Ending wasn't satisfying, and a lot of sections of the plot were bad from a story standpoint. Too many plotholes.…
the parents of the victims staying friends with the real culprits, even after they know, was unrealistic... united in hatred of ML, even when truth comes out. Incomprehensible decisions by the writers really destroyed some excellent acting.
it was good, but... some of the decisions of the villagers did not seem realistic, father's of the daughters remaining friends with the fathers of the killers, for instance. these little details ruined the plot lines for me and made it feel too contrived...
excellent k drama, but without season 2, it makes no sense, no resolution, and a waste of time. I wasted 16 hours. if season 2, I'd give it an 8, without season 2, it gets not even 1 star.
worst ending in the history of k dramas. So many episodes that move too slowly, then put 5 episodes of content into the last 20 minutes of the last episode, then an ending that makes no sense and resolves nothing.
are you serious? why is it violating or shameful? there's many people with disabilities who are also part of the…
lol, you keep claiming I'm homophonic, like that's some type of trump card against me, I'm not, and i literally don't care how much you throw out accusations. I don't need to prove anything to you. you turned this intro a personal attack. I'm done.
i enjoyed it honestly. I'll give it 8.5/10. actually would've give a 9 but the ending confuses me lol
It’s actually simple.
The actual Greek myth upon which this is based, Sisyphus, ends in this way:
Sisyphus is fated to push a round stone up a mountain, only for it to roll down again. asisyphus is totally aware of his fate. Camus concludes: “One must imagine Sisyphus happy.” and that's how the myth story ends.
Therefore, the end of the show, Han Tae Sul is Sisyphus… and he has accepted his fate, and so we must imagine him happy… it’s not real, but we must imagine him so… because the original myth instructed us to.
As an autistic male, I feel violated that they took an autistic character to advocate for gay marriage. That's like mixing metaphors, but using people with disabilities to do so. Shame on Netflix.
The actual Greek myth upon which this is based, Sisyphus, ends in this way:
Sisyphus is fated to push a round stone up a mountain, only for it to roll down again. asisyphus is totally aware of his fate. Camus concludes: “One must imagine Sisyphus happy.” and that's how the myth story ends.
Therefore, the end of the show, Han Tae Sul is Sisyphus… and he has accepted his fate, and so we must imagine him happy… it’s not real, but we must imagine him so… because the original myth instructed us to.