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City Hunter: Episode 20 (Final)

Am I dead? I think I might be dead. City Hunter may have gone killed me dead.

This finale hits all the right notes for me, wrapping up the plot and giving us some emotional payoffs along with the narrative resolutions, and doing it with suspense, tension (my blood pressure is still spiked, I swear), and satisfaction. The ending leaves me feeling wistful and bittersweet at the cost it took to get to this point of resolution, but the series signs off with enough openness that I can imagine my own continuation of the story from here.

Or, you know, they could give us a Season 2.* JUST SAYIN’.

*Seriously! We have such ideas for another season! Really good ones. Auuuuugh, Season 2 aja!

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Let me just take a moment to talk about Young-ju’s death, which I freaking love and yet totally am shattered about. He was the one person — aside from Yoon-sung — whose death would have really meant something to me, which would’ve knifed me in the gut and then twisted the blade, and I’m totally in awe that the drama went there. Even if I’m also feeling a little raw and upset about it.

Just when we thought they weren’t going to actually get dark and serious and kill anybody to add that bit of gravitas you can’t fake with near-misses, the drama went and knocked one off that really, really counts. Nana and Shik-joong had their moments, and if they’d been killed at this stage, I would have been dissatisfied — it would’ve been too late to have impact, and lost its shock factor, and I would have argued that both characters would have been more effectively killed earlier.

I may be one of a minority who loved the Young-ju character the whole way through — so determined, so passionate, so upright and fair — but even more than that, his death has such resonance because it makes a difference on an ideological level. As was pointed out in the previous recap, these two men were capable of doing what the other couldn’t, and therefore they both needed each other to mete justice. Now with Young-ju gone, he practically mandates that Yoon-sung do the right thing, without distractions or wavering or letting personal feelings interfere with the truth. It sets us up for a pretty dramatic conclusion in this episode, for sure.

They way he dies is so thematically perfect, and consistent with character. Of course Young-ju would choose to face the bad guy over his own safety; he always has the greater good in his sights, even if he’s sacrificing his own health to ensure it would be protected. When he took out his phone to ward Yoon-sung away from him, gaaaaahhh that just about killed me.

So I was already half-dead when starting this episode, which killed me all over again.

FINAL EPISODE RECAP

Beaten to a bloody pulp by Chun Jae-man’s minions, Young-ju dies, hand clasped in Yoon-sung’s.

And then…Kim Jong-shik wakes up in his hospital bed. Oof. What timing.

You know what? Now I’m glad Kim Yong-shik is alive, because waking up to find that his cohort-in-crime killed his son? It’s the perfect way to make him regret his actions for the rest of his life, in a way that his suicide attempt would never have achieved.

(I’m sorry for doubting you, City Hunter. I should have had more faith. *sobs*)

Yoon-sung takes Young-ju’s phone, and sees the text message supposedly sent from the City Hunter that directed him to the junkyard.

He asks Jin-pyo why he did it, and Jin-pyo replies that all he was doing was sending the prosecutor to find the truth. Yeah, if you put the truth in the middle of a lion’s den and strapped a bloody steak to his chest.

Yoon-sung says that Jin-pyo essentially killed the innocent prosecutor, to which Jin-pyo says that his comrades were innocent men who died, too: “Now Chun Jae-man will die at my hands.”

Chun arrives at the port for his getaway, only to be stopped by Jin-pyo, who takes out the two minions swiftly with his cane. He doesn’t even break his stride, much less a sweat.

Chun stutters, “What do you want?” Jin-pyo: “Your life.”

Chun makes feeble excuses for the 1983 massacre, saying he had no choice. Jin-pyo turns that right back on him, saying there’s no choice now, either: He’s gotta die.

Chun dashes for the boat, scrambling away from the slowly advancing Jin-pyo, who at one point is beautifully framed by the Korean flag behind him and the ship’s light casting him in shadow — now there’s an avenging angel of death if ever there was one.

As Chun kneels and begs for mercy, the camera shifts focus to their two shadows. We hear Jin-pyo drawing his sword-cane, then striking.

Yoon-sung arrives at the dock and makes his way to the boat, finally finding the bodies of the minions unconscious, and Chun Jae-man lying in a pool of blood. He shouts in frustration.

Yoon-sung flips through the secret book, reading about Operation Clean Sweep’s origins and the five men who orchestrated the affair: now-dead Senator Lee Kyung-wan, former presidential candidate Seo Yong-hak, recently comatose Kim Jong-shik, freshly killed Chun Jae-man…and President Choi Eung-chan.

The last name is the surprise, and Yoon-sung understands now: “This is what it all comes down to?”

In the morning, he goes to his father to tell him he’s responsible for Young-ju’s blood as well as Chun’s. Jin-pyo says calmly that Chun was the one who killed Young-ju, but Yoon-sung counters, “You’re no different from Chun Jae-man. He didn’t kill those special agents himself, either. He merely borrowed the hands of others.”

That pushes a button, and Jin-pyo whips his blade around to point at Yoon-sung’s throat: “You dare put me in the same category as Chun Jae-man?!”

Surprising Jin-pyo with his knowledge of the full truth, Yoon-sung asks if the final step in Jin-pyo’s cruel revenge was to have President Choi Eung-chan die at his son’s hands: “You’ve had quite a lot of fun these past 28 years, stealing me from my mother, making me believe a different man was my biological father, and telling me to take revenge against my real biological father. That revenge — I don’t think I’ll be able to do it.”

Jin-pyo asks if it’s because of their blood tie, but Yoon-sung says no, and that he’s seen up close what a good president Choi is. Jin-pyo counters that he didn’t get to his current position with clean hands, and says, like the sadistic bastard that he is, “I look forward to seeing your expression when you find out what he’s really like.” Yoon-sung says, “Don’t look forward to seeing my expression, period. Things won’t happen the way you want.”

Seo Yong-hak — ironically, he’s the safest of the targets in prison — sees the impending shitstorm and tries to pre-emptively strike to protect himself. Calling the press, he announces that the fifth City Hunter target will be the president, and that the five targets had been involved in Operation Clean Sweep together — but that the first four were “scapegoats of revenge.” The actual leader, he declares, was the president.

This forces the president to also speak to the media, and he calls an emergency press conference. He plays the “I know nothing about this” angle, though — and why do I feel like you’re reliving your childhood regret of refusing to cop up to the stolen lunch? The harder you insist now, the more disgraceful this is going to be later…

The president ends the press conference having stated nothing of relevance, but is stopped by one last question: Was he aware that the Seoul district prosecutor who was in search of the confidential records has died? Judging from his reaction, this is a surprise.

When Sang-gook hears the latest news, things finally click into place for him. He’d wondered all this time why Jin-pyo was wasting his time talking up senators and high-ranking officials when he had the book in his possession, but now he guesses that Jin-pyo was purposely bribing the people around the president, to feed the corruption before taking him down for it.

Sang-gook pleads for Jin-pyo to end this now, to restore honor to the dead and stop there. Jin-pyo ignores him, as usual.

The mood is heartbreaking at Young-ju’s funeral. Sae-hee collapses in tears, his father weeps quietly, and his co-workers mourn his loss. Surprisingly, more than the tears or apologies, I’m moved by his boss’s reaction; he says in a shell-shocked voice, “Dead or alive, you’re one of my boys. What you couldn’t finish, I’ll do it for you. I’ll catch all the bastards who did this to you and feed them prison rice, and that society of justice that you so wanted to see realized… As long as I’m wearing my prosecutor’s robes, I’ll do everything to preserve it.”

Oh, that breaks my heart. Why does this make me cry even more than his actual death? It must be that painful understanding that Young-ju’s death carries narrative purpose, and that makes it particularly poignant to see that people are spurred by it. When you live a life so passionately and unwaveringly, your conviction moves people, even if it’s belatedly in death.

The president arrives and pays his respects, and a few moments later Yoon-sung steps through the doors. Young-ju’s assistant Pil-jae gets in his face belligerently, asking why he’s here: “This happened to our prosecutor because he was chasing you. The City Hunter! That’s you!”

He calls Yoon-sung a murderer and screams his vow to catch him.

(Aggggggh, this is such a perfect setup for Season 2, it’s kills me. No really, there are little bits of my sanity dying right now, so aggrieved are they that such a fantastic setup won’t get to see fruition — ’cause this means we have the dumber, slower, but now incredibly impassioned second prosecutor taking the place of the first, but operating under an incomplete understanding of the truth, vowing with all the best of intentions to capture the City Hunter…)

Without confirming or denying the City Hunter accusations, Yoon-sung tells the president quietly, “I came because of the loss of a worthy prosecutor, but I’ll go.”

Sang-gook joins Team City Hunter to share what he’s found regarding the connection between the president and Chun Jae-man. There are signs of deals and favors being made between them, such as the large amount of Haewon Group money that funded Choi’s presidential campaign.

President Choi mulls over the accusation of Yoon-sung being the City Hunter. Not happy news for him. He looks over immigrations records that place Yoon-sung’s entrance into the country just months ago, and puts together the facts that have been there all along, such as Yoon-sung’s proximity when the City Hunter routed his incriminating videos through the Blue House’s network.

Those suspicions are confirmed when prosecutor Pil-jae drops by to fill him in on the City Hunter investigation. He explains that Young-ju had been chasing Jin-pyo and Yoon-sung, the former of whom is linked to the 1983 incident. Yoon-sung, on the other hand, was born to former Secret Service agent Park Mu-yeol…and Lee Kyung-hee.

This comes as news to the president, who clenches his hand as he registers the implication.

Nana warns Yoon-sung that the president may have caught on to his identity, and has requested his personnel file. Yoon-sung is called in to his office, and for a moment both father and son look at each other, both knowing the truth but pretending not to.

President Choi asks if he’d seen the press conference. Yoon-sung asks the loaded question about whether his statements (denying knowledge of Operation Clean Sweep) were true — will he cop to the truth, or deny it? He waits tensely for the answer.

Choi says, “It’s true.”

Aw, that’s disappointing. Choi explains that being president requires him to make decisions, too many in number for one person to handle alone, so he’s chosen to concentrate on two causes: the health and education of the people, which he will do his utmost to protect. It’s why he was against Chun’s bill to privatize health care, and against Kim’s methods of denying university students tuition. In a few days’ time, an amendment regarding these social issues will be up for a vote, and he’s determined to pass it.

Yoon-sung asks if he’d still stand by those causes even if the methods he uses are unjust.

Nana hears the truth of Yoon-sung’s paternity from Kyung-hee and asks Yoon-sung about it. She understands the dilemma he faces of going up against his father, and doesn’t want him to continue.

He tells her that Targets 1 through 4 all had corrupt skeletons in their closet: “If they hadn’t, I would have forgiven them.” When Nana asks if he’ll act against the president, too, he hesitates a moment before replying, “If he’s corrupt.”

Nana tries to argue that he doesn’t have to be the one to punish the president, but Yoon-sung cuts her off to say that that’s the dilemma faced by Young-ju, who didn’t act and covered up his father’s misdeed: “But was that really to his father’s benefit?”

In strategizing their next move, Team City Hunter focus their attention on Senator Lee Young-taek, who is under investigation for taking bribes regarding Chun’s privatized medical care bill. He’s a necessary figure in passing the president’s amendment.

True to expectation, the president meets with Lee Young-taek in a restaurant, asking for privacy. Lee asks what he’ll get in return for backing the bill, and President Choi offers to get the police to back off their investigation. Oh no, you just gave the City Hunter reason to go after you…

Choi isn’t happy with the deal — he clenches his fist tellingly — but sees it as a necessary evil. Lee accepts the deal and leaves, at which point Choi’s expression darkens.

And then, the sliding door to the adjoining room opens, and there stands Yoon-sung: “I had no idea you were so skilled in striking deals, Mr. President.”

Choi stands by his choice, though: He doesn’t regret the compromise made because it will enable countless students’ educations. People want this amendment to pass because tuitions are too high, but the people with power are the politicians and rich fat cats. He says that in politics you have causes that require you to make deals, and there’s no other way to effect change.

Yoon-sung asks the Jean Valjean question of whether it’s okay for orphans to steal in order to eat. I’m guessing he didn’t see Les Mis, because the whole tenor of that story runs counter to his point. But he argues that you can’t sacrifice things along the way when brokering your backdoor deals, and use them to cover up corruption.

He informs the president that he has the confidential book: “That decision you don’t regret — I’ll make you regret it.” Phew. Badass son.

Nana has been keeping watch with the bodyguards outside, but picks up on a strange noise and heads off in search of the potential trouble. She bursts into the president’s dining room moments after Yoon-sung’s departure, but the whole point of the distraction was to allow Yoon-sung this confrontation without Nana in the mix.

Posing as a reporter, Yoon-sung tracks down a man involved in President Choi’s presidential campaign and asks about the funding source. The man has his own suspicions, but suggests that Choi kept record of it somewhere, since he’s scrupulous about keeping ledgers.

The man then warns the president that a man had sought him out asking for information, and Choi guesses that Yoon-sung will seek him out soon.

Yoon-sung goes to the presidential quarters and cites tutoring for Da-hae as his reason for gaining entrée, but hides himself in a separate room. He goes through the study looking for that ledger, but finds nothing.

President Choi senses Yoon-sung is around and retrieves the ledger from its hiding place inside his pillow, and finds Yoon-sung mid-search. Holding out the book, he asks if this is what he came for, and wonders at Yoon-sung’s motivation for doing this.

Yoon-sung: “Because of faith. The faith that citizens have that the politicians they elect will act in good conscience. The faith that soldiers who enlist to protect their country have that their country will protect them. The faith that universities will turn out talented people, for the sake of our next generation. The faith that businesses will both suffer with and grow alongside their workers. And the faith of twenty-one men who were promised by their country to be met off the shores of Nampo. Protecting that faith is my cause.”

Goddamn that is a good speech. Young-ju is deeply principled in his belief in the law and the quest for justice, but despite their differences, Yoon-sung is just as principled in his own cause, even if that requires him to break some laws.

The president says, “In the past 28 years, I never for one day forgot Operation Clean Sweep. I understand well how much pain Jin-pyo felt.” Uh, unless you were shot in the chest by the bullet that pierced your best friend’s heart, I’m gonna say you don’t. But okay, we’re being figurative here.

President Choi gives Yoon-sung the book, calling this the record of the illegal funds “I had no choice but to receive.” Dude, I get that you’re a decent guy with a moral compass that’s relatively normal — not like the skewed megalomania of your Council-mates — but your tendency to frame everything as though you’re a victim of your own choices is starting to piss me off.

But at least he’s a man who understands that his actions will have consequences: He tells Yoon-sung that he’ll be grateful if he’s the one to handle this. Yoon-sung takes the book and heads out silently, stopped when President Choi calls out, “Yoon-sung-ah. The father who made you live this way is sorry.”

Ack! Yoon-sung is stunned at this admission, but not swayed from his own cause. He walks out quietly, determinedly, with tears in his eyes.

Nana asks if he means to continue to the end, saying that the longer this goes on, the person most hurt is himself. Yoon-sung says he must, as there’s nobody else to do it.

He’s disheartened as he swoops into action, but doesn’t stray from his path; he sends copies of the confidential 1983 file to media outlets, as well as the ledger pages detailing the illegal campaign contributions.

Voting begins on the amendment, just as the packages arrive at the papers. The amendment passes, to the president’s relief, but that elation is cut short by the breaking of the news of his two scandals. Calls are made for impeachment.

Choi tells an aide ruefully, “It’s okay. I feel a weight has been lifted. This is how it should have been from the start.”

The next delivery to the front of the prosecutor’s office is a six-parter, with the bribed senators roped together and delivered with photographic evidence of their misdeeds.

After monitoring the news, Yoon-sung gets up to prepare for the inevitable confrontation: “Father will be coming.”

Meanwhile, Jin-pyo readies his handgun and puts on the remaining dog tags.

Nana is entered into the system as being off-duty tomorrow, to her surprise. Aw, Yoon-sung, trying to take her out of harm’s way — and consequently putting her right in the thick of it, because what are the odds Nana is going to sit this out knowing that he’s planning to move? Thinking of the possible conflict, Nana contemplates her own gun.

Yoon-sung prepares his gun, too, and can I say that I do not care for this elegiac background score? I care for it NOT AT ALL. It’s making me crazy nervous. Also, there are too many guns for this to end well, I’m thinking… Damn you Chekhov and your gun rules!

Jin-pyo calls President Choi to give him the warning: He’s due for his judgment, and not from the people but from Jin-pyo. Choi is resigned to his future, and tells the lead bodyguard that he’ll be expecting an important guest, who should be led to him politely without being frisked. He asks for time alone and gets it, while Nana peers into the room to check — she didn’t take her day off after all.

Jin-pyo arrives and is told the president is waiting for him, and is led inside. Yet when he steps inside the hall, it’s Yoon-sung who meets him instead.

Jin-pyo will not be thwarted from his final target and tells Yoon-sung there’s nothing for him to do anymore: “You can’t stop a revenge 28 years in the making.”

Yoon-sung counters that he’ll take care of this, leading to a standoff as they stare each other down…and then both grab for their guns. Ohhh, fuck.

Jin-pyo and Yoon-sung pull their guns out at the same time and level them at each other. Oh fuck oh fuck oh fuck. This is just like that damned dream, only a hundred times worse ’cause it’s REAL.

Yoon-sung: “The cruel revenge that requires me to shoot my biological father — do you think I could carry that out and live well? Having to point a gun at the woman I love — do you think I could do that without a care? Having to fight the father who lost his leg for me — how do you think I’d feel? I wanted you to think just once of me, and stop. I…just want to live an ordinary life…happily with you. But…that was all a dream.”

And then he points the gun at his own head.

WHAT THE—?!?!

And for one moment, finally, Jin-pyo looks surprised. Yoon-sung vows: “If this is my fate, then I will end it by my own hand.”

NOOOOOOO!

Yoon-sung’s finger tightens on the trigger…hand shaking…Jin-pyo looking on in shock…

A voice shouts, “No!” It’s the president, standing with Nana, who points the gun at Jin-pyo.

Nana tells Jin-pyo to stop, and then pleads with Yoon-sung to lower his gun.

President Choi tells Jin-pyo he’s been waiting for him. Jin-pyo returns, “I’ve come for that life I promised to take.”

President Choi tells Nana he’s sorry, then shoves her out of his way. He closes his eyes, having accepted his fate, and awaits Jin-pyo’s bullet.

Jin-pyo turns his gun from Yoon-sung to President Choi — and there Yoon-sung is, with the choice to let one of his fathers die. He can let Jin-pyo shoot Choi, or shoot Jin-pyo first.

But no, he’s got to be a goddamned hero, because he jumps in front of Choi instead — and takes the bullet through the heart.

Nana recovers her bearings, turns to see Yoon-sung shot, and shoots Jin-pyo.

HOLY SHIT. They’re going all Hamlet on us. Blood, blood, everywhere. It happens so quickly that it’s almost over before anyone’s fully taken in what’s happened.

The bodyguards rush in and escort a thunderstruck President Choi away, while Yoon-sung collapses to the ground, wheezing in pain. Nana rushes to his side.

Jin-pyo is bloody and badly injured but still able to hold his gun up. Ordering the bodyguards surrounding them to stay still, he points his gun at Yoon-sung on the ground.

With effort, Jin-pyo addresses the room (not unlike Young-ju in his dying moments as he declares himself):

Jin-pyo: “I am the sole survivor of 1983’s Operation Clean Sweep, Lee Jin-pyo. To avenge my comrades who were betrayed by our country, I killed Lee Kyung-wan and Chun Jae-man with my own hands, dropped Kim Jong-shik from the overpass, and sent Seo Yong-hak to the prosecutors. Now I will kill the last, President Choi Eung-chan. I am the City Hunter.”

Oh god, he’s taking the fall for his son. He’s exchanging their lives, and now he drops the clip out of his gun. He whirls to face the bodyguards with an impotent gun, and they fire away reflexively.

Jin-pyo is hit with several bullets and collapses slowly, with Yoon-sung watching in horror, too injured to do anything but lie there in pain.

Yoon-sung reaches out his arm toward his fallen father, and with difficulty, father and son inch their fingers toward each other until they can clasp their hands together, both lying amid their own blood.

Oh god oh god. This is just like Yoon-sung’s nightmare, except waaay worse. At least his Nana fears were realized happily when they reached toward each other with his blood infusing hers, but this time it’s a literal death-dream come true.

Heartbreakingly, Jin-pyo looks at Yoon-sung with a faint smile.

And then, we rejoin our characters an unspecified time later.

Da-hae works in a small cafe — perhaps one she runs, or at least manages. Nana visits her, her usual upbeat attitude in place although her father has recently passed away.

Ki-joon and Eun-ah are finally an official couple, and come bearing wedding invitations. Eun-ah complains that the Blue House is a lot less interesting now that Nana has quit and Yoon-sung is “gone” (deliberately vague to keep us on the edge of our seats).

At Yoon-sung’s apartment, a wreath of flowers has been sent by now-former President Choi Eung-chan, wishing someone a healthy and happy recovery. They’re for Mom, telling her that he’s thankful and sorry, and that he wishes her happiness. Kyung-hee and Shik-joong have packed their bags and are ready to embark on new lives in the U.S.

Nana walks through the airport with her own packed suitcase in tow. Spotting a familiar silhouette in the distance, she hurries toward it — but to her disappointment, she doesn’t see him.

But the camera whirls around, revealing Yoon-sung standing behind her, alive and well after all. Not that we doubted. But still! Phew, relief. You can start breathing again.

She turns around and sees him…she smiles…and he smiles.

At the military cemetery, a large memorial has been erected to honor the memories of the 21 valiant soldiers who died for their country, the first two names being Lee Jin-pyo and Park Mu-yeol.

And later, Yoon-sung drives along in the night.

 
JAVABEANS’ COMMENTS

What a satisfying way to wrap up this story arc, yet leave the story open-ended enough that we can imagine Yoon-sung continuing on to become the City Hunter for hire that characterized the original manga story. Even if we never get more of this City Hunter, the setup works in creating an origin story with its own, complete wrap-up that still points to more in Yoon-sung’s life in the road ahead, whether or not we get to see it unfold onscreen. (Although, we really should see it unfold onscreen. Really.)

I think the idea of Jin-pyo’s death was pretty much a possibility from Day 1, so it’s not a surprise. But what it did was achieve a lovely sense of closure for this story, and while I think Jin-pyo wouldn’t have given up his quest for the fifth target on his own — I don’t really think he got to acceptance or forgiveness — if pushed to choose between that and saving Yoon-sung, he had no qualms in making his choice. *Tear*

The cruel irony of the sacrifice is that Yoon-sung now knows that Dad did love him after all, but it needed Dad’s sacrifice to prove it. And Jin-pyo gives not only his life to Yoon-sung but takes the blame, so that Yoon-sung could in fact have a happy life after all this darkness and revenge. That’s been the big question all series long, hasn’t it? Not whether City Hunter would survive, but how he would be able to live as a normal person as he so desperately wanted. And until ten minutes before the end, there didn’t seem to be much hope of that for him. It’s a pretty damn satisfying resolution, in my book.

As I said in the podcast, this drama isn’t perfect, and it has plenty of flaws along the way. But it had a special magic about the way it stirred my emotions, got me invested in these characters, kept me on the edge of my seat, and surprised me at multiple turns. It’s beautiful to look at, scored with music that fit every mood, and boasts a gorgeous melancholy ambiance; it would have made me a fan even before we got to the tight plot. (It wasn’t airtight, but it was well-thought-out and developed well.) But then you add in heaps of thematic and emotional resonance to the mix, and you’ve basically owned me for the past two months.

 
GIRLFRIDAY’S COMMENTS

Not a perfect finale or a perfect show by any means, but damn was it gripping all the way till the end. I love that the final episode’s central conflict was the showdown between Jin-pyo and Yoon-sung. To me that was always the heart of the show — the father-son relationship that was so fraught with pain and misplaced love. It was the central love story to me, above Yoon-sung’s relationship with Nana.

One thing I absolutely love about this show’s treatment of the paternal conflict is that Jin-pyo IS the real dad, in the only way that matters. The fact that the president is the biological father does not somehow transfer nineteen episodes of daddy-angst onto someone new because of blood. Yoon-sung remains, from beginning to end, Jin-pyo’s son. Not by blood, obligation, or anything else but unconditional love. And Jin-pyo’s sacrifice in the end proves that Yoon-sung’s love for Dad wasn’t unrequited. Finally, a story that acknowledges that blood is NOT the end all be all! Welcome to kdramaland!

Jin-pyo was the most tragic character in this drama, and I knew from the start he would never survive. (A character that extreme can only end in epic death; it’s like a law of the universe.) But no matter how totally screwed up his worldview was, his all-too-late realization that Yoon-sung was the only thing that mattered, and his final resting place alongside Mu-yeol as a soldier finally put his vengeance to rest and his soul at peace in a satisfying way.

I’m good with the open-ended relationship with Nana (and prefer it in fact to a candy-coated version), because no matter which way you slice it, their relationship will always be an open-ended one. I would’ve liked more interaction, more words, more time, even if the end result were just as open-ended. But I got the sense that it was a casualty of the live-shoot, which is too bad.

As a series, City Hunter gave me that perfect combination of action and heart – what began as a quest to avenge a death became a young man’s journey to becoming a hero. It tapped into the core of what I love about hero fiction, in illustrating the cost of being an idealist in a corrupt world.

That’s why the death of Young-ju is so fitting in an ideological sense, because he was the most upright defender of justice, who paid the gravest price. To me that death is what seals Yoon-sung’s fate as the City Hunter. What came before are the stirrings of a hero; in taking up the mantle after Young-ju’s death, he becomes the hero both men were meant to be.

My biggest disappointment with the finale is the drama’s failure to nail this in a concrete way onscreen, at the end. It’s there thematically, and Young-ju’s death resonates with all the characters, but if I were writing this show, the last scene would’ve been Yoon-sung at Young-ju’s grave, overlooking the city he’s sworn to protect.

No words necessary; just that image alone would’ve satisfied the promise of the City Hunter’s future, spurred by the sacrifice of his brother in arms, the perfect mirror to the opening brotherhood between Jin-pyo and Mu-yeol, also separated by death. The moment was there in his death in Episode 19, and their relationship is the perfect bookend, but that tiny push of thematic resonance and closure would’ve been my ideal send-off for the City Hunter.

I loved City Hunter for a million reasons, but the biggest is this: it gets me right there, that place in my heart where my six-year old self refuses to give up on the idea that heroes fight evil and good prevails. It ran the gamut from hilarious and cheeky to kickass and epic, and though the finale’s delivery wasn’t pitch-perfect, as a whole the show swept me up in its world and made me want to live there.

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I loved this drama. I sincerely hope there will be a season two with the original cast with the characters that survived. I'm going to miss my crazy Wednesdays and Thursdays. It was a fun ride! Thank you, Show. <3

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thankyou too much girlfriday n javabeans.. i've been with your CH recaps and its beén enjoyment reading the way you recap it.. i love it

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Thank you, javabeans and girlfriday, for recapping this series!

What a finale! I enjoyed the finale, even though, I agree with girlfriday it would have been better to have the last shot be of YS at YJ's grave. I hope they DON'T make a season 2. I can't imagine a second season being as epic as this one. And Lee Jong Hyuk was just perfect!

I know Jin-pyo led my beloved YJ to his death...but I still can't help but mourn Jin-pyo. I knew there was not going to be a happy ending for him and I couldn't imagine someone like him being incarcerated...so I knew he was going to end in death. But still, that man has lived such a painful life. With the betrayal and the grief. The image of the korean flag behind him made me feel a stab of pain. At least now he can reunite with his friend, Muyeol.

I'm glad they left the romance storyline sort of open-ended since it was a weak part of the show (not PMY's fault!) and I do dislike how kdramas have to insert romance into almost everything even when the drama is fine without the romance. They went light on the romance these past few episodes so it's been nice.

the writing was not perfect in this drama, but A++++ for direction and music.

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I really thought there would've been a bigger ending and resolution with Nana, considering she was the whole factor from episode 2 ish in that his feelings start to change.
I guess city hunter change albeit not a whole lot. what started out as a meaningful revenge became somewhat meaningless if you compare to the whole backstory of JP and YS. The president wasn't all that important in that he was the biological dad. I honestly cried in the hand holding scene between YS and JP.

I know the final few minutes was to give a sort of window to every character's ending, but it really did feel choppy, AND DAMN WHY CAN'T NN AND YS JUST GET TOGETHER. season 2? hopefully yes (and with more nn and ys parts ,and maybe not as long as 20 episodes, most likely 16), no season 2? I would be ok too. THANKS FOR THE RECAPS!

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i'm all sorts of sad. because its time to say goodbye to City Hunter. Will be reading this after i get to watch the subbed episode. *sigh* this is too sad...

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My explanation about YS and Nana's last scene together to try to cure my disappointment on how short their last scene together played out (trying to convince myself that it IS a good ending even without the ring and everything else): That last scene where Nana was wearing white and YS was wearing black and they meet, that is the fulfillment of their promises to each: Nana waiting for YS till all the things are done and YS coming back to Nana alive. So even though it's not the super happy ending scene for the couple that we want, it does mean that they can be together now, right? But i'm a little confused as to whether Nana is bringing a suitcase because she's going to the US with them too? since Mom and Ajushi are going to US? But then, YS is driving in Seoul at night (meaning he didn't go live in the US with his family...unless he was dead and only mom and Ajushi are going?)?
aahh..I'm confused.
Need help here.

Can anyone explain what happened?
thanks!
Why are they wearing white and black and just smiling at each other?

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My interpretation is that NN is alive and YS is dead, like that poster where YS is sinking to the darkened city... NN is going away with ahjussi and Mom, but YS is not around...

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I think that until I hear the writers say,
"Why do you people think YS dies? He lives. That is how we wrote it,"
I will have to interpret that he dies and Nana dreams a peaceful goodbye before heading off to the States.

We see LMH driving in Seoul because that is where he died.

Sorry to be such a downer!

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thanks for the replies, Dream and Jomo.
but the PD clarified that YS is alive and they are together now (read later comments...). That makes me happy, but more importantly, this drama as a whole (from beginning till end) is what impresses me and keeps me on edge the whole ride. I am SATISFIED. ^^

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@sb

That's still the question. Whether YS is alive or dead. If what NN saw was just part of her imagination.

Others say YS they want to think he is alive.

But, personally I think he is dead. It was NN's imagination YS saying goodbye.

It was ambiguous ending I suppose. Depends in one's interpretation they say.

Nonetheless, for me up until the writers issued a specific statement about the ending or at least they will say there's a season 2 for this that's the only time I will believe he is indedd alive.

For now, in my mind he is dead bec. of the circumstances laid in the ending.

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OMG!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IT WAS GOOD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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ah MAN! these last two episodes were amazing. i didn't even watch young ju's death for myself, and i don't think i would've cried watching his death, but reading the speech his boss made, dude.. that did it. it hit it right there.

and yoon sung's speech, the writers worded it well. i don't feel that the speech is new in any way, because i feel i've heard and have even seen it lived out before, but to me, it's still profound. those words, i wish that for the people of this world.

they did good here.

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Thank you so much for the recaps and comments JV and GF. Really enjoy the read and insights through the 20 episodes.

The last episode kept me on the edge especially the confrontation in the last few minutes. When YS point his gun on himself, got shot when he was blocking the bullet for his bio dad, I was like "f#" .

It was touching that JP takes the blame for everything and redeem himself as YS's true dad. The expression on his face reminds me of when he save YS in the first episode..

I would have love more NaNa and YS interaction at the end but the open ending leaves me satisfied. To me the scene looks like NaNa is going to the states with YS / she arrived at the airport therer and YS is there to fetch her.

Not really sure about having season 2 (Can it top this one with the revenge theme dealt with) Wish there will be a special episode or internet version or a movie though with more NaNa and YS being partners to fight crime, like the Manga.

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I can only say just this " Love you to piece, show"
Off to read and wait for the E sub. Thanks much Javabeans and Girlfriday for this awesome work!

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"Yoon-sung prepares his gun, too, and can I say that I do not care for this elegiac background score? I care for it NOT AT ALL. It’s making me crazy nervous. Also, there are too many guns for this to end well, I’m thinking… Damn you Chekhov and your gun rules!"

I was thinking the same. We managed to go through the show without much use of guns and now all of the sudden everyone has a gun with them. This definitely will not end well for many people.

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thanks for the wonderful recap.. how can you guys write so cleverly.. i am seriously as in love with your writings as i am with city hunter.. more power...

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Thanks for the recaps..the drama was worth watching..and Jin Pyo..he was still HOT up to the end...

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I WANT TO READ THIS SO BAD!!! BUT I HAVE TO WAIT FOR THE EPISODE TO GET SUBBED.... TT_TT

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This is without a doubt the best action k-drama I have ever seen. Granted, I haven't seen many, but out of the ones I have seen, this is THE BEST!

I was satisfied enough with the ending. I do wish there had been more interaction between Yoon-sung and Nana, but I am satisfied with the open-ended-ness. It allows us, as viewers, to think up ways of how they could be together. Which I like.

Young-ju's death was a surprise, but now, as I reflect on it, I could see it coming. But still, I can't help but imagine how it would have been different if he hadn't died, and had coming running in at the last minute. One can dream.

Jin-pyo's death was a given right from the get-go. We all knew he would end up dying, even if we didn't really entertain the idea. I loved the speech he gave saying that he was the City Hunter. A true father would do that. And he was a true father. Mu-yeol was dead, the President not only had no idea Yoon-sung existed, but he was the leader of the Council of Five! Neither of them were a real "father" to the Yoon-sung. Only Jin-pyo was. He raised him and taught him and gave him a purpose, albeit a deadly one. He was the true father.

When Yoon-sung was shot, I almost had a heart attack. I couldn't help but think, "Just like Mu-yeol." I'm not sure if the similarities were on purpose, or if that is just my imagination at work, but it did strike me, for a brief moment, that he could die, just like his supposed father. If that was intended then props to the show for the comparison.

I'm glad Yoon-sung didn't die. I would have been angry that the hero died. But he didn't and we have a relatively happy ending. Thank you, Show.

While I doubt there will be a second season, I think that we were given enough of a series cliffhanger for the possibility of one. But doubtful.

Thank you Lee Min-ho for being so cool and a real bad ass City Hunter.

Thanks, too, to the rest of the cast and crew of City Hunter for an amazing, suspense filled ten weeks. Or however long it is been.

Also, thank you to Javabeans and Girlfriday for the fun and interesting recaps!

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Well said.
:)

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echo....

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Thank you so much for the recap and your beautiful final comments. My sentiment is expressed though them. I so hope there will be City Hunter season 2 sometime in near future.

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O.M.G
BEST SHOW I HAVE EVER SEEN IN MY LIIIFFFEEE
PLS THIS IS OPEN FOR A SEASON 2 LEE MIN HO
SO SAD IT'S OVER
LEE MIN HO#1
KIM NANA#1
CITY HUNTER #1

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Thank you for recapping this show. It will remain a favorite always.

I really do hope that they see the possibilities of a sequel. They have so many things they can do!

Crossing my fingers and awaiting news.

Thank-you guys once again!

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First, JB and GF, 감사합니다~!

Second, I absolutely love City Hunter. There was a lot of beautiful stuff in this episode - visually and emotionally, and I loved about 90% of it to death. But I have to say, I seriously missed Nana. She has always been one of my favorite characters (definitely my favorite drama heroine EVER), and her interactions with Yoon Seong were wonderful. I felt she deserved more closure.

Was she at the airport? Was she moving in with YS after his mom and ajusshi moved to the US? (I vote for this option). I would have liked for him to have offered his hand to her and for her to have taken it, at the very least. Or at least they should have shown her with the ring.

The open-endedness left me feeling a little hollow (like, "that's IT?!") but all will be forgiven if they repent by making a season 2 with speed and facility. ;p =)

NOW what do I look forward to all week?!

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If they decide a season 2..that will obviously convince me he is alive..but, for now he's dead to me. : (... not because I want him to but, bec. of the circumstances shown.

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I'm with you kyle... there is no way he could have survived a bullet to the heart.

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It didn't really look like a bullet to the heart for me..i was thinking if it was to his heart then it shuold have been closer to the middle...

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no the heart is located on the left

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Yeah, I think he died and he was a figment of NN's imagination because you see her seeing someone who looks like him and she runs after him and later he appears and just smiles. He is driving around Seoul because his spirit still lives on.
Unless his heart is on the right side of his chest!

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Could not agree with you more girlfriday!! Would have been epic if they ended with yoon sung looking over young ju's grave at the city. I thought it was great they didn't end with a cheesy scene between yoon sung and nana and instead brought us to the city hunter, whose mission and personal development were the focus of the drama in the first place. Am I too hopeful in saying ep 20 really felt like it was saying "to be continued..."? I am hoping against hope for this to happen, with Lee Min Ho in season 2 pleaseeee.

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The ending is a BIG,BIG,BIG DISAPPOINTMENT to me. It was not as solid and as impressive as the previous episodes. It gives me the impression that the writer did not have enough time or got exhausted already to even come up or think of an ending that would have more impact on the viewers and fans...just to get it over and done with...thus the end... What a waste!!!

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thanks for the recap

i loved the whole journey - an action-drama-romance-comedy with a theme of betrayal, revenge, justice in a political setting which means that corruption, some social issues and the different kinds of politicians including their issues were also tackled

a very satisfying ending for me because there was closure

my heart broke at the end of ep 19 and continued to break in the last episode until the last scene when YS and Nana smiled at each other, I smiled too and suddenly felt better which is good, at least for me

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what you said about "It’s there thematically, and Young-ju’s death resonates with all the characters, but if I were writing this show, the last scene would’ve been Yoon-sung at Young-ju’s grave, overlooking the city he’s sworn to protect. " is so truuuuuee, couldn't agree more...
and yeah i am one of the minority who love young Ju more than Yoon sung....... it was eventually a tragic and happy ending overall... for me personal, it's gonna be always a tragic because of yeong ju's death, it's impacable yet unspokenable!!

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INSANE. SHIT. That's all I've gotta say. My pulse is still racing.

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This has been the only kdrama that got me hooked and anticipated. For the past two months I had been just looking forward to Wednesdays and Thursdays. Aw... I will miss CH so much.

I do love the ending. I don't believe that every question needs to be answered and every loose end tied. In real life, that doesn't always happen either.

I'd love to believe that YS is alive, but I'm afraid I would have to admit that he is dead... and that the ending scene was only in NN's head, with him smiling at her to send her goodbye. The fact that YS was 'driving' alone at the end also echos this fact. He was shot at the heart, quite sure...

So sad.... I really need to find a CH/LMH rehab now. Any one knows where?

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I second this comment "I don’t believe that every question needs to be answered and every loose end tied. In real life, that doesn’t always happen either."

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CH/LMH Rehab:

http://asiandramachats.spruz.com/

Several of us have already checked in.

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OMGoodness.. I didn't think there REALLY would be a CH rehab!!! How could you do this to me? Now I am laughing while I am still mourning.....

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"I do love the ending. I don’t believe that every question needs to be answered and every loose end tied. In real life, that doesn’t always happen either."

I totally agree with this.

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In real life Yoon Sung lives off of drug money.

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oh the drug money! WHY?!!! I know it's a small detail, but it really bugs me. The whole Jin-pyo kidnapping YS (whom, we thought was his BFF, Muyeol's son) from his mom and raising him to seek vengeance (reaction: how farfetched and effed up to that to your friend's kid) ended up making sense in the end with YS being really the President's biological son. But the drug money! funding the expensive shampoo! so wrong! I really hope YS gets a real job!

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jb and gf, girls thank you sooooo much for the recaps!! big hugs from russia.

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thanks javabeans and girlfriday! this drama was a rollercoaster of a ride... and it was bumpy at times but overall i'm left exhilarated and satisfied. jinpyo's redemption was not fully earned in my book but i liked that in the end his love won against that hate and guilt he was overcome by. i also felt the final closing scene could have been more meaningful... but guess that leaves a possibility for season 2 ;D

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whatever happened to Creeper?

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I wondered that too! Maybe he's still tied up in the basement? :)

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how about the guy who made target # 4 escaped? how did the president know lys is his son or does he really know?
but my love for city hunter will not waver for this small flaws. for me city hunter is almost perfect (no one and nothing in this world is perfect). LYS is alive and there will be season 2 (fingers cross).

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I thought the finale was a letdown. Yoonsung made the wrong decision. He takes down the President even though the old man had good intentions. Sure, he bribed some politicians, but in the end he is passing a bill the insures healthcare for the entire nation. The Prez made the correct decision. Things like honor sometimes must be sacrificed. Yoonsung is such a hypocrite. He breaks laws in order to see justice too. It's not like he's always followed the rules. Is not he the same as his true father? So why, if Yoonsung and the Prez are from the same mold, does the City Hunter take the Prez down? If the President is impeached, then another, probably more corrupt one is going to be elected, because Choi Eung Chan is a pretty damn good president if one ever existed.

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Oh I've been waiting for this recap...
gosh all the drama...
and the face-off between Jinpyo and Yoonsung
but I'm glad that Jinpyo do loves Yoonsung and the way he dies shielding Yoonsung in this finale is really way beyond my expectation...
I knows he will die, but this is not just a casual death in between revenge and anger

as this episode is the finale, I cries for more of City Hunter....it tops my list for best storyline in 2011...
and the open-ended... I welcome season 2 if they have enough materials which can maintain the suspense, great directing, and great casts... hint: Lee Min Ho is a must

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Girlfriday your ending recap was EXACTLY how i felt, love your way with words, that ending at Yongju's grave would definitely have been what this drama needed for thematic greatness, but all in all, amazing series, best I've seen in a long long time.

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awesome show! thanks javabeans and girlfriday for the recaps. superb work! hands down. :) i'm still reeling from kim young-ju's death. the scene of his funeral had me bawling my eyes out. i feel for sae-hee's character. what moved me most in that part was the silent exchanges between the president and kim jong-shik. no words were spoken but the few seconds were fully loaded. it shattered my heart into pieces.
yoon-sung's speech on faith.. has me floored. hands down as well to the writer who wrote it. (clap clap!) the ending of jin-pyo's and yoon-sung's relationship was too tragic but i loved it. the sacrifice. the gun to the head. the shock factor is way up there.

show.. you have here.. one satisfied viewer! :)

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I loved the show. I loved all episodes. Yes, it was not perfect, but it was pretty dayum good! One of my favourites of all time.

Ep 20 was epic on its own. There were twists and turns till the very end of the episode. How scared was I when I saw YS put the gun to his own head? A looooooud gasp was heard at my place!

LMH knocked my socks off. Boy CAN act. This show was not going to be my 'May Drama Crack'; I was only going to watch a few episodes to check on the pretty boy, but Gawd, how good was he portraying a really conflicted character?

I think I'm a hopeless romantic in the end, and would have liked another proper lovey-dovey scene between YS and NN (hey, who I am kidding, LMH is soooooooo hot!), but well, we can only keep on praying for a season 2... Doesn't have to be on the works right now, but how about soon... Pretty pls???

Thanks for your recaps JB & GF. You are Awesome (yes, with a capital A)

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"Finally, a story that acknowledges that blood is NOT the end all be all! Welcome to kdramaland!"

Yes, I love this show for that. I'm so happy that even though YS knows JP is not his biological father, his love for JP never waver.

Gosh, their father and son love story is so tragic.

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@Maymay ;)

I can't agree with you more with :

"...their father and son love story is so tragic."

It is the main reason I am so invested in watching CH - the resolution between father and son because parent-child relationships are just so emotional and close to my heart.

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Where is nana going? In yoonsung's house, it showed two luggages, one orange and one blue. Nana was pulling along that exact same orange one. I can't make any connections of it because it doesn't make sense for nana's luggage to be at yoonsung's house so maybe it's just a coincendence that they have the same luggage. But still, where is she going?

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Btw this ending just screams season 2 to me. Maybe the pd is going to reveal news of season 2 soon OMG....k just lemme dream.

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The ending kept me hanging I think cause it was an open ending. It could have been better. Or ended with the death of both father and son.

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In my opinion... it ended with the death of both the father and son.

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That's what I thought too.

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Me too, they both died (father and son). Not that I'm happy with it.

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Oh my god! Whaat? Jin pyo kinda reminds me of Faith from Buffy. I cant believe the ballsiness of this show! Omg what an amazing show! Season 2 could work really well as yoon soung a poor detective in seoul. Or maybe....yoon soung could take over Jin pyos drug empire? Ah my mind is just blown. City Hunter has so much potential as so many things. Personally I think that a detective agency like angel could work so well! Eun ah could be his Cordelia! And....Jin pyos minion could be like Wesley. Its interesting how JPM is similar to what wesley was. Thank you so much for the wonderful Recaps and podcasts!

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The drama did not make me cry, but girlfriday's closing comments did. The drama did not hit all the right notes for me, but your closing comments did. You say all the things that I feel, and so eloquently. How did you girls get so smart? In a long series of fantastic recaps and comments, this one takes the cake in My book. Thank you for giving a satisfying closure to the drama. Gratefully yours.

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Aishhhhh!!! Aishhhhh!!! Aishhhhhh! (One of the things I will miss about CH...Le Min Ho's cute aish....and I think I will be copying this expression instead of darn or any other expletives.

The writers should have done us fan service at the end...and let Nana and YS hug or kiss or both. But then, probably to avoid the rabid fangirls out there, they just have LMH flash his most adorable smile and frame his handsome face....that is so worthy of being made into a wallpaper.

Thanks JB and GF for the 20 awesome recaps. I enjoyed CH so much. I haven't picked any new dramas yet that am so crazy about...(but am starting to love Scent of a Woman) so having CH end, made me sad.

I hope Season 2 will be on the works. I still need my LMH for my preggy cravings...lol.

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And I agree with some of you that YS probably died and Nana was just dreaming about seeing him.

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My world was turned upside down and I've been dysfunctional for the past 2 months. Now, I still cannot believe it's all over.
Garrrrr, LMH when will I see you again?

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I have the same question in my head looping endlessly, LMH, when will I see you again?

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@corn tea ;)

Me toooooo!!!! WHEN will we see LMH again??? Not another year of waiting I hope??

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Looking at historical data, he seems to be doing only one drama a year. I hope the trend doesn't continue.

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@corn tea ;)

Exactly!! As it is, PMY has already agreed to do another drama but no news yet of LMH.

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"the last scene would’ve been Yoon-sung at Young-ju’s grave, overlooking the city he’s sworn to protect. "

i love your idea. i hv not seen the show yet. must read your recap first so that i won't shout and crack the roof. so touching. i cried reading the way you describe how the president apologize indirectly to yong sung. "sob. sob. sob" so touching.

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I can't believe it's over T_T Here to leave a mark for my greatest kdrama addiction/love, CITY HUNTER! <333333333333333

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finally it ends.. but somehow episode 19 gives more impact to me than this last episode.. Total heartbreak for me over YJ's death..

Anyway, I do support girlfriday's suggested last scene.. That would be more appropriate, more impactful and more meaningful by having YS look over the city from YJ's grave.. Perhaps the writer would like us to think that YS is finally able to live simply as he wanted (no more complicated story for him)..

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ühü ühü ühü ı am very very very angry because distress

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Amazing! Simply amazing!

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First off, thanks a million to JB and GF for keeping the City Hunter flame alive all these weeks. Your recaps helped me out when I was away on business trips and could not access the Internet Tubes at all. I'm still processing the finale, but a few items jumped out at me:

1. It still blows my mind that LMH is only 24 FREAKIN' YEARS OLD, and he's already turning in award-winning performances. Wow wow wow. How the heck is he gonna top this series now?!?

2. The best example of badassery in Episode 20 was when Jin-pyo whipped out his sword towards Yoon-sung's throat (after carefully cleaning off the blood first), LMH didn't even flinch or bat an eyelash! Nice.

3. Here's why I think there will NOT be a Season 2 -- maybe it's my eyes failing on me in my old age, but Yoon-sung was filmed way too light and fuzzy in that last scene. I'm going with the "shit, he's dead" camp on this one... but will be happy as a pig in slop if another season is called up. :-)

4. And hey, Director and/or Producers? You really screwed up on the ending, getting all choppy and stuff. Left me with a bad taste in my mouth. We would have been more than happy to just have a stills montage of CH's beautiful face. But that's just me.

Crap. What am I going to do on Wednesday and Thursday nights now? Oh that's right -- watch the other K-Dramas captured on the TiVo while I was obsessing over "City Hunter." Maybe next week...

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1. It still blows my mind that LMH is only 24 FREAKIN’ YEARS OLD, and he’s already turning in award-winning performances. Wow wow wow. How the heck is he gonna top this series now?!?

Maybe top it off with CH season 2?

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Um..YES!!!!
God this ending was fantastic...even though I'm not a fan of the open ending....this one was so perfect because it WASN'T a complete rom-com. I get the purpose of NaNa so I'm so glad it continued to be open ended...

corntea - season 2 petition? can we please? we should have a facebook group or put it on viki or SOMETHING

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love this drama...and thanks to JV and DB for the recaps
and btw i dont why when i read your recaps, i got goosebumps...weird me

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thankss so much for the recap :D! seriousllyyy this drama kept me on my toes the entire time :)
Im sooo GLAD YS is alive :D!

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