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Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim 3: Episodes 1-2

Pass the bovie and prepare three liters of warm saline stat, because our favorite idealist is back in the OR! Our heroes from Season 2 have returned, and they’re inches away from achieving their dream: a brand new trauma center for Doldam Hospital. But days before its official opening, a top-secret complication emerges. Faced with dying refugees from North Korea, what can our doctors do? Not break every regulation in the book? Ridiculous!

 
EPISODES 1-2

Han Seok-kyu in Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim 3: Episodes 1-2

We open, unusually, miles from Doldam Hospital — and indeed, South Korean soil. The coast guard have picked up an unidentified vessel. Inside are four defectors from North Korea, survivors of a gunfight on board. A desperate woman, RI BOK-YOUNG (Yoo Yoo-jin) pleads with them to save her father, who’s caught four bullets to the chest. This calls for top-secret emergency treatment.

It’s dicey as heck: there’s no operating facilities aboard, and they can’t return to the mainland. Luckily, there’s a nearby hospital with a whole lot of heart, whose doctors eat impossible things for breakfast. A helicopter descends, and out stride some delightfully familiar figures. It’s DR. SEO WOO-JIN (Ahn Hyo-seop), looking every inch the unflappable surgeon. He’s flanked by NURSE ASSISTANT PARK EUN-TAK (Kim Min-jae) and DR. JUNG IN-SOO (Yoon Na-moo). The boys are back in town!

Ahn Hyo-seop and Kim Min-jae in Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim 3: Episodes 1-2

The gunshot victim is complicated. Possible damage to the inferior vena cava means Woo-jin is reluctant to operate alone. And so, we pan to another familiar face: DR. CHA EUN-JAE has been dispatched to interrupt the fishing vacation of their beloved mentor. That’s right — it’s TEACHER KIM (Han Seok-kyu)! He’s scarcely had time to whistle a cheerful tune before he’s yoinked back into his natural environment: surgical chaos. Together, he and Woo-jin prepare to perform another miracle on the operating table. Seconds in, the patient goes into cardiac arrest. And yet, to the utter awe of a nearby army medic, LEE SUN-WOONG (Lee Hong-nae), they stabilize him on nothing more than a scalpel and a prayer.

Meanwhile, Eun-jae has her own crisis to masterfully sail through. Gone is the wavering, nausea-ridden trainee of last season’s start. She’s a take-charge Type A who’s here to show Doldam’s newest fellow, the hapless JANG DONG-HWA (Lee Shin-young), what a doctor from Doldam can do! Bok-young has collapsed into massive hemoptysis, which basically means her lungs are flooded with blood. But after some complicated finagling with tubing — which, annoyingly, Dong-hwa is too inexperienced to appreciate — Eun-jae has her out of the woods.

Lee Sung-kyung and Lee Shi-young in Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim 3: Episodes 1-2

Make no mistake: both patients need more treatment than they can get in the backroom of a ship. Unfortunately, the coast guard have orders from above. Peace talks between North and South Korea are in process. South Korea cannot take the diplomatic risk of bringing defectors to the mainland. But Teacher Kim has a tried-and-tested line for such moments: I’m a doctor, not a politician! Luckily, the captain is open to persuasion. Officially, the defectors must remain on this ship. Unofficially? Well. There might be a way.

And so, we return to the much-loved, ivy-encrusted halls of Doldam Hospital, where the lights on the entrance sign still sputter bravely! Here, NURSE OH MYUNG-SHIM (Jin Kyung), and DR. NAM DO-IL (Byun Woo-min) reckon they’ve found a solution. It’ll mean multiple health and safety violations. It’ll mean a probable nervous breakdown for MANAGER JANG GI-TAE (Im Won-hee). But, what else is new? And so, in the name of top secrecy — and romantic ideals — the North Korean patients are smuggled into Doldam Hospital’s new, unfinished Trauma Center.

Lee Sung-kyung and Ahn Hyo-seop in Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim 3: Episodes 1-2 Lee Sung-kyung and Ahn Hyo-seop in Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim 3: Episodes 1-2

But let’s take a moment to drop in on our OTP. Three years into their relationship, Eun-jae has decided to move in with Woo-jin — for, uh, practical purposes. It’ll help them focus on the important things! Like commuting less! And splitting chores! (She has a list. RIP Woo-jin — it sounds comprehensive.) Woo-jin, for his part, also has his mind on deeply important matters: namely, scooping Eun-jae into his arms, scheduling plenty of midday couch makeouts, and being shirtless at all times. These two have come a long way with one another — Eun-jae is bright and teasing; Woo-jin, warm and content.

Sadly, our other official couple are in choppier emotional waters. Eun-tak peers sadly at his phone. Bringing a patient back from the brink of death is one thing. But texting his girlfriend “I miss you”? That’s much more fraught. And perhaps he has reason to dither. When we move to check on DR. YOON AH-REUM (So Joo-yeon), she’s sleeping sweetly on a plane. Marking her place in her textbook is a very recognizable hand: JESSIE (Skeleton). And covering her with a blanket as she naps on his shoulder is none other than DR. BAE MOON-JUNG (Shin Dong-wook).

Kim Joo-hun in Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim 3: Episodes 1-2

Last season, Doldam Hospital gained a new, initially reluctant addition to their oddball crew: DIRECTOR PARK MIN-GUK (Kim Joo-hun). He too is flourishing. He’s no longer that wet paper towel of a man (I say this affectionately) armed with Baby’s First Guide to Nihilism and a hilariously one-sided vendetta against Teacher Kim. Instead, he and his Minion Friday, YANG HO-JOON (Go Sang-ho), are busy masterminding the creation of the new Trauma Center. This means expanding the staff — and word is, prestigious cardio surgeon, DR. CHA JIN-MAN (Lee Kyung-young) is looking for a job.

Come and see the Trauma Center, Director Park urges him. It’s empty; we can go today! And so, blithely unaware of the political minefield awaiting them, they head in. The first surprise is, of course, the fact that the Trauma Center appears to be up and running, sans permission. But there’s more. When Teacher Kim offers his hand, Dr. Cha pushes rudely past, walking instead towards Eun-jae. It’s been a while, he says. Dad, she replies.

Lee Sung-kyung and Lee Kyung-young in Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim 3: Episodes 1-2 Lee Sung-kyung and Lee Kyung-young in Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim 3: Episodes 1-2

Later, Eun-jae confides in Woo-jin over a cup of (milky) coffee. Her mother still hasn’t forgiven her for siding with Woo-jin when he exposed her brother’s surgical negligence. Still — no regrets. As for her father? He… uh, may or may not still be upset. (She’d brought him cake for his birthday. He demanded to know why she was in his office, then cut her off to prepare for surgery.) Now, however, Dr. Cha makes a point of lying in wait for Woo-jin. My daughter is precious to me, he declares. And our family had no issues with each other until you showed up. Just saying.

Dr. Cha’s relationship with Teacher Kim is no less turbulent: back in undergrad, they were fierce rivals. It was a case, Dr. Nam confidently diagnoses, of TVPG: Two Very Proud Geniuses. According to Dr. Cha, Teacher Kim’s nonsense hasn’t changed. According to Teacher Kim… well, bringing Director Park into the Doldam fold was one thing. He was moderately moral, and seriously crazy: the ideal fit! But Dr. Cha hasn’t a crazy bone in his body — and if he did, he’d opt for surgical removal. He’ll never be one of them. (Bah, never say never. I spy another classic Kim-induced redemption arc on the horizon…!)

Meanwhile, the status of our defectors looks bleak. North Korea have found out about the refugee ship. They’re demanding repatriation by midnight, or they’ll walk away from the peace talks. There’s 40 trillion won on the line, but Teacher Kim is scathing. A doctor does what a doctor does — politics be damned. Bok-young’s still bleeding badly; Eun-jae recommends a lung lobectomy. (She’s never performed one before, but as far as her mentor’s concerned, there’s a first time for everything.) It’s settled: today will bear witness to the Trauma Center’s first, semi-legal surgery. And although Director Park may curse the name of Kim, he can’t actually admit that he’s wrong. What he can do is invite Dr. Cha to witness the operation. Perhaps if words won’t work, Teacher Kim’s skill will sway him.

Eun-jae is antsy; this is a tricky surgery, and her old nerves are peeking through. Steadfast as ever, Teacher Kim assures her she’ll be fine. But there’s a wince-worthy hitch: Manager Jang has forgotten that electricians are coming to switch off the power! As they’re elbow-deep in lung matter, the machines flicker out. Teacher Kim’s response? Eh, could be worse! With the air of a man who’s sewn up organs under stranger circumstances, he orders his staff to use their phone torches. He and Eun-jae will operate by touch. And, with Dr. Cha watching nonplussed from the window, that’s precisely what they do. The lesion is clipped closed, and the patient scrapes through alive.

Meanwhile, a second complication unfolds. There are two other surviving defectors: a man (Kim Cheol-yun) and a boy, KIM KYUNG-SOO (Han Ji-an) — the latter of whom refuses to speak a word. On a trip to the bathroom, the man attacks his guard, making a bid for freedom. Hidden in one of the stalls is the feckless Dong-hwa! Yesterday he skipped out on surgery; today, he’s fled to play war games in the toilet. Alas, he’s about to experience more real-life conflict than he bargained for.

Woo-jin, hearing the kerfuffle, moves to investigate. He’s stopped short by Kyung-soo. Don’t go in there, he urges. That guy killed my father. Seconds later, the man emerges, holding Dong-hwa at knifepoint. Woo-jin, thinking fast, palms Dong-hwa’s discarded phone. As the lights shut off, he presses play on the war game, and the sounds of gunfire startle the man into releasing his hostage. Agents converge on the scene just in time, saving Woo-jin from being grappled and stabbed.

Han Seok-kyu and Ahn Hyo-seop in Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim 3: Episodes 1-2

Crisis averted, a new day dawns at Doldam. Teacher Kim and Woo-jin regard two empty hospital beds. Was it really right, asks Woo-jin, to send those patients back? We did our best and that’s enough, replies Teacher Kim, with uncharacteristic fatalism. But there’s no fooling Nurse Oh. Send away patients? Over Teacher Kim’s dead body. Sure enough, alone in his office, Teacher Kim deletes a text: Since I granted you this favor, I no longer owe you. It’s from DEFENSE MINISTER RYU WOON-GIL (Kwon Hyuk-soo), seconds before he walks into the peace talks.

Later, Dr. Cha pushes past Woo-jin on his way out. Your daughter is precious to me too, Woo-jin declares to his retreating back. Just saying. Meanwhile, the staff at Doldam merrily greet the returning Ah-reum and Moon-jung. Three years don’t change much. As ever, Ah-reum can’t resist voicing the fatal words: awfully quiet for a Friday, isn’t it? Right on cue, the phones blare. Luckily, they’ve got a new member of staff to help stem the emergency deluge: Sun-woong, the star-struck army medic!

There’s one final sting. Director Park receives a call from Dr. Cha. He’s calling about the position. He’ll consider it — on one condition. Remove Teacher Kim from the Trauma Center.

So, what’s the prognosis? Doctor Romantic Teacher Kim has been plowing on for a staggering amount of time by K-drama standards, but its BP still looks healthy, and the monitor is making encouraging bleeps. Words cannot do justice to how much I love this show. Seeing each member of the ensemble cast was like embracing a series of old friends.

Part of the beauty of it is witnessing how some of our characters have grown up, and grown happier. Eun-jae is a force of nature: in Season 2, she vacillated between arrogant and anxious; now, she has a natural confidence that triumphs even when she’s struggling. Woo-jin has softened and become more mature — between his openness with Eun-jae and his kindness towards Kyung-soo, there isn’t a hint of his old frustration. Even Director Park has come into his own. No longer is he the nerdy villain, mocked by the other villains behind his back! He’s calm, competent, and mildly exasperated at all times!

But equally, the other joy of this show is how much things stay the same. Nurse Oh will always be noble and caring, with a will of steel. Manager Jang will always chew the scenery, mess up in endearing ways, and eventually come through for the team. The sign on Doldam Hospital will always sputter on and off. Flawed doctors will join the group and metamorphose into great doctors. Best of all, we can always, without doubt, depend on Teacher Kim to make the moral choice, to fight for everyone in need of help — and to never, ever abandon his patients. I love every bit of it!

 
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Great opening episodes!
I'm in love. Again.

(And the 🍒 was that they let the patients die to enable them to live.)

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Love the special appearance of EAW cast!

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That was truely a stellar casting for a cameo. Loved it!

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I can't stand Jang Dong-hwa. One life-and-death situation does not absolve him of his misconduct. Kick him out and replace him with my favorite medic Sun-woong. OMG I love Sun-woong. How could Kim Sa-bu forget him at the job interview? Director Park should've hired him right then and there. (The Extraordinary Attorney Woo cameos were hilarious. Classic narcissist Kwon Min-woo, but Hairy Boss Min-shik especially cracked me up. "I'm a real big fan" with his squealing and giggling.)

I was surprised at Kim Sa-bu telling everyone at the hospital about the North Korean defectors after signing confidentiality agreements. Why was Manager Jang freaking out so much? The NIS was standing guard and can obviously overrule a building inspection. Not to mention his incompetence of forgetting the electrical inspection.

The antagonist this season is Dr. Cha who walks into people's offices without permission. Who does he think he is removing our Teacher Kim? Did he not hear Director Park just say Kim Sa-bu is his reason for staying? Dr. Cha is right though -- Kim Sa-bu does run the show in Doldam Hospital.

I'm not used to affectionate Woo-jin. Personally, his unrequited love in Season 2 was more heart-fluttering.

Since the North Korean woman Ri Bok-young wasn't repatriated, I wonder if she'll work at Doldam (can she?) because she's clearly part of the medical field after telling Woo-jin about her father's condition.

Words cannot do justice to how much I love this show.

I agree, @alathe, I love Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim so much, and the show makes me feel so nostalgic. A big thanks for your detailed recap!

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How has Lee Sung Kyung gotten skinnier. If she looks like that on screen, she might fly away in real life when the tiniest gust of wind hits. My Lord.

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Also the hairstyle. She has had this hairstyle in her last 3 dramas.

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Thank you, @alathe, for the weecap! I can't believe Eun-jae tried to resist Woo-jin's suggestion in the beginning - with those abs out after his shower?! :) Never mix politics and medicine when Kim Sa-bu is around - that's another rule they should always bear in mind. Loved Eun-tak's wide smile when Ah-reum arrived.

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The look on director Park's face asking what is happening when he returned to the trauma center was hilarious. The guy has learned to expect a disaster each time he leaves the gang alone. Also, the wau he is stuck between Ronaldo and Messi of the medical field. But I sense teacher Kim's ex girlfriend has something to do with this rivalry.

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Aww yeahhhh! The third season came with the similar, feel-good vibes of the previous seasons.

I had a happy feeling when I saw the familiar Doldam building with its leafy vines. Then they revealed the big, impressive trauma center and I became proud!

Loved the intro, slo-mo shots of our Doldam team! It was so extra, but fun for the premiere. They looked extra cool, of course.

I'm excited to see more of the new guy Sun Woong! His look of awe is me. It will be nice to see a fresh face learning from Kim Sabu and the Doldam staff. Can't say the same about Dong Hwa yet. His slacking off left a bad impression.

I almost want to rewatch the previous seasons, but no time! I didn't remember the extra connection between Eun Jae and Woo Jin because of her brother.

Honestly, I also can't remember much of the current couples, but Eun Jae and Woo Jin were real cute in their home.

Director Park fits in well. He's not so bad. I appreciated that he acknowledged Sun Woong's effort. Don't care for Eun Jae's father though. We must have a villain, I guess. I assumed he would have no ties to the Doldam crew. But since he is Eun Jae's father, I hope he sees more of her skills and the father & daughter relationship gets better.

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Yeah I was so blank when they mentioned the relationship between Eun-Jae’s family, her brother, and Woo-Jin. I tried to search, though, who this brother was, but I didn’t find anything.

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In S2, there was a patient who was operated on incorrectly by Eun-Jae’s brother. This was discovered by Woo-jin when that patient was admitted to Doldam. Her family mainly via her mom just wanted to cover it up - but Eun-Jae insisted an apology from her brother. Good on her.

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Gah, 2 episodes out, and it did not disappoint! I think we have a good plot. And the 2 new members (with contrast characters) is a nice addition to the Doldam family. That scene towards the end showing the whole crew bracing themselves for the surge of the emergency patients, made me smile and feel proud of them. Haha… You could really feel that they are a family, and they treat their patients like one. Love the Doldam crew!

P.S. The EAW cameo is a nice touch. *chef’s kiss*

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Before i even read the recap... ill unload what all i felt while watching the first 2 episode (with my eyes wide, ear to ear grin and goosebumps)
cause i just loved this shows past seasons and therse couldn't be a better way to make me recall just why i am head over heels of this show as a whole, sabu nim and Park Wanjangnim (i love him 2nd most after Sabunim)
.
First and foremost.... i need to know how come Sabunim can remain so calm n composed despiite all chaos around him.. i want to learn please.

The way the first episode played out in such a intriguing way.. like we saw almost all the conflict points alread-
1. Uri Ronaldo vs Messi of Medical world
2. Woojin vs Jinman,
3. Jinman staring at Sabunim and that lady photo,
4. Eun Tak msging to Areum with so much apprehension,
5. Areum with Bae MoonJeung in flight with so much comfort level,
6. EunJaes conflict with her parents abt her brother,
7 DongHwa being the trouble maketr in this season,
8. And that Military Doctor just in awe looking around this grand magnanimous Doldam Trauma Hospital (just like i was and if i was impressed any less with the Doldam team and their work ethics)

so far we know the menu of this season and what all we should expect to get as a result of being patiently waiting for all these years... but what we dont know is this season looks so much for heavy on conflicts of personal interests than just medical (JinMan is one hell of a man.. he is clearly trying to trade his position in trauma center by outing Sabunim and his audacity to ask it directly to Park Minguk)

Next Park Minguk.. i know he loves this Doldam team and just to much respect fo4 Sabunim but i still have this tiny hunch that there will be a time in future episode where his love n respect will go shaky... why ? just looking at the way camera remained on him longer than necessary everytime JinMan tried to convince him against Sabunim (i want to be wrong.. i really dont wnat him to go against my Sabunim cause MinGuk is team doldam now) so fingers crossed.

i might be in minority cause i am not much intertwined or you say looking forwads towrds love story of WooJin n eunjae but more worried abt EunTak and Areum.. that too very less.
This show always makes me curious more about the bigger picture, the plot, the conflicts, the way sabunim handles all the curveballs and how Doldam Team battles it all with such zeal and dedication.
.
phew... i wrote a lot.
more in next post.

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next thing...
the moment i was sold...
Military Doctor says "its checkmate"
and next we see SaBu nim using his unique thinking to manage to keep the patient alive by putting a pipe in the vein and stichinng it up... wowww.. no one could have thought that... and i was literally clapping hard cause this show raises bar for medical dramas more n more by each season and then by each episode in each season...
i have huge respect and applaud for the Research team of this drama for bringing cases so complicated and then working them out so believably (if not in reality but at least in that moment) as if its the bestest thing happening to that patient undergoing treatment from one and only SaBunim.
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Next.. why i love this show more.. cause it gives me so much hope and positivity for handling my my life crisis.
its teaches us to focus (chibchunghae) every time there is a crisis and then never to give in as situation isnt as worse as it could havr been and that we had faced worst in past and this is nothing.
belive me.. i love this show the most for this one factor, for keeping the hope in me alive, for giving me these lessons of life that fighting matters the mos and that having a calm mind in those desperate moments can allow you to get over the chaos better than a jumbled mind.
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So my most fav character Sabunim and Park MinGuk
my fav plot- Sabunim fighting against jinman (and also to figure who is messi)
sabplot- if by any chance MinGuk stands against Sabunim ever (i would want it to not happen.. but just curious)
charcater i want to see grow- DongHwa this boy has capabilities, the way he managed to get the pulse of NIS soldier despite in a bloody situation... he just needs right motivation, his eureka moment like the military doctor had...like WJ had in last season.. DH needs just one life changing moment and he can be the successor of WJ.

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Anyone else thinking Kim Min Jae is looking much more polished, more smooth, more handsome… almost too ‘lead actor’ for this role now? Are they planning to give him more plot lines this time? Hope so!

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From season 1, I thought Kim Min-jae was very good looking and and could really pass as a lead actor. I am glad he has been starring in lead roles recently (I think he deserves it). But I am also glad that he still reprised his role as Eun-tak (despite already doing lead roles). So yeah, I also hope he’ll have more exposure this season.

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I respect his professionalism as he still stars in this show despite having had lead roles many times in the recent years. Yes, I agree that right now he looks like a “lead role material” even in his ursine gown. I don’t really mind if his part in the show this season is small or big because he has already shown his professionalism as an actor: He is responsible.

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It would definitely be a disappointment if he's not given more layers to play this season than he did in the first (I never saw the second season). But I'm not sure if that's only due to the fact that he's now established himself as a lead, or if it's because I'm so used to seeing him in a prominent role that it's hard for me to accept him as supporting.

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To me a large part of it is the hairstyle he stands out to me a lot.

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I noticed his hair too. Now he looks older & polished (good word, @Susanf!) with his hair styled back/parted, showing his forehead lol.

He looked younger back in Season 2 when he had bangs and a rounded haircut.

Ahn Hyo Seop still looks young with the same hairstyle he had before. Bangs covering his forehead.

(Omg I just looked up their ages and Hyo Seop is older than Min Jae by some months!)

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It seemed to me that the show has made Euntak ssem a more prominent team member. He’s acknowledged more in the operating room, beyond handing over the scalpels and cutting the strings. I agree that he looks more handsome here than past seasons, but I think how we see him is enhanced by his slightly bigger role.

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Here is dramatic start:
Mr Park:"Our trauma center is going to open soon and we need some staff. So I am going to scout a lthe archenemy of my the most important doctor of Doldam to make things hectic again ... because I do not have enough problems on my plate"

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This is actually made me doubtful: Why did he scout such a person knowing he was an enemy of Kim Sabu?

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That is also my question ... Why ? Just why?

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Out of the frying pan and into the fire. What a fantastic start to one the consistently good dramas.

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Ep 1 was underwhelming, but Ep 2 was good. I was glad when they ended the episode without dragging the politics of the two countries. Finally a Kdrama to look forward to.

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The first thing I thought when I saw the opening shots of the first episode was "Oh, big budget!" But then I got sucked into the actual storylines. I do admit, though, that I still have to look away when we get to the close-ups of the various surgeries and procedures; they always make me queasy. Clearly, I was right to not ever pursue being in the medical profession, lol.

I only watched the first season of this drama, and although I liked it, some of the predictability started to get on my nerves. It wasn't so much that "Doctor Kim" was different on that front than most any other medical drama; whatever its country of origin, these types of dramas--from St. Elsewhere to ER and everything in between-- ultimately end up hitting the same themes. Maybe I had just personally seen too many.

But what bothered me most about season one was the cycle of Doctor Kim being abrasive and righteous; then the young, arrogant, yet insecure doctors and administration push back; then Doctor Kim is ultimately proven right, often at the expense of the push back team, who end up all looking like fools in the face of DK's brilliance. At a certain point, I just tired of this dynamic, skipped ahead to the later episodes in Season One when this had played itself out, and then skipped Season Two because I figured with fresh faces, we were set to repeat the same type of arc all over again.

This time, though, I love that all the leads have already established their credentials and that there's a warmer, more mutually respectful relationship between colleagues. That makes for a more interesting show in my eyes. Obviously, the show's themes and plot twists remain fairly predictable, but in a way that goes down easy and feels good.

For me, the romances have been the biggest draw, and I'm a little concerned our happily domesticated pair is in for some very cliched conflict, but hopefully the show will surprise me on this front and put more focus on Eun-tak's relationship troubles.

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I think some of the issues you mentioned in S1 was no longer there in S2 when the focus became squarely on Kim Sa-bu’s nurturing the young talents both on the technical skills and what it takes to become the professional they sworn in. I like S2 much better - but it is also about the drama landing on the right spot after S1.

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I have only seen two extracts of this drama, and nothing of the first seasons.
Still I am compelled to comment that it really bother me than in 2023 a FL react like a teen schoolgirl when her boyfriend of 3 years kisses her.
I'm at loss if it is supposed to be cute or funny.
Unless you tell me that this is not representative, it's stop and don't watch for me.

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I hear you. I rolled my eyes a bit at that one, too. I mean, they were alone, in their own apartment, have dated (and likely slept together) for three years, and clearly love each other, so that scene did not ring true. Pretty typical for kdramas, though, with their often very, very sanitized and/or immature depictions of sex.

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Everytime Woojin kisses Eunjae, Lee Sung Kyung's acting always bring me back to when she was acting in Weightlifting Fairy Kim Bok Joo - the whole blushing face, omg-i-can't-believe-you-just-did-this look.

It's appropriate for WFKBJ, not so much for here, considering that they have been dating for 3 years and even living together. They are outside the staff lounge, it's a chilled out location, I don't see what's wrong with a peck on the lips or on the cheeks, especially since (I assume) most know about their relationship by then.

Totally get your reaction though.

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Am I correct in thinking that I’d need to get both a VPN and Disney+ subscription to watch this in the US? 🤬

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I hear ya!

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At that last scene I reflexively blurted out 니가 뭔데! Ni ga muon deh! Who the hell do you think you are!

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I was happy to meet the Dr Romantic squad again! They started with a bang with boat, helicopters, etc.

It's nice to get new characters. Jang Dong-Hwa will need growth but he's not a bad doctor. At least, he didn't try to oparate someone under drugs. Lee Sun-Woong looks very passionate to learn.

To be honest, I would have prefered to get new main characters instead of Seo Woo-Jin and Cha Eun-Jae, Lee Sung-Kyung's ton and her character writting make her looking like a teenager... Or to get back Do In-Bum!

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Episode 2:

What was that at the end? A big and old man, experienced and respected in his field called a director and said:"sorry but there is a man in your staff I do not like although I do not know him. So kick him out snyd I will bring you more problem". Anyone would know this man does not want to live besides others peacefully. This is a domineering character that any director should avoid

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Wishing this show was available to me, but thanks to Dramabeans for the recaps. For now this is my only way to keep up with what's happening at Doldam Hospital & Trauma Center.

Hoping for a guest-star visit from Yoo Yeon-Seok and Seo Hyun-Jin. Perhaps as a married couple on vacationing in the area, who bring their child into Doldam for emergency treatment????

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They’re really proud of WJ’s body, no? In the first episode of S2, we were shown his chest and abs, and now again in the maiden episode of S3, we see them again =)

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OMG! Atty. Minwoo of EXTRAORDINARY ATTY WOO has a cameo! He is applying in Doldam Hospital! He has changed career path! Haha! =)

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Here we go again. TEACHER KIM is officially “on vacation” – yet his office door is open – free for anyone to enter and look at his files as they wish. He (or the series writer) never learns! 🙄

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The Doldam Hospital Trauma Center is the brainchild of TEACHER KIM. Why would this a’hole newcomer/old rival of TK want him out?? What a jerk! 😡

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It's really very good

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