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Signal: Episode 13

Soo-hyun takes the spotlight this hour as she wrestles with her most difficult challenge yet: saying goodbye. Signal has put us through some emotionally trying episodes over its run, but if this episode is any indication, it can still wring more tears out of us. As we dig deeper into the past, there are fewer number of people our detectives can trust other than each other.

In the wake of a fallen cop, our cold case squad will need to tread with caution to figure out the details of why his life was in danger. And if they aren’t careful, it’ll be them who might get caught in the crossfire.

SONG OF THE DAY

Jung Joon-young – “공감 (Sympathy)” [ Download ]

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EPISODE 13 RECAP

While Jae-han’s bones are assembled in the NFS building, we jump to 1999 where Soo-hyun learns that Jung-jae has tendered his resignation. Jae-han hasn’t turned up at work either, so she seeks him out at his father’s small watch repair shop.

Jae-han’s father takes her to Jae-han, and she sees the envelope for his own resignation. He doesn’t see why she could concern herself with whether he quits or not, but she’s seen today’s date circled on the calendar hanging in the shop, and says he shouldn’t resign on his father’s birthday.

She disagrees with his idea to buy food, arguing that it should come from the heart. So they end up buying groceries, and her initial claim of being a great cook crumbles as she mixes up ingredients and burns the food. Heh.

Somehow she manages to set a visually appealing birthday dinner, and Jae-han’s father wonders how Jae-han snatched such a pretty lady. Both men dig in… and gag. Ha, it’s terrible, innit? Well, they say it’s the heart that counts.

Jae-han’s father suggests they have a drink instead, and Soo-hyun denies Jae-han’s claim that she’s a lightweight. Cut to: Soo-hyun drunkenly singing in the cab. HAHAHA.

After the cab driver kicks them out, Jae-han piggybacks her the rest of the way. She asks him not to quit, reminding him of how he once told her that being a cop isn’t so bad. When Jae-han says he isn’t qualified to be a police officer anymore, she holds on tighter and tells him: “Lee Jae-han is the best detective I know. So you can’t ever quit.”

Once Jae-han’s father arrives at the forensics building, he and Soo-hyun are told that the skeletal remains are indeed Jae-han’s. He’s brought in to see his son, and torn between relief and anguish at seeing Jae-han one more. He breaks down into sorrowful sobs, as Hae-young looks on helplessly.

Now Jae-han’s fervent words in their transmissions come tumbling down upon him, and Hae-young later arrives at Jae-han’s funeral where there are only two attendees: Jae-han’s father and Soo-hyun, dressed in her police uniform.

“It’s okay,” Hae-young finally tells her. Even if there aren’t any other mourners, Jae-han will find comfort in knowing that there are still people in this world who haven’t forgotten about him.

Her eyes brimming with tears, Soo-hyun says she realized later on that she and Jae-han hadn’t taken a decent photo together. Her biggest regret is that if she’d known that time was the last time, she would’ve made sure that there was something to hold onto.

Shortly after Jae-han’s “disappearance”, his desk had been found stuffed with cash. The corruption scandal had broken his father’s heart, and Soo-hyun had sworn to find him. But as time passed, Soo-hyun concluded that Jae-han must be dead, because he wouldn’t have simply abandoned his loved ones.

So she’d run to check every skeleton that came in through the NFS doors, Soo-hyun explains as tears stream down her cheeks. At times, a part of her wished that he’d enter through a door as if nothing had happened, calling her name. “If he came in like that… if he did…” she says, her voice trembling.

Soo-hyun places a flower before Jae-han’s table, then steps back to give her sunbae a final salute. Tears well up in her eyes again as she remembers how he told her they’d talk that weekend, once everything settled down. “You asked me to wait until the weekend… but it took fifteen years. Since you broke the promise first… you can’t say anything even if I speak badly of you, sunbae-nim.”

Hae-young silently surveys Jae-han’s room while Jae-han’s father grieves. Soo-hyun returns to the precinct and picks up the photo of Batman on her desk, which she’d found while going through Jae-han’s things years ago.

There was another photo in the back—the one of them acting like badass cops—and fresh tears fall from her eyes looking at it again. Clutching the photo to her chest, Soo-hyun sobs, finally giving in to her inconsolable grief.

Hae-young is in his car, a business card for a grilled pig skin restaurant in his hand. He’d found it in Jae-han’s room after Soo-hyun had taken Jae-han’s father away, and wonders why Jae-han had kept it.

Back in March 25, 1999, Jae-han reads that the sentencing for the Inju gang rape case is today. Little Hae-young watches as Sun-woo and the other offenders are taken away, and Hye-seung’s father is enraged that Sun-woo will face juvenile detention for only six months.

Sun-woo sees his heartbroken little brother in the crowd, just as Jae-han arrives to see the teens taken away. No matter how many times we’ve seen it, hearing Hae-young’s cries still breaks my heart. Seeing the young boy, Jae-han connects the dots that Sun-woo is Hae-young’s brother.

Following up on the family’s history, Jae-han learns that Sun-woo and Hae-young are half-brothers with different fathers. He seeks out the boys’ mother, who lives in the literally broken and graffitied home.

He takes in the various certificates on the wall (and there’s an empty space where a picture frame must’ve once hung), and the weary mother is filled with guilt. Sun-woo is her son from her first marriage, and their family could barely afford much of anything, but her boys were close.

Later that night, Jae-han travels to Hae-young’s house. He finds the young boy sitting outside and waits with him at a distance. Hours later, Hae-young descends the hill and Jae-han follows the boy to the main street.

Hae-young walks into the pig skin restaurant and asks for a meal, much to the ajumma’s surprise. Jae-han sits down at a nearby table and pays the woman to feed the boy what he wants, insisting that he isn’t the boy’s father.

Once the food arrives, Hae-young digs in at first, then stops mid-bite, recalling how he’d asked his hyung to take everyone out to dinner. Wiping away his tears, he keeps eating.

The restaurant is still standing, albeit without a customer in sight. The ajumma greets Hae-young fondly, asking him if he wants some omurice. She recognizes their old business card and Jae-han’s photo.

Turns out Jae-han had paid the ajumma handsomely so that Hae-young would be fed. He’d taken a business card with him and would sit nearby while Hae-young ate. She thought it odd that a complete stranger would look after a young boy, and eventually that man stopped coming.

Hae-young takes a walk down memory lane when he exits the restaurant. Jae-han follows little Hae-young at a distance, as the present Hae-young thinks to himself, “I thought I was alone.”

Back in high school, some boys had mocked his brother, which triggered Hae-young’s rage. He’d thrown punches at the student until the latter finally apologized. Hae-young had eaten at the ajumma’s restaurant, and we later skip to the brawl at the pool hall.

Hae-young had shown up at a classmate’s doorstep the following morning, asking how he can get into college. The girl is HAN DO-YEON, who had given him her notes while he was napping on the school rooftop.

She’d told him that getting into a good school was a farfetched idea because there was no way he’d bring his grades up in two years. Getting into a top-tier college or military academy would be out of the question, so how about the police university? That would fit in his qualifications since tuition and room and board is provided.

Hae-young had initially found the suggestion preposterous, but later entertained the idea. The restaurant ajumma had said she’d eat her words if Hae-young was accepted, but Burn Hand’s criticism about his socioeconomic status had wriggled at him.

When the walkie-talkie lights up, Hae-young brings up the Inju case, but Jae-han cuts him off. “I’m going to go all the way. I’d forgotten something important—that I cannot give up and turn my back on it.”

Tears well up in Hae-young’s eyes as Jae-han warmly tells him: “You said that cold cases exist because someone gives up. I’ll make sure that that doesn’t happen to this case.” Hae-young simply hopes for Jae-han’s happiness, because he feels that the importance of being with loved ones outweighs solving a case.

“I wish you would be happy too,” Jae-han transmits. “Even if you’re poor, you can all live under the same roof, gather together for a warm dinner, eat together, and sleep together… and not be lonely. I wish you would live like others do.”

Jae-han smiles when Hae-young asks that he step away from this case because pursuing it could endanger his life. He’s a violent crimes detective, Jae-han tells him—he’s not one to be so easily scared off. But Hae-young counters that Jae-han was the one who started these transmissions and told him that the link would start up again, and it would be up to him to convince Jae-han from the past.

“I heard a gunshot,” Hae-young tearfully explains. Jae-han likely put himself in danger because of the Inju case. Jae-han interrupts Hae-young before he can reveal anything more. His mind is made up; he won’t ever give up. Andddd that’s why you’re awesome.

About an hour later, Soo-hyun sits with Hae-young and asks if he still believes that they shouldn’t trust the police force. Hae-young confirms it, adding that the cops missed nabbing Kim Sung-bum by mere minutes.

This means someone had to have tipped the gangster off, Hae-young says. He believes they should let the others know about Section Chief Ahn’s confession, but Soo-hyun says they can’t because Director Kim oversees everything now.

She hangs upon Section Chief Ahn’s words that everything started in Inju, citing that Director Kim oversaw that investigation as well. There were many rumors swirling around because Director Kim rose through the ranks so quickly—some believed he joined hands with the rich and powerful.

When Hae-young gets worked up and suggests that they investigate the director, Soo-hyun tells him to simmer down. What they have is a theory, so it’s imperative that they proceed with caution—two cops have already died, after all.

Soo-hyun is understanding to Detective Kim and Heon-ki’s sighs when she confirms that they’ll be reinvestigating the 1999 Inju case. Heon-ki quickly separates their corner from the rest of the precinct with the whiteboard, saying that if they’re going to be crazy, they may as well go about it quietly.

He asks in a hushed voice if the reason why Hae-young hates cops so much is because his hyung was named the main offender in the case. Detective Kim can sympathize with how Hae-young must feel, and Soo-hyun picks up on how he knows about the case too, seeing as he’s aware of Sun-woo’s suicide.

Detective Kim admits that he leafed through the case files, adding that all of the witness statements matched up. But that’s what’s so suspicious, Soo-hyun retorts. If all the witnesses lied, then it means someone else is guilty.

Detective Kim says that solving it now will do little, since rape doesn’t fall under the new statute of limitations law. But if they find out who was truly behind the crime, then they can find out who exactly killed Section Chief Ahn, Soo-hyun argues.

Right now Hae-young is the prime suspect for Section Chief Ahn’s murder, but none of the cold case squad believes he committed the crime. Soo-hyun tasks Heon-ki with finding out how the evidence was acquired while Detective Kim is assigned to follow up on the victim.

We jump back to more of Soo-hyun and Hae-young’s conversation, when the latter admits that he was unsuccessful in tracking down Hye-seung. Finding people is an area Detective Kim excels at, and he comes back to Soo-hyun saying that it wasn’t easy, but he tracked her down because Hye-sung’s been seeking psychological help on a regular basis.

Since the cops are on patrol outside his house, Hae-young lays low and sneaks out a different way to meet up with Soo-hyun. He’s brought up to speed on Hye-sung’s need for psychological help, and he guesses that she suffers from PTSD and takes medication for insomnia or depression.

Other than that, all they know is that the address she gave the psychiatric hospital is a fake and she hasn’t scheduled another appointment. Hae-young guesses that Hye-seung must live near the hospital due to her extreme anxiety around people, particularly men.

Because she stretches her month’s supply of depression medication to a year, Hye-seung must’ve somewhat managed her post-traumatic symptoms. So there’s a likelihood that she made a fresh start for herself and holds down a job, though it may be a vocation that deals with mainly women and doesn’t interact with too many people too often.

Hae-young roams the streets, then stops to watch a woman open up a cosmetics store. He approaches her, but the woman says she isn’t Hye-seung. He checks other stores that women may frequent, then he happens to see a woman deliberately stop and avoid two men walking in her direction.

He calls out to her by name, but keeps his distance when he introduces himself. He explains that he’s here about the 1999 Inju case, but she gets agitated and makes for the door. “You remember Park Sun-woo, don’t you?” Hae-young calls out. “He was my hyung.”

Eventually Hye-seung sits across from Soo-hyun and Hae-young in a cafe, with Soo-hyun acknowledging that this must be hard for her. Promising to keep their conversation short, she cuts to the chase, asking if Sun-woo was the principal offender.

Hye-seung lowers her head, then says that Sun-woo was the only person who was truly genuine with her. Sun-woo had sought her out when she was alone, advising her to go home lest something awful happen to her. Showing him her injuries, she’d told him that her alcoholic father did this to her, so she sees no reason in going home.

Taking the beer can away from her, Sun-woo had suggested a better way to lead her life than being a runaway: by securing a future for herself. So he’d promised to tutor her.

Everyone at school had known the online post was about her, and their whispers had driven her up to the rooftop. Just as she was about to step off, Sun-woo had grabbed her. “It’s not your fault,” he’d said. “There’s no reason for you to die. It’s not your fault.”

She’d gone and betrayed the one who saved her life, Hye-seung confesses. When they were in the hospital, her father had threatened her, and so did Director Kim later on. She was so scared and so young back then, and she’d been promised that it would all end if she gave that confession.

She was focused on leaving the hellhole that was Inju, and Hye-seung apologizes to Hae-young. Soo-hyun asks who was truly responsible in framing Sun-woo then, while a group of teenage students pass by Jae-han on the street.

 
COMMENTS

Even though it’s been nearly seven weeks and we only have a handful of episodes left, it still amazes how Signal can still leave me breathless and in awe at each episode’s end. Often times, I need to take a few minutes so that I remember to breathe from the intensity that is this show. And the thought that it may eventually come to an end saddens me.

Getting the confirmation on Jae-han’s death was the first of so many heartbreaking moments in this episode, and as painful as it was to watch Jae-han’s father and Soo-hyun lament over his death, it was also a relief that they finally found an avenue to express their grief and gain some closure on what happened to him. We’ve seen Soo-hyun and Jae-han’s relationship develop as the years pass in the past—suffice it to say that it’s been such a delight from the early days of Jae-han as a sunbae annoyed by the newbie cop to the moments of him as an annoyed sunbae showing genuine concern for her. He was a meaningful presence to her, and watching her send him off fifteen years after his death broke my heart again into a million pieces.

Soo-hyun truly shone in this hour as we watched her deal with her grief regarding Jae-han and then picking herself back up to solve what happened to Jae-han and how the 1999 Inju case ties into what can only be a greater conspiracy. I may not have always agreed with Soo-hyun as a character, but there’s no doubt that Kim Hye-soo brings everything to the table in her acting, showing us both a tough, quick-thinking team leader and a meek young woman seeking to impress her crush’s father (with a white lie that she’s a decent cook, heh).

My curiosity was piqued after a few of you mentioned how the Inju gang rape case is based off of the Miryang gang rape in 2004. Allow to me say that the details are beyond horrifying and sickening, so prepare yourselves if you decide to read up on the case. How a crime of that severity then translates onto our screens is no easy task, considering that most of those involved are minors. Even though we have more clues in this episode than the one prior, especially with Hye-seung’s confession, the story is still far from complete. It honestly worries me that this episode left us with how Hye-seung getting pressured by Director Kim to give up Sun-woo’s name was the clincher in the case, because again, we’re given an incomplete picture and the episode runs the risk of placing blame on her for what happened to Sun-woo.

So I’m hoping that the next episode will provide a broader scope of this case, because Hye-seung has faced enough wrongful victim blaming from her peers and the public. If the Inju case does end up following the events of the Miryang case, then we’ve only yet scratched the surface of the social nightmare that is to come. It makes me sick to think how far corruption and injustice can reach when one has the money and power to do whatever they wish, and that the passage of time has done little, if at all, to break that cycle.

Pulling back to Hae-young and Jae-han, it was touching to see that the detective had a hand in the young boy’s life, if only to make sure that Hae-young wouldn’t go hungry. It’s these unsaid gestures that make me love him more than I already do, and he has no idea how much a small gesture can help shape someone else’s life and help a young boy realize that he’s never truly alone.

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Thank you!

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I cried too much on this episode. I just cant imagine that its already their final week!

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Same here! I don't think I've ever cried this much for a drama since the last 2 episodes of 49 days. I'm preparing myself to say goodbye to Signal. This drama is such a gem!

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I haven't cried this much in long long time... this episode was way too painful.

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Signal IS a gem. I enjoy it tremendously, but after viewing each ep., I'm also immensely depressed because just as the recapper says:

It makes me sick to think how far corruption and injustice can reach when one has the money and power to do whatever they wish, and that the passage of time has done little, if at all, to break that cycle.

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I know. For me it's also depressing to see Jae Han always had to fight the corrupt system alone. He put up a good fight even though sometimes he could not directly see the result himself. At least Hae Young has his teammates in this fight - maybe that's the one point that the present/future is better than in the past.

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Exactly. I felt so sickened by how the gang rape case progressed in Signal, and I got more horrified that this was exactly what happened in the Miryang case. In a way I feel so disappointed that this could still happen in such a developed country.

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IKR!!!! Couldn't believe that omurice can made me cried so much.

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Ahhh who would have thought watching young PHY eat omurice would make me wanna try it so bad?

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The best episode ever! So poignant!

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Why so AWESOME, Lee Jae Han??!!

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best drama .+ best writer + best Director+ best actors

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Agreed. If this ends well, it will be the best Kdrama I've ever seen and that's out of over 200.

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100% agree !

No matter what the ending is, Signal will still be the best kdrama i've ever seen.

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+100000
After more than a decade of watching, I can say that this is truly at the top of them all.

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Agreed! Now browncoat_78, are you a fellow Whedonite?

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This! Glad we all got to experience this. Such a great start to our kdrama year!

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Unbelievable acting and storyline, probably the best and most intense drama I have ever watched. Do yourself a favor and start watching this drama, but probably not at night because the content is pretty serious and gruesome.

Thank you for the speedy recap :)

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I totally turn off most of the lights and watch it late-ish at night, because it's so good that I want to get the full effect the drama team was aiming for.

And that's how I end up jumping out of my skin when I see small white puppies, and why I was tearing up as Jae Han kept an eye on Hae Young through the restaurant mirror. You could have let a firework off outside, I'm not sure I would have noticed.

This is the best, best BEST drama.

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Just amazingly crafted - I cried buckets - Dad breaking down at the morgue, the goodness of Sun Woo and Jae Han, everything is tight, earned and meaningful.

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I do the same thing! and I also put on my earphone to watch it so I can completely focus on it because I don't want to miss even the simplest details, this drama is SO good.

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This episode was truly heartbreaking yet with so many heartwarming moments,so poignant…so sad this drama is soon coming to it’s end,too good!!

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When even a scene with a boy eating omurice makes you cry :(

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That scene was so so sad. He thought he was all alone, but no, our Hero was with him the whole time.

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Thats the scene that got me crying too! I wasnt crying during the funeral (although it was heartbreaking to have it confirmed) but when jae han paid the ahjumma to give hae-young the omu-rice and he was eating it all alone while crying just got ME crying - and i DON'T cry watching dramas..like EVER! Jae-han is truly my hero in this show and i really want him to survive and put those baddies in jail (however unrealistic in real-life that may seem).
Can't believe that there is only two more episodes left - what am i gonna do with my life? It has truly raised the bar for quality kdramas <3

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Ikr?

Funnily enough, this was the saddest scene in the whole episode for me, although the scene where Jae han's father grieves over his remains, and the empty funeral hall was pretty sad, too.

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For me too.

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It suddenly makes you see everything about Hae-young so differently -- remember several episodes ago when everyone wanted to eat out (or something) and the team asked him what he was having, and he said, with the gravity of the ages, 'omurice'?

Omurice is literally an insitution in his soul. It means something to him and that's the sustenance of his soul, as much as the physical omurice: his brother, his hopes, his happier childhood, his family -- but also the loss of it all. That's a heavy meal.

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And of all the things in this heartbreaking episode, I finally started to cry then, that moment Hae-young realises Jae-han was with him back then, that he wasn't alone, and in that moment, he becomes real to him in a way he never was before, despite their communications.

So, so good.

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I like the time dilation in play here, too - Hae Young has been talking to Jae Han for a few months, but in Jae Han's life, Hae Young has been around for over a decade. He's been the helpful-but-cautious voice on the other end of the radio, the one who has some of the truly heavy decisions resting on his shoulders (because while JH is living in a linear fashion with just the knowledge of potential other futures, HY has to live in a place where he has limited ability to avert decisions that he knows have horrible consequences, but full knowledge of those consequences).

So Jae Han has had time to become incredibly fond of Hae Young in a unique way. It must have absolutely stunned him to realize HY was so young in 2015, and that HY has been so very careful about such a vital case in his own life.

You understand why he'd want to take care of HY. But it's perfect, the whole thing is just perfect. All the awards, please.

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Augh, yes. Everything you said. Yes. Yes. Yes.

I also find it incredibly touching how they relate to each other when they talk, in their transmissions. Hae-young is technically his superior in rank, and Jae-han defers to him in a way that is surprisingly generous, yet so in character -- I guess it makes a powerful mirror, that moment he realises that the time-distant lieutenant is this heartbroken, lonely, hungry boy. That's the moment Hae-young becomes real to him, too.

God that just made that scene even more wonderful.

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I don't know how the drama is going to end, but I want a happy ending... with Jae-han and Soo-hyun happily married, and adopting Sun-woo and Hae-young.

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Yes, so true! The genuine love and affection that has grown between them is the best part of this show. In this episode, both of them wished for the other's happiness before their own- that's true love and friendship. :')

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I was crying since Jae Han's dad saw the bones of his long lost son, but seeing HY realize that he wasn't alone broke yet another piece of my heart. it's just too tragic for me to handle

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I totally agree! That's why it was the saddest scene for me and thankfully you expressed it perfectly, so I can just nod my head :-)

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@snailshell yes to everything you said. Well now I'm sad again

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Lol, I started tearing up reading your post! Haha!

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Lol, I started tearing up reading your post. Heartbreaking.

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That's one of the reasons I love this drama so much. So often it seems like whoever writes the drama forgets that we've been watching it the whole time, and makes changes in the past to further the plot. But this drama (where all the alternate past, present, and future times would be KILLER to keep up with) is doing SUCH a good job with consistency.

Anecdote: I don't like to watch sports with my husband because he is so hard on the players. He's very athletic and when somebody biffs a play, to him, it's because they just aren't focused. With me (who's rather uncoordinated) when someone makes an error, it's understandable, because I under perform in sports all the time. And it's not because I don't try.

My husband gets frustrated with me when we watch movies, or TV, because I see the flaws in the writing. (When a show has a glaring writing mistake I KNOW it's because the writer wasn't focused. And it bugs me. And I say, "he (a character) wouldn't have done that," of "that was a stupid way to resolve that conflict."

That is why I LOVE Signal so much. The writing (so far and fingers crossed for the final 2 episodes) is SO good. The acting is SO good. (And I even forgive the silly Subway PPL's.) This drama is so good!!!!

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even the omurice was acting

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LOL!

Yes, and it deserves and award for playing the best omurice in kdramaland! :)

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AHAHAHAH!!

Even that flower pot was like "I'm gonna shatter against this wall like no flower pot has ever shattered before. Link ain't got anything on me"

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I'd read about the real-life Miryang case last year thanks to Han Gong-ju (warning: DO NOT go looking it up unless you want to have your blood boil), but it's still really, really hard to watch how Hye-seung is treated here.

(I wonder if Korean media at least have rules about not releasing the names of sexual assault victims now? Or at least minor ones?)

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** SPOILER **

The rape scene in Han Gong-ju was horrifying. It wasn't visually graphic, but no less sickening with the long shot of how many guys were in the room when her father opened the door. What a powerful scene. It's appalling that none of the guys in the Miryang case were convicted and are still living, breathing, walking among us.

So while I still love Signal and see where the story is going, I can't help but be a little bit disappointed that they didn't really go there w/ this case.

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Han Gong-Ju is way too cruel and horrifying to be part of a Korean drama, even for Signal. Depicts korean misogyny and power based society without mercy, there's no hope, no happy endings, no quirky second leads... just the awful truth. (And still, the movie is just a glimpse of what really DO happened).

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It's way too cruel and horrifying, which is exactly why it should be part of Signal, at the very least to give voice to rape victims, create dialogue and inspire change. That's what happened with the film 'The Crucible'.

I'm actually in awe that Signal wasn't afraid to go to the extreme in previous cases, and after reading about Miryang, I was curious to see how they would portray the Injoo case. Regardless, Signal is making a commentary about political/police corruption and bribery. In the drama, rape doesn’t fall under the new statute of limitations law, so I see where they are going with Sun Woo's case as evident in ep 14.

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Yes man that film "The Crucible" such a hard movie to watch. I was left emotionally numb after watching that movie, seriously my mood was down for a couple of days and I still get sad every time I remember it. Such a horrible case :/

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Hi,

I don't want to google the miryang case but can someone tell me more about it. Specially how is it that is connected to the injoo case?

Thanks!

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Hey Beesuzie, this is the basic case overview from wiki:

"The Miryang gang rape, known in South Korea as the Miryang middle school girls rape incident, was a criminal incident that occurred in Miryang, South Korea in 2004. At least 41 male high school students gang raped several middle school and high school girls over the course of 11 months. The case provoked controversy due to police mistreatment of the victims and lenient handling of the offenders"

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Thank you!

God, that sounds awful.

I hope we do get an ending with justice. Especially, when in the real world we know that doesn't happen often.

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I think it's a case of reading between the lines -- the reference is very, very clear. It didn't need to go there, really. And in the end, the focus isn't really the rape case itself, but Sun-woo getting framed. This show has very little excess -- it's a marvel of less-is-more storytelling.

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Well, yes, it is reading between the lines, but I'm not against subtlety in expressing what happened. My bit of disappointment comes in b/c Signal has done a great job at balancing subtlety and excess (visually and emotionally) in previous cases such as the girl being burned in the bus or Soo-hyun being a victim of a serial killer, so I found how they portrayed the rape incident a little less powerful than the previous cases and definitely less than in Han Gong-Ju. I understand where this show is going with Sun-woo's case and while I love it, it doesn't lessen my bit of dissatisfaction in how the rape incident was dealt.

Spoiler

She was supposedly raped by a number of guys, but in ep. 14, it visually implied that only one guy raped her. That didn't make sense to me and it's an injustice to the memory of the victims of the Miryang gang rape. You can't just gloss over something like that. It doesn't have to be excessive nor does it have to be visually graphic, but it needs to be realistic.

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but it makes sense according to the story. the online post said "one person started it and another 7 people etc etc.." so I guess that scene was shown just to reveal the real culprit who initiated the gang rape and how it started, not the whole tragedy.

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No, it still doesn't make sense. Yes, one person started it, but that means all the guys should've been there. From my understanding, it's a gang rape, not a serial gang rape. Are you saying he raped her once, then she decided to come back to get gang raped? Makes no sense. If you watch Han Gong-ju, you'll see a powerful portrayal of what happened, and it was neither excessive nor graphic. My heart went down south at the implication of the tragedy w/ only one scene.

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Maybe the other guys came after?

It also doesn't make that much of a sense. Did it all happen in one day or in a span of days? I looked up Miryang case and it was a serial case.

Maybe the show is being careful with the case? I love Signal but sometimes the writing does show some weak points. Like this one. And that no known consequence was shown after LJH caught the box killer. What happened to the life for a life premise?

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For someone like Jang Tae-jin, what he did must be summoning his lackeys, the In-gans, to join his sickening rape party after he was done with her. I guess it happened when the victim was still unconscious or something like that.

Also, maybe because I'm a mother who easily cries, I'm thankful that there was no depiction of the actual gang rape.

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Miryang was a serial gang rape, and i think the main culprit forced her to come back after that. The drama didn't show all this, but to Korean viewers I guess this would be a reasonable inference.

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Her initial rape (which was shown in this episode) was by one guy. If you rewatch earlier episode, the "devil" who started it enlisted others to rape her too, later.

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I assumed that the devil raped her first, then using his influence with the other kids, had the 7 members of the student council rape her too, and then got 10 of the neighborhood delinquent kids to rape her as well. None of this was shown, but was alluded to in earlier episodes.

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Makes sense to me because from the translations I read it was always asking who was the instigator and LEADER of the group. Also, I thought it was a lie that there was 18 and it had always been 7 or 10 boys as the detective asks why the number suddenly became so high...

I don't understand how it doesn't make sense? That scene was showing the leader, not who was the sole only person who assaulted her.

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The definition of gang rape is: rape of one person by several attackers (at least two or more, usually three) in succession.

The Miryang gang rape incident is a serial gang rape. That means the victim was "raped up to ten times by three to 24 high school boys in each occurrence".

In Signal, it's called the Injoo gang rape. That means they were all there, he started it, then pressured everyone to participate.

My whole point is that this depiction is the weakest of all the cases when it should've been one of the strongest, especially b/c it's based on the Miryang serial gang rape, which was such a horrific tragedy. I'm hoping that films like Han Gong-ju will create dialogue, action and change like The Crucible did.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crucible_(2011_film)

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well in the real Miryang case, the girl did come back whenever the group call her out because she was threatened. I found the link where I first read the story: http://netizenbuzz.blogspot.co.id/2014/12/pann-movie-han-gong-ju-scandal-based.html

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It obviously wasn't called serial for nothing.

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I've just looked it up, and.... that's just so horrible.

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I was hoping it changed too but seeing how in the recent sponsorship case (sex for money), the female idol's information have been released while the CEO and sponsors involved were not named, I just had to shake my head. This is ridiculous and unfair. Ugh I'm getting so mad again.

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i cried so much during this episode. i'm just about to watch mrs cop 2 first episode and then ep 14 of signal. i love the show so much that its been subbed since this morning but i purposely saved it for tonight so i could end my last night before work with something really awesome. lee jae han is so freaking awesome. i watched a bts clip on youtube of his from the show and just seeing him smiling and being himself made me feel so fuzzy and warm inside. i think ive grown so attached to his character. he just makes you really love him.

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Lee Jae Han is super awesome. He's just the best!

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Sadly came to realization about the fate of Sun Woo during this episode, and am even more sad that my prediction was right. Heartbreaking stuff. Amazing, but heartbreaking stuff.

For all you criers out there, if you haven't watched Epi 14, get another box of Kleenex at the ready.

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Sunwoo is such a selfless boy. He's too precious to die!!

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The good ones always die young. Smh.

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Sun Woo is unbelievably good, and it's not hard to imagine that the thing that kept Hae Young from going totally feral is that he can't do that to the brother who raised him.

For Hae Young to have gone into that police station again and again to try and explain about the woman kidnapper shows a resolve far beyond that of his parents, and it's clear that Hae Young would never have done anything to disappoint his brother, even after his death. Damn.

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it breaks my heart how unfair the world treated him yet he's still so positive and forgiving (especially on E14)

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Wow
This drama has been so awesome
Thanks a lot for the recap

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I was just waiting for the recap.

This episode was the most emotional episode for me. I cried in most but I cried the hardest in this one. Maybe it being aired on my mother's death anniversary made me more emotional.
I am so sad that next week might be the ending of this epic drama. It was an emotional roller-coaster.
For some reason I think sun woo and jae Han will be the after effects of changing the past. They will remain dead.

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No, I don't think so or at least I hope not. Sun Woo and Jae Han will have to live. Otherwise, it would be too unfair and my heart would not be able to take it. I need a happy ending.

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I'm more curious how the changed past will shape Hae Young feature,if Jae Han succedes to save Sun Woo(still fear he will be late) will Hae Young still become a detective(maybe influenced by him founding justice)...If Jae Han indeed comes alive after all this mess he'll be this time the only one who will remember and know Hae Young-ah in the future if indeed fate brings them together again,as detectives...so i'm really curious how the past will change the future Hae Young,even personality wise as he might not live the wild life he had to be shaped like we know him now

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@ Miky

The alternate present:
I feel like you....with Jae Han saving Sun Woo, the past may change... and it will be the other way around. Jae Han will be alive and only he will know the present. He will seek out Hae Young who may not be a policeman (hope he does not turn out to be a hooligan, as he was beating people up pretty much out of anger as a kid, but with his brother's care have become a good man too) who will not 'know' him.

Not sure about Soo Hyun, she will be hopefully with Jae Han, but will not know Hae Young as well. I don't know if that's supposed to be a happy ending though ;( But at least we know that the present reality is worse for all three of them. :)

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I don't think that's true because remember how whoever changed the past remembers? Like when Park Hae Young changed the whole hostage situation, he was the only one who remembered that Soo Hyun had died? So I think he would still remember.

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Agreed. Somehow I have a feeling there won't be a happy ending. Maybe Sun Woo might be saved but poor Lee Jae Han will still be dead :(

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@ PistachioSkies Yeah but Hae Yong wasn't involved in the case as he is now,if Jae Han saves Sunwoo let's say their family might not fall apart and he won't have the lonely hard childhood nor the angry teenage years he had because he'll have a happy normal life,so his personality will be changed as well,he started being all wild also thanks to being shaped for what happened in his youth if not he would more likely be a student role model as he was good at studies and loved his bro and would be like his role model aside from not being alone(his dad seems busy working and not taking care of him at all),not like we saw him in the flashbacks...and if he changes that past Hae Yong won't remember him because he doens't know Jae Han as a kid on a one on one like as an adult,so he will grow up without knowing anything,only Jae Han will know as the timeline will be again reseted and the present we see won't exist

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I cant get over how awesome this drama is.
This episode and the next one is a sob fest, be prepared!
This drama hurt so bad because its not different from the reality we face. The rich and powerfull can easily get away from their crime using their money, status and power. I wish this is not the reality that we lived in but after living almost a quarter of century I'm growing bitter watching/reading news about crimes. It scares me to face the fact that people can be so cold and cruel. I hope that in real life theres also another uncorrupt official such as Jae Han/So Hyun/Ha Young who relentlessly persue justice no matter the consequences is otherwise our life will be so bleak.

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I know what you mean about feeling jaded reading about the seemingly unending series of terrible crimes in RL... But I think the message of Signal is that each of us doesn't have to contribute to the cruelty. I think HaeYoung even says it outright in the ep where they catch the Hongwon-dong serial killer.

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i normally watch rom-coms because they are light and not much thought is needed. i haven't really had any of the recent ones keep my interest long enough, but this show has... and it isn't a rom-com. i think consistency and simplicity is what makes this show good. a writer, director, staff, and cast all work together will made this show shine.

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The thing that really sets Signal apart for me from most other dramas is how unafraid it is to slow the pace right down in this, the 4th to last, episode and to focus on the emotional state of the main characters. Most shows of this genre really ratchet up the drama and the suspense at this point of the story. The heroes are most often being chased, menaced, threatened or otherwise in peril but Signal lets everything go quiet while Soo-hyun and the father get to finally grieve the death of Jae-han. This is something they've never been allowed to do because, before they see the skeletal remains, he's merely missing even though they both know in their hearts he's dead.

The scene when the father tentatively reaches out to touch his son's bones while thanking him for returning so he can perform the final rites before he, himself, dies is so unbearably moving. Most lesser dramas wouldn't bother with this but move directly onto the next dramatic beat. And then to see this decent, wonderful man and excellent cop being buried, after being left to rot under some stairs for 15 years by greedy and venal men, without full honours while being labeled as corrupt is so heartbreaking. I like how the writer etc gives these characters the dignity they (and we the audience) deserve and ignores the hyped-up and ubiquitous dramatics.

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+100000

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Total agreement.

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I applaud this show, that although it is a crime procedural with a supernatural twist, it has not forgotten to balance out action and suspense with so much heart, that it gives great entertainment without toying with us viewers and that it is authentically good.

The writing and the execution of this show has been exemplary. All earlier episodes have been consistently adding on the layers to both intrigue us and show us enough to understand where every character is coming from, how the main relationships have developed and how events have shaped and changed circumstances. It has brought us fully on board in the pain of our protagonists and at the same time given us their human moments which we can relate to well and which do evoke mirth so naturally.

It seems that there has not been a wasted moment or extraneous scene. No unnecessary characters, melodrama or dishonesty in this show. I'll consider Signal a show to remember (although hard to re-watch) and a standard to hold up other shows against!

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I am excited to say this: HE LIKES HER BACK!!!!!!!!!!

I was sure Jae han was too good of a detective not to know how Soo hyun felt about him. Not when she was wearing her heart on her sleeve so obvious that the whole department knew she had a crush on him. Turns out he liked her too, but was just blowing her off. The batman hidden photograph proves it! Oh la la!

What a heartbreaking episode. We finally find out how Park Hae young and Lee Jae han are connected. It's like an infinite loop, Hae Young of 2015/6 introduced Jae han to Hae young of 2000. And the Hae Young of 2000 is why Lee Jae han and present day Hae Young are linked. I like to think that the soul of dead Lee Jae han knew he had unfinished business, so it reached out to present day Hae young to finish the job for him.

I love this drama so, so much. It is so good!

I literally cried buckets when little Hae young was eating his omurice alone in the Ahjumma's shop thinking about his hyung. There was something so heartbreaking about that scene. I watched it twice, and each time, I cried. I will miss this show so much when it is over. :-(

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"But Hae-young counters that Jae-han was the one who started these transmissions and told him that the link would start up again, and it would be up to him to convince Jae-han from the past."

What does this mean?

Does this mean that there was a time when the transmission started in an alternate reality, then stopped before the transmissions started again in this sequence of events? I've puzzled this statement time and again in my head and it makes no sense to me.

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I think it's a loop and this happened before,we know that Hae Young told Jae Han in episode 1 were to find the body of the so called kidnapper,and most likely Jae Han told him before he got shot what he knew from him and that thetransmissions will continue(what Hae Young told him now),so it's a loop,don't think it will close till justice is served as his soul let's think can't rest in peace...My take at least is that,so the story happened don't know how many times before we get to the one we see now...

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That's an interesting theory, and I must admit it makes sense for them to be on a loop, until they get it right.

Something akin to Groundhog Day, if you've ever watched that movie...

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this show is amazing! can they bring JH back and give our 3 leads a happy ending please? The bad cop and the politician can die in place of JH and Seon Woo.
I don't mind if HY will not become a profiler because of the change in the past. His brain can be useful elsewhere. I just want all three of them alive, and happy. Especially JH. He is just too precious!

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That scene where HY told JH to stop investigating the Inju case, and focus on settling down and creating a happy life with his loved ones (which meant that to protect JH, HY was willing to give up everything he had staked his life on), only to have JH respond that he wasn't going to give up trying to make sure that young HY got an intact family and a chance to be happy, even if that ended up costing him his own life-- just about killed me.

But it also made me more hopeful that this time around, both Hyung (Sun-woo), and JH will make it out alive. Because if JH still ends up dead, HY is going to feel that it was all his fault. And if Hyung still ends up dead, it would mean our noble hero JH failed in the mission that he was willing to give up his life for. He went through so much when he wasn't able to save his first love, and I'm hopeful that will get to see him successfully complete his mission to save Hyung, and prevent HY's misery.

Thanks a million, gummimochi, and all my fellow Signal lovers. It's not an easy watch, but it's an especially satisfying one. I'm very grateful to be sharing such an amazing show with you all.

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The amount these two guys love each other is just so heartbreaking. Between them they've had to broker a very complicated deal about what can be changed and how, and it showed that they're both honorable men who pursue justice unflaggingly... But then there's the personal element as well, and this scene was just to gorgeous in showing how deeply they want the other to do well.

And I do love that Soo Hyun is a tenuous link here. She's such a different woman for each of the men, and they basically never talk about her, but you know that some of Hae Young's reasoning for JH to drop the case has to do with SH.

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At first, as I watched the funeral and mourning scenes, it seemed to me that Hae-young was the apparent outsider. Neither Soo-hyun nor Jae-han's dad knew him know JH, or knew how he was connected to him. Even in Hae-young himself, there was a veil between them in their raw, visceral grief.

That's also why I love how they crafted that chain of events that irrevocably changes his outsider status. He finally finds himself in Jae-han's universe, in that room where Jae-han sat on that floor and cried to him for Won-kyung's loss, and through that, he follows a thread that leads back to himself, and this shadow-figure becomes someone who had been there for him even though he didn't know it, and the knowledge of it changes his whole perspective on his own life. Protective to the end, Jae-han filled the role of hyung, in a way. It changes everything.

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I agree. I love that the connection of the three main characters has it's own intricate layers.
Although I'm afraid that not everyone of them may survive, I'm still hopeful to the fact that there's still a chance that we will be left with an ending that will be an unforgettable one.

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@ Miranda - thank you for pointing this out about Soo Hyun. The young idealistic Soo Hyun who was a hoobae for JH and now the much jaded woman working with PHY. I loved the stark contrast with her past and present self which was why the writers of Signal were just pure genius in terms of character build up.

Lee Jae Han what can I say.. I just love the man! It's not hard to adore him- I was crying buckets to realize that JH was there all along keeping an eye on the young PHY. I felt that both men were fighting a lonely fight against the injustice in the world. The only difference is that PHY has Soo Hyun to confide and support him. I wish that JH was more open with the young Soo Hyun in his time it would have made a difference if he had a partner to rely on when things got rough.

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Gosh, this drama... How come it makes me bawling over a child eating omurice? It's okay, Haeyoung-ah, it's okay, your hyung isn't the one who did that.

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i haven't watch it but.. i knew it! hye seung wont do a horrible thing to her only friend unless something scary happen to her. she's also a victim.
but to be the reason of his death, i think that can make her do something great to payback what she did back then. i wish she can help hae young.

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god, that ending! the last scene where the group of boys (with a new, "unspoken of" student) walked past jae han is such a nice touch. depriving the audience of his identity and revealing it only later on show how much invisible and invincible the villain actually is. nice!

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Yes, the directing/editing/music was perfect and created a powerful scene. I loved it too!

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JH looks so damn handsome in that final scene.

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I Cried from the beginning till the end of this episode,..
every scene in this episode is sooo sad, and everyone involved in this drama is really great delivering emotion to it's audients,

wah, i just can't watch another drama after watching it.

Among all signal's eps,
eps 13 is the hardest to watch,..

Bravo Signal, BRAVO!!!!!

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Thanks gummumochi!

I'm so touched by this show... and these words of Jae Han:

' “I wish you would be happy too,” Jae-han transmits. “Even if you’re poor, you can all live under the same roof, gather together for a warm dinner, eat together, and sleep together… and not be lonely. I wish you would live like others do.” ' - reading the recap has put these words of Jae Han in perspective. Just as Hae Young is trying to warn Jae Han to be careful so as to stay alive,... Jae Han is speaking to present day Hae Young but is actually telling the little boy Hae Young whom he fed, ... that he would help him have a warm dinner with family again.

It's amazing that their care for each other has transcended time and even death in a supernaturally unique way. They are connected by so much more than just a spoilt walkie-talkie. They are together even throught different universes? of time, after death has taken one of them. We may (and probably won't) ever get a 'scientific' explanation about how that walkie talkie works, but that it has it's power source from some powerful life-giving energy, like love and justice, is a way I'd like to look at it! :)

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Yes, that's one of the things I absolutely love about this drama, the deep connection between the three main characters.

That scene also brings back what Hae-young said about cold cases; they exist b/c someone gave up. He always said it with emotions and conviction b/c he experienced it first hand. I love that when JH was about to give up and quit, seeing young HY reminded him why he can't.

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This wonderful, masterful scene. Jae-han finds the heartbroken young Hae-young, Hae-young discovers Jae-han was watching over him all that time. They both take up this latest radio conversation full -- just so full -- of unspoken understanding, and it's maybe the most iconic scene of this entire show.

So good. SO good. So, so good.

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The drama was so intense i had to stop and reads comments. I cried a river while haeyong ate omurice while crying

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I love this show SO MUCH, man I love the characters, I love the story and I love and hate at the same time the emotions it makes me feel. Seriously those scenes with LJH and young PHY were so bittersweet, I was hoping they would have a connection with each other in the past, I was hoping they would meet but to know that LJH took care of him from a far distance while he was growing up somehow makes it better.

That scene were they told each other that they wanted the other to be happy,man did it break my heart. I think that kind of explains why fate brought them together, they were two people affected by tragedy, they needed someone to understand them and to protect them. PHY is trying to help LJH so that he can be alive and be happy in the future (present) and LJH helped and is still trying to help PHY survive and be happy in the past. Thank gummimochi :)

Also for anyone having withdrawal syndrome during the week because of this show I recommend watching Missing Noir M and 11.22.63 both are great shows and they will help you survive the week :)

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I did watch Missing Noir M,
you have a great taste of drama :D,

11.22.63? i never saw it,.. is it kdrama?

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Watched Missing M Noir, but I think this drama's better. And I didn't like Missing M's ending...why? why? why? I really hope this drama doesn't go that way. It'll be too sad.

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Yeah, everybody knows the ending of Missing Noir is Not complete yet,.. there are so many mistery left, and it makes me hope OCN will air the 2nd season of it.

Don't worry, i believe the writer and director will make a terrible ending ^_^

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*will not make

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Hi! I watched Missing Noir M as well and found the ending too sad. I just hope that after we've grown so fond of the three characters, even if one of them would still die in the end, we'd get a justified ending.

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11.22.63 is a sci-fi, suspense series based on a Steven King book about a man who "falls" through time into 1958 and finds himself attempting to prevent the assassination of JFK that occurs in 1963.

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ooh.. sorry,.. i thought it's a kdrama,

thanks for the info ^_^

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i watched Missing Noir M. It is also a good drama and i believe their might be a season 2 which i will definitely watch.

The tragedy is that Signal will be ending soon. I doubt there will be a drama as good as this in the near future.

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Did you watch pied piper?

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It’s these unsaid gestures...no idea how much a small gesture can help shape someone else’s life and help a young boy realize that he’s never truly alone.

Regrettably "some of" today's youth are quickly written off...if only more people would try to keep this in mind.

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This is so true. Most of the people I know still remember their preschool teachers or their nice babysitters. Adults like this touch children's lives in a very subtle yet influential way.

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Something funny occurred to me... if Jae Han and Soo Hyun had got together earlier, they'd probably be eating out most of the time LOL! or Jae Han's dad would have had to do the cooking. They were both hopeless in the kitchen!

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Ikr? lol

The cooking scene as well as the follow up dinner scene were hilarious! I quickly figured out that dad would have to do most of the cooking if they got together!

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While a group of teenage students pass by Jae-han on the street.

OMG LEE JAE HAN LOOKS SO FREAKING HAWT IN THE LAST SCENE ♥

Thank you for your great recap. I am so not ready to say goodbye to signal. I can't believe we only have 2 more episodes. I need more of this wonderful show.

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omg yes. he looks so cool waiting in that corner. I just love how he catches up fast. more jae-han's awesomeness please!

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My question is this if they do save Sun-woo doesn't that create a Catch-22, I think that's right, where in Hae-young never becomes a cop and therefore nothing they've done including saving Sun-woo ever happened?

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If Sun Woo doesn't die (though... I really think he will, unfortunately), maybe Jae Han's walkie just goes dead. There's no one on the other side to hear it. And since the police academy is still a very intellectually challenging place, Hae Young might end up there anyhow.

In which case only Jae Han might remember everything? Unless they both remember.

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If it's a loop that's been going on for some time, I think what happens is that the loop ends, seals itself up, and time goes forward again as normal. In a sense, the timeline is "reset", so it doesn't matter if HY becomes a cop or not, because...

hold up.

So. HY is not the primary agent in this time-loop. Jae-han is. HE's the one making things happen, that's what Hae-young was trying to tell him. Hae-young is always the *re*action -- Jae-han is the ACTION. Everything is going round because of him. So that means the answer to everything can only lie ultimately in Jae-han's actions, for him to set right the thing that he's looping on.

I'm guessing each time he's been getting closer and he's finally here -- it's Sunwoo. It's all about saving Sun-woo. I'm beginning to think JH just might not die in the end (again) after all, and so that might be his secondary wrong-to-set-right. The reason HY became a cop in the first place was because everything got messed up. In essence, the present timeline in which HY exists is the WRONG one. If JH can fix things, the "right" future is meant to be one in which HY is not a cop at all. Or if he is, it's not because of his brother.

This post is full of italics and caps because it's full of shocking realisations and omg moments I had while writing. Sorry. Getting my mind blown over and over here.

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@Miranda and snailshell

Very interesting comments.
@sanilshell - like your point about HY being in the wrong timeline.

IF JH manages to prove that SW is innocent and he doesn't die, it is unlikely that HY will be the defiant and angry teenager we saw. He may join the Police academy because he wants to be like JH, whom he'll probably get to meet. SW himself may end up a detective too, and who knows, be JH's hoobae. Together, the 4 of them in 2016, with SH, become Korea's top crime solving detective team!

I'm crossing my fingers!

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Goosebumps reading all your theories and it does make alot of sense in their world. They might all likely still have a connection in the future. I'm thinking because of the impact that JH has in the lives of the brothers, Sunwoo and Haeyoung, they might indeed end up in the police force, under SH! Haha! I do wish for a relatively happy ending given all the sadness and hardships that the leads have gone through. I think it would be enough. But either way, I have confidence that the writer/PD will end with a thematically satisfying ending.

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i really like your ending lol.... :D

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Oh my God I love your ending. Let's hope it's the one they'd use, or something similar.

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I like this theory. Similar to edge of tomorrow... they'll repeat the loop until a key event/condition is reached. Although I think, it's not Sunwoo's survival... I think it's the deep corruption by the rich and powerful. There is also a link to the case of the bridge corruption. Too many lives are lost because of the corruption in both cases...

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Cha Soo Hyun
"I thought he must have died. If he hadn't, he wouldn't have left his family and colleagues like that. So, every time a new skeleton came in... I ran to National Forensic Science.
But still, I wished... that every time the office door opened, it would be him behind that door. Like nothing had ever happened... I was hoping...that he would barge in calling my name. I was just hoping he would.
You told me to wait until the weekend. But it took 15 years. You broke your promise. Jae Han, you have nothing to say even if I make a fuss about it.
I realized later...that we didn't even take...a single photo together.
If...If I knew that would be the last time, I would have left one at least... That's what I regret the most."

How does it feel to not have a proper closure and wait for 15 years? The shattering pain...the terrible longing.. Cause he just disappeared, and she was not okay, and nothing was ever the same. She cried out but no one heard it but herself. There she sat until she realized that there’s no Batman to comfort or save her, she just have to be her own hero. Time passed and she learned to stand on her own two feet once more. When she stood again, she was stronger, but not immune.

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I'm quite late to the game in terms of watching this drama (just picked it up last week), but already I'm hooked!

The moment where we learned Jae-han had been supporting Hae-young all these years was so powerful. I'm struggling to describe it with the right word. I appreciate Hae-young's realization that he was not alone after all. What a powerful moment in a series that continues to take my breath away time and time again.

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The effing nerve of that bloody drunkared of an asshole... with what kind of lousy and pathetic anger does he dare to go railing on SunWoo when he was the one who grabbed his hurt daughter's hair and hissed the words "I 'll kill you if you say the wrong thing". Wrong thing being speaking out against the real perpetrator whom the police was protecting... oh cry me a river. I hope he never sees his daughter and anyone to do with her and rots in InJoo.

I love that Signal focuses on the emotional aspects of the crimes and its consequences rather than the scientific aspects because dramaland has had an abundance of DNA evidences and cold hard steel. And cases are all about the people. And I like that HyeYoung is a profiler who wears his heart on his sleeves instead of one that broods and contemplates with insufferably blank expressions like other geeeeeenius detectives. Actually, the whole cold case squad is fantastic, plus! None of them are deadweights. Shows how characters CAN have both emotions and logic!

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Thumbs up to your comments!

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Yes, yes, yes! This director focuses on what matters and I love it!

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Oh to have this as the ending would be glorious :) but I can't get my hopes up.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WzQuBPnePEY&feature=youtu.be

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Just watched the link! So cute! How I wish that is the ending too!!! Please, writer, please!

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ASDFHJKGFDSDFGHJKLHJGFDFGHJKLKJHGFDFSFGHJKLJHGF I JUST SAW THIS OMG THANK YOU

I don't wanna keep my hopes up but omg this is the perfect ending please please please. Jo Jin Woong is hella adorable. I'm hyperventilating here.

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Thank you for the link, this highlighted my day! They're just too cute, my favourite people in dramaland ?

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@ Cat

Wow! Thanks so much for this link! That was lovely! ... The sweetest smiles I've ever seen on any of them. So natural, so full of good humour. I could stare at them smiling like that forever! :D

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Jae-han, Jae-han. Wahhhhhh.....
They have got to bring him back somehow.
What an angel. I love this show.

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Reading up on the Miryang case was truly horrifying. Imagine; all the perpetrators got off literally scot-free without any lasting consequences. I cannot imagine how those people could live normal lives. And imagine being married to one without ever realizing it and then have a daughter with said man. omg.......

I'm glad that they are bringing it up again, especially in a drama that is currently well received. This case should not be buried and people should not forget that the victims are still living this nightmare. The perpetrators and all those who helped bury it and victimised these girls must be held accountable for their actions. Justice must be served if humans want to continue surviving in this effed up world.

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The number one thing I want to go into right now is into the brain of the scriptwriter. SERIOUSLY! I want to know what's inside that brilliant head of hers for the FINALE!!!

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PERFECTION!
This drama greatness is UNRIVALLED! There are only great things you can say for this masterpiece but every time I want to give praises, I'm lost for words.

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The fact dat at least 41 involved n yet none were convicted is just horrifying..i just hope dat sunwoo n jaehan make it through...is it to much for me to hope for a happy endin for signal?

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This drama is not for those who are weak at heart. Nor for those who are looking for fluffy love stories. It showcases the unfairness and cruelness of the society. I can't tell how much I love this drama. It is absolutely brilliant!

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best kdrama ever. please do yourself a favor and watch this if you haven't.

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I have to say, reading everyone's thoughtful comments here really enhances the whole Signal-watching experience. Thank you all for your thoughts on such an amazing show. You all have covered the poignant moments beautifully.

So with that being said... on a more superficial note, how HOT is high school rebel Hae Young? Heheh

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+1000

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+1

Your superficial note cracks me lol. Young Hae Young is indeed so hot. But more than that, i adore Lee Je Hoon' acting. Be it high-schooler or profiler, he is the same person who wears his heart on his sleeve, passionate, yearn for justice and still a bit mischiveous. From now on am so gonna check these amazing trio future work.

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Signal still continues to deliver awesome flawless episodes! And despite this episode being a bit more subdued, with focus on SH and also on her past with JH, it still gets us right through the heart. The reveal where JH paid for HY's omurice meal, was just sooo heartbreaking and so touching. Someone had his back after all and a connection was made between them.

I can't wait for the final episodes! And although I do wish that the world would conspire in giving our leads the happy ending that they deserve, I would be okay with whatever ending this writer-PD team will give us. I am assured that they have thought things through and that it will still make sense in the end.

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well I just love Lee Jae Han sunbaenim so much. he's one of my favorite characters ever. and knowing that the writers are probably not gonna save him this time either just breaks my heart so much. Signal is a great drama but it's really too tragic, painful and heartbreaking. Like just how much more tragedy will they make Jae Han and Hae Young go through?

all I want from Signal is that Hae Young and Jae Han can be alive and well in 2016 and be best friends. i need realistic, but i need even more Jae han and Hae young's happiness, after all they've been through

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Gummi! I cried reading your recaps. ;A; This show is just so heartbreaking. Every time I reach the end of an episode, I also have to stop for a few minutes and let it all sink in.

I'm the type of person who nitpicks on everything. My dramas need to be satisfying and all the loose ends need to be tied up before it ends. But with Signal, it's different. If all three of them are living happily in the present while drinking soju is how this drama ends, then be it. Jaehan and Soohyun need to get married and have wonderful babies while Haeyoung babysits them, okay?

Jo Jin Woong is all bits of amazing. I'll probably cry and give him a full bow if I ever see him in person.

Thanks for the recaps, gummi!

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Ahhh. I cried watching the episode, cried reading gummi's recaps, and cried reading all of the comments here. All of you are so awesome. This kind of environment makes watching the drama so much more enjoyable. Having other people to talk to about a drama I love is just so awesome. Moments like this make me really appreciate dramabeans more. I love you all! *virtual hugs*

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I am crying again because of your comment.

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@ earthna and everyone!

*Hugs all around!*

Thanks for being such thoughtful and considerate drama-commenting companions :D Loved reading you all!

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I thought I wouldn't love this show this much. Everything is so well-written, well-executed. I really have high hope for the finale.

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I have no words left to tell how happy i am after watching this whole series... all the actors were new for me (i haven't seen them before)... but i like them all as the drama progress. Cho Jin Woong is such a gem actor.. he is now my one of the best actor.. what a character he has played??? AWESOME... Debak to the whole Team behind the camera.. and how can i forget PD kim.. Love you all... :)

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I don't know anymore. I can't see through my tears. Young HY eating omurice. PHY telling JH to be happy. Sunwoo being so damn nice and forgiving. Arghhhh show I hate that you're ending next week. Can we all have a happy ending for all of them? Excuse me while I cry some more.

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Thanks to the scriptwriter or highlighting these type violent crimes do exist in South korea and not everyone glosses over such issues in the increasing spread of New wave of Hallyu. Victim blaming and the level of corruption and how someone in power can play with the law is something that must be eradicated as much as possible from all societies across the world.

I came to this drama for its story and cannot wait to see how it will end. Am only up to ep13 still though. Best drama in a long while. Beats all those rom-com and revenge series.

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i know its been a long while since this post hs been up but if someone sees this comment , can u please help me find the song which cha soo hyun was singing in the taxi while she was drunk... i know i have heard the song somewher before but cant remember it!!! driving me crzy !

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