Estou achando fofo e gostosinho de assistir. Já estava cansada de plots de Cinderela (como essa era minha princesa favorita?!), mas essa está indo fora do convencional, sem forçar tanto quanto em "Ela sonha com a cinderela". Espero que tenha um bom progresso!
A tradução que colocaram em português ficou "Meu Mafioso Favorito", mas aparentemente o título em inglês é "The Woman Who Plays" (algo como "A mulher que joga". São completamente diferentes!
so they’re not gonna tell us why that taxi driver wanted to kill them for 15 years and in every timeline possibleexcept…
He was a killer in search of victims and always crossed the path of the protagonists. I believe he is one of those elements of destiny that could not be undone without third parties changing it (like Tae did).
This drama is confusing and the back an forth. I don't know how the rating is 9.I can't wait to know how it ends…
I liked it because it goes back and forth. I feel like the effect is shown quickly. Unlike other dramas, we only discover the effects of actions in the last episode.
well,i couldnt enjoy the last 2 epi s of the drama enough which i should have on my 1st watch,first i thought…
I can also only watch it when I get home after work. I spend the day away from social media, no matter how long the bus takes to arrive. But yesterday I saw the first few minutes while I was on the street and it really interferes with enjoying the episode. I feel like I need to rewatch.
But Sun Jae looks sad, tired and nervous in the first episode.I think that him singing the song that wasn't on…
I agree, I don't think he did. But I think he thought, in the first timeline, and seeing Sol changed his mind. I saw some people saying that the pills are the effects of a fight, but show them before the bell rings.
I don't remember if episode 4 shows the original timeline or already undergoing changes. But I find it interesting that in episode 2 there is a small difference when it shows Sun Jae's post-death scene, in addition to their photo, there are no more pills and food appears instead. Which shows that his first interactions with Sol have already helped him.
Things I noticed when I rewatched the first few episodes:
In the original timeline:
* Sol's mother doesn't tell her that Sun Jae was the one who saved her, even when Sol tells her that she found Sun Jae on the bridge and asks who saved her in the accident.
*The candy Sol gives to Sun Jae on the bridge saying "you like this, right?" it's the same one she gave him the first time they met. And Sol probably doesn't even remember that. Did Sun Jae start to like this candy and just because she was the one who gave it to him?
* When Sol leaves the show, the person who drops his cell phone is dressed the same as the person who drops his cell phone in episode 7. He looks like the taxi driver.
* The original scene of Sun Jae's death shows many pills on the table, some crushed, and a bottle of amber liquid (apparently alcoholic drink) almost empty, which seems to indicate suicide. There are also the sweets he got from Sol. This makes me theorize if he didn't give up taking the pills when he thought about her. But then he's standing still and receiving a mysterious visit before falling into the pool (similar to his death in episode 7). What would be the point of changing the method of death so quickly?
* In the second episode, the table is different after Sun Jae's death: we have the bottle, the candy, their photo and food (which didn't appear before). We don't see pills anymore. In the second line, then Sun Jae didn't want to die anymore? Will it really be suicide? I don't think so.
What's everyone take on the first time SJ died? Suicide or the taxi driver?
But Sun Jae looks sad, tired and nervous in the first episode. I think that him singing the song that wasn't on the setlist shows that he missed his youth and Sol. And he is very disappointed when Sol doesn't recognize him as a person, just as an idol. Maybe he felt alone and really thought about ending his own life. The scene shows a lot of pills, some even crushed and him looking sadly outside while someone rings the doorbell. So I think he really thought about dying. But I don't know if the visitor was the taxi driver who threw him into the pool.
Já estava cansada de plots de Cinderela (como essa era minha princesa favorita?!), mas essa está indo fora do convencional, sem forçar tanto quanto em "Ela sonha com a cinderela".
Espero que tenha um bom progresso!
I believe he is one of those elements of destiny that could not be undone without third parties changing it (like Tae did).
I feel like the effect is shown quickly.
Unlike other dramas, we only discover the effects of actions in the last episode.
But yesterday I saw the first few minutes while I was on the street and it really interferes with enjoying the episode. I feel like I need to rewatch.
But I think he thought, in the first timeline, and seeing Sol changed his mind.
I saw some people saying that the pills are the effects of a fight, but show them before the bell rings.
I don't remember if episode 4 shows the original timeline or already undergoing changes.
But I find it interesting that in episode 2 there is a small difference when it shows Sun Jae's post-death scene, in addition to their photo, there are no more pills and food appears instead.
Which shows that his first interactions with Sol have already helped him.
If he thought about death, seeing Sol helped him want to live.
In the original timeline:
* Sol's mother doesn't tell her that Sun Jae was the one who saved her, even when Sol tells her that she found Sun Jae on the bridge and asks who saved her in the accident.
*The candy Sol gives to Sun Jae on the bridge saying "you like this, right?" it's the same one she gave him the first time they met. And Sol probably doesn't even remember that. Did Sun Jae start to like this candy and just because she was the one who gave it to him?
* When Sol leaves the show, the person who drops his cell phone is dressed the same as the person who drops his cell phone in episode 7. He looks like the taxi driver.
* The original scene of Sun Jae's death shows many pills on the table, some crushed, and a bottle of amber liquid (apparently alcoholic drink) almost empty, which seems to indicate suicide.
There are also the sweets he got from Sol. This makes me theorize if he didn't give up taking the pills when he thought about her.
But then he's standing still and receiving a mysterious visit before falling into the pool (similar to his death in episode 7). What would be the point of changing the method of death so quickly?
* In the second episode, the table is different after Sun Jae's death: we have the bottle, the candy, their photo and food (which didn't appear before). We don't see pills anymore. In the second line, then Sun Jae didn't want to die anymore? Will it really be suicide? I don't think so.
I think that him singing the song that wasn't on the setlist shows that he missed his youth and Sol.
And he is very disappointed when Sol doesn't recognize him as a person, just as an idol.
Maybe he felt alone and really thought about ending his own life. The scene shows a lot of pills, some even crushed and him looking sadly outside while someone rings the doorbell.
So I think he really thought about dying.
But I don't know if the visitor was the taxi driver who threw him into the pool.
In episode 7 it looks like he was the one who dropped Sol's cell phone and in episode 1 it also looks like him.