Was Min Seok even a killer or just a dirty businessman? He only killed animals? The murderer was the nail psycho…
Presumably it was 'suicide by jumping off the cliff' and his head was bashed in beforehand. It seems likely though that in an autopsy you'd see if someone died from a once-off impact on rocks or was hit repeatedly with one in different places, but I'm not any sort of corpse inspection specialist.
She didn't tell anyone what she saw because she was locked away in "psychiatric care" by the smuggling ring. For whatever reason, really...
Do hae su is the dumbest char everyone keeps telling her that killers target is her cuz she had seen his face…
She was not the target of the killer at all.
Yes, the serial killer's death by a rock from behind is absurd. As an expert hunter (of animals), he would obviously hear / sense the attack coming anyway.
This started out so good but went downhill later. I dropped at ep13 I couldn't handle the coma guy acting is cringe…
I think his "insta recovery" is that he, as a true Criminal Mastermind™, has been faking the inability to move.
But again, he too has like four or six different unrelated characters in him.... The lovely perfect son (adores mother, great grades); the murderous disciple (killing someone 'to see what happens'); the unwilling participant ('used' by the serial killer); the super-smart murder master; the truly deranged (final episodes); the scared convalescent (begging mommy and daddy to save him from the scary ML).
LOUSY ENDING The penultimate episode felt like a finale (in terms of pacing and action), and the finale felt like…
The last episode could -technically- have been worse, but virtually everything that happened in it was entirely unnecessary I like "what happened to the characters afterwards" semi-filler episodes, but this is just "hey we found some extra tropes in our drawer that let us make this longer".
For me Mr. Queen (2020) is far from being in my top 5 dramas – I don't even know if I think it's better or the same as the rather similar The Last Empress (2018).
Shin Hye Sun is very much A+++, but the rest of the cast felt like they were picked due to being available & affordable. Considering the rating, I also expected fewer production mistakes and plot holes.
Why is it in old kdramas the couples have to go through so much to end up together
I think every writer has the audacity to think that they are writing the *one* show where it's okay to have seven tears-in-the-rain breakups for no reason, four sequential amnesia plots, evil step-parents preventing the leads' relationship, and about four monkeys of each gender to drag the leads into a triangle/square/hexagon. Emotional rollercoasters and dramatic cliffhangers are/were seen as necessary so people still tune in the week after?
Also, I hated that jung-oh plot, when she spoke at a school about effective measures that prevent kids from being…
The point and message are things like: - in Korean culture, the louder voice of outrage tends to win - once an accuser puts a spin on things, you are unlikely to get out of it easily - you can't convert conservatives by saying 'it works that way in other countries' - what people ask and what they want to hear are often entirely unrelated - "pick your battles", "there's a time and a place": distraught parents in very real fear of their child being attacked won't be receptive to a speech about free condoms; just because you are correct about a topic does not mean it is an appropriate issue to push
For me the major issue with that scene was that Ahn Jang Mi did nothing at all, as a character with more experience, more power, and full understanding of the situation.
It seems likely though that in an autopsy you'd see if someone died from a once-off impact on rocks or was hit repeatedly with one in different places, but I'm not any sort of corpse inspection specialist.
She didn't tell anyone what she saw because she was locked away in "psychiatric care" by the smuggling ring. For whatever reason, really...
Yes, the serial killer's death by a rock from behind is absurd. As an expert hunter (of animals), he would obviously hear / sense the attack coming anyway.
(No full plot spoilers please, just an evaluation.)
But again, he too has like four or six different unrelated characters in him....
The lovely perfect son (adores mother, great grades); the murderous disciple (killing someone 'to see what happens'); the unwilling participant ('used' by the serial killer); the super-smart murder master; the truly deranged (final episodes); the scared convalescent (begging mommy and daddy to save him from the scary ML).
*spoilers*: Here the SFL, having killed a person, only gets to come out as innocent after first dying a sacrificial death.
I like "what happened to the characters afterwards" semi-filler episodes, but this is just "hey we found some extra tropes in our drawer that let us make this longer".
Shin Hye Sun is very much A+++, but the rest of the cast felt like they were picked due to being available & affordable. Considering the rating, I also expected fewer production mistakes and plot holes.
I'm not sure I fully agree with that, but at least it makes more sense than what I watched.
(I generally can't stand them, and Live was much better for me.)
- in Korean culture, the louder voice of outrage tends to win
- once an accuser puts a spin on things, you are unlikely to get out of it easily
- you can't convert conservatives by saying 'it works that way in other countries'
- what people ask and what they want to hear are often entirely unrelated
- "pick your battles", "there's a time and a place": distraught parents in very real fear of their child being attacked won't be receptive to a speech about free condoms; just because you are correct about a topic does not mean it is an appropriate issue to push
For me the major issue with that scene was that Ahn Jang Mi did nothing at all, as a character with more experience, more power, and full understanding of the situation.