Drama-MusicAddict wrote: I find your post interesting because it made me realize that most of the time in dramaland we always get the other end of the story. The main lead has almost always been the one to fall in love, and then find out their loved one has a terminal disease of which you had no idea.
However, in Scent of a Woman they approach the same situation from another perspective. This time it's the character with the terminal disease.
I get what you're saying, and the scene when Ji Wook finds out will be quite heart wrenching, I'm already anticipating it, but I think the change in perspective is what makes this drama so interesting. Of course the great chemistry always helps.
:D
Of course!:D I'd lie if I said that I'm not wishing for a whole lot of romantic interaction/sizzling contacts and so on, and I am anticipating his discovery too, mostly because I believe it will come quite late, when the guy is already cooked and lost (sorry for the barbaric language), which is going to make it all the more heartwrenching.
Nevertheless, I have been thinking a lot about this while watching this drama: living your life to the fullest, of which I've always been a die hard supporter, has consequences on the people who love us, at times terrible ones. Because the drama is narrated from her perspective, we as viewers are naturally lead to root for her and see no real wrong in what she does, but... well, on a more rational level it IS wrong.