249

While You Were Sleeping: Episodes 1-2

We’re off to a good start for SBS’s new supernatural romance While You Were Sleeping, which is beautifully shot, cleverly written, and full of warmhearted characters. I’m reminded again that I love the way Park Hye-ryun writes her heroines—funny, sassy, prideful to a fault, totally flawed—because the way her character is written is making me like Suzy in this role. It’s not a thriller, it’s not a melodrama, and it’s not a rom-com… but it is all of those things, with a touch of fantasy and a lovely melancholic touch throughout. Whatever you want to call it, I’m in.

 

[geolocator_show for=”SG”]

[/geolocator_show]

 
EPISODE 1: “While You Were Sleeping”

On a snowy night in Seoul, time seems to flow backwards. Cars and people move in reverse, and snow falls up into the sky.

A woman with a scratch on her face sees a man walking toward her, blood streaming down his face. She runs into his arms, dropping a hair-tie in the process, and says, “I believe you. Because I’m me, I can believe you.”

As they embrace, time stands still… and then everything begins to move in reverse again.

The same young woman, NAM HONG-JOO (Suzy), wakes up from what must have been a dream, looking very different with longer hair. She writes down what she remembers, muttering at how absurd it was, as Mom comes in and nags her about her pigsty of a room.

Hong-joo says she hugged a stranger in her dream, which is crazy because she’s not the type to throw herself at men. Mom agrees that she shouldn’t, not looking like that anyway.

Mom wants to know if the stranger was handsome, but Hong-joo reminds her that she has a boyfriend. Mom counters that she’s been on two whole dates with him, and keeps prodding about Dream Guy since Hong-joo’s dreams have a habit of coming true.

Hong-joo barks that this one will not… and then freezes at the sight of Dream Guy standing across the street from her house. Mom heard that they’d be getting new neighbors, and wonders if the two handsome boys are brothers.

They are brothers, in fact, and Little Bro shoves a rice cake into his hyung’s hands. Hong-joo’s Dream Guy, JUNG JAE-CHAN (Lee Jong-seok), pouts at his little brother’s insistence that they pass out rice cakes to their new neighbors, calling it old-fashioned.

Hong-joo panics when Jae-chan heads straight for their house, and tells Mom that he’s the guy she hugged in her dream.

Jae-chan puts on his nicest smile for the intercom as he rings the doorbell, only to be met with Hong-joo’s cold reply for him to leave and never come back. He’s stunned at the rejection and yells over at his brother for making him do this. Little Bro (Shin Jae-ha) just guesses that he didn’t smile.

Jae-chan swears up and down that he smiled, and Little Bro decides that if the girl is that rude, Jae-chan should date her because they’re a perfect match. Pff.

Sometime later, Hong-joo sits at the bus stop while complaining to Mom over the phone for taking the car, and then panics again to see Jae-chan walking in her direction. She’s so engrossed in her plan to avoid him and appear disinterested that she ignores the schoolgirls who ask her to move aside so they can sit on the bench.

Jae-chan happens to sit in the seat right next to hers when there are plenty of others available, so she moves one seat over, and he follows suit. She does it one more time just to be sure, and he scoots over again to be next to her. So she’s suddenly convinced that he’s trying to seduce her.

She stands up to give him a piece of her mind and blurts, “I’m not interested in you!” at the exact same time that he stands up and tells the schoolgirls that they can sit together now. So embarrassing.

The schoolgirls snigger at her, and Hong-joo is so mortified that she gets on the wrong bus and just stays on—one that happens to be plastered with a giant ad for He’s Just Not That Into You. LOL.

Jae-chan smiles at her, finding the whole thing amusing, but as the bus pulls away he connects Hong-joo’s voice to the rude intercom girl across the street and yells after her.

Hong-joo tells Mom about it that night at their samgyupsal restaurant, convinced that Jae-chan has fallen for her. When a customer comes up to the counter to pay, Hong-joo is distracted by the sight of familiar objects—the man’s lighter, the bandage on his finger, and even his face, which we see in a flashback to a dream.

Hong-joo says that she dreamt about that man lighting a cigarette on a snowy night with that bandage on his finger, and the moment he did, he caught on fire. Mom takes her seriously right away and runs out to stop the man at his car.

Mom tries to ask for his lighter and cigarettes, saying that they’re bad for his health, but the man just shoves them off. Hong-joo shouts through the window, “Ajusshi, you’ll die if you smoke that!” but of course he doesn’t understand just how literally she means it.

He pushes them into the street and drives off, and Mom shows Hong-joo the lighter she stole from him in the tussle, hoping that it’ll change things. Hong-joo is more cynical and says it won’t: “It’s no use. It’s all his choice and his fate.”

Mom argues that if you know, you have to change things. But at that moment, snow starts to come down, just like in Hong-joo’s dream. Hong-joo: “You can’t change it. Who would believe such crazy talk?”

Hong-joo continues in voiceover as we watch the cigarette man find a second identical lighter in his car before stopping for gas: “That I saw you in my dream, that my dreams always come true, so if you want to live, you have to listen to me—how would anyone believe such nonsense? Even Dad couldn’t believe it and went like that. You can’t change the future. Knowing doesn’t change it.”

And just like Hong-joo says, as if it were predetermined, the man lights a cigarette and ignites the leaking gas all around him, sending his car and the entire gas station up in flames.

In the morning, a group of staff workers from the prosecutor’s office swoon at a picture of the handsome new prosecutor arriving today, who happens to be Jae-chan. His new office manager, MOON HYANG-MI (Park Jin-ju), thinks his looks warrant a cake.

Her former boss, prosecutor-turned-lawyer LEE YOO-BUM (Lee Sang-yub), feigns jealousy over her shifting loyalty, but then pays her tab. He says that he should congratulate Jae-chan on his first day too, and they’re surprised to hear that Yoo-bum was Jae-chan’s tutor when he was young.

Hyang-mi thinks Jae-chan looks too smart to need a tutor, but Yoo-bum says he was always in last place in school. In flashback, we see Little Jae-chan proudly read “justice” as “just ice,” to the horror of his tutor. (Man, is this the third time Nam Da-reum is playing younger Lee Jong-seok?)

The story is a bit disheartening to Hyang-mi, whose coworkers worry that she’s in for a tough time with a new boss who’s not the sharpest tool in the shed. She says optimistically that he’s still a prosecutor, so how bad could he be?

Cut to: Jae-chan posing for a series of selfies in the hallway with his new ID tag, like he’s fifteen and on a field trip to the prosecutor’s office. They cringe, and when Yoo-bum calls out to him, Jae-chan recognizes him right away and calls him “hyung.”

Jae-chan seems less than enthused when Yoo-bum leads him into his old office like he still works here, bragging about the cases he tried. Jae-chan gets introduced to his team’s lead investigator, Chief Choi, who dutifully tends to Yoo-bum’s coat out of habit.

Yoo-bum says he came to congratulate him on becoming a prosecutor, except he makes sure to refer to Jae-chan as a snot-nosed kid. Hrm, looks like you’re here for your ego. Yoo-bum offers his help with anything he needs, calling it a win-win, but Jae-chan doesn’t seem eager to take him up on it.

As Yoo-bum answers a call, he mindlessly rips and rolls up tiny bits of paper, which Jae-chan clocks with interest.

It takes him back to his youth, when Yoo-bum had done the same thing while teaching him the meaning of “win-win.” Yoo-bum had said that Jae-chan’s father offered him bonuses for every time Jae-chan raised his rank in school, and he hatched a scheme to forge Jae-chan’s report cards and split the money.

Little Jae-chan had scoffed that his father, a cop, would throw them in jail if he found them out. But Yoo-bum had insisted that they wouldn’t get caught, and lured Jae-chan with the idea of buying that motorcycle he’d been dying to get. He’d said that Jae-chan would get his bike and his father would be happy about his grades, calling it a win-win.

Hong-joo has another dream, in which she wakes up in the hospital near Christmas time. She holds a letter in her hand from her mother—a list of things to do in the event of her death, including bank accounts and insurance policies. Oh no.

She asks the woman by her bedside if Mom passed away because of the accident she caused, and she begs to be told that this is a dream.

She wakes in tears, and continues to sob as she writes down the details of her dream: “Aunt, long hair, Mom’s will, because of an accident I caused… Mom…”

Mom notices her swollen eyes when she comes out of her room, but Hong-joo lies that she just ate ramyun last night. Just then, a news report shows the cigarette man from her dream dying in a gas station fire.

Hong-joo is numb with shock, and then suddenly runs into the bathroom and starts cutting her hair in wild desperation. Mom pulls the scissors out of her hands and asks what’s wrong, and Hong-joo cries that it happened just like in her dream.

Mom says that they couldn’t do anything about it, but Hong-joo is inconsolable as she wails, “It doesn’t change! Mom, what do I do? What do I do?” Mom hugs her in worry as Hong-joo sobs.

She ends up telling Mom about her dream, and Mom just laughs sweetly and asks if that’s why she cut her hair. Hong-joo says she had long hair in her dream, and vows never to grow it again.

Mom says teasingly that Hong-joo’s looks were mostly due to her hair, and tells her with a comforting hug that she won’t die so easily. Hong-joo says in a tiny voice, “You’re all I have in this world. So don’t leave me alone, okay?” Ohgod, now I’m terrified.

Despite what she says to Hong-joo, that night Mom takes out her bankbooks and starts writing out a will. Noooooo. The calendar behind her says it’s February 13, 2016.

The next day, on Valentine’s Day, Yoo-bum buys a bouquet of flowers and is surprised to run into Jae-chan outside the restaurant (in the middle of taking more embarrassing selfies, naturally).

Jae-chan says he’s here on a date as well, when Hong-joo runs up to them and greets Yoo-bum. Er? She and Jae-chan turn to each other in a mix of surprise and antipathy, and Jae-chan is extra shocked that she and Yoo-bum are dating.

Yoo-bum suggests that Jae-chan and his date join them, and Hong-joo and Jae-chan nix that idea in unison. As they head inside, Yoo-bum makes sure to patronize Jae-chan as usual, patting him on the butt and acting proud that he’s all grown up and has a car, when it seemed like just yesterday he was buying him a motorcycle.

Flashback to 2003. Dad had discovered Jae-chan’s motorcycle because he’d gotten into an accident, and accused him of stealing it. Jae-chan swore he didn’t steal it, and ended up confessing to forging his report cards with Yoo-bum for the money.

Dad had been so proud that he’d framed every one of Jae-chan’s report cards to display on his desk, but at Jae-chan’s confession, he threw them all in the trash, heartbroken.

Jae-chan sighs in the present thinking of that memory, and then notices the snow begin to fall.

Hong-joo is distracted through dinner when Mom doesn’t answer any of her text messages, and she thinks back to having blown out the candles and checked the stove before leaving, but then realizes that she left the front door open.

The worry is too much for her and she bolts up to go check on Mom, and Yoo-bum offers to drive her car for her because she’s never driven in snow before. Gack, I just realized she’s wearing the same outfit from the opening dream sequence.

Meanwhile, Mom is on her way home as usual, except a young man in a baseball cap is on her tail the whole way, like a creeper. He follows her all the way to her front gate, and Mom jumps in fright when he calls out to ask her something.

Hong-joo calls Mom repeatedly as Yoo-bum drives, and she sighs in relief when Mom finally answers and says she left her phone at the coffee shop, but a nice young man brought it to her. Phew.

Hong-joo can finally rest at ease, but she asks Yoo-bum to take care of her mother in the event that she causes an accident. He’s confused, but he promises to protect her and her mother.

He looks over at her, and in that instant, a figure tumbles over the hood of the car and falls to the ground in a bloody heap. Oh shiiiiiit. Agh, it’s the young man in the Batman cap who returned Mom’s phone. He lies in a pool of blood, not moving…

The car careens into a lamppost and Hong-joo’s eyes flutter open for half a second, and then when she wakes again, she’s in the hospital. She can barely focus her eyes and searches the room for Mom, but the only familiar face she sees is her aunt’s.

She fades again and then wakes up for good this time, and is shocked to see how long her hair has grown. Craaaap. Aunt says it’s Christmas Eve, and the other ajummas in the hospital room say that she’s been asleep for months.

Hong-joo asks for Mom, and Aunt says tearfully that Mom held on for so long just waiting for the day that Hong-joo would wake up. She explains that someone died in that accident that she caused (interesting that no one ever mentions Yoo-bum in all this), and that in order to pay damages to the young man’s family and to cover her hospital bills, Mom had to sell the restaurant and the house, and work night and day without rest.

One day she collapsed in exhaustion, and fell down a flight of stairs to her death. And just like in her dream, Hong-joo opens up her mother’s will, which lists her accounts and ends with: “Don’t blame yourself.”

She begs her aunt to tell her this is a dream: “I have to wake up. Why can’t I wake up? Tell me this is a dream, please! I don’t like this dream!” Aunt urges her to keep it together, saying that she might be facing trial for the accident. Hong-joo doesn’t understand why when she wasn’t the driver, which is news to her aunt.

 
EPISODE 2

The prosecutor arrives to question her about the accident, and of course it’s Jae-chan. Hong-joo thinks back to how he’d held her in her dream, but in the present he’s cold and formal.

He’s obviously skeptical of her account—that Yoo-bum was the driver that night. Jae-chan tells her that Yoo-bum testified the opposite, and we see him telling Jae-chan in flashback that he regretted letting Hong-joo drive in her worried state, when the roads were so slippery. Ugh, you asshat!

Hong-joo says he lied, but Chief Choi shows her the evidence that’s in Yoo-bum’s favor, like her blood on the driver’s side airbag, and the blackbox footage from the ambulance that shows her being rescued from the driver’s seat, and Yoo-bum being rescued from the passenger’s side.

She says that Yoo-bum must’ve changed seats with her while she was unconscious, and wiped the airbag clean of his blood before putting hers on it. Jae-chan doesn’t bat an eye and says that’s just conjecture, and he believes in evidence over conjecture.

She asks what she’s supposed to do then, and he advises her to confess so he can deliberate the outcome, because the victim’s family is pressing charges.

Hong-joo tries calling Yoo-bum, but of course he doesn’t answer. All she can do is think about how she’d asked Mom not to leave her all alone in this world, and the next thing we know, she’s standing precariously on the edge of the hospital roof, as her aunt and Jae-chan try to talk her down.

Jae-chan asks to talk things out, but Hong-joo doesn’t see the point when she already told them what happened, but no one will believe her and nothing will change. Jae-chan calls out, “I’ll believe you!” and begins to walk toward her.

Hong-joo says, “How nice would it be if this were a dream… if it were your dream… Thank you for saying you’d believe me.” A tear falls as she closes her eyes, and then she lets go.

Jae-chan leaps forward and grabs her hand, but she slips through his grasp. He watches in horror as she falls away from him…

…And then he wakes up in bed. WHAT? Wait, no seriously, what?

It’s the morning of Valentine’s Day, 2016 (ohthankgod), and Jae-chan wonders what kind of a dream feels that real. He tells Little Bro that he had a weird dream about the neighbor, and Little Bro says he called it when Hyung said she was rude that first day: “That’s the start of a typical rom-com!”

He asks what genre the dream was, and Jae-chan says she died in it, which puts a chill in the air. But they look out the window and Hong-joo’s mom is alive and well, so Little Bro says it’s obviously not coming true.

He asks why Yoo-bum appeared in the dream, and Jae-chan says he ran into him recently. Little Bro gets fired up and asks why he didn’t punch his lights out and spit in his face. He decides that Hyung’s dream went makjang by romantically connecting the two people he hates most—Yoo-bum and Hong-joo.

Jae-chan takes note that today is Valentine’s Day, and makes plans with Little Bro for after he picks up his new car.

That morning he runs into Hong-joo at the bus stop, and decides to just ask if she knows Yoo-bum. She’s alarmed at that, thinking he’s stalking her (to seduce her, pfft), while he’s alarmed that his dream is turning out to be not so crazy.

She gets up to hail a cab and get away from him, so he says he knows it sounds crazy, but that she shouldn’t meet Yoo-bum today, or drive in the snow, or go anywhere near a car. He frantically tries to get her to listen, but she just storms off in the cab.

Something about the way he talked makes her think of the cigarette man and how he hadn’t listened to her warnings, but when she asks the cab driver if it’s supposed to snow, he says the forecast is sunny.

That night, Jae-chan is startled when everything happens like his dream: While waiting for his brother, he runs into Yoo-bum instead, and Hong-joo arrives to meet him. Jae-chan scrambles to intervene and asks Yoo-bum to buy him dinner right this instant, but Yoo-bum says he has a date.

This time, Hong-joo isn’t even that surprised to run into Jae-chan, and without preamble he tells her to go home like he said earlier. She asks why, but Jae-chan doesn’t have an answer. Yoo-bum’s guard goes up and he asks if he’s the only one who doesn’t understand what’s going on, and leads Hong-joo away.

Little Bro arrives, and Jae-chan gives up and agrees to go. But when they’re about to leave, snow starts to fall and he can’t shake the feeling that his dream is coming true. He says he has to check one last thing, and waits in the car. Just like in his dream, Hong-joo gets up in the middle of dinner, and at the same time Mom leaves the coffee shop without her phone and the young man follows her out with it.

Jae-chan watches as Yoo-bum follows Hong-joo to her car, and takes her keys to drive. He realizes that Hong-joo was telling the truth in his dream, but by the time he runs out to stop them, they’ve driven away.

He tells Little Bro to call the police and report the accident, which Little Bro calls insane because it hasn’t happened. He wonders why Jae-chan is so concerned about this woman, but Jae-chan says he just doesn’t want her to end up like him, back then.

Little Bro thinks that Hyung must just be overwhelmed with stress at seeing Yoo-bum again. Jae-chan tries to listen to him and go on his way, except he can’t get the image out of his head of Hong-joo falling out of his grasp to her death. He stares at his hand and decides to just do the crazy thing, and leaves his poor brother stranded in the parking lot.

Yoo-bum promises to protect Hong-joo and her mother just like in the dream, but this time he asks what that was with Jae-chan earlier.

But before she can answer, a loud crash sends their car spinning through the intersection. They’re both conscious but hazy, and Hong-joo looks up to see Jae-chan walking through the snow to get to her.

He opens her door and asks if she’s okay, and then in the distance we see the young man in the Batman cap standing just a few feet away from where Jae-chan’s car rammed right into Hong-joo’s at full speed.

Jae-chan pulls her out of the car gently and asks if she isn’t hurt, and then checks on Batman Cap, who’s stunned but fine. Yoo-bum asks if he hit them, and Jae-chan says he skidded in the snow and lost control of his car.

Yoo-bum doesn’t believe him though, and accuses him of hitting them on purpose, perhaps because he needs money. Jae-chan says that if it weren’t for him, Yoo-bum would’ve killed someone tonight. Yoo-bum asks if this is because of that motorcycle accident.

We flash back to 2003, the night that Jae-chan got caught for having a motorcycle. We learn that it was Yoo-bum who had caused the accident, then a college student at Seoul University, and he’d told Jae-chan to take the fall.

Jae-chan had insisted on telling the cops that Yoo-bum was driving, so Yoo-bum turned icy cold and said he’d testify the opposite, since it was his word against Jae-chan’s. Then he collected his bag and just walked away, leaving Jae-chan to take the blame.

In the present, Yoo-bum calls him crazy, but Jae-chan insists that he did this to save them, because otherwise Yoo-bum would’ve killed that man and framed Hong-joo for it, her mother would’ve died, and then she would’ve taken her own life like a fool. He says that Yoo-bum is capable of that and worse, and Hong-joo listens to all of this in shock.

Yoo-bum asks who on earth would believe him and expects Hong-joo to agree, but she can’t take her eyes off of Jae-chan.

Jae-chan says in voiceover, “Who would believe me? That I saw you in my dream, that you were so sad in that dream that I came here to change it—no one would believe it, the future I changed.”

But of course, one person does. Hong-joo’s eyes fill with tears and she takes a step forward. Just like in the opening dream, she marches right up to Jae-chan and throws her arms around him as she says that she believes him, because it’s her, because she can.

He’s startled and tries to pull away, but she grabs tightly and won’t let go as she says, “Thank you.” He tentatively reaches up and pats her softly as he hugs her back.

 
COMMENTS

What a fake-out! They totally got me by setting up Hong-joo’s premonitions in one specific visual style—by letterboxing anything that’s her dream—because I then automatically trusted that anything fullscreen was happening in reality. I never expected that the hero would have premonitions too, which opens up a whole wide world of what-ifs and crisscrossing fates. Not to mention jumbled timelines.

It was lovely to see how their dreams converged, but already I’m wondering what happens if they ever have conflicting futures. The ability (or curse?) seems very clearly to be Hong-joo’s, so I wonder what made it possible for Jae-chan to suddenly have a dream premonition, like if they’re psychically connected somehow, or if his dream was just a fluke. Was it really Hong-joo’s wish in that moment before she jumped off the roof that made it possible? Does that make it an alternate reality? Are we back in W–Two Worlds and I don’t know it yet because I’m not real?

Now I’m suddenly interested in her supernatural ability, whereas initially I’d assumed it would just be a straightforward curse to see the future. But then again, where would the drama be if there weren’t a way for her to change the course of Fate, right? Or maybe she only sees the future, and he’s the one who can change it…

I’m immensely thankful that we didn’t have to begin the series with tragedy either, because the moment we met warmhearted, loving Mom, I knew her days were numbered. It was a nice surprise for Jae-chan to save the day so quickly, because I expected to go through a whole series of horrible incidents before Hong-joo had convinced him of her premonitions. Of course, I’ll still be spending the entire series terrified for Mom, Little Bro, and anyone else who seems remotely kind and lovable, because I know better than to rest easy. Every episode they survive will be one more than expected.

The drama moves through timelines and dream/reality in a very fluid way, so it felt pretty seamless and I never questioned the flow of the story, even though it seems like a risky move to repeat timelines in your premiere episodes. But because the opening incident set the stakes so high—Mom’s death and Hong-joo’s on top of it—I was on the edge of my seat as Jae-chan relived the day and tried to change the future. It was full of purpose and emotion and easy to get invested in, and I can only hope that what they face together from here on out will be the same.

 
RELATED POSTS

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

249

Required fields are marked *

It's here! It's here.

Dances a bit. I LOVE LJS and have been waiting for his new drama

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This drama is stressing me out ㅠㅠ

Was not expecting anything but i'm actually shookt

1
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

omg I feel the same way. I went into it blind to everything, except I knew who the writer was and so trusted it to be good. My heart hurts now and I don't even know why #shooketh

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

The cinematography of this drama is just too beautiful. Especially during the scenes with snow might I just say. On the other note, I was a bit confused when Jae Chan suddenly had premonitions in his dream as well. I thought only Hong Joo could do that? Also, it's still only the first two episodes and Yoo Bum already managed to piss me off. lol

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Could it be that Hong Joo already knew that if she dies in 'reality' that the last living person to speak to her or touch her hand will then start having dreams.

Hong Joo knew that she could trust Jae Chan to do the right thing because he had all the facts of the case when he woke up in the past, he then did help her, and she gets out of the car and says to him something like: "I 'knew' I could trust you" - meaning: 'trust Jae Chan with the prescient gift.'

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Also this is in stark contrast to Yoo Bum, whom she tests in the car before the 'paralleled-accidents', in both versions of the accident she asks Yoo Bum if he would look out for her mom if she caused an accident. Both times he agrees...but she asks him to test his reaction after the accidents. In the first version he completely didn't look out for her mother as he 'threw unconscious Hong Joo under-the-bus as it were'. In the second version Hong Joo understands why Jae Chan did what he just did and accepts his word as fact, and hugs him, because she knew that the end scene was coming...: her first dream of hugging JaeChan with her disbanded-loose-short-hair.

She doesn't tell Yoo Bum that her mom would die as a result of the accident, so she knows that there is a period of time...after that accident or another...that results in her mother's death.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

You know its true love when you crash a brand new car to save someone based on a dream.

But in all seriousness, I love this drama, I'm completely hooked and I did not see the twist with them both seeing the future. I love Lee Jong-Seok and Suzy and lol, please do not compare this to W-Two Worlds, it might jinx it XD

3
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Nooooo noooo nooooooo I haven´t had time to watch it!!!
But I promise that... when I have watched the episode. Probably tonight, then I will come back here to read the recap and re-do all your comments as well!! LOL!!!!!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think am gonna wait until episode 8-9. Habaek traumatized me so much that I went hiatus for k-drama for a month and only watch a drama after it aired. But the recap sounds promising, honestly i'm tempted to start watching it.

1
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

You can trust this writer, she's never let us down yet.

6
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yeah I went into this trusting this writer (I loved Pinocchio and loved I Hear Your Voice even more) and the fact that Lee Jong Suk picks has an eye for good dramas.

2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Omo, it's all so preeeetttyyy- and I'm not just talking about the leads ;)
I was pretty wary going into this, but Suzy's doing okay so far. Still a little wooden, but nothing too offensive, which is definitely more than I was expecting.
My primary concern at this point is that this show's gonna go Inception on me. My IQ is not high enough to handle all the 'a dream inside a dream inside a dream or is it a dream in a dream...' again.

3
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

suzy dreams a part of the event (like the dream about her mom dying but she doesn't know how) and ljk dreams the entire event and it's consequences if he doesn't prevent it (like suzy committing suicide and her mom dying etc)

1
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Aha...interesing....I thought that only 'written dreams' come true...like a vision-board. Hong Joo always writes her dream down...whyyyyyyyy? Jae Chan never does that because somehow he will remember the cases they work with verbatim...it looks like that...what I mean is that the visionary who doesn't write down what he saw in the dream has the ability to re-write the dream.

But I like your theory too!!!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

There were a lot of emotions as I watched this first episode and this just signifies the start of a great drama.

I have to admit, I'm one of those who questioned Suzy's acting after watching her in Uncontrollably Fond but seeing her in this just makes me question whether it was her character there or she just didnt fit the role. Cuz she's doing much better than I expected in this one!

I still wonder how LJS was able to dream when its meant to be Suzy's gift. And did anyone still remember that Hong Joo's "boyfriend" was still standing there when this hug happened?

I absolutely loved how their lives are already intertwined in the first episode and that because of Suzy's gift, she's able to understand what he just did.

2
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Loool they were like, Yoo-Bum? Never heard of him! *cackles*

2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Well, the thing is: Suzy has fallen into the LJS effect, just like the girl Park in Pinocchio.
Conclusion: you want to make a hopeless actress into a real one, put her with LJS in a drama! Lol!
Maybe they should come up with another noona love between him and Kristall, and then I will end up loving her as well.... LOL!!!!!!!!

1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Didn't need another drama to live watch but I guess it's a happy problem! I'm totally sold with the plot and cinematography - and yes, even Suzy's acting seems better than her performance in UF.

In contrast to Temperature of Love, this one feels faster somehow so I'll probably have to rewatch to get a better grasp of things. Props to @girlfriday for a super quick recap! 🙌🏼

1
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

Oh, and that music! It's so spot on, and I can't wait to have it in my K-OST playlist.

1
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I was thinking the same thing about the OST.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

... and I just got it from iTunes.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Lackluster premiere numbers. Will be interesting to see if the show's ratings manage to go up, or will slowly fall.

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This is drama is off to a great start, keep it up, loving everything about it.

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I entered this drama armed with the knowledge that Park Hye-Ryung loves to giveth really amazing parents and then taketh them away, and I still didn't make it to the 20-minute mark without sobbing.

4
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

And here I am hoping Hong-Joo won’t be an orphan until the end of the drama

1
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm trying to gird my heart for the eventuality. We basically have a case of Chekhov's will. It exists, so it's got to be delivered by the third act. ☹

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

not much to say about the plot yet (though I'm worried about how terribly black-and-white the characters are, with Satan as the main antagonist) but Suzy and LJS are almost too beautiful to bear. having them both in one frame should hopefully distract me from every plothole.

2
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Good, good - a very hateable non-villain the only problem is it will take at least 10 years before Lee Jong Suk will look like he could be a procecutor on see

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

And how come nobody ever sees that someone is messing with the car and why won't they call an ambulance first, the dream is like another makjang drama I mean it is like believing a fortune cookie. And how would it have been the accident to blame if something had happened to mom - it is not causally connevted just an unfortunate sequence of events. I don't understand why, what was said in the dream that the accident is the cause, would sound logical and plausible

1
reply

Required fields are marked *

This premier completely blew me away!

I don't remember the last time I was so excitedly and intensely drawn in on a Romance Drama's episode 1...(because Save Me did this to me too!) Maybe the last Romance that did it was W?

I wasn't expecting to get into this one, but lately that's what's been happening to me over and over - with Save me and The King Loves, too, I gave them each a passive try and love love loved them both.

I didn't expect this to be so thrilling! I praise the writing, directing, acting, and editing. Excellent story telling.

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This is just what I need to get me out of my slump. Lee jong-seok oppa!!!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm surprised at how much I liked it. I was expecting some IHYV vibes, but less interesting due to the repetition of ideas. It was the opposite however, the writing was great and the plot has me hooked already.
LJS is love 💖 and I'm liking Suzy too, the cinematography is gorgeous and I'm so curious about how the whole supernatural thing will play up.
I would keep watching anyway for LJS, but I hope this is as enjoyable as the other works of this writer, so far it looks promising. 😊

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

The pilot episode was quite impressive. Finally there is something to watch!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I was thinking that it wasn't exactly a dream. It feels more like a time-continuum slip. Her words as she fell that she hopes it is his dream and their hands touching each other felt like a connection was established that created a time-slip. So it felt real to him, because it was indeed real - just an alternate reality. Her desire would have been to change what happened on February 14th so that's the time he was brought back to.

Well, that's the feeling I got. lol

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

That was what I was suspecting too. Perhaps the Powers That Be that gave Hong-Joo the ability to see into the future also gave Jae-chan a chance to prevent her death and allow the both of them to use her powers for good and to take down that snake, Yoo-bum, who will inevitably do something illegal and morally wrong in the next few episodes.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thanks GF! LOL your: "Are we back in W–Two Worlds and I don’t know it yet because I’m not real?" Let's go in existential crisis ... we're all not really watching this show because we don't realise we don't exist and I don't have 3 projects going on concurrently. That's the kind of reality I can live with! 😋

I found this a very strong start to the series, with everything going well for it. The challenge will be to keep up the pace and the unexpected twists, and giving us a coherent series of events arising from changing the futures of others and avoiding unfortunate outcomes that result because they interfered. And all without getting us all turned around!

My guess on the point(s) of connection between Jae Chan and Hong Joo. They coincidentally knew Lee Yoo Bum who had been a snake in Jae Chan's past and was destined to be a snake in Hong Joo's present.

In his dream, Hong Joo has as her last wish, that it was just Jae Chan's dream. And so it came to pass.

Here's to many good dreams within dreams in which we exist and to Jae Chan and Hong Joo being more real than my work!!! 😆

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I wasn't really excited for this drama - for various reasons - but I was sold in the first 6 minutes. Really, witty and funny writing was all it took.
And then the plot and the cinematography! I even like Suzy here. (Even though I still can't emotionally connect with her.)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I usually jst read recaps and comments but I had to register cos of this show.......its jst sooo good that I am scared of being let down..
I've been in a serious drama slump since do bong soon and this came along and I am so hyped now.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

wow, just wow.. Its been a while since just reading a recap before even starting the show captivated me this much! (thank you @girlfriday) I wasn't too sure if I wanted to watch this one live or wait out till near its end and binge (in case our worst fears about suzy and eagerly awaited dramas come true). But dang it all, I'm gonna start this now! I'm grateful they didn't kill off mom, just reading the whole scene gave me too much anxiety... I'm keeping my fingers crossed this drama maintains the pace and emotional investment throughout its run. I really need a crack drama and this looks to be the strongest contender yet. :)

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I really like the way this is coming together. The only thing I had a hard time believing is that Yoo-bum would be dating Hong-joo in the first place. She's not rich, she's not beautiful, she doesn't look well-connected - so why would an opportunist like him be wasting his time on her?

1
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

............Suzy is absolutely gorgeous, what are you talking about? I was watching the premiere with a friend who I've shown only a couple of other kdramas before and the first thing that comes out of her mouth is "so pretty, she's really pretty" and judging by Suzy's rise to fame, it's not just me and my friend who think so. Unless this is one of those shows where the heroine is supposed to be average-looking but not really because she's played by a pretty actress, who knows. I say this because like you, other than her looks I also don't see why he would date her, a blind date is one thing but more than that seems odd coming from him.

2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Suzy.... isn't beautiful? What? Like, I know beauty is in the eye of the beholder but have you SEEN her?

2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I know while Suzy is gorgeous, her character is just regular girl-next-door pretty. Maybe it's for a "nice guy, man of the people" image? Maybe he gets off on having someone of lower status than him, so he can feel looked-up-to and feel like the big man. Or he's just killing time with her before he trades up.

2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm loving it!!!Also the cinematography is BEAUTIFUL!!!

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think they should end this drama right there! It was perfection! Its like watching an hour movie.

2
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Comment was deleted

2
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think that it's normally Hong Joo who has the dreams, and she is frustrated that no one believes her. But then one night, Jae Chan has a dream (it seemed like an unusual, unexpected occurrence for him). The dream disturbed him so much that he tried to stop it from coming true. Eventually Hong Joo realized that must be what was going on (because she remembered trying the same thing, unsuccessfully, on other people). So when he was able to change the outcome of the dream by stopping the accident, she knew she had found someone who would believe her, who could also help.

Both of them dreamed of an accident, and both of them dreamed that her mother died. So they sort of dreamed the same dream--but he was able to change the outcome.

Yes, it is so pretty!

And yes, I miss Kang Chul, too.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Comment was deleted

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Lee Jong-seok does not disappoint. Suzy did really well in this first episode. I was hooked right away. I do love fantasy supernatural types of stories so I was going to watch this anyway but I did not have high expectations. I wasn't feeling any of the kdramas anymore and started watching C-Dramas. But, "While You Were Sleeping" had me getting back my Viki membership!

2
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

My thoughts on this first episode are pretty much just "!!!!!!!!!". I try not to get too hyped for a show because that can backfire, but I love Park Hye-run's dramas and this ep did not disappoint at all.

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ahhh....I love it.

I didn't realize Nam Da Reum was also young LJS in Pinocchio. I did notice that he was a great match to play young JS, though. He isn't JS, but it looks like he has watched him carefully--there were some similar mannerisms between them.

2
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I agree! And i think the level of energy and intensity is in sync too.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Im so glad Im not the only worried about this drama screwing up with this complicated set up. I really want LJS to make this drama work. Also I have to say, I found Suzy's acting quite real and I was actually tearing in the scene where she wakes from her coma because too many feels!..
One thing that bothers me is the fact the the CT camera part where LJS tells her that the camera shows she was on the drivers side, but how could it not show Yoo Bum moving her?
Im crossing my fingers for this drama, but soo far so good!

1
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

The CT was from the ambulance. So, when the ambulance arrive, she was already in the driver seat.

1
reply

Required fields are marked *

As always.... LJS took my heart away...

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Well, being completely honest, I don’t really like the lead actor, in my opinion he does not convey much sympathy and I liked him in this episode. But I also liked him in the beginning of W, which started well and then went bad, and I think I'm one of the few people who simply loved UF (I think people didn’t quite understand the premise of the drama), but I can’t deny that Suzy was very bad in that role.
But in this first episode she was much better than the whole UF and I liked the plot twist in here and I hope it stays that way
I was not excited about this drama, but because of this episode I will give it a chance and I hope it will surprise me a lot more.

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Maybe the guy Jae Chan saved might end up being a serial killer?

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Hello! I've been watching out for all your recaps and articles but I only made this account just now. Great job!!

This show is actually interesting. I can't wait to see how the story/plot will unfold. And surprisingly, Suzy is doing so great so far and of course with Lee Jong Suk, he's a versatile actor. I really am excited for this. I'm hoping it will be a major hit!

Anyway, can't wait to read your future recaps, girlfriday! Have a great day, everyone!!

2
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I Like the writer of the drama. Lee Jong Suk can make any drama watchable so I have faith in him. At least Suzy Improved waiting for the next episode and hope it will not disappoint as some of the drama are good in the beginning but become dragging in the middle.

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Can't get over how good this first ep was. SOOO excited to see whats to come. Thanks for the recap, our drama drought is finally over!!!!

3
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Comment was deleted

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

EASTER EGGS AND HINTS: I noticed in Hong-Joo's room she had a few movie posters up. The ones that caught my attention were 'Midnight In Paris' (2011, dir. Woody Allen) and 'The Girl Who Leapt Through Time' (2006, dir. Mamoru Hosoda). BOTH films have to do with time travel. The latter in particular deals with the consequences of changing things in time. 'What if by changing your fate to avoid pain and suffering, you cause somebody else pain and suffering?' That question was a recurring theme throughout that film. I think both these posters are sly nods of whats to come in this show.

6
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Jah! Such keen observation ! There was some discussion about time travel theories in the early comments u should check out & add to!

1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Lee Jong Suk definitely knows how to choose his dramas. I feel that the fantasy genre really suits him well. His characters feel different every time.

Also, I think this is the second time I’m not disliking Suzy’s acting. I first liked her in Dream High but then her other roles were just so-so. This type of role suits her so far.

What a premiere episode!!! I didn’t expect Jae-Chan to also have a premonition. I was gasping for air already when Hong Joo fell from the roof. I was like “Is she going to survive that?!?!” and “Are we going to have a paralyzed lead?”

I like everything so far except that song sang by Eddy Kim. I’m not sure if it’s just me but the lyrics “I Need Your Love” felt so cliché.

2
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Which site can i watch this from please?

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think we're settling in for an awesome ride, and another round of Lee Jong Seuk greatness... and boy does he look all grown up now! of course he still has the baby face but his body and head have better proportions ( I used to feel like his head was way to small for his shoulders >_< ) and he doesn't feel so gangly and like an awkward teenager adapting to his body anymore!

so after that very superficial comment from me... I am enjoying this drama a lot and I hope that we get a drama that delivers what it promises during it's premiere week.

I already hate Yoobum, and I definitely hate his habit of ripping paper and rolling them into little tacos... ugh.

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Even though the cinematography looks beautiful and I LOVE LJS to death, I am staying far away from this one. My main problem is Suzy's acting. The moment I think she's got it under control, girl goes in a whole different direction. Aiyaiyai.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Does anyone know why this show has low ratings in korea? This is the lowest rating show he had in his career. I would have expected it to start 16% by now

1
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I wondered about that too.. both LJS & Suzy are major star power in Korea.. Oh well @headsno2 will probably enlighten us this Sunday! :)

2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Did anyone else get the little bro saying "hyung, do you want to go a PIANO recital with me?" *** PAGETURNER FEEEEELS! kyah! (watch ep 3+4)

1
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Dreamy, compelling, and beautiful! I'm not in love just yet, but I'm really enjoying it. Suzy appears to be doing surprisingly well and her acting doesn't distract from the drama's other good qualities.

Weird detail, but I like how you can definitely see that Hong Joo's glasses have glasses in them and how it gets that reflective glow that glasses have. The glasses in kdramas often appear to be just empty frames or so expensive and immaculate they don't reflect.

2
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Enjoying it so far but there's one huge hole that annoyed me so much in the 2nd episode- like, the cafe boy literally could have called out to her mum when she left without her phone. Like she didn't go very far when he came out of the cafe. WHY must he follow her all the way to her doorstep like a creep? And don't tell me he couldn't have ran after her, it was snowing and she was holding a coffee she couldn't have been going very fast -_-
Has no one commented about this yet??

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ljs is really not so typical looking, too thin and "limpy" and that's hair of his always remind me of a scarecrow??? But he has nice voice and his acting is comfortable to watch and by Pinocchio, I think his acting is already above many popular male leads. And the best of all is how natural for him to have good chemistry with his female leads. That's pretty important I think.

2
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Wow, I think this show took me by surprise! I'm loving so much I started to question myself. While I was watching it, my brain is shut.. and I can't really explain anything using reasons. One thing I just know is that I do really like this show.. not start to watch episodes 3-4. <3<3<3

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *