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Hide: Episodes 11-12 (Final)

We’re at the end of our twisty tale of greed, oodles of betrayal, and nefarious deeds in the name of revenge. Our heroine and her crew take on the evildoers for the final time, and they’re done playing it safe. Knowing it’s do or die, they go on the offensive as their adversaries scramble to stay in control. While somewhat open ended, we do get a tidier ending than expected that sees everyone, in some way or another, facing the consequences of their actions. For some that means punishment, for others new beginnings, and sometimes a mix of both.

 
EPISODES 11-12

So many people to take down, so little time. Moon-young and her sidekicks go all in and aren’t afraid to get a little devious. To get at Yeon-joo, they’ll need some help, so Moon-young teams up with CEO Choi and steals Yeon-joo’s right-hand minion Seok-goo out from under her. Seok-goo locates Yeon-joo’s safe, which houses boatloads of cash and her super secret computer with evidence against CEO Choi. Moon-young passes along the intel to CEO Choi, but first she sets up a spy cam so she can break into the safe herself – she’s not about to let CEO Choi steal away with murder evidence.

With no one on her side and nothing going to plan, Yeon-joo begins to unravel. But she’s not the only one falling apart. Sung-jae and his corrupt family are not doing so hot themselves. Sung-jae’s father’s shadiness catches up to him, and his loyal office manager slips Moon-young evidence of his corruption. It doesn’t take much convincing from Moon-young to get him to hand over Hwang Tae-soo’s DNA, evidence that will certainly damn his son, in exchange for the incriminating evidence against himself.

Sung-jae, already wallowing in his woes and self-pity, is stunned by this betrayal. He turns up drunk at Moon-young’s and throws a fit when she informs him that she’s already turned the evidence over to the prosecution. His father’s loving way of rectifying his betrayal is that he had Yeon-joo help him secure a boat so that Sung-jae can go on the run. Sung-jae knows better than to trust Yeon-joo, so he’s not about to get on a boat she chartered.

Hide: Episodes 11-12

Yeon-joo is growing ever more desperate and reckless, so it was only a matter of time before she went totally unhinged. She finds Seok-goo stealing the cash out of her safe and watches him rip up her passport. Her response? Unflinchingly stabbing him in the neck with a kitchen knife.

Sung-jae walks in and pauses for a beat at Seok-goo’s dead body, but he’s much more concerned with his own problems. He found passage out of Korea and needs Yeon-joo’s help to retrieve their embezzled billions, so off they go. Surprising no one, it’s another betrayal. Sung-jae also struck a deal with CEO Choi: he can flee on a Geumshin vessel if he kills Yeon-joo.

Yeon-joo is no idiot and realizes the danger she’s in the second she notices a Geumshin logo on the boat. But it’s not easy to escape when you’re trapped on a massive boat with someone intent on killing you. She gets an unexpected savior in Moon-young who may hate her but draws the line at murder.

Jin-woo had a tracker installed on Sung-jae’s phone ages ago, unbeknownst to Sung-jae, which allows him and Moon-young to crash the murder right on time. The justice fighting duo earns an epic eyeroll from Sung-jae who has had it up to here with their righteous meddling. Up until now, Sung-jae has largely avoided outright hurting Moon-young, but he’s not about to let her get in the way of his ticket to freedom. When he advances on her, Jin-woo attacks.

While the guys duke it out, Yeon-joo gloats to Moon-young about a “present” she left her. Right then, Moon-young receives a call from Shin-hwa – her father is in the ICU after attempting suicide. Yeon-joo visited him in prison to taunt him with the gory details of how Moon-young’s life has gone down the drain and encouraged him to die. He isn’t dead, but he is in a coma.

Moon-young doesn’t get much time to process this latest trauma before Sung-jae comes charging in with a wrench. When she stands in front of Yeon-joo and refuses to move, Sung-jae warns he’ll kill her too. But before he can make a move, Yeon-joo grabs Moon-young around the waist and hauls them both into the water below.

Jin-woo doesn’t hesitate to dive in after them with life rafts; Sung-jae watches stunned but, of course, does nothing. Moon-young breaks free in the water and still takes the time to grab the unconscious Yeon-joo before she swims to the surface. The three of them get to safety, and they’re whisked to the hospital when the police arrive shortly after.

Hide: Episodes 11-12

Meanwhile, Sung-jae makes his way to Switzerland and tries to retrieve his money, but the DNA results come out proving that Tae-soo, his assumed identity, is dead. Sung-jae is now a wanted person and hightails it out of the bank before they can take him into custody. He probably would’ve been safer letting the police arrest him because CEO Choi’s men find and almost kill him. With no identity and no one left to help him, Sung-jae is stuck in a Swiss hospital alone.

CEO Choi also sends someone after Yeon-joo in the hospital, but her guardian angel Moon-young thwarts that attempt too. Yeon-joo holds herself at syringe point to get Moon-young to hand over her keys, but Moon-young instead offers to drive her wherever she wants to go. They visit her father’s grave, and Yeon-joo is surprised to see a new headstone with the correct name. In her attempts to set things right, Moon-young had it changed. Looking into their family, she learned that Yeon-joo’s childhood dream was to be a prosecutor – to her, Moon-young stole her life.

Moon-young is gentle with Yeon-joo who is on the precipice of a breakdown. She even says she hopes Yeon-joo will learn to smile again. When Yeon-joo finally breaks down sobbing, Moon-young sits quietly by her side and motions for the officers standing by to let her grieve before taking her into custody.

Hide: Episodes 11-12

From there, we get the typical finale wrap up with a surprisingly happy ending, all things considered. Chairman Choi, Yeon-joo, and Sung-jae’s mom are all arrested and sentenced. Sung-jae is miserable, alone, and poor abroad. Moon-young and Bom are reunited and begin a new, happier life. Jin-woo musters up the courage to meet his daughter and her adoptive parents. He and the now-retired Officer Baek work for Shin-hwa’s new law firm as investigators. Moon-young’s father pulls through and is acquitted.

The one downer is that Moon-young still has to stand trial for the crimes she committed while “saving” Sung-jae from his fake kidnapping. She’s convicted and sentenced to a year in prison with two years’ probation. (Who is going to care for Bom?) It’s a bittersweet ending where, in the final scene, we see Moon-young walking down a sunny street. She cries briefly before rallying herself and pushing forward, just like she’s always done.

Hide: Episodes 11-12

Given how intense everything was, I’d expected more casualties to be honest (R.I.P. Seok-goo). I certainly didn’t expect the semi-reconciliation between Yeon-joo and Moon-young, but I didn’t mind it. They both lost their fathers to circumstances beyond their control as children but had very different opportunities that took them in different directions. I can’t imagine they’ll ever be friends – that’d be wild – but they reached an understanding, thanks in large part to Moon-young being saint-like in her ability to sympathize and forgive. She even wrote regularly to Yeon-joo in prison when no one else showed any concern.

While Yeon-joo turned out to be a somewhat stereotypical loneliness-and-trauma-made-me-like-this villain, I did think she worked well as a foil for Moon-young. Lee Chung-ah made her more three-dimensional than she might’ve been otherwise, and I found her infinitely more interesting than Sung-jae as an antagonist. It feels like the drama was suggesting Sung-jae was corrupted by greed and his terrible parents, rather than him being always terrible, but he was too much of a spoiled brat for me to really care.

Sometimes, you just need a fun, thrilling ride with some over-the-top moments, and Hide scratched that itch. The cast was strong and the story fast-paced enough (and short enough) that it kept me engaged and waiting to see what new, dramatic twist was around the corner. I’m not sure it would’ve worked half as well without Lee Bo-young at the helm, ensuring we had someone to root for and care about throughout the wild turns we took. Despite all the betrayal, greed, murder, and other various forms of bad behavior, the justice prevails worldview made for a surprisingly optimistic story where the good guys won and everyone was held accountable for their actions in the end.

Hide: Episodes 11-12

 
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I was thinking during episode 11 when the puzzle piece clips were rapidly firing across the screen that there were more knives being juggled than humanly possible. It was beyond belief like a nouveau chef deconstructing into pieces an Agatha Christie parlor of suspects reveal of the killer. The sledgehammer theme was that you cannot trust anyone; that anyone is a disposal asset; and family members can be the worst offenders. I also thought there was no way CEO Choi was going to uphold any bargain with Na since he had way too much to lose. We all know that CEO Choi will betray Na but how sound is Na’s plan to betray him? It seems she needs Joo alive to pull that off. And it seems her husband sold his soul to CEO Choi for only $7.2 million dollars.

How many nine lives does each character have? The finale ties together all the strings into one neat ball of sadness. Isolated, ostracized; alone, repression, loneliness. Everyone except Prosecutor Joo and the Detective end up with criminal records and tarnished reputations. The final lesson in the last scene was simple: you cannot hide from your past and you have to move forward.

The series was like a roller coaster ride of twists and turns, turning average people into minor superhero characterizations. A rushed explanation for most of the last episode. We have to assume that all the bad guys got their sentences. We assume that Cha is in a Swiss chard vegetable state. Pros: Pure entertainment. Good escapism. Cons: Almost too much plot to handle. FL had a lot of personal baggage and strikes against her to have her happy ending.

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Hum... I don't the original story but this one felt meh.

I didn't like how the husband switched from the lovely and caring husband to this awful person without anything explaining why or how. I think it's a shame they didn't make him less evil and if he still showed some love for his wife, I would have cared for him or it would have been interesting to always doubt like Nicholas Brody in Homeland.

I didn't like this crazy side they gave to Yeon-joo. Her reason was based on a real wound but they made her so edgy, I didn't really care for her.

It was nice to get a very smart FL, Moon-young had to fight against the different villains who fought each other too. It was nice to handle an issue pretty fast when her husband had to feign his own death... Her prison sentence was weird, she had a motive to act like this. Her father killed a man but it was ok?

After 12 episodes, no scene with Jin-woo and his daughter? I was so ready to see Lee Min-Jae with a cute little girl, I'm very disapointed! I could watch a drama with him and the retired cop investigating, they were fun together.

So, as a Swiss citizen, I vote for keeping Yong-Pil from Welcome to Samdalri and sending back Sung-jae in Korea.

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Well, that turned out very differently from how it was originally planned...

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She’s convicted and sentenced to a year in prison with two years’ probation. (Who is going to care for Bom?)

@quirkycase I'm no legal person. But I think one year in prison with two years on probation means she won't serve jail time. But in the event where she is slammed or convicted or stands trial (I'm unsure of what the grounds are but it falls majorly within this 3) for new criminal charge(s) within the space of the two years probation, she would serve her one year jail term in prison.

So basically she is not in jail. And she gets to take very good care of Bom herself. She only needs to be on her best behavior for the next two years and all will be happily ever after.

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Oh so this is what probation means?! I've always thought it meant, in her case: 1 year in jail + 2 whole years of probation, so altogether I was counting either 2 years or 3 years depending when the first year of probation starts. I never realised it meant jail or be good cos' we're watching your sorry ass

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I think it's like a suspended sentence.

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That is correct. The one year jail sentence was suspended for a two year probationary period. If she committed another crime during that time period, she would immediately go to jail for a year.

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Then if she stayed away from crimes, then Moon-young won't go to jail? Or will she carry out the sentence after a year?

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No jail time if she has clean record after two years. The jail term is then vacated but her conviction stands as a matter of record.

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Thanks @quirkycase for those beautiful recaps. You covered everything beautifully, giving us a more organized version of this twisty drama.
Our two leading ladies did a magnificent job saving this ship. And while I am not necessarily entertained, it was watchable.

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Overall I enjoyed HIDE. I think the second half was a bit crazy but then again the whole thing was crazy. Lee Bo-young once again gave a terrific performance. I will keep an eye out for Lee Min-jae’s future projects. (Was it dramatically necessary to scar that boy’s face?)
Meanwhile O/T like back in 2017 I await the spouse’s (in this case Ji Sung) upcoming SBS drama CONNECTION. Episode one airs May 24. As usual still no legal US stream announced.

Believe it or not in the final15-20 minutes I saw the making of a spin-off (maybe HIDE AND SEEK). When now retired Detective Baek Min-yeop (Kim Sang-ho) and Jin-woo (Kim Min-jae) were out doing investigative leg work for now Attorney Shin-wa I thought, “these two are great together, they could make a team”. I have always been a Kim Sang-ho fan. We would have the attorney ladies and our two investigators seeking justice for the wronged and taking down the bad guys.

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Not a fan of spin-offs. But Na would not be an attorney, she forfeited her law license. It was said she was the law firm's office manager.

Interesting fact: Until 2020, private investigators were illegal. Now it is a heavily regulated profession.

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