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Dramabeans Top 10: Korean dramas whose endings are better left unwatched (trust us)

javabeans: Sooooo, we’ve been wanting to bring back the “If You Like…” series of reviews, where we take a theme or motif and recommend other shows like it. We really liked the idea when we first brought it out…

girlfriday: But then we got tired. Mostly, it was just daunting because we wanted so much to be all-encompassing, and never leave out a drama.

javabeans: And as many shows as we’ve seen, there’s just no way we would be able to write about every single workplace romance drama, or makjang tearfest drama, or drama about heroes with good eyeliner.

girlfriday: Wait, I might still want to do the one about eyeliner.

javabeans: But then it occurred to us that we could cap our lists, instead of trying to name every single applicable title ever made.

girlfriday: Hence, the birth of Dramabeans Top 10. Because ten is a number we can handle.

javabeans: Plus, it sparked a wave of fun future list ideas to tackle, so we’ll roll those out in due course. We promise! I’m pretty sure we said that about If You Like, but we mean it this time! I feel good about this. Because Top 10 means Not Top 100.

girlfriday: For our first Top 10, we decided to start at the end—or more specifically, with endings.

javabeans: And for better or for worse (mostly just worse), drama endings have lacked a little something recently. I still haven’t seen the finale of Yong-pal, for instance. I know all about it, and I just can’t bring myself to sit through that.

girlfriday: I think you’re better off skipping it.

javabeans: But I have to finish it! I invested 17 whole hours already, and even loved 6 of them! I can’t NOT see the last one!

girlfriday: … And therein lies the perpetual problem that we face, time and again. To finish, or not to finish… that is the question.

javabeans: Would you rather preserve a pleasant memory despite harboring a gaping hole about the ending, or would you rather tarnish the whole experience so as to save your curiosity from expiring?

girlfriday: We’re here to help out! If you choose the gaping hole, feel free to stop reading here.

javabeans: However, if you choose the red pill, we’ve got a whole list for you below, so you can read up on the ending but not waste your hour.

girlfriday: Oh, and SPOILER ALERT, because of the obvious.

javabeans: These are in no particular order, if only because how do you measure the weight of one heartbreak against another? *sob*

 

1. 49 Days (2011)

javabeans: The ending for 49 Days may be more polarizing than universally decried. But it gets added to this list because for those to whom the ending felt wrong, it felt really, really wrong. The crux was this: You gave your heroine a second chance at life, she earned it, and then you killed her anyway! What in the WHAT.

Dying wasn’t the problem, since this whole drama was built around finding new meaning in life via death. After the heroine was killed before her fated time, she was given the chance to win back her life if she could find three people who truly loved her. If she were to fail, we all knew she was taking that big elevator up to the sky, so we were always aware of the threat hanging over her head. The problem was in giving her all these narrative plot hoops to jump through, awarding her the victory, and then declaring that she had been fated to die soon afterward anyway, claiming her life for a wholly unrelated reason. That’s not just withholding a cookie from you; that’s giving you a piping hot cookie, describing all the ways in which it is delicious and gooey and mouthwatering, then snatching it away before you can eat it. And throwing it on the ground. And crushing it under a dirty, heartless boot. Stomp, stomp.

 

2. Who Are You—School 2015 (2015)

girlfriday: I swear, my resentment for this show’s ending isn’t all about being on the other romance ship—it’s also about not giving our twin heroines a proper resolution as sisters. On the one hand, this show’s ending isn’t actually offensive premise-destroying anti-matter like some of the others on this list. But the ending still took all the wind out of my sails when I really enjoyed the ride up until the finale.

Who Are You—School 2015 put a fantastically tense twist on the usual high school drama, with Kim So-hyun playing two diametrically opposed twin sisters who swap fates. It repurposed melodrama tropes—amnesia, hidden identities—to intensify high school drama, which made for some crack viewing through its run. But in the end one sister basically took over the other’s life, becoming her stand-in rather than gaining a relationship with a sister. Where was the sisterly bonding, the character growth for unni? And don’t even get me started on the romance, where we watched the hero pine over one sister all series long and then suddenly love the other one, reinforcing that whole replacement motif (which I find worse in principle because they’re identical twins). Or set up the second lead to pull all of our heartstrings to the bitter end, only to kick his heart to the curb. Ugh, I take it back. I’M STILL MAD AT YOU.

 

3. God’s Gift—14 Days (2014)

girlfriday: This one actually pains me. Because this show was so good. SO GOOD. I actually wish I could tell people to watch only 15 episodes and imagine the rest, because the ending you picture in your head will invariably be better than the one the show delivers. But the problem is, you can’t not find out what happens at the end of a mystery thriller where lives are at stake… so then you’ll just have to watch and join the rest of us who carry the rage in our hearts.

God’s Gift was a brilliant show that wove together two mysteries—a dead girl and a killer on death row—and put a heart-stopping, sweat-inducing ticking clock on the story by sending its two lead characters back in time 14 days so they could stop their loved ones from dying. It unfurled in tense, gripping action and suspense as a mother stopped at nothing to save her daughter. The problem, of course, came in the final episode when our hero discovered the role he played in the girl’s death the first time. He could have just not killed her the second time, but no, he decided he had to sacrifice himself to Fate (that bitch) to save the girl who was already saved. Sadly, Captain Awesome was not also Captain Smartypants. Worst. Gift. Ever.

 

4. Surplus Princess (2014)

javabeans: I can almost excuse Surplus Princess for its off-the-rails ending in light of the meta knowledge that the show was being suddenly cut down by two episodes, with barely any time to adjust for the new timetable. But knowing why a show flipped everyone the narrative middle finger doesn’t magically make sense of the narrative chaos, so the show earns its spot on this list.

Surplus Princess had a quirky and zany charm that may not have resulted in a ratings bonanza, but entertained its cult audience with its wacky comedy and silly plot about a mermaid princess who became human to win the man she’s crushing on, which required her to score a job at his company. Thus the show entwined the familiar Little Mermaid premise with the topical theme of the younger generation struggling to find gainful employment in today’s fiercely competitive market.

Did she win her man? Yes. Did she win the right to keep her legs and remain on land? Ish. She disappeared into tears and mist, only to make a literally last-minute reappearance after the obligatory finale time-jump, marked by the deliberately provoking caption “I’ll be back.” The show dropped a tantalizing plot twist, and then dropped the curtain, as though to punish us for the cable station’s misdeeds. What did we ever do to you, Show, but love you and watch you faithfully?

 

5. Vampire Idol (2011-12)

girlfriday: I can’t be entirely mad at Vampire Idol for not delivering a satisfying conclusion when the network cut its episode count down from 120 to 79. And in some ways, I admire the ballsy approach to write a big F–you ending for being robbed of a third of its intended run. I could imagine doing the same in the heat of the moment, with a bottle of bourbon at my side. But it still sucks to be on the other end as a viewer who invested time in these characters over 79 episodes, to be left wondering, basically, WTF.

Vampire Idol was a wacky show to begin with—a sitcom that brought alien vampires down to Earth and found comedy in acclimating them to human life. It was low-rent, low-tech, and filled with acting newbies (many of whom would go on to superstardom). But it was also hilarious and witty and totally out there, and found ways to embrace its own limitations with inventive jokes and storylines. We even started to care about this crazy family of vampires, idol trainees, and assorted guardians. So imagine what a punch to the face it was to get to the last episode where instead of a resolution, we got a series of cryptic glimpses into the future that left a zillion more questions and everyone hanging in the balance. I mean, it literally closed on: And then that happened… *surprise face* THE END.

I can’t imagine a single person who watched that ending and didn’t throw something at their screen. And if you didn’t, you are a better person than I am.

 

6. Hong Gil Dong (2008)

javabeans: Admittedly, I did write in defense of the ending in the finale recap, and I still think there’s some merit that can be mined out of the ending. Or maybe that was my heartache talking at the time, trying to glean purpose from a finale that yanked the rug out from under our collective feet. Sure, the drama had been growing increasingly dark, and yes, war is a harsh mistress… but for the type of show Hong Gil Dong was—a rambunctious romp that portrayed a legendary fictional hero in a slapstick rom-com light—it was rather a slap in the face to kill off all our good guys in the final hour in a futile burst of bravery. It wasn’t the death itself that hurt, but the clash between our expectations of a boisterous happy-ever-after and the bitterness of the closing massacre (however beautifully filmed) giving us a sacrifice that amounted to nothing. If Hong Gil Dong had been presented in a more nuanced, complex, or dark light from the get-go, perhaps the ending wouldn’t have felt such a betrayal of rom-com trust. Instead it left us like the drama—the ground razed and barren, smoking in the aftermath, just like our spirits.

 

7. Rooftop Prince (2012)

javabeans: Structurally, Rooftop Prince was a bit of an oddity, sandwiching an uproarious fish-out-of-water comedy in between a romantic mystery-melodrama. For most of the drama, we focused on the Joseon prince and his three sidekicks who time-jumped into present-day Seoul, where one plucky everygirl took them under her wing like very adorable, color-coded ducklings who relied on her to acclimate them to modern marvels like toilets, public transportation, and evil chaebols. Hilarity, much of it side-splitting, ensued. On either end, we were given a heartfelt romance and mystery set in Joseon times, where the prince struggled to uncover how his beloved wife came to die.

That made for a finale episode that felt, tonally, jarring compared to the wackiness that preceded it. But tone shift aside, what gave Rooftop Prince its disappointing ending was the conclusion of the romance, inasmuch as the lovers were split apart by 300 years: The heroine got a second chance with a reincarnated version of her prince, while the prince… died alone, forever devoted to the sweetheart he left behind in modern Seoul. Sure, future Yoochun may have gotten his girl, but past Yoochun had to live out his life without her. Well, at least he had his Power Ranger sidekicks with him to soothe the pain.

 

8. Gu Family Book (2013)

girlfriday: Loving your girl’s 422-years-later doppelganger is totally the same as loving her… right? WRONG. I seriously felt like Gu Family Book got dropped on its head just before the finale, because whatever possessed it to kill off our heroine and propel our hero four centuries into the future as an ending resembles no earthly logic.

I know, it was a supernatural drama to begin with, about a half-gumiho hero who learns to tame his inner beast and save Joseon. No one ever said it was realistic. Gu Family Book was certainly flawed, but it also had a fun, comic-book style and I enjoyed the hapless beginnings of a young hero-to-be. But the show had a bizarre idea of narrative payoff if it thought that killing his one true love and making him wait generations for her reincarnated doppelganger was some kind of cosmic reward for being a hero. There are some dramas where this kind of ending could work [javabeans: NO THERE AREN’T], but this one didn’t support that kind of epic scope, in story, scale, or execution.

 

9. Mi-rae’s Choice (2013)

javabeans: Here’s a simple, clear-cut fail for you: You designed a drama all around a character making a choice, and then? WE GOT NO CHOICE.

Okay, sure. The character did make a choice in the final episode, which we’d been building up to all series long: Which man would she pick? The one she’d initially fallen in love with but grown to bitterly resent later, or the one her future self was convinced would lead to a happier life, prompting her to time-travel back to her youth to convince herself to pick Door Number 2? (The dilemma was a tad bit more nuanced than a mere love triangle, but since the key premise was withheld from us, the drama forfeits its right to claim nuance.) And so, we’re shown that she chose… but not shown the choice. Who does that?

When you refuse to deliver on the most basic, fundamental element of your story, you’ve basically copped out of telling a proper narrative with a beginning, middle, and an end, inasmuch as we never got out of the beginning territory. You’ve essentially reneged on telling a story at all, which means this drama barely gets to be called a drama. Go away, dram.

 

10. Big (2012)

girlfriday: You know what’s funny—Big got its romantic happy ending, and yet it still angers me more than any of the other dramas on this list where characters met untimely deaths, ambiguous fates, or were forced into second romances with reincarnated doppelgangers. Because, go figure, this happy ending was supposed to be between the heroine and the hero of our story—aka Coma Boy—not the heroine and the body he was borrowing while she fell in love with him.

Big is really simple in premise—it’s a body-swap drama that asks us to spend an entire series believing that there’s a teenage boy inside a grown man’s body. Which is a head-twister in the romance department, because you’re not quite sure she’s falling in love with the true person on the inside and not the hot man on the outside (because, um, Gong Yoo), but you still put faith in what the story is telling you. Because you believe in such a thing as blind love. And call me crazy, but in exchange for going along with that, I wanted to see those two characters, in their own bodies, getting their happily-ever-after to prove that she really did love only Coma Boy. Is that asking for too much? Is it really? To get a happy ending with your two leading characters in their true corporeal form? I think not, Show. I think not.

 
+7 Honorable Mentions:

11. Oohlala Spouses: On paper, saving a troubled marriage via body-swapping hijinks sounds heartwarming and hilarious. In practice, the marriage should never have happened and wasn’t worth saving.

12. High School King of Savvy: We were with you until you married a high-schooler. Is “He’s eighteen—it’s legal!” really the message you want to be sending?

13. The King 2 Hearts: You killed the only thing that was good and true in this world when you killed off the king’s bodyguard. RIP, Earnest Bot.

14. Secret Door: You were supposed to give us a secret door into the untold truth of the infamously grisly, captivating true story of a king who forced his son to kill himself. What we got was a blander, tamer ending that told us nothing new. I could have gotten a more riveting story reading my history textbooks.

15. Prime Minister and I: It’s a romantic comedy that ends on a handshake.

16. Bad Guy: In a word: nihilistic. In more words: Our “hero” ends up destroying the thing he wanted all along (family), lets his sister shoot him, and dies alone and friendless. Nobody ever finds out he’s dead. The murdering sister blithely relaxes to a massage after killing the brother she never knew she had. Fin.

17. Nice Guy: Maru may or may not have lost his memory, and may have started a new romance or rekindled an old one. We may never know. Maru is mysterious. No one will ever know Maru.

 
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What about I Summon You, Gold and Jang Bori is Here?

Hope you can come up with a Top Ten Best Drama Ending List.

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bibimap ~

I Summon You Gold.

Yeah, poor Mong-hee was a fifth wheel during the camping trip.

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I'd forgotten that one. Thanks soooo much! It's not that the ending was horrible, but couldn't they at least given her a guy or just not have gone on that camping trip. That one was too much like an American soap opera for me. Just... what a waste.

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PlumWine ~

It had some actors and actresses we liked so we stuck with it.

We did name one of our cats Deok-Hee, after Lee Hye-Sook's horrible character.

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John -

I believe I started watching this one because of Yeon Jeong Hun. I was patiently (not anymore) waiting for Vampire Prosecutor 3, so I figured it would tide me over. I also like the jewelry design process so I figured it would at least interest me more. Still didn't save me from feeling let down at the ending.

I imagine that cat acts like the 'queen' she's named after. Unfortunately, my daughter named her cat Isis 6 years ago. Now when she wanders off we have to go around are neighborhood yelling Isis.

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I can so relate to this list ! Haven't watched many of these dramas thanks to your warnings in the reviews- so the utter frustration of watching king 2 hearts, nice guy and gods gift endings were avoided..

But yea.. Prime Minister and I.. started off so sassy and fun. And boiled down into a needless ex wife melo

I'm surprised you haven't mentioned This Winter the Wind Blows ..The drama derailed long before the end .. but ugh.. so much of missed potential

On a separate note , I was surprised at the number of fellow reviewers who think QIHM ending made no sense either.. haha .. you could literally here me screaming at the screen. .. It's a perfectly logical and genius ending ! The writers have sown the seeds since the very start !! Watch it ! Such a good drama lol

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I also tginkthink She's So Loveable should have been on there Too. U remember watching it to the end and going WTF!!! Waste of my time...

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She's lovable is just pretty terrible overall, but yes the ending is really stupid. The main OTP was horrible and stupid. Made me root for the second leads much more.

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Blood had a terrible ending as well. Not that it was built on a great premise by any means but still, the ending should still have some logic...which it had zero.

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Oh yes, I forgot about Blood. Bloody mess ending! :D

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Oh yes, blood ending...

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Maybe I'm not recalling everything, but what made it so horrible?

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It's an ambiguous ending, kind of like City Hunter. Except pretty much every character died, including the hero as we were led to believe. It didn't show what happened to all the infected test subjects in the hospital.

In the final couple minutes, the hero popped up to save his girlfriend. Many were totally confused by this. Some of us had to rationalize the hell out of it for ourselves.

Given I've trained myself to automatically expect WTH!! kdrama endings, Blood wasn't all that bad.

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I'm pretty ok with ambiguous endings. Especially if it saves from an ending like FK. (Yes, that's my mantra too.) Besides, in my mind a wedding does not equal happily every after. As long as my (smiling/kissing/holding hands) main OTP are (safely) together (alive) in the last shot (and I can tell who it is - big) I'm fine. (usually)

I'm sure I forgotten a qualifier or 2 but that's all I can remember right now.

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Oh man. School 2015 has scarred me for endings. Until recently, I'd been refusing to watch currently airing dramas for fear of dealing with an ending like that again. First time I've ever been on the wrong ship but I thought for sure she would end up with Tae Kwang. It just seemed perfect for each twin to be matched up with one of the main leads, especially since the one lead male was supposedly in love with Eun Byul for 10 years or something. Made absolutely zero sense to me that he jumped from one twin to the other in a matter of months [was it even that long?!]. Ridiculous. >< If it weren't for the fact that Sassy Go Go aka Cheer Up has me hooked, I'd still be on my "currently airing" drama hiatus.

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I am enjoying Sassy Go Go recently too, but as of episode 5 there's been some hints of possible love triangle. And I am scared of love triangles because I always end up rooting for the 2nd lead until the bitter end (case in point: Gong Tae Kwang, ChilBongie).

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Yeah, I've been praying to every drama god there is that they stay out of the love triangle trope. Halfway through and doing pretty good so far, so I'll just have to keep my fingers crossed!

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I've been hooked on Sassy Go Go as well! I do not think there will be a love triangle though. We only have 6 episodes left and there are still things we need to clear up on such as Ha Joon's relationship with his dad, Yeol with his dad, Yeol's dad and Yeon Doo's mom's relationship. Ultimately, I think Yeon Doo is the only other person besides Yeol that Ha Joon is able to warm up to. He saw how loyal she is when she said she wouldn't tell people about the incident with him and his dad. I don't think he'd dare touch Yeol's girl either XD

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Reading this article just made me mad again to that drama, I mean I love them but those ending just grahh! :) xD

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I thought I was the only one who devastated when they decided to kill Eun Shi-kyung (Jo Jung-suk character) in King 2 Hearts.

At the moment they did it, I'd decided not to watch the drama anymore and I didn't care about how it ended.

I was so into him, and I cried when he died. Literally cried.

I still remember how it hurt me badly *okay, I exaggerate it... a little bit*

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Big definitely had the worst ending ever for me. I was actually legitimately so angry after I watched the finale. I marathoned through the last few episodes because I was behind and when I got to the ending, I literally had to take a moment because I was just fuming. WTH WAS THAT ENDING?!?! I was expecting Shin not Gong Yoo!!!! >:(

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lol, same here...It took me days to calm down, I seriously felt so cheated after watching it!! I legitimately wanted to throw something at the screen this day *growl* The ending was THAT infuriating! (though I should have seen it coming with that stupid last-minute plot device in episode 14)
God knows I love Gong Yoo but I sure wasn't expecting it to be him under the umbrella, I was expecting Shin Won-Ho...I didn't ask for much, even 5 minutes would've been enough but no Hong sis decided to chicken out at the last minute and thus ruined the whole drama.

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I recently reqatched Rooftop Prince and I surprisingly liked the ending better than at my first watch.

49 Days is a drama that would have not stayed in my heart for so long had it not been with this ending.

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WHIB is the most WTH WTH ever . Legendary.....

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Our beloved Beanies, I so disagree with you in most of these endings. I get it that girls want their romance but in some of these cases, this could never happen. In Bad Guy, 49 Days, Rooftop Prince could we have a "they lived happily ever after"? How silly would that be? And in Big? The young boy is Gong Yoo's twin, so his face in the age of 21 is... Gong Yoo's. Did you expect to see Gong Yoo in his 20s? And in God's Gift, well... We HAD to watch Doctor Stranger's trailer? Really, SBS? In Mermaid I can't even comment on tvN's utter stupidity.

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I don't remember they being twins, one was born many years later how could they be twins?

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Courtesy of "Frozen Embryos through IVF" storyline. I think that was the whole purpose of the "identical tweens" plotline. (perhaps My Sister's Keeper korean version?)

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With Big I don't think it's because people are mistakenly assumed that it's Gong Yu. At least I don't. I know the one under the umbrella is the little brother. What makes me angry is the fact that they don't have enough courage to show other face besides Gong Yoo. And how they happily skip the transformation/shift between the brothers and force us to happily accept that the transformation has been done. It's okay to assume that your viewers are stupid and easily pleased but not to that extend. I actually kind of love the show and totally enjoy it but it does have one of those endings that is bound to ruffled feathers. And justifiably so.

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But since they are identical twins the one under the umbrella IS Gong Yoo only his 20-year old version. Is there any other possibility that this one? The student grew up to have his brother's face and we all understood that. Perhaps Gong Yoo or Hong sisters didn't want to resort to something that it might look odd as showing a 30-year old actor to be a very young man. Nonetheless, I never thought that there would have been any kind of misunderstanding about who's who in that finale. Perhaps Hong sisters did not assume that the viewers are stupid but rather intelligent and familiar with the writers' work instead.

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wow i totally agree with "who are you", nice guy, mire's choice, big.. those are one of the biggest mistakes of my life

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Top 10 messed up heroes, Top 10 roommates, Top 10 geniuses....

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I was waiting for Big to be mentioned :) But isn't the ending that the younger brother is actually a clone of Gongyoo? So then she still gets to love both the inside personality and the outside body. Ya know. After waiting like 10 years...

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You're right! Another commenter has pointed that out, too. What does make Big's finale so terrible? (and I'm not talking about the whole storyline) Is it because we DIDN'T actually see him as a 20-year old man (which, I think, was somehow difficult, right?) or is it because we DIDN'T like the ending, period? I can't fully understand all the rage here...

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"Is it because we DIDN’T actually see him as a 20-year old man (which, I think, was somehow difficult, right?) " Personally, yes this is my main issue with Big. In my eyes (and heart), they were oozing with chemistry from their very first scene and so I wanted to see the REAL hero in his own young body to be with the heroine.

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But how would that be possible though? Gong Yoo was not 20 after all. Since they were identical twins he was supposed to look like him only younger,wasn't he?. The real question here is why Hong sisters went for a finale that caused so much misunderstanding. Did they really think the audiences would get it anyway or did they aim at getting a buzz, albeit the poor ratings?

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I agree, it was just a shot of a hand holding an umbrella, or some such thing. I think a lot of us wouldn't be quite so upset if we had just gotten to see the FACE! I heard it was some cop out or something by the station, but I'm not sure.

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Love Letter, Jo Hyun Jae.
love that one, and hate the ending to pieces.

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ha I still remember the ending. SuAe on wheelchair. At least they were together (even though not married or anything).

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Thanks! at least someone with common sense, I agree with a lot in the article!

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I know many will disagree, but I didn't like City Hunter's ending...:( I generally felt the romance lacked in the latter episodes and Nana became secondary. But I thought something more definite will happen for the couple in the end at least, but it was too vague for my taste. From the way they were filmed in the last scene I didn't quite understand if they were still a couple...

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I am fine with 49 Days' ending. I think it's quite realistic ending. We can't hope a died person (Scheduler) to comeback to life as if nothing wrong. While for Jihyun, though it's sad but I still able to accept her fate. She had already done what she needed to be done. And everyone had come to their resolution. I don't think Yikyung ended up with Hankang, they are more like bestfriend.

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Earnest Bot!!!! AGHHH that ending still kills me! :'( Why oh why of all the people it was Earnest Bot!!

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I cried into a towel :( and fell sick for the next few days. The things a drama does to us

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Thanks God, I only watched three of those in the list: King 2 Hearts, Rooftop Prince, and Nice Guy.

Nice Guy: It's not my cup of tea... I just couldn't feel any chemistry between the main leads.

Rooftop Prince: I watched this drama because of those three funny guys...

King 2 Hearts: Forget it! You broke my heart to pieces when Shi Kyung died... He's the main lead for me...

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Yes, you can't really put it on this list if the whole show lacked, well everything... Doctor Stranger...

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I'm actually ok with several of these endings.

49 Days I thought was very poignant. But like the US TV show "Dead Like Me" I thought the sadness gave it dramatic power. Like her parents say to themselves, she came out of her coma to say good by to them. I felt bad for the male lead but at least he had a little time with her.

Rooftop Prince my interpretation of the ending as that Yoochun's modern character gained all his past life memories when he came out of his coma, and thus he actually remembered all the events of the show from the prince's perspective. So yeah he was alone in Joseon time but he knew he would meet his reincarnated true love later on and he did, as a modern man.

Gu Family Book well ... I saw the end coming. I didn't see the flashforward coming, and then I wanted Gu Family Book Season 2. The flash forward to the future was exciting. Imagine if that crazy evil dude who was the villain reincarnated as a North Korean spy or a gang lord or something like that.

Mi-Rae's Choice I thought this was a fantastic ending. The way I interpreted it was that her CHOICE was to focus on her career and not pick either guy. The important message for me was that she was not picking a man to make her life better, she was making her own life better and having a career and success and then MAYBE she was going to get a guy but on her own terms and maybe it was JYH and maybe not.

I'll give a pass to Surplus Princess because of the episode cut. I always saw it as a parody more than anything else (remember how the work supervisor would appear above the cubicle partition with the Attack on Titan theme playing? And the princess got her feet in a sequence that combined Sailor Moon's transformation sequence with Arnold's Terminator landing?) School 2015 just pretty much fell flat on its face. Big really did NOT satisfy. The others I haven't seen.

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I'm still mad at bad guy. It was truly a full force punch to the face.

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I'm still hating big on BIG.

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Another honorable mention needs to be K-POP - The Ultimate Audition. It starred mainly unknown idols/trainees and younger siblings of idols. It was a really cute show. Super cute.

And then.... around episode 12 or 13 it took a left turn into wtf-land. It's like they filmed the whole thing, got word it had been cut down by 2-4 episodes and then editing tried to splice something together - after coming back from a week-long bender.

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The leads chemistry were off the charts in that show. That show suffered because of the cut. I really hope dramas stop extending/cutting episodes.

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Totally agree on no. 17 ;)

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My no.1 WTH ending show is God's Gift, I think because I loved the drama so much that my frustration was twice big. I was thinking about dramas that I have watched, and for many of them, I could not remember the ending. I assume that means ending must not have been that bad for many shows.

I didn't have any problem with some of ones listed. However, there were some I didn't like (mostly because of sad ending- leads dying/leaving/parting) including Sign, Bad guy, What happened in Bali, Beethoven Virus, Bittersweet Life, Damo etc.

As for SangDoo, Let's go to school, I remember people talked a lot about ending that time. At least we got fantasy scene at the end which eased my pain. I remember reading writer (Lee KyungHee) added that ending (maybe for fear of viewers' rage).

And for Iljimae, the PD made it clear Iljimae was alive and well at the end. So I have no problem with it.

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I would add Shine or Go Crazy, which shone till the end and then .... gone crazy. What was that ending?

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My Love Eun Dong has my vote for worst ending. Yeah nothing like letting the suicidal and psychopathic fake dad have a relationship with a 10 year old boy who is not his son. And don't forget--main character noble idiocy at its finest. 14 great episodes and 2 WTF episodes...

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I second that.

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Air City ending - totally unexpected, like a heart-attack. I couldn't sleep for days. Hahaha...

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i scream BIG as soon as i read the headline.

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many dramas would i end even before their 8th episodes, but worst endings happen when the shows are all great, promising, but then in the last two eps... BOOM you questioned all your WTF to your screen.

Big remains number 1 to pop out my head when it comes to worst ending, because the idea, the progress, everything's fine, until your 'male lead' is actually gone. poof.

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This was really fun! Looking forward to the lists to come.

However.....High School King of Saavy....one of my top three dramas....I have no issue with the marriage....I think the circumstances were so extenuating and both families approved. I think it was the best answer and because it was out of the norm, I thought it very creative and worked great for that particular couple. I absolutely LOVED the ending of this drama, probably would rate on my top 3 best endings. Funny, huh???

BTW--my bro married his wife when she was 17....no pregnancy involved...17yrs later they are still together and happy. It works.

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yeah I have no problem either cause it is a drama not real life and in the drama it works. cause what are the other options? breakup? they tried that. Eloping? what about Dad and sister...

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I am usually very understanding with sad endings in Sageuks but "Ja Myung Go" took it to another level of mass suicide lol. That was the worst ending ever for me.

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Painter of the Wind
Scholar Who Walks the Night
City Hunter
What the @#$% happened?!

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+1 on Painter of the Wind. The logic behind MGY's character leaving made absolutely no sense. I get that there couldn't be a happy ending there, it would have seemed really cheap to pigeonhole her character as Kim Hong-do's wife given the drama's exploration of genderqueerness...but still. I would have loved a tragic ending that had some meaning to it.

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I wasn't sure if she left as a man or a woman! In the 1700's a woman could never travel alone. But also how do you just leave town: no relatives, no jobs, no money. No Motel 6. What was the plan?
thanks for responding!

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Another WTF ending: The Winter The Wind Blows, did the main lead have to die? And by his best friend in the most senseless manner? Or DID he die? Did the main female lead survive her surgery? Or was it just a dream? These ambiguous endings give me a Headache! And ruin the drama for me. If the main leads die, then at least have the courtesy to inform the audience of that fact and NOT keep us guessing! (Big Sigh. Ends Rant).

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1) 49 Days: Haven't watched it yet but it's most certainly on my to watch list (along with Twenty Again). Especially because of wrtier So Hyeon-Kyeong. I've enjoyed her other works Two Weeks, Seo-Young My Daughter, Prosecutor Princess, and Brilliant Legacy.

2) Who Are You - School 2015: Better time spent watching Sassy, Go Go (Cheer Up!) instead. WAY15 felt like a disservice to the school franchise. But if you must watch, the good news is that it was a big breakthrough/breakout role for Yook Sung-Jae as Kong Tae-Gwang. (Of course I also enjoyed him in Plus Nine Boys and now in The Village: Achiara's Secret) At the end of the day School 2013 and Monstar fared much (not just much but wayyyy) better as youth genre dramas due to their respective screenwriters; good writing and narrative logic; a compelling plot and character development; both excelled at nailing emotional truth and depth; sense of self/personal identity; and for their intensity and gravity of the teenage experience.

3) God's Gift 14 Days: Do I regret watching it? Not at all! I still contend that this drama had one of the strongest and most solid 1st & 2nd premiere episodes for tv than I've seen in a long long time. And for that this drama was well worth the watch in addition to how it referenced Hans Christian Andersen’s The Story of a Mother. Regrettably, the drama ran out of time for the story that it wanted to tell.

4) Surpluss Princess (aka The Idle Mermaid): Eccentric, campy, unconventional and fun. Bummer the episode count was reduced from 14 to 10. A case in point where it truly helps to know the backstory & set of events that transpired behind the scenes in context to the narrative that's happening onscreen.

5) Vampire Idol: From 120 to 79 = 41 that's a lot of missing episodes. Still because of Lee Soo-Hyuk & Kim Woo-Bin, it's in my pending queue of kdramas to watch list.

6) Hong Gil Dong: Haven't watched it yet. With the Hong Sisters I now know it can be either hit (Master's Sun, Greatest Love, My Girlfriend is a Gumiho, My Girl, ) or miss (Warm & Cozy, Big). And then there are the projects that fall sorta in the ambivalent category (He's Beautiful, Fantasy Couple). Just earlier this week I completed watching Couple or Trouble.

7) Rooftop Prince: No regrets about watching even though it ended like it did. When thinking of RP, good memories of Park Yoo-Chun and a great OST "Hurt" by Ali.

http://wiki.d-addicts.com/Rooftop_Prince_OST

8) Gu Family Book: A big breakthrough/breakout role for Choi Jin-Hyuk as Koo Wol-Ryung. The best thing about Gu Family Book was the storyline of Wol Ryung and Seo Hwa. I stuck it out for Lee Seung-Gi & Choi Jin-Hyuk.

9) Mirae's Choice (aka Marry Him If You Dare): Do I regret watching it? I’m probably in the minority here but I don’t regret watching it at all. The premise - 20/20 hindsight…same choice vs. different choice. The promos...

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Continued...

9) Mirae's Choice (aka Marry Him If You Dare): Do I regret watching it? I’m probably in the minority here but I don’t regret watching it at all. The premise - 20/20 hindsight…same choice vs. different choice. The promos highlighted two suitors, one choice. The possibility that the second lead would have a fair shot at the heroine, even if it was a different timeline was enticing and refreshing. It started out as exciting and full of potential but sadly faltered along the way. Therefore, I have a love & hate relationship with MHIYD. A painful love although it took me through the ringer of disappointment, anger, sadness, and frustration. MHIYD’s ending…I’ve made peace with it and I'm a Na Mi-Rae & Park Se-Joo shipper all the way. Also, it had a nice OST.

http://wiki.d-addicts.com/Marry_Him_If_You_Dare_OST

10) Big: 16 hours I'll never get back. Watching Big felt like a chore to me. I knew from the beginning I didn't really care for it but I continued to watch it hoping it would get better. Listen to your intuition.

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Honorable Mentions:
12) High School King of Savvy: Another wonderful acting performance by Seo In-Guk. "We were with you until you married a high-schooler..." There were many aspects of HSKOS that I truly enjoyed. But, I simply could not put on blinders and ignore the big elephant in the room — some of the morally ambiguous points like a woman in her late 20's/early 30's "continuing" to date and eventually marry a guy she discovers is still in high school student. Granted the writers did a great job in making most of the characters well-rounded and sketching their complexity.

13) The King 2 Hearts: A completely enthralling drama, enjoyed it tremendously. Plus it was my 1st Cho Jung-Seok drama. RIP Eun Shi-Gyung. I question if casting Yoon Je-Moon as evil villain John Mayer/Kim Bong-Goo was the right decision. I don't think he was the best person for the job. To this day, I still think his over-the-top performance/portrayal of John Mayer/Kim Bong-Goo was the weakest link.

15) Prime Minister & I: It was Yoon Shi-Yoon's last drama before he entered the military. Still convinced that Im Yoona's acting is entirely overrated.

16) Bad Guy: As a kdrama newbie looking for my next kdrama to watch, I almost selected it a couple of times. But every time I would read the synopsis, I was never in the mood to start it.

17) Nice Guy: I've always been indifferent about it - neither loving it nor hating it. Watched while it was airing. Relieved it's checked off the list and not in my pending queue.

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Gap Dong had lost its charm before the last episode, but the ending was SO. BAD.

Especially the long speeches in the end, about the meaning of life, lame even for a high-school play. I wish I could get that hour back.

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Watching Mirae's Choice was like watching bread get moldy. It was a gradual deterioration in story and concept that, by the time the finale came along, I was not even surprised it had gotten that bad already.

You guys should do the flipside and do a top 10 best Kdrama endings. I'd like to suggest Scent of a Woman.

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Maru was no mystery. The fact that he gave her the same rings he had picked out before his amnesia clearly indicates the return of his memory. A happy ending ♡

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THAT WINTER THE WIND BLOWS
He survives, she gets her sight back and then they reunite at the cafe...

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Agreed. The director made the ending literally fuzzy by putting that weird filter on the last scene, so viewers weren't sure if it was real/imagined/afterlife. I guess the PD decided he wanted to be an artiste, not just an artist, in the end.

But that was another show that went steadily downhill anyway, from the episode after the forced kiss. I know a lot of people here had strong negative feelings about the forced kiss scene, but it didn't really bother me that much. But in the next episode the sexual tension was gone and so was the writing, and that bothered me a lot.

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it would have been awesome if there was a rating panel. i will give this post five stars for totally agreeing with them all.

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Very true! I watched majority of the dramas mentioned here and I gotta say that the endings were not as good as the whole drama. However, some of the endings I was actually able to handle

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Add Soulmate to the list. Such unfinished business. Such high hopes dashed.

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I figured they meet up in Japan. The director was basically letting us decide if we believed in soul mates.

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I only watched Gu Family, Hong Gil Dong and Rooftop Prince. The last one dod not bother me. Gu Family SO DISAPPOINTING I don’t want to rewatch any episode and Hong Gil Dong thanks to that I rarely watch historicals anymore. What a wail and sobs ending :(

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I totally get the feeling when a show ends in a frustrating manner, which seems so much more common in K-drama than others like J-drama etc.

Agree with many on the list, and want to add on a couple of my own:
- My Spring Day - reality be damn, it just feels so... wrong. I waited till the show has ended, read the comments in the forums, and havent watch the last 2 episode since.

- War of Money - i think someone else also mentioned about shows that in the last 10 min suddenly pull a gun/knife/big stick and wack off the lead, totally out of the blue. War of Money was the first time i encounter it, and left a bad taste in my mouth. Shame too, i really like both the leads.

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bad guy's ending sucked!! Not because of the "nihilistic" ending but because the execution was terrible and the main character sucked..a depressing ending doesn't make a drama bad..look at what happened in bali..which is what bad guy tried to be and failed at miserably..jo in sung character shoots and kills ha ji won's and so ji sub's characters in the last minute and then kills himself..depressing yet totally fitting and well done..Bad guy was a fucking mess that made no sense and the main character was completely unrelatable and unsympathetic and I was glad he was dead by the end..and Han ga in sucked too

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Thanks for this post! It was the first time I laughted about those smash-my-laptop-kill-the-writers endings (I'm looking at you Kim Nam Gil shows!).

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The scary part is that I've watched them all!!!??

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Eun bi's eyes in middle part of ways2015 feels like she is falling in love with taekwang Her eyes are bright when she is with Taekwang. THE TIME JUMP BROKE MY HEART. HER EYES WERE COLD while talking to Taekwang Its not Eun Bi anymore! I hate youuuuu writerssssss still hate youuuu

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