replay the entire heartache.. Just please NO, NEVER, not when I've devoted time to this instead of Great Expectations!
Anyway I was just musing over the entire 'what you think equates her worth' ridiculousness and there's nothing to compare is there? Even his own life, if he chooses to give that out instead of hers, which implies in a sense that it is anyhow a step still beneath the value of the one he wants to save. Which means that nothing could be exchanged which would [FAT HOPE] mean that nothing compares to her worth and he should just give the madame nothing. Heh. It'll be awesome though if a drama could just grow some steel balls and give us some twisted answer hahaha
But if Hanna were the one who fell in love with JJW on her unfortunate switcheroo.. let's just say at least her childhood was sweet. Ghosts really shouldn't linger around that long. It isn't fair. Looking young but being really old? HM Would we then be envious of them being stuck in a time-rut or they of our being able to age naturally?

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Am so glad all that amnesia stuff is all over.

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Yes, didn't take him long, did it? I'm so proud of him!

Today's episode was totally worth the wait ... and the amnesia!

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One more... can we please get some real kisses? Seriously??? How can there be better kisses in a high school drama and nothing passionate here? PLEASE???

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i've given up any hope for that by now....*sigh*

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I'd be happy with more sweet handholding, cuddling, forehead kisses, full-bodied hugs like we've seen in the BTS in place of forced 360 degree kisses if needed, honestly. Or just a sweet, realistic kiss on the cheek.

Of course, passionate kissing and maybe some neck kissing would be even better, but I know what I'm watching, and yeah, I don't think that kind of thing is going to happen.

Just...something. Please.

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And now we have Chun-hee!!! How more awesome can this drama be?!

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since "Hanna" is calling the ghost unni, that means she's actually hee joo and the ghost is hanna right

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No clue. I forget which twin is the older one.

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Undeniable chemistry, coupled with good writing, totally gave me all kinds of feels, especially in the last minutes leading up to the final scene. My heart was beating so fast at the possibility that JW might finally remember GS, and he did! Uri trooper of a master actually did!

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I am more convinced than ever that Ha Na died in the accident, and that Hee Joo, the orphan brought up in an institution is the one who schemed and plotted the kidnapping and survived, choosing to live as Ha Na- and of course she hates her face, so had plastic surgery.

She's bitter about the fact that Ha Na was adopted, loved, cherished, and well to do, and had contact with their uncle all that time, while she grew up in an institution, poor, unloved, and probably suffering from attachment disorder.

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I totally agree. The expressions that played across her face when Joongwon called her a counterfeit at the end of the episode were priceless. They said, "This can NOT be happening to me twice!"

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Yeah, the woman is crazy. What is her goal and why is it taking her so long to go for it? All this standing around romancing Joong-won's aunt is not going to work.

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Also, if the dead girl is Ha Na it makes more sense that she wants to protect her sister. She would naturally feel sorry and guilty that she had the great parents, the great life, the pampered, beloved life and even ongoing contact with and love from their only biological relative while Hee Joo got stuck with institutional life. And I think it's a safe bet that when she found Hee Joo, Hee Joo rubbed that in and played the pitiful orphan card pretty well.

She wants to stop her, but she doesn't want to take everything she has away, which is what would happen if it turns out that she's actually *not* Ha Na, so has no right to the name or the all the money and property she's been using.

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Thanks for the update

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As much as I loved the angsty moments this ep, and as heartbroken as I was when Gong-shil was trying to send JW away on her rooftop. Then in that moment of supreme despair ... the close up zoom on that "FX" beer! I mean, the camera stayed on it for like 5 whole seconds! Could they be any more obvious about the PPL?

I couldn't help laughing, when I felt like crying - ended up doing a *coughchoke coughchoke*

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Thanks a lot for explaining the reason JW loves GS. You gave such a clear logics. Thanks very much again.

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Hmmm... I really like this turn of events. Honestly this memory loss propaganda had been used so many times b4 that I really hate it now. But if they use it in such cute way I guess I can't really mind.

About Chun hee and the coffee ghost, I don't think it's chun hee in chun hee's body. I think it must be another ghost that gong shil met while she was in the Coma and wandering around as a ghost. So, now it has 'returned' possessing chun hee's body either to bring her to his world,like dead's world entirely once and for all, or use her body to bring someone's spirit back to living's world.

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oh, hahaha, you've got quite an imagination - I like it! :D

interesting theory, but how would they fit all that into the remaining episodes, i wonder?! :)

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How great is Uncle Pushypants? He got another special mention in my own blog today. I love how he scopes out where his wife is, then keeps nudging Joonwong. “Are you gonna go see Bangshil? Are ya? Huh? Huh?”

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I know! I love the uncle :-)

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Hello everyone!

Well, I am certainly glad that Joong-won recovered from his amnesia because I'm not sure that I could've taken another episode with him struggling to regain his memory of Gong-shil.

I'm in agreement with others who have speculated that 'Hanna' is really Hee-jo, and that Hanna is the twin who perished in the car accident. There are still elements of the twins' back story that are still fuzzy for me. Perhaps it has something to do with the time line of events described in the previous episodes. I wish that Hee-jo's ghost would tell Gong-shil once and for all who she really is and who Hanna-not-Hanna really is, instead of uselessly hanging around Hee-jo and Joong-won.

Coffee-ghost isn't random after all (surprise!). He has been working for a mysterious man who is somehow connected to Gong-shil. We know that Gong-shil was involved in an accident and that for three years she was in a coma-like state. Could this man have been responsible for her accident? Perhaps he too was in a coma-like state? This could explain why he sees ghosts.

Lastly, does the introduction of this man means that the Hong sisters will finally explain the link between Gong-shil's accident and her gift?

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When Lee Chun-Hee came on screen, did anyone else think "CHUNHEE-AA" as in Stepmother Kim's cry from Family Outing Season 1?

Thought this episode was a little on the boring side but I did like seeing his progress towards recapturing his memory. Definitely one of the best examples of amnesia I have seen in a drama.

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Whether or not I am the last or the first to make this comment or observation, don't care . . . . oh gheee whizz how my heart thumped when he got his memory back and realized whose necklace was his return charm. To see him look to Mz Hanna as she clasps hers, and says this was it, and he sooooo shots her down and said it was like it, but not the original was the cherry on top of a banana split for me.

I gave her a salute and a large Bronx cheer!!!! (then turned around, garbed a tissue, and wiped the cheer off the pc screen!, but did not care!!).

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I was trying to figure out why Ep 14 didn't seem quite as good as the rest. It's because Tae Gong Sil doesn't smile at all in it. she has a delightful smile that would melt any heart.

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Thanks for the recaps! I've also enjoyed everyone's comments and theories.

I loved how his worst prediction of what he said is never really spelled out between them, only a flashback of saying he loved her.

I have something that is bugging me though. Since the beginning JW has always said that the living are scarier than anything that can't be seen. He was stabbed by a living person, for goodness sake. However GS doesn't want to drag him into her world (full of ghost) because he might get hurt. I don't think a ghost can hurt him, or tons of people would have dropped dead already. So while I understand the various reasons of why she is pushing him away, this one does not make sense to me. I realize she was trying to solve a case, but a ghost did not stab him! If anyone can help me look at this concept in a different light it would be much appreciated. Thanks.

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I think it's something along the lines that if GS's following the ghost and JW's following GS, then that's when she's putting him in danger, since he can't see or hear ghosts, and is just blindly following GS with no idea of what it's all about.

The same thing happened with the army deserter, when they followed his dog - JW could easily have gotten shot.

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I saw the preview for Ep 15 and so help me Lord, Master's Sun better be a story about how two people nd up falling in love and becoming stronger together and live their lives HAPPILY (with lots of sweet tugging-at-the-heart-strings and angsty-proclamatations-of-love moments) instead of a girl goes through traumatic shit to become a stronger woman cause GODDAMNIT I SIGNED UP FOR A LOVE STORY NOT...NOT...whatever the heck I just saw in the preview!!

Sigh.

Oh, now on to this Ep14. Gosh, it gave me so many feels. I love love Madame Go here (she's actually a good character! Creepy but good and with a heart) and I especially loved her line "She gave all of herself. Calculate the costs for that and then we can start to negotiate/you can settle it". I could literally see the smack-to-the-face-deliverence that line gave to Joo Joong Won.

As for Kang Woo, my heart breaks for you baby boo. You and your puppy dog eyes and pouting lips. I desperately need to hug you. Just....*hugs*.

I'm not going into the Tae Gong Shil's pain and Joo Joong Won's pain/denial/jealousy/love/why you got so many emotions on that darn handsome face of yours?. I can't. Gah! So much angst the both of them T_T

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episode 15 is a doozy.

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Haven't seen it yet. Waiting for subs. But more angst? I'm guessing more angst...Sigh.

I can't take anymore pushing-pulling-tugging-denial between those two. Hong Sisters, just give me ONE and I mean, just ONE good episode (not the last 10 minutes of the last episode cause Imma hurt something I swear) where they're actually a couple. Like a proper couple. No denials, no sacrifices, no BS. There's not been a single episode where they've actually been a couple. Yes, I know you both love each other, but DAMMIT say it to each other AND MAKE THOSE SKINSHIPS WORTH IT!! TOUCH!! TOUCH EVERYWHERE!! TOUCH EVERYTHING!! SKIN-ON-SKIN CONTACT!

...I think I may have gotten a bit carried away there -__-

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My other favourite moment in Ep 14: when amnesiac Joong-won was sitting in Gong-shil's empty office. Even though he didn't remember anything about her and couldn't see anything, he still tried to talk to the ghosts! Such a sweetie! (and actually pretty smart too)

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I am so happy that we get two episodes this week!!!!! I am glad things are playing out the way they are and I must say I really do not mind the amnesia in this drama. it might be because they cannot honestly drag it for too long, I mean there is only 3 episodes left and because even though he does not remember in a way he kind of does (if that makes sense)!
also the whole thing with the necklace! I was getting nervous thinking he was going to confuse the two and think Hanna's was real but thank God he know it was a fake. which makes me think if in the past Hanna ever pretended to be Hee Joo and if he noticed the difference, I mean notice how angry she got when said he was not looking at her and that he knew it was a fake.
another thing is that I am still not fully convinced that Hee Joo is good, maybe they are both evil, I don't know. whatever the case we will soon find out the whole story, hopefully.... one more week!!!!!!

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she change her face but didnt change her name?!?!?!

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thanks for the recap javabeans!!!
I really enjoyed this episode, especially how the whole amnesia trope was used!! Thank the Gods, the Hong sisters didn't give us something so over-used and cliche (phew!! worried all this week for nothing!!). I'm so excited to see our couple in an honest relationship now that everything's out in the open. Please no more noble idiocy taeyang! I understand it, but still... watching joowon so confused and sad is heart breaking. :(

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Just because no else mentioned it, in the original 'Ten Little Indians' by Agatha Christie, one of the ten people supposedly murdered fakes their own death for nefarious purposes. A throwaway clue in the drama, apparently.

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Ma Bong-chul!

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"The statement refers to the fact that he knows she’s been scouring the graveyards, having followed her out one night. He’s ready to provide a comforting shoulder to lean on, but keeps his distance while wishing she’d call his name in her moments of need. Which is why you are a second lead, m’dear."

OOF WHAT A STATEMENT. And this is why I read your recaps religiously, solid life advice hidden in every episode.

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I am so relieved that Joong-won remembers. Gong-shil told him not to touch her at least twice, and all I could think of was that this is the total opposite of the rest of the drama, lol.

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Wait, wait, wait. Just a second. I have certain thoughts of my own too which kept bugging me......... I think Joong-Won must have started going out with the real Hee-joo first. And then some how he fell for Hanna( IF the person pretending to be Hanna is actually Hee-joo) without knowing about the twene scene......... Because, one thing is for sure that Joong-won is completely unaware of the presence of Hanna. Hee-joo must have felt betrayed. The only good thing ever to happen in her life was being taken away by her twin sister who seemingly had it all......
Basically the point is, if the scenario about Hee-joo and Hanna exchanging identity is correct, and that Joong-won loved original Hanna, why on earth did Hanna exchange her identity with Hee-joo......I mean Hee-joo was set for revenge and could have done anything but why Hanna? To get close to Joong-won while pretending to be Hee-joo
ARGHHHHH........It all seems very confusing in my head and I think it seems even more complex and muddled in this comment :o

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Haha..yes, quite confusing.

It is true that JW knew HJ first! (this part from when HJ said she knew him because he visits the orphanage from where she is at) and HJ fell in love with this young man.

It didn't say/show that JW reciprocated any of HJ's feelings but when Hanna took over HJ's identity to get to know him (because she was curious who the sister HJ is secretly in love with!), and given her kind and cheerful persona, JW then fell in love with Hanna but thinking her name is HJ (she introduced herself as the orphan!).

So, technically, Hanna didn't change identity with HJ but adopted HJ's identity. No one knew Hanna was in existent then...

So, you are right about the part where the dark/evil side of HJ took over because she was so jealous that Hanna seems to have everything! But the fact is actually she didn't even have JW's love to begin with! It was only one-sided. Sad!!

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When Ha Na asked him if she was not the thing he was trying to remember while holding that look-alike necklace, and Joo Joong Won told her, it looks the same but is not the real thing, I literally screamed! That gave me so much life, that even in his amnesia he saw through that witch and saw her for the fraud she is. YESSS! That was the moment of this episode for me.

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Hong sisters must really have something against third parties. I really feel for Kang Candy. But on a lighter note, I think he'll prolly end up with Tae Ryiung.

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