This review may contain spoilers
The ghosts were fine. It’s the feelings that attacked me.
This drama was a weird little cocktail — equal parts ghostly hijinks, heartfelt moments, and existential chaos — and somehow, it worked. I went in expecting a quirky mystery with some mild horror, not a full emotional ambush. I didn’t think a show tagged with ghosts and supernatural chaos would make me cry that much, but here we are — ugly-crying over what was supposed to be a spooky comedy. It’s genuinely funny, surprisingly touching, and sneakily profound beneath all the absurdity.
Then came that ending. Surviving a two- or three-story fall with a bloodied head? Sure, miracles happen, but this one felt like it skipped medical realism entirely. And the second coma? At that point, it was less “tragic fate” and more “the universe needs new material.” Coming out of two comas before thirty without a hint of brain damage is... impressive, if not scientifically sound. So when he finally woke up again, I didn’t know whether to laugh, cry, or send flowers to his poor neurons.
Still, I get why they went for a hopeful close, even if part of me wished they’d let the story rest where it naturally wanted to. I know most viewers crave happy endings, but I’ll always choose an honest one over a convenient miracle. It’s how I write too — I follow where the story leads, not where it’s comfortable.
Despite my issues with the finale, this drama remains funny, heartfelt, and strangely moving. It’s messy in logic but rich in feeling — the kind of show that sneaks up on you, makes you laugh, and somehow leaves you crying anyway.
Then came that ending. Surviving a two- or three-story fall with a bloodied head? Sure, miracles happen, but this one felt like it skipped medical realism entirely. And the second coma? At that point, it was less “tragic fate” and more “the universe needs new material.” Coming out of two comas before thirty without a hint of brain damage is... impressive, if not scientifically sound. So when he finally woke up again, I didn’t know whether to laugh, cry, or send flowers to his poor neurons.
Still, I get why they went for a hopeful close, even if part of me wished they’d let the story rest where it naturally wanted to. I know most viewers crave happy endings, but I’ll always choose an honest one over a convenient miracle. It’s how I write too — I follow where the story leads, not where it’s comfortable.
Despite my issues with the finale, this drama remains funny, heartfelt, and strangely moving. It’s messy in logic but rich in feeling — the kind of show that sneaks up on you, makes you laugh, and somehow leaves you crying anyway.
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