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Numbers: Episodes 9-10

All the spreadsheets in the world can’t bring a man back from the dead. But maybe the data left behind can resolve his last regrets. Our heroes are blazing a trail through Sanga’s files, in the hopes that numbers can still save the day!

 

EPISODES 9-10

It takes a while for the flames to die down. Longer for the crisis team to find what’s left of Hyeong-woo. Our heroes attend his funeral with twin hollow-eyed stares, distraught in the face of this villainy. Hyun and Suk-min join, wracked by guilt that they hadn’t intervened sooner. But the belle of the ball is Vice President Han, who dabs his eyes dramatically at the photo of poor, dear… er, whatshisname. Lackey no. 4. Flanking him, in true bad taste, is his brand-new replacement minion.

Vice President Han isn’t one to let his no-doubt enormous grief slow him down — it’s back to business! This time, he’s dead set on selling a P2P online loan company to his good friend President Jin. Peering at the files, Ji-soo quickly spots the squiffy numbers; this loan company is riddled with more losses than your average accountant has business formal button-downs.

Meanwhile, Chan-joo of Sanga has handed over stocks to his feckless son, Bo-sung. Bo-sung is all indignation: how’s he meant to pay off the interest? Fortunately, he has a good friend from Taeil willing to cut him a squeaky-clean deal with low interest… provided Sanga’s stocks remain steady. Sanga’s too big to fail, right? Well, not so much. Thanks to a carefully-orchestrated — and deeply distasteful — scheme from his loving uncle, a drunken Bo-sung is manipulated into being caught canoodling with a minor. Stocks plummet.

Bo-sung is forced to admit to Chan-joo that his stocks have been seized. With a fatherly screech of rage, Chan-joo batters Bo-sung with his fists. It’s amid this touching family tableau that Lee Sung-joo enters, smug to the bone. Guess who’s now the majority shareholder for Sanga? I’ll give you a clue: he was last spotted shoving his brother’s head into a urinal, and now gives a scream of triumph that I can only transliterate as “AaAAaaaaaaauuAAARRRGHAA!” As Sung-joo gloats all over the room, Chan-joo and son are dragged away by a prosecutor. There’s a new chairman in town!

Later, Ho-woo receives some mysterious mail — supposedly from the long-dead Mr. Jang. With help from Yeo-jin, he nabs the security footage from the post office. Hyeong-woo appears on screen like a ghost. Prior to his death, he posted Ho-woo an innocuous-looking key card… to his old staff locker in the Taeil foyer. Inside are a series of pen drives: his way of being understood from beyond the grave.

The drives contain recordings of every single meeting Vice President Han conducted —with threats, fraud and everything in between — whilst Hyeong-woo stood by, every inch the loyal lackey. One stands out. It’s the voice of Mr. Jang. On that dark night after the destruction of Haebit, he stood at the top of a building site… and spoke with a masked figure. Hyeong-woo. There’s the flash of a knife, and a muffled cry of pain. I’ve stood before the gates of hell, Mr. Jang says. You think I didn’t plan for the worst?

L Kim Yuri Numbers: Episodes 9-10 L Kim Yuri Numbers: Episodes 9-10

As Ho-woo listens to his father figure die afresh, Ji-soo makes her own discovery. On the list of Taeil scholarship beneficiaries is a forensic scientist — easy enough to track down. She steps into the office of a broken man, swigging from a bottle of soju. Vice President Han bribed him into faking an autopsy report. Jang In-ho’s death wasn’t suicide. He was stabbed by Hyeong-woo. Ji-soo and Ho-woo are in agreement: they will make Vice President Han suffer.

This is a mission statement our heroes can all rally behind. Dream Team assemble! Seung-jo, Ho-woo and Yeon-ah are joined by Suk-min, Hyun, and even Vice President Ahn. Their mission? To figure out just why our resident villain is so keen on selling an online loan company to Jisan Bank. As our heroes run the numbers, their faces fall. The loan company is lousy with hidden debt. If Jisan swallowed this poison pill, it would be up to its elbows in loan failure. Here’s where Ho-woo’s murderboard comes into play: he’s got evidence of Vice President Han meeting with the Financial Services Commission.

Cue glorious, glorious ham. Vice President Ahn has to sit down. The banks…! she intones. Vice President Han wants to take over Jisan. With someone as unqualified as our villain at the helm — he’ll draw blood! Hyun delivers the most beautiful line of the series, with pitch-perfect sincerity. It’s only a matter of time before Vice President Han starts messing… with the national economy! Our heroes are horror-struck. Not the national economy! Yeon-ah makes a frantic call to alert her father. Alas — too late. The deal is struck. After all, Chairman Jin is laughably blackmailable: the last thing he wants is his daughter knowing about his less-than-legit ascent to power.

Seung-jo, meanwhile, is devastated to learn of Mr. Jang’s murder. Words, he confesses to Ji-soo, are worthless in the face of this. Still, all he can do is say that he’s sorry. It’s not your fault, insists Ji-soo. Please, don’t act rashly. Disregarding this warning, he cuts straight to the belly of the beast: his father’s office, in the dark of evening. It’s time for a family chat.

Choi Jin-hyuk Choi Min-woo Numbers: Episodes 9-10

Let me ask you something, begins Seung-jo. Is all of this — becoming Chairman, owning Jisan — worth enough to justify murder? Vice President Han gives his signature, semi-ironic smirk. When I become chairman, he replies, you’ll be my successor. Seung-jo looks part stricken, part resigned. We could have been an ordinary family, he says. Asking after each other’s day. Consoling each other. Caring. But you’ve never done any of that. And I can no longer live as a murderer’s son. His father’s face curdles: that thin sneer of a man biting into a rotten lemon. Your greatest fortune in life, he says, is the fact that you’re my son. That same thing is my worst misfortune. Oof. I lived my whole life at its worst, Seung-jo bites back. Your son, Han Seung-jo, is no more.

Elsewhere, Ho-woo meets with the newly-minted chairman of Sanga, Sung-joo. He’s got a last-minute plot twist in store. What would you say, he smirks at a snarling Ho-woo, if I told you Vice President Han was to blame for the death of your birth parents too? It’s improbable, but he’s got papers to prove it. Ho-woo’s father worked on a Sanga construction project — one which would later become notorious for its fatal safety breaches. He and his wife died in the collapse that resulted. Sung-joo hands over two conflicting ledgers: evidence that Vice President Han was embezzling money from the project.

Rage eclipses rationality. Ho-woo confronts Vice President Han, papers clenched in his fist, railing at him for killing his parents. He is subsequently annihilated. Call yourself an accountant, scoffs Vice President Han, darkly. You come to me no plan, no proof — just hearsay. I hope you’re prepared to pay for your rudeness. Know your place. Ho-woo is utterly undone. He leaves work to wander the streets, numb with rage. Later, his friends drag him home from a cell after brawling on the streets. He refuses to speak a word.

Ho-woo’s not the only one mid-breakdown. Seung-jo has noped out of Taeil: he’s gone fishing, potentially forever, thank you so much. Of course, he lasts about thirty minutes before pulling out his laptop. Disaster has struck! Vice President Han has rallied his obedient ex-scholarship flunkies into launching a media campaign against Jisan. The press is rife with unfounded fears about its debt, wreaking consumer chaos. It’s not long before Seung-jo’s on the phone from his new office, the lake, coordinating a defense with the Dream Team — which now includes Jae-hwan and Hye-won, and is a veritable dream battalion.

Choi Jin-hyuk Kim Yuri Numbers: Episodes 9-10 Choi Jin-hyuk Kim Yuri Numbers: Episodes 9-10

Seung-jo is lucky he’s predictable. By evening, Ji-soo approaches, remembering his favorite haunt. It must have been tough, she says, living as that man’s son. So, stop saying sorry. Do you remember saying you’d defeat your father if I was patient? Seung-jo nods. Well, she says, I can’t wait forever. This is all the prompting Seung-jo needs. Soon, he’s back in a tie, striding into Taeil like he owns the place! To reward him for good behavior, Ji-soo organizes a gift: on TV, they announce that Jisan’s finances are solid as ever, quelling consumer fears. The crisis recedes. Meanwhile, for the low, low bribe of a cup of coffee, Hyun agrees to park the loan company’s debt with his new firm.

Ho-woo is still deep in his torpor when a very insistent Seung-jo begins asking irritating questions. Things like, are you ever going to come back to work? And, what happened to your insatiable yen for revenge? Ho-woo is adamant that he and his murderboards are closed for business. Tough-love mentor that he is, Seung-jo expertly nabs the last word. Forget about feelings — face reality. Stalking to his room with a face like thunder, Ho-woo returns to his post-its with a vengeance. He tallies up a litany of Vice President Han’s crimes. Arson! Murder! Violation of the Certified Accountant Act!

L Yeonwoo Numbers: Episodes 9-10 L Yeonwoo Numbers: Episodes 9-10

The next day, to Yeon-ah’s delight, she encounters Ho-woo in the archive room. With an air of awkward decisiveness, he pulls her into a hug. After much blushing and fidgeting, the two settle into research-mode. They hit the investigative jackpot: all Sanga subsidiaries donate to Nuri Children’s Foundation… a charity that owns 4.9% of Sanga itself. But there’s no evidence that its supposed projects ever existed. Looking at Nuri’s sponsor list, there are five companies that donate millions on the regular. When the two take a road trip to visit these firms, they discover… a series of abandoned portacabins. Paper company ahoy! This is a money-laundering scheme of mammoth proportions.

Sure enough, the press explodes with news of a search and seizure. Nuri is well and truly scuppered… but our villain seems positively chipper. The reason becomes clear when he calls a meeting with Sung-joo, casually declaring it’ll be their last. After all, he deserves to be punished for priming Ho-woo against him. Sung-joo is outraged; he was in on the Nuri scheme. This could destroy them both! Vice President Han gives his shark-like smile. Not so much. The case prosecutor is a scholarship fund minion. This won’t touch him. What’s more, he declares, recently, he investigated a fire the caused the death of a Taeil accountant. The real owner of the warehouse was, of course, Lee Sung-joo. It takes Sung-joo a moment to realize he’s been outmaneuvered — but, oh, that guy was dead before he even hit the ground.

Another deadly counter-move occurs: Jisan’s BIS ratio has plummeted. Protesters surge to every branch, demanding their money. Hyun’s offer to park the loan company’s debts? Yeah, that just fell through. Turns out, Vice President Han is awfully good at threatening firms. The loan company was bait for one of the most terrifying events in the world of accountancy… a bank run!

Still, it’s not over for our scheme-happy hero. Ho-woo’s fired up and ready to meddle. Recently, he’s been thinking — who outranks Vice President Han? That’d be the ever-elusive chairman. Vice President Ahn assures him a rookie accountant hasn’t a snowball’s chance in hell of a meeting. But that just means getting creative! Ho-woo casts caution to the winds and makes a provocative post online: he’s got evidence of a private equity firm controlling a bank. That evening, he receives a visit. It seems, says the chairman, that you want a conversation.

We don’t see what they discuss. In fact, the next time we check in with Ho-woo, he’s on a road trip. He’s discovered the address of a survivor from Sanga construction disaster, YOON MOO-IL. But when he knocks on the door, it’s answered by none other than the barista from Taeil (Cha Young-ju) — Vice President Han’s deadliest spy!

Despite a tad too much messing around with literal murder, this drama is back to what it does best: hyping the heck out of finances. Hyeong-woo may have died by fire, but Sung-joo “died” by paperwork — and wow did the latter make for better TV. It’s the same kind of brilliance as Hyeong-woo leaving his posthumous mark via meticulously-organized pen drives. I love the sheer quantity of horror our characters put into the phrase “bank run,” and when our main action involves scrutinizing donor lists. Above all, I’m thrilled that the stakes are so high they encompass… the national economy!

My one bone to pick is that this drama struggles with priorities. Sometimes, it does too much at once, and skips over the fun parts. There’s been far too much focus on the slightly tepid romance between Yeon-ah and Ho-woo, and nowhere near enough on the much more compelling Ji-soo and Seung-jo — or the under-explored relationship between our two male leads.

Still, when it wants to, Numbers can bring it. I was enthralled by the scene between Seung-jo and his dad; the tension was sky-high, and the dialogue to die for. There’s also something utterly lovely about watching every single background accountant pitch in to take down the villain. Speaking of which — Vice President Han’s eleventh hour machinations were a delight. I can’t wait for where our last episodes lead us!

 
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This show would be nothing without the dramatic background right-in-your-face music. It’s pretty much a ham sandwich with an OST. @alathe, massive respect for being able to keep track of what’s going on because I sure can’t. I want more Seung-jo and Ji-soo interactions, even if they’re not romantic. The confusion over her child’s gender was wryly funny and sweet - this is what grown-ups look like and Ho-woo and Yeo-jin can’t hold a candle to them.

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Ho Woo and Yeon A 's romance is so bleh that when Ho Woo tried to communicate with the deaf and mute barista girl, I found it sweet.

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So bleh that I can't even get the nearly interchangeable female characters' names straight! 😂

I was waiting for the barista to become more than a cipher, and Ho-woo's the only one who has treated her as an individual so far. That's bound to pay off, right? That closing moment was the one thing that made me sit up and take interest in a plot twist instead of just laughing throughout these episodes.

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This drama has turned into a farce with these two episodes.
1. The ultimate goal of VP Han is to control the economy of SK.
2. The murder(! and not suicide!) of Jang In Ho.
3. Sang Ju informing about Ho Woo's parent when he himself DID NOT KNOW ABOUT THEM.

I don't know which one is more laughable, but above all the fact that shocked me more was Sim Hyeong doing a Tom Cruise and pulling a "Mission Impossible" stuff of copying office files into personal external devices when the drama initially highlighted top security in the firm, by using animal names as alias for projects and using a barcode for every print.

At this point, I wonder if all other actors, except Myung Soo are completing their scenes by holding in their laughter after reading the script.

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It is slowly dawning on me that I might have made the wrong career choice, as I always thought that accounting was rather dry and uneventful. Maybe I should think about a career change.

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@alathe, you have the best recaps. As the kids say you ate and left no crumbs. After episode 9 I literally laughed out loud, they made this man a supervillain. He created a perfect storm to cause a bank run and scoop up a bank and take over the Korean economy. DRAMA. Ho Woo sulking for two weeks was also kind of funny, sir get it together. We are finally in the last two episodes and I can't wait.

As for SeungJo and Jisoo, his adorably pathetic attempts to get back to her are so funny. Maybe I should transfer to Hong Kong indeed. Also not knowing his son was a boy, at least double check. ha

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When I get to the right machine, I’m gonna get my new gif-skillz on for that man, our supervillain…I saw the gif actually go by in my mind while watching.

ETA: Done.

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I could have written a whole essay about what I saw in Numbers this week, but you all have quickly saved me (and yourselves) from this fate by already writing about so much that I had also noticed. I love Dramabeans.

@alathe had pinpoint accuracy here: “Hyun delivers the most beautiful line of the series, with pitch-perfect sincerity. It’s only a matter of time before Vice President Han starts messing… with the national economy!” It was a phrase so, so beautiful that when I heard it, I paused to savor it. It won’t be long now before we hear that Han Je-kyun wants to start screwing with the weather, creating a button that makes it snow at the beach.

Overall, Hyun as sunbae ex machina is really working for me.

@elinor read my mind about the music, which I now consider to be an entire character in this drama. I mean, the scene @emsel mentions where Sang-ju informs Ho-woo about parents he didn’t even know, without using or showing any specific names (not that Ho-woo knows their names?!$?)...well, go back and watch the scene recap at the beginning of episode 10, if you like. Or listen to it, I mean. The music is like verbal denotation, telling you what to hear in the characters' words and how to feel about it. The ending credits song from episode 9 also really stood out for me.

I also really connected with @emsel’s emphasis on @elinor’s point about how blah our young main couple are. It reinforces this note I’d made, @dramaddictally-style, while watching: In the café scene where it becomes understood who’s who and what’s what between them as children of parents (I know talking about how I am a child is my love language), Ho-woo and Yeon-ah might as well have been sipping egg creams at Woolworth’s with the cutesy drinking-straw-based stage business. I expect such shenanigans from King’s Ransom but admit that I did want more from my dearest Numbers.

Lastly, the opening scene of My Mister called and wants its discussion of how much pressure per square foot any given material can take back. May I remind Numbers that it is about accountancy.

I do hope my loving sarcasm here doesn't completely hide my abiding affection for this drama, one that keeps me at the edge of my seat, sides-split, every week.

PS: @nefret, good luck with your career change. I think you’re making the right decision.

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@alathe Let me, as usual echo everyone else in thanking you for your hilarious recap that also captures the strengths and weaknesses of this show. I will follow your recaps to the end of the earth, even if the next one is of a tragic sageuk...uh, maybe not.)

Anyway, as others have noted, that the villain would affect...THE NATIONAL ECONOMY was the funniest line of these two episodes. The national economy!!! Even Dr. Doom wouldn't go that far!!!

But there were some other gems as well. I've always liked the fact that although the villain has a team of corrupt financiers, prosecutors, and government officials at his beck and call, because he gave them a scholarship he really is most dependent for his information on the barista in the company cafe, whose spying is enormously effective because customers think she is deaf. Well, of course. There are deaf staff at my local Starbucks, which is why I go there periodically to shout out my social security number and all my internet passwords!

I also liked when Ho-woo, confronted by the knowledge that not only his adopted father but his birth parents were killed by corrupt accounting, drunkenly wandered the streets for days, but then brought himself back from the brink by neatly lining up post-it notes. (I believe this is the trauma therapy approved by the APA.)

And I was also pleased that the best little library in the world continued to play a key role, although in this one, it was the Internet connection it supplied that gave the answer. But, you know, today even scholarly libraries with massive print holdings have had to provide multiple services for their patrons. So its a way for accounting libraries to stay relevant, beyond the traditional strategic placement of cartons to allow the exchange of flash drives and amorous glances.

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Lest anyone think my enthusiasm for this drama is tallied only in the profit column, I agree with others that the romantic relationships must be listed as losses.

I've already mentioned last week how Ji-soo's family decisions only make sense if you think the drive to revenge the past loss of fatherly love is always stronger than the motherly love you might feel for your own child. But also, if you were Seung-jo, suspecting that you'd fathered a child, even if you were nobly denying the relationship because of embarassment about your accounting skills, wouldn't you make just a little effort to learn about him and not determine the gender by a fuzzy baby picture?

As far Ho-woo, and Yeon-ah, they don't even figure into the balance sheet. I understand that Ho-woo needs some sort of information source or corporate accounting buddy to pass him binders, but it could have just as easily been the copying machine. On the other hand, Yeon-ha is a beautiful young woman, to go with the beautiful young male lead, and there is nothing more beautiful than seeing young accountants in love!

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I know from personal observation that accountancy firms are very romantic places, producing numerous married couples. Maybe because they can calculate the tax benefits of married life.

I am baffled by the deaf barista as well. She seems to be the only barista there as well. But what is even more strange is that these accountants keep on discussing confidential information in open and public places. From my recollection this is where they discuss football, the weather, traffic, colleagues' outfits and who might be going out with whom. For other things doors are kept closed.

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All joking about the show aside, its true that my three accountant relatives are all married to accountants they met at work. So maybe there is romance in numbers. But it could also be that many people still meet their spouses through work, despite the prevalence of online dating sites like Farmers Only.com I met my wife when we were both teaching, and my children met their fiances at their workplaces, which are not directly related to accounting.

It would be interesting to learn whether accountants are more likely to marry within their firms than other occupations. If so, that the show highlights this romantic aspect, would just be one more way its destroying sterotypes about accountants being boring. I wonder if there will be a surge in accounting majors among young Koreans because of this show?

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It’s probably the way they throw little wads of paper at one another’s shoulder at emotionally-significant moments.

I dunno, I mean, it was sort of hot when Han Je-kyun did it.

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Just as easily been the copy machine. 🤣🤣🤣🤣, yes.

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I'm liking this show and look forward to it every Friday.

Like the story from the accountant's perspective.

I think this is the first k-drama I've seen where multiple female characters are contributing to the overall storyline, and not only being victims. I would like to see more of this.

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Try Be Melodramatic.

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I agree and Search WWW.

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Can’t wait to see how the band of heroes rescues The National Economy. Glad to see Ho-woo and Seung-jo have licked their psychological wounds and rejoined the fight, but it takes a certain amount of privilege to be able to retreat to ye olde fishing hole to do so. Just saying.

Based on the Wonryeong School in “Little Women” and VP Han’s Taeil scholarship recipients, apparently the best way to collect loyal minions in every aspect of politics and business is to sponsor their education.

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What is less than 1-dimensionnal ? Main characters from Numbers who are drowned by over-the-top secondary characters. I'm angry at myself that I'm not able to adjust my viewing lens and adapt my expectations.

Black ice queen needs to set Seung-Jo free. He is only the shadow of a zombie. Please erase his memories and send him 10 or 30 years back .
Barbie-chaebolina-not-woori-Sunshine managed to get a "I will not retreat" from Backpfeifengesicht. Boy didn't even made a step and does not have a whale illumination. They don't have enough chemistry to pass un bac littéraire. Total waste.
I'll keep reading the recap, and will FF to the end for the bean.

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The arson subplot reminded me that Sketchy Abandoned Warehouse gets almost as much airtime as Truck of Doom and Cliff of Non-doom but nowhere near the fan love. Is there just one SAW that everyone knows about and frequents? Or is there a regular circuit of SAWs that the bad guys use on a rotational basis? Is there an online reservation system? Does a contractor come by to keep the trash can fires burning? It’s not quite as deadly as ToD but scarier than CoND because our heroes tend to actually get beaten up there, and supporting characters lose their lives on the regular.

As for other locations that are practically characters, I'm impressed with this show's elevator game - it's on a par with Sh**ting Stars or Love in Contract.

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In one sense Choi Min-soo (V.P. Han) is maybe laughing all the way to the Jirisan Bank which he aims to own. NUMBERS has to be one of the easiest gigs he has acted in. I think that in a majority of his scenes he is seated behind his desk, seated at a couch or standing in an elevator. All his scenes could have been front loaded and been done in a week. Maybe they were.

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