I get why you might find The Trunk messy, but that misses the point. The murder mystery is not meant to be a typical…
I wish I could give you a more insightful reply, but it has simply been too long since I've watched this for me to remember why I was so upset with it. I don't remember the stalker, but I do remember this: the show is advertised as a mystery, but it is not a mystery. That alone is enough to tell that it did not have excellent writing. The ex-wife's absurd behavior only served to further the plot and bland romance, and then a stalker with weak motives appears to continue that trend. And as I wrote in the review, while I didn't dislike *all* of the music, there were moments where music abruptly appeared, loudly, and it was like EDM or something lol I don't know, but I remember thinking, "Jesus Christ, that sounds horrible for a moment like this."
I also remember most of all thinking that this was extremely overdramatic and slow and kind of boring sometimes. Maybe the messiness is supposed to be a portrayal of their flaws, but I've seen many shows and read many books where flawed characters do not need abruptness and confusion like this for the tension to rise.
I'm dumb. Can someone explain to me the story behind Sa Eon and Hui Ju's marriage? I don't really get it; something…
sa eon was supposed to marry hee joo's sister, but i think that he made a deal with her because he was already in love with hee joo. my interpretation of it was that he told hee joo's sister to leave so that he could marry the other instead, which she likely accepted because she didn't want the marriage in the first place. in the end, it worked out for him because he got the sister he liked and saved her from a bad arranged marriage in the process.
I was combing through the episode staring at tie patterns to figure out when the epilogue clip happened, that's…
i was under the impression that after he took her home he returned to the police to ask them what happened/make sure they don't talk about her, and that's when he finds out she can speak. otherwise, i don't know. he seemed really weird during the interview, so i'm thinking he already knew then, which is why he asked her if she could talk or not. to see if she would lie again. that, or he he was trying to throw her off. either way the time of events confuses me a little too lol
What type of questions they might be? Coz form me it was quite clean cut ending.
what about dried squid fairy? and what about kyung? how about the author? did he or she just leave the comic characters be even after they constantly went against the comic's plot? they kind of just threw those characters out to give haru and dan oh a happy ending. i'm happy with the ending, but i just feel like they could have cleared out a few things :)
i feel like they just ended it off in a weird way. maybe they'll end up making some sort of short sequel? seeing ha ru show up suddenly at the end doesn't answer many questions that viewers may have.
I really wanted to be able to watch this but I just couldn't get past the 5th episode. I started watching it when it first came out. The first episode was alright, it kept me interested because I wanted to see what kind of role JCW would be playing. Afterwards, it completely lost all of my interest. I think I'm just going to end up skipping around the episodes to get the gist and then move on.
I also remember most of all thinking that this was extremely overdramatic and slow and kind of boring sometimes. Maybe the messiness is supposed to be a portrayal of their flaws, but I've seen many shows and read many books where flawed characters do not need abruptness and confusion like this for the tension to rise.