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One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6

Our one dollar lawyer and his crew spend a lot of time in nature this week — but it eventually leads them to a solution, and just when their latest case gets more and more convoluted, the truth comes bursting out. The aftermath, however, leads to some hints around our hero, and we’re rewarded with some long-awaited backstory.

 
EPISODES 5-6 WEECAP

One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6

Because this is One Dollar Lawyer and the cool is constantly undercut by the comedic, we first replay Ji-hoon’s heroic save of Mari in the woods, and then his epic strut to the bad guy with a flashlight. Except it’s not a bad guy with a flashlight, it’s Min-hyuk! With Mari and Moo-jang joining them, it’s a bunch of funny and informal recognitions all around. In the words of Ji-hoon: “I met an old friend in the middle of a murder investigation.” Everyone knows everyone, but Mari wants to know just what Ji-hoon was like as a prosecutor; even though she digs a bit, she doesn’t find out much (for now).

Ji-hoon and Min-hyuk are on opposing sides of the case this time, of course, so they part ways only for Ji-hoon to head back to the crime scene even later at night by himself (so clearly, his theatrics are just that, which makes me love them even more).

One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6

Ji-hoon and the gang uncover new leads bit by bit, and it’s packed with humor and pretty well-written PPL scenes — I guess it’s a bit easier to write a PPL scene when you have three wacky characters with whom it doesn’t feel strange to talk about chicken pasta and carry on while staring at it.

Starbucks coffee and chicken aside, Ji-hoon does uncover quite a bit — though maybe not through his lip-reading skills (lol!). An analysis of the missing father’s last painting reveals an important clue: the signature character (a man with a black umbrella) has been freshly painted, but the actual painting is over three years old. This causes Ji-hoon to rethink the whole crime scene, and one clue after another, we learn that the missing father (cameo by Uhm Hyo-seop) is not missing at all — he committed suicide three years ago, and the wife kept it a secret. The paintings worth billions of won were not done by the father… but by Kim Min-jae! He’s been the captive genius behind the scenes, though it all started out innocently enough.

One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6

Anyway, all the sleuthing of our good guys seems for naught when Min-jae outright confesses to the murder, out of the blue, and straight to the prosecution — with a finger heart for added weirdness. Everyone is thrown for a loop except our lawyer. He knows that Min-jae is innocent because he’s Ji-hoon, and I know Min-jae is innocent because he just spent the scene prior crying to Chopin in the interrogation room. That is surely the act of someone suffering, most likely out of love, and sure enough my hunch was correct.

Ji-hoon still believes in his client even when Min-jae leads them right to his father’s three-year-old grave (!!!) and the murder weapon from the mother’s stabbing. The truth, however, doesn’t come out till they bring Min-jae to visit the crime scene — with the press hovering about — to walk through the night of the murder.

One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6

Ji-hoon is about forty steps ahead, though, and he lays a trap for Min-jae that he never saw coming. The “last painting of his father,” which was supposedly being worked on, was replaced by another one, and just when Min-jae is trying to think himself out of the tangle of lies, his noona KIM SOO-HYUN (Han Dong-hee) charges in.

That’s right — the daughter was the murderer in what was a case of accidental manslaughter after Soo-hyun slashed the painting with a knife. Min-jae happened upon the scene, and in an effort to save his step-sister, he said they would blame it on his father. But then, possibly in the bubble bath, Min-jae realized he will have to be the scapegoat himself.

Gah, family love! Or wait, is it romantic love? These two were thrown together five year ago when their parents (unhappily) married, so who really knows what’s going on there (but maybe it’s just my makjang imagination, or the chem of these two actors). Either way, the show makes it clear via flashback that Min-jae, Soo-hyun, and their father were lovely humans, and the curator mother was the nasty one. Not that she deserved to die like that.

One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6 One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6

Leaving the scene of their victory, Ji-hoon quizzes Mari on what will happen to both Min-jae and Soo-hyun as per the law (a nice way of giving us closure on those characters without actually giving us closure), but the story lingers here for a moment.

Mari ponders over the mother’s dying words, and we get this flicker of a moment from Ji-hoon. Dangit, the acting from Namgoong Min here! There is something we haven’t seen on his face before; he lets down the facade by a fraction of an inch for a fraction of a second, and then says, “Parents are like that,” before going back into weird mode and leaving.

One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6

At this point we’re half through our second episode of the week, and — despite being an adamant hater of “case of the week” stories — I am quite enjoying how the drama is pacing itself. The first four episodes handled quick and light cases with an equally quick and light touch. Then, when the painter-murder case got heavier and deeper, the story slowed the pace, and we spent over two episodes there.

Now, with that case concluded, we pause before the next one — a decision I’m so glad the drama made. We all need to catch our breath; also, it’s a good time to step back and give us a little more information about our hero. (It’s a ballsy move that we’ve gone almost six full episodes with practically nothing on Ji-hoon’s life or backstory.)

After that first barely-there hint at the crime scene, we next see Ji-hoon at a grave with a bouquet wrapped in black paper. The OST, which has been mostly a mixture of goofy and epic, switches to a throb of mournful strings. It’s nice to have the drama confirm for us what we’ve all likely intuited by this point: a tragic event in Ji-hoon’s past is what made him leave the prosecution and become the one dollar lawyer.

One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6

The sad music continues when Mari accidentally finds a photo of attorney LEE JOO-YOUNG (finally my girl Lee Chung-ah enters the plot!). Her curiosity finally wins out, and she treats her sunbae Prosecutor Na to dinner and we get a full-fledged five-year flashback to tell Ji-hoon’s story.

Past-tense Ji-hoon might be in a black suit and have straight hair, but his ways are just as crazy. We see him and Min-hyuk in action, finally getting a search warrant for the corrupt CEO of JQ Group (Yoon Na-moo) and going against all their higher-ups who were likely to give the guy a free pass. They’re not only bold as hell, but Ji-hoon is just as creative in the past. They wind up bringing the CEO to a red carpet event where Ji-hoon knows they’ll get press coverage and the powers that be won’t be able to cover up his arrest. (And, as an added bonus, we get an adorable but random Lee Je-hoon cameo).

One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6 One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6

Ji-hoon and Min-hyuk are hard at work on their case, but the defense is soon revealed to be Baek Law Firm. Grandpa and his cronies march into the courtroom… but the lawyer is actually Joo-young! She previously sought Ji-hoon out in the men’s restroom (lol) and seeks him out again after their first hearing. She buys him vending machine coffee and it’s clear the two share a ~connection~ despite being on opposing sides of the case. Joo-young is their ace attorney, but she seems to want Ji-hoon to win so that the bad guy she knows she’s defending can actually get punished.

The show keeps up with the sad strings and even adds in some beautiful lighting in our final scene of these two together. What happens between them? Why does Ji-hoon have her photo hidden five years later? Is what happened in the courtroom related to Grandpa Baek’s high opinion of Ji-hoon?

Even though it was a unique move to make us wait this long for Ji-hoon’s story – and then to give us a massive twenty-minute chunk of it — I’m not sorry they did it. We’ll see how much it plays into the present-day, though after the huge tonal shift we’ve taken, I don’t know how quickly I’ll be able to laugh over curling iron jokes again.

One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6 One Dollar Lawyer: Episodes 5-6

 
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@missvictrix thank you for the speedy turn around on the weecap. I am glad the murder case is over. I assumed the kids were a couple despite fast forwarding to avoid the scary bits in episode 5. (Episode 6 has only just been released with subtitles over here) I picked up on their connection and as they are not related other than because their parents married I don’t have an issue with it.

I am so glad the case is over and hope it was only in there to show us Jihoon is more than capable as a lawyer but chooses to use his skills on ‘minor’ issues as the poor deserve access to skilled lawyers as those minor issues are like life and death to them as in the first case we saw and the pickpocket’s daughter’s health.

I am looking forward to being able to watch the rest of the show properly again. I still hope there is no romance between the leads as I think it works better due to their position as mentor and mentee in the work environment they will have an imbalance due to his years of experience whilst she is a rookie.

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Yes, I think if they play their cards right, we can get the requisite loveline for Ji-hoon via backstory -- and the depth of the drama -- and then Mari just stays like the audience, learning to respect/understand him from the outside. (They have zeroooooooo chemistry anyway!)

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They dragged the painter case. They could resolve it way sooner. I don't know what relationship both "children" had, but if they were lovers, it seems more logical that Min-Jae said right away that he killed his step-mother if he wanted to protect the woman he loved, why did he deny everything at the beginning?

So it looks like Ji-hoon is from a good family and he's rich. He changed his way after Joo-young's death, I guess. I was happy to finally see Lee Chung-Ah !

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I didnt feel that the siblings were lovers. Its just that they are close. With a piece of work her mother is, it seems like she just gravitated towards her new father and brother more. That scene in the lake with the three of them shown how they were once happy as a family.

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Of course, game plan no. 1 is not to confess right away but to mislead everybody more especially the prosecutor.

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As you say, @missvictrix, the momentary reaction and comment on parents: that's going to be crucial. My bet's on Jihoon's dad doing something atrocious which ends up with Jooyoung dead/on the run/in abject poverty and disgrace and Jihoon's trying to atone. But it *is* an interesting choice to start this 6 eps in - is it now going to dominate and we're heading into a more serious drama? Or are we going to be fed these crumbs and then be thrown back into wacky cases in a couple of episode's time? Genuinely curious...

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I find myself hoping Ji-hoon himself was a parent -- I doubt it, but a girl can hope. I think your idea seems most likely!

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The painter's case felt like it took a little longer than it should have, so I'm glad it finally wrapped up. I have to say that the actor playing the role of Kim Min-jae was quite good.

Looking forward to how the show moves forward now that we got quite a bit of Ji-hoon's backstory and that brief preview at the end.

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Finally! Lee Chung-ah.
I hope she's not a backstory character. She has to be in the present as well.

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I knew it was daddy's boy walking in the woods....laugh out loud when he called out ahpa...refreshing for a change to have daddy boy...actor is good...mature yet cute daddy's boy.
Minjie is kind of sweet boy to his dad but like jihoon said, 1st mistake, his drawing but let dad gets the credit n covering up for his sister, flashback that he likes his new family when they were at the lake, the 3 of them talking about going for holiday together. Jihoon is right, both mistakes, out of his kindness, does not make his dad n sister happy. Glad he really did not kill his parents.
I like the pacing of the drama, giving us something to laugh n leading to jihoon backstory. I always thought jihoon is rich, nice suit n watch but wonder why he is not paying rent. And did he bid through phone at auction to get the drawing to prove his case, or who did it.
The cast acting is good, hope writer develop the story well.

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Finally! We get to know the backstory of our hero. There are still a lot of questions but I do hope the show give more info soon.
Plesantly surprised to see Lee Chung Ah. She starred with NGM in another drama and I like their chemistry onscreen. Its the same here. Also, I feel like JH is atoning for something and I have my suspicions on who JH visited in the cemetary. I did like that he and Min Hyuk were a great team. Min Hyuk seems not too bright and vain but it feels at times that there is more going underneath. All these new info on JH got me looking forward to next week. I wonder how Mari's grandpa play into this.

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There's always something underneath the 'not too bright and vain' exterior. I just don't want it to be a character named Scheming Min-hyuk, or have any inkling towards it. Just let his father remain the villain hiding in the dark night.

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MH is a mystery. I do hope as well that he is not the culprit since I liked the glimpse of the team work between him and JH.

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Things have taken a far more interesting turn with the addition of JHs backstory. To my mind, this has made the drama far more engaging. Loving his black suit and understated style in the backstory!
The murder case went on too long for my liking, but as @missvictrix noted, that slight slip of the facade on JHs part as they summed up the results, was great, and immediately got me interested again. I'm hoping for a little more backstory next week to keep me going!

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