331

Big: Episode 6

Okay, I don’t know if they did that time jump because the previous episodes were missing that spark, but man I’m glad they did. It’s a new year and a new show, as far as I’m concerned. I might be putting too much stock in the potential that comes out of where we find all our characters a year later, but I’m hoping the change in the tide is one that’s here to stay. Best time skip ever: Nobody gets a lobotomy, and the plot gets a conflict. Win-win?

 
EPISODE 6 RECAP

So we’re now a year ahead of the original story, and Da-ran attends a friend’s wedding. Yoon-jae’s shell walks right up to her and stands at the elevator, and she looks over in shock, “Kyung-joon-ah!”

But he doesn’t answer, so she asks haltingly, “Yoon-jae-sshi?” He turns and says it’s been a long time. She’s so floored she nearly misses the elevator, and then asks again skeptically, “You’re Kyung-joon-ie, right?”

He shrugs. Okay, that’s a dead giveaway, right? She asks why he hasn’t called, when he came back, what he’s doing here. He just says he’s here for a friend’s wedding, and she gets confused again, “Yoon-jae-sshi?”

Kyung-joon (I’m almost positive) looks over at her and wonders how she got so old in such a short time, and declares with almost too much nonchalance to be believable, “You’re not pretty anymore.”

She scowls, now sure, “You ARE Kang Kyun-joon!” He continues, “When I first saw you, you were so pretty I followed you around.” So it was true! That spins her around again though, “Yoon Jae-sshi?”

Kyung-joon smiles, “I’ve changed so much you can’t even recognize me anymore.” He leaves her dumbfounded in the elevator, and turns back with his trademark, “Uh-oh, mental explosion.”

When she snaps out of it, Da-ran shouts after him, “You ARE Kang Kyung-joon!” as the doors close on her. She catches up to him in the banquet hall and sits down to talk to him tenderly as Kyung-joon, not realizing that the entire wedding party sees her as desperately trying to cling to ex-fiancé Yoon-jae.

Wait, don’t touch his face! He likes you! He smiles to himself to see that she really was confused about who’s soul was in there, and then points out that the whole room is staring at them. Has she already forgotten about whose shell he’s in?

She covers her face in horror, “I only see Kang Kyung-joon, but they all see Yoon-jae-sshi.” Aw, I still find the sentiment really sweet, despite the social mortification happening right now.

Kyung-joon figures that the first person to stand up and walk away hangs onto their pride, and she agrees, suggesting they both get up at the count of three. One… two… and of course Kyung-joon springs up first, “Three.” Derp.

She’s left to clean up the mess, or rather get humiliated by having all her girlfriends run up and publicly console her. ‘Cause that’s so helpful. A real girlfriend would drag her ass out and into a bathroom first.

But just as she’s about to drown in a vat of her own pride, Kyung-joon opens the double doors and hero-walks back in. He beelines straight for her and says he’s counting to three.

She panics, not knowing what’s going on, and springs up at three. He grabs her hand and they go running out of the wedding hall like the end of a nineties music video.

Outside, she thanks Kyung-joon for saving her from an awkward situation, and he has to point out that she just got back together with “Yoon-jae.” He shows her their hands, still clasped.

It finally dawns on her what she did, only to have Kyung-joon tell her that’s actually why he’s here—”They’re telling me to get married.”

And then at the same time (or is it a flashback?), Mom is asking Se-young to stay by Yoon-jae’s side. Great. Now the monsters have teamed up?

Kyung-joon says Mom keeps pushing him to marry Se-young. Da-ran understands, “Because to Yoon-jae’s mother, you’re not an eighteen-year old blood clot.”

He makes this awesome silent oh-no-you-did-not-just-call-me-that face and tamps down his would-be outburst. “That’s a NINETEEN-year old blood clot to you!” Hee.

He says that’s what he needs Gil Teacher for—if he has to get married, then well, Da-ran is the only one who knows the real him. She hilariously leans in and narrows her eyes, asking if this is because he still likes her.

Kyung-joon: “I’m different now. I was too young then.” Da-ran: “You’re STILL young.” He explains that it’s not a real proposal—he just needs her to be his shield against Mom’s parade of women, including Se-young. Da-ran turns him down.

He catches up to her in his car, purposely making another show of their togetherness in front of her friends. She argues that if he’s looking for a girlfriend-shield, he should be looking for girls his own age.

He astutely points out that in his body, going after girls his own age would land him in jail. “I guess if I go to jail, I can’t get married.” HA. Plan B is jail then?

She says she can’t do it—after everything she did to break up with Yoon-jae and forget him, how can she be by his side again and look at him daily? He mutters, “Do you still like Seo Yoon-jae that much? Does it hurt that much to see me?”

He drops her off at home and then stops her, “Gil Teacher, will you say my name?” Da-ran: “Kang Kyung-joon. Kang Kyung-joon. Kang Kyung-joon.” If only this were Beetlejuice.

He watches her go with a wistful look. “I missed you. The one person who calls me Kang Kyung-joon.” Just break mah heart why don’t you.

Da-ran goes home and looks through her box of Yoon-jae stuff, stopping at the picture of Kyung-joon kissing her. I wonder if there are more Yoon-jae memories or Kyung-joon memories in that box, when all is said and done.

Kyung-joon dresses for work, now wearing his grown-up clothes with ease. His room is this strange mix of kiddie bed and figurines, with… medical books? Wait, he’s not going to attempt to be a DOCTOR after a year’s worth of self-teaching, is he? UM…

He meets his colleagues at the hospital and says he’s planning to return to work. He reads another medical text and murmurs to himself that he’s almost filled his brain. Dude. Not the matrix. You can’t just upload that stuff.

And sure enough, as soon as he walks into a ward, he cringes at the sight of blood. Oh, whoops, that part.

He sits with his comatose body for a while, and Mari greets him with surprise. Man, that’s some hardcore love for someone so young. He asks her about that very thing, and she says that because she liked Kyung-joon, he lost the person he loved most in the world.

So she’s going to keep liking him, and then become the person he loves most in the world. That’s… sweet. He gets it now, that it’s more like a loyalty thing for her. And if there’s guilt attached, it makes even more sense to me.

He taps his fingers on her head and that makes her ask directly if he’s got some special connection to Kyung-joon: “Are you… his dad?” Kyung-joon rolls his eyes and says that would mean Seo Yoon-jae would’ve fathered him at the age of twelve. He makes a cheesy Mari pun [Mari mari andwae = Mari makes no sense] and leaves her growling.

Aunt and Uncle work through the connection too—if he’s not Kyung-joon’s dad, then he must be some relative from the dad’s side of the family (they think maybe uncle), otherwise what’s all this talk about the inheritance?

Kyung-joon drops by the school, sending everyone into a tailspin (especially Na Teacher, who thought his competition long gone). He meets with the vice principal to ask about Kyung-joon’s credits required to graduate, and is surprised to learn that everyone thinks Da-ran was dumped.

He announces in front of everyone that he was the dumpee, and so he left to go improve himself and came back to ask again, and got squarely rejected. So cute. I do love that the guy walking around in Seo Yoon-jae’s body has no concern for Seo Yoon-jae’s pride.

As they walk out, Da-ran accuses him of making up an excuse just to come here and do that. He calls her smart and says he needed to do that so she could still save face if she were to date him again.

They argue over the issue again over dinner, and at one point she calls him a little blood clot again and he nearly stabs his fork right through his plate. He wants her to go see Mom with him, and when she refuses, he orders her to get all her newlywed stuff out of his house. Like right now.

She looks around at all the stuff, muttering as she wonders why Kyung-joon became so cold. What, do you even have to ask that? She starts packing up her things, and he arrives after meeting with Mom (just to update her that he’ll stay at the house alone and return to the hospital).

They bicker about when she’s going to move the stuff out, and he tells her to clean the kitchen while she’s at it. So petty. He then goes to the store to buy cleaning supplies and asks, “Which is one that doesn’t clean well, so it’s takes the longest time?” Cute.

Choong-shik goes shoe shopping with Mari, and I’m amazed that they got through a year and he’s STILL got pizzas left on his tab. He actually alludes to the fact that he’s winding down on pizzas, and says he has something to tell her when he’s no longer her slave. Heh.

Mari in turn muses that she never imagined Kyung-joon would still be asleep, three hundred pizzas later. Choong-shik asks if she’s heard anything about Yoon-jae returning to the hospital. For some reason she says no, and Choong-shik nearly murders a shoe as he says he’s been hearing rumblings about Yoon-jae’s return.

Se-young arrives at Yoon-jae’s house with a box of his belongings from the hospital. She walks in smiling in anticipation, but finds Da-ran there instead. They have a standoff in the living room, each wondering why the other is there.

But the hilarious part is, Da-ran is no longer concerned so much about Se-young and Yoon-jae, as she is about Kyung-joon having a hot, scantily-clad lady friend visiting him at night, and tries to reason that Yoon-jae has the mind of a 19-year old right now.

It flies right over Se-young’s head, and she acknowledges that Yoon-jae is different after the accident, but she’s not going to give up on him like someone. But all Da-ran sees is her long legs in her tiny skirt, and chases her out the door before Kyung-joon gets home.

Kyung-joon arrives just in time to see Se-young leave, and smiles to hear that Da-ran chased her out. She tattles that Da-ran thinks he’s a childish kid. Kyung-joon: “I am. I’m a kid. And I’m very childish. Can you handle it?”

Se-young argues that he’s not at all childish, or he didn’t used to be. And she’s not going to give up on him like Da-ran. He sighs, “Fine. If, IF that guy returns, you can have him.” You don’t think that’s a mixed message to the dog with a bone?

He comes in still smiling about Da-ran chasing Se-young out, but frowns to see her lost in thought as she looks at Yoon-jae’s stuff from the office.

She checks out his room and marvels at all the medical texts, amazed that he’s really as smart as he claimed to be. He says it’s not so bad, zooming to thirty in one go. But he doesn’t want to be married off the same way.

She agrees that it’s pretty serious if Se-young is dropping by this late at night. He pointedly mmmm-aaaahs at the thought of that sexy lady coming by at this hour. “Teach, this is a brain that knows no self-control.” Rawr? Or is that icky? Still confused. Though her face at his o-face is awesome.

She tsk-tsks that Se-young would turn right around if she knew that his brain was more blood-clot, kiddy-bed level. Determined to prove her wrong, he gets right up in her face, inching her backward, “Then Gil Teacher would never… ever… feel that pull?”

She says that’s right. Uh-huh. He plops down on his bed and says that’s why Gil Teacher is the only one who can protect his innocent kid-brain. Argh. Still the same Kyung-joon: a man when it’s convenient and a kid when it’s convenient.

She goes home and sighs—what is she going to do about Kyung-joon? She can’t just leave him like that. Kyung-joon looks at the picture Da-ran was holding when he walked in, sighing that the hearts were still coming out of her eyes. Aw, kid.

At school, Na Teacher bemoans never having made a move (for a whole friggin’ year, I might add) and asks Ae-kyung to shoot his heart into the race. She complies, only it backfires and makes her fall for him.

Kyung-joon decides to face the music with Da-ran’s family, but then hides in fear the second Mom appears outside the mandoo restaurant. “That ajumma is the scariest one!” He sneaks in posing as a customer and hides behind a fan.

Thinking himself cowardly, he puts the fan down and gears up to face them, only to see Dad wielding two sharp butcher blades and Mom tapping a rolling pin in her hand. He quickly hides again and makes his way to the door…

Where Mari appears and blocks his exit. They have a silent standoff while Mom and Dad greet her, and he begs her not to give him away. She lets him off the hook and has his mandoo packaged to-go.

They eat in the park and she scowls at another Kyung-joon-copying behavior, taking two radishes per mandoo (I hate that too!) and he gives her the excuse that he normally eats three.

She gets sand in her eye on their way out, and for a moment, while her vision is impaired, when Kyung-joon tells her she’ll be okay and tousles her bangs, she sees him… as the real Kyung-joon. When she blinks the ajusshi returns, and it leaves her puzzled more than ever.

Meanwhile, Yoon-jae’s mother tells Da-ran to clean her stuff out of the house because she’s selling it. Da-ran says that there’s someone who’s supposed to buy it back from Yoon-jae, but obviously Mom doesn’t care.

She looks around the house and worries, remembering how much Kyung-joon had wanted to protect his last remaining possession, and what lengths he went to, to keep it.

Se-young comes by to check in on Kyung-joon as a patient, and finds out from a nurse that Yoon-jae stopped by the hospital to visit this kid. She wonders why and starts digging around, and finds out the connection: they were in the same accident.

Da-ran gets a call to come home to meet a visitor, but Kyung-joon gets there first, to see Na Teacher (who he just calls Phys Ed, ha) making nice with the family. Dad delights in the prospect of having a son-in-law follow in his footsteps, and also squeals to find that his last name isn’t Seo (having long since come to hate the term Seo-suh-bang).

Kyung-joon sees Da-ran walk up, and stops her from going inside. His distraction tactic? An existential crisis about soul and body.

While she ponders his crisis, he sneaks in little questions about Phys Ed. Have they gotten close? She says no really quickly and without thought, and he smiles.

She doesn’t know how to solve his dilemma, but she knows one thing for sure: “You’re just Kyung-joon-ie.” She tells him that he’s young, so he shouldn’t be around adults who are drinking, and he can never smoke, and even though he has a license, the driving still worries her so.

He beams. Awww, that smile is freaking adorable.

Mari watches over Kyung-joon in the hospital, thinking over all the weird signs that Yoon-jae and Kyung-joon are so alike in every way. She wonders aloud, “In this world, is there such a thing as two people who feel the same?”

Uncle comes in to ask if she knows the relationship between the doctor and Kyung-joon, and then gives her yet another puzzling clue: that Yoon-jae bought Kyung-joon’s house.

She asks Choong-shik about it, and he says he doesn’t really understand all the changes that happened to Yoon-jae after the accident. Mari locks in on that—what accident? When? The clues are a-convergin’.

Da-ran and Kyung-joon get coffee, and he sits down first, squeamish at the sight of a barista’s bloody finger. She wonders how he read all those medical books then.

She looks over at him, noticing that his lean-back-hand-in-pocket posture is exactly the same way he sat in class every day. Aw, is she really starting to see him as Kyung-joon? She smiles at him.

But while she’s waiting for the coffee, a girl knocks into him with her drink, not even trying to pretend it wasn’t on purpose. She asks for his number. He takes out his phone and Da-ran grumbles that that kid is really easy, just as her phone rings.

Kyung-joon: “Are you just gonna watch?” HA. He reminds her that she’s supposed to protect him, so she goes running over with their coffee.

The girl asks if she’s the girlfriend, and Da-ran can only manage a “Well… um…” but it’s enough to make the girl go away. He scowls at her lackluster response to the question. He asks again if she’s going play along for his sake, and she says she’s still thinking it over.

He sighs that if Gil Teacher’s thoughts get long (gil-da-ran), her confusion just grows too. He illustrates with a piece of candy taken from a bowl.

“The bait is Kang Kyung-joon. Just bite. The only person in the entire world who knows the real me is Gil Da-ran. This isn’t happy fishing, where I’m trying to catch a lot of fish. It’s sad fishing, where there’s only one fish, and I’m hanging onto it. Gil Teacher, please bite.”

He pushes his metaphor candy across the table as bait. (There you are, Hong sisters trademark! Where have you beeeeeen?)

Meanwhile, Mari has hopped the fence into Kyung-joon’s yard, and discovered his bed inside the house. She fumes and starts attacking the glass. When that doesn’t work, she tosses a chair clean through the window. What’s a little B&E for a true-blue stalker, eh? She’s officially back to being creepy.

She hardly even registers the cut on her arm as she walks past the broken glass, and goes straight for the bedroom, kept exactly as Kyung-joon would. At the same time, Se-young visits Kyung-joon’s body and wonders about the accident that left one asleep and the other without his memories.

Back at the coffee shop, Da-ran guesses that in other people’s eyes, it’ll look like she’s getting back together with Yoon-jae. He says this in-between will never work: it’s either all or nothing, and she has to choose.

Da-ran: “Kyung-joon-ah, I really want to stay by your side and help you. But I don’t want to see Yoon-jae-sshi’s face. It took so much to clean up my feelings, but seeing you with that face… can I stop myself from being swayed? Will I be able to not feel that pull in my heart?”

His face falls as she says the words. He says she’s made her decision then, and agrees not to see each other ever again. He gets up to go. Why does this feel like a break up? A real one? It’s confusing in a really good way.

Her heart sinks as she watches him walk away, and she picks up the candy on the table with a sigh.

Kyung-joon comes home to find his window bashed in and Mari waiting for him. She gives him the third degree and then sticks out her bloody arm for him to treat. He turns away at the sight of blood.

Mari: “Are you afraid of blood too?” Eeep!

Da-ran arrives outside, apparently having changed her mind. I’m happy about that, but too panicked to register it right now.

Mari finally lets the missile fly: “You’re not a doctor, are you? Are you… Kyung-joon-ie?”

Her eyes fill with tears and he says nothing, frozen in shock. Da-ran comes in, of all things calling out, “Kyung-joon-ah!”

Oh NO. Looks of panic, three ways across. Mari asks if it’s true, and then grabs him in a hug, crying, “Kyung-joon-ah. Kyung-joon-ah!”

 
COMMENTS

She found out! I’m actually a little impressed that she sleuthed it all herself, and it seems fitting that the only one who could actually get to that conclusion on her own would be the nineteen-year old. Because body swap is not a logical adult answer to anything. Excited to see what changes her new knowledge will bring.

I actually much prefer the one-year-into-his-adult-body version of Kyung-joon, so the time skip works wonders for me. The previous setup had zero chance of working out—perhaps one reason why many of us, me included, felt emotionally detached from the show as a whole despite liking it (though there could be many other explanations). For me, one thing was clear before: Da-ran was in love with the shell, and almost never saw Kyung-joon or put him first. To the point that it made me question her heart (or lack of one).

But now it’s a new game. For one, Da-ran sees him now and her go-to is Kyung-joon, not Yoon-jae. And he’s come back as an even more confusing version of the manchild that he was—now he seems more mature, more caught up to the body, but also knows better how to play that angle. Because he’s only aged a year, technically, but he seems like he’s closed the gap more than Da-ran will let herself believe. Or is he just playing adult because he’s figured out how to act like one? It’s more of a mind-bender, but in a good way.

Now Da-ran’s number one concern isn’t Seo Yoon-jae. Giving her a year to get over him offscreen is pretty much a godsend, in that now she’s no longer a Seo-Yoon-jae-comes-first mindless robot. She’s finally putting herself first, and has spent the year passing the teaching exam and growing from her pain, like a normal person. Honestly didn’t know she had it in her.

This puts the Body/Soul conundrum in a MUCH more interesting place. Before, Kyung-joon found himself having to compete with his shell, and always losing, which is a given. But now there’s a more interesting conflict: he’s trapped in the body of the man she least wants to see. Like of all the human beings ever. And that’s how she should feel. That’s what we wanted for her—to wake the hell up and grow a spine. Only, now she has… and he’s still trapped in that guy’s body. Whoops.

It’s a million times better a problem than the first one, which was rather simplistic. Before, the body swap wasn’t that big a problem. Sure, it was inconvenient, but fundamentally, it didn’t have a huge conflict that drove it (a mistake, I think, in expecting the body swap itself to BE the conflict). But now, the romance is pitted against the body swap in a crucial way: Will Kyung-joon ever get the girl wearing the body of the man who broke her heart? And if he succeeds, how much of that will be her residual feelings for her last love? Why we didn’t just start here is killing me. I suppose it needs some setup, but I don’t know if we needed five episodes’ worth.

Being stuck in the body that got Da-ran’s heart-eyes was bad, but now his shell actively causes her pain. And his hurt at that unfixable problem (FINALLY) starts to get me in the heart. I hope it’s a conflict that we tease out more, since Kyung-joon thankfully kept his crush going strong while he was away. The soul-body jealousy has been good from the beginning, but with this new dimension, it’s got some serious potential.

And I’m so glad that of all things, Kyung-joon learned to hate being considered a kid. It didn’t bother him before, but now the way he reacts whenever Da-ran calls him a kid or a blood clot is perfect. He’s figured out how to get the entire world to see him as a grown man, but the one woman he wants to impress still sees him as a tiny baby. He spent the first five episodes just wanting to be a kid again, which I understand but care less about. But now he desperately wants to grow up to get the girl, which tugs at the heart in a new way. I hope this is where the central conflict will stay for a good long while.

 
RELATED POSTS

Tags: , , , , , ,

331

Required fields are marked *

If daran will end up with kj, i hope its kj in kj's body..only then its real love.if not, she obviously just fall for YJ face..
Really wanna see GY as YJ..cant root for DR-KJ(inYJ) ship...sigh...

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ae Kyung and Na teacher are on my shipping list now (:

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Great episode!

So looking forward to the next one.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Girlfriday, you said it almost all. The only thing I'm not completely agree is that for me this drama always had the spark. 60% of that spark has name and is Gong Yoo and the other 40% is everything else. Hahaha, ok maybe not but I have loved this drama since the begining.
I think that we needed the 5 episodes of set up because that make this one year jump more rich and interesting. We saw Da-ran' s blindness and their discovers about Yoon Jae which makes now logic that she doesnt want to see his face. But we also saw the first development of her relationship with Kang Kyun-joon and why now she could agree to be his "fake girlfriend" and why he is in love. And we met Mari and Da-ran´s family.

Thank you for the recap!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

It started out shaky for me and I am along for the ride. But unfortunately, I am still not emotionally invested in this drama. The characters are cute and the story? It could be a bit better. Not that it is bad, it's just not grabbing my attention enough to consistently wait for it every week.

I feel that just being a fan of an actor and gushing about him or her makes up for the lack luster of a drama. This thought doesn't really pertain to "Big" but to others too. (since big is still building up it's story.) BTW I really enjoy Mari's role here. Many of you have express and liken her to Gil Da when she fell in love with Yoon Jae. . .But there is one point that I have to make and that is, Mari knows more about KY than DR knows YJ, and just that little detail makes me believe that her love for KY is more than guilt and I don't think she is blinded by her "love" and can't see KY for who he is, while DR fills that character to a T. Just my opinion.

I just really want the comatose patient to wake up so the plot can get moving again and not drag things too much.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I felt a certain choppiness and a "disconnect" within the story, but now I wonder if that was all intensional. To have the viewers go through the process of falling in love from the very beginning with the characters. Giving the writers credit and assuming it is all planned, the gameplan was simply brilliant!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ughhhh this drama is so gooood. I think this might be the first drama that I watch in which I really have no idea about who will end up with who at the end. I hate that because it's so annoying to be caught offguard but I like it too because it's something new and it keeps me on my toes. I guess this is my drug, my guilty pleasure.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Raise your hand if you were distressed to hear "Call Me Maybe" as one of the songs playing in the background. Oh no, it's gone global!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This episode didn't have any previews. But I wonder, when they want to show the "diamond ring scene" and those "scenes that Da Ran has a bandage on her left hand"?

I watched them in the preview of 6th episode at the end of 5th episode.

Gong Yoo's hairstyle in one of those scenes is like kyung joon's, not kyung joon's a year after.

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

yeah, i agree on you on this..i dont think that the diamond wring scene and the scence where DR's hand has a bandage was not shown in ep. 5 and 6.. i wonder what episode will that be scene appear,hmmmm...

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Dear biglover,
I think, they've changed their mind and deleted those parts, maybe! OR, they want to use those scenes in another episode.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I should correct my previous post: I watched those scenes at the end of episode 4th.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Still not feeling it and I so wish I was but for me the writing, directing and Da-Ran actress' portrayal is weak. I read the recaps and then sort of watch (really only GY).

My theory was that the 2 guys are half brothers and the cherub picture/book is a relevant connection to their father. Thus the special day that Yoon-Jae's mother referenced early on and Kyung-Joon's b'day are the same day. But who knows? I just feel very jipped since I was so looking forward to this drama :( But THANK YOU for the recaps ... I still come back to those hoping it gets good enough for me to watch properly.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

1. What was she coming back to say!?
2. I'm in Team Neverwakesup--sorry :(

3. As someone in that weird zone of technically considered an adult but doesn't feel like one at all, I think this drama could explore some interesting topics. What exactly qualifies someone to be an adult? Is it just a number? Is it life experience? Do you ever feel like an adult, fully capable of tackling the world--it doesn't seem like Da-ran was there yet...This is especially interesting to me because Korean culture puts a much greater emphasis on age than I'm used to being from the US...

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Love your comment, especially with regards to the Korean emphasis on age hierarchy.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Just as a whole, I'm loving everyone's comments and deep feedback on what exactly certain relationships mean and how they can possibly play out. the hong sisters really know how to create dramas with many, MANY layers.. and "big" is doing just that!

at first i tried to predict what i thought could possibly happen in the next episode(s), but i fail each time *LOL* .. the show delivers with the most unexpected twists!

some people are upset because they think that the "wrong pairs" will end up with one another by the end, but honestly at this point i don't care who ends up with who. i, like many others here, am simply here for the ride, to watch the hong sisters throw these characters around. i love the lack of predictability and how unconventional it is from other dramas. as GF mentioned in one of her earlier "big" recaps, this is like the hong sisters' 'experimental drama', and although what we expect to happen might not even come close to what the actual ending will be, i love how i can watch this drama on both a somewhat superficial/above-the-surface/thought-free level, at the same time i can also return to the episode/drama at a later time and rewatch to make note of the various characters' perceptions and how in-line (or out-of-line.. hehe) they are to the actuality of said events.

and must say that everyone in the cast is doing a phenomenal job! they are all playing their roles in the right keys, so no need to be hating on the actual people (and besides, if you hate the character, doesn't that mean that the person's acting is right on the money?) :D

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

love the time skip, not only did KJ became more mature, but GDR also became a more likeable character. She used to blindly like YJ so much that she hurted JK, but now that she is over with YJ, she only sees JK and its so cute that she keeps on saying his name. Now I can totally see the teacher and student relationship working...though what if the body swap back again,because that would really confusing.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I really wanted to like this drama, for the actors, for the writers so that I was almost pining over it, over what I wanted it to be...like many crushes I have lived through.

So, I am just so happy at this turn of events. Finally I can get on board, open heart, sincere mind and all.

Wonderful!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

"He astutely points out that in his body, going after girls his own age would land him in jail."

Isn't the age of consent in South Korea 13?

Inquiring minds want to know ... and no, I'm not Korean or planning to visit the country anytime :)

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yes, it is 13, but I still think one could easily press a case for statutory rape. 30 year old after an 18 year old?

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Confused now. If the party in question is past the age of consent then doesn't statutory rape become a non-issue legally (however icky by most moral standards)?

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I have to say, this is topping the list of my fave Hong sisters' drama. I think the relationship between the pair has always worked. Actually this was the most boring ep for me because they've got to actually take action and get back together, rather than letting things run their hilarious course. I'm sure it will prove interesting, especially now Ma ri knows!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Does anyone know the piano song that frequently plays throughout the episode? It's so beautiful ;.;

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I really wanted to like Big, I love the Hong Sisters and GY but I'm just not feeling it. I'm liking it but there are so many things that seem wrong and they bother me, I think they make me detached from the story.

First, I do understand that Koreans put more value into age but it all seems so over the top, DR keeps calling KJ a child. He's 18 and 19! In my country boys go to college at 17 and most are already working, driving and having a nice sex life at 19, I just don't get it. Certainly Korea is not that different. Cha Chi Soo was 19 at FBRS and while his former teacher had doubts about him, it had much to do with his personality and situation, she didn't keep talking to him like he was a child and he had PLENTY of reasons to be immature, much more than KJ who was portrayed in the first ep as rather precocious.

Apart from being common DR doesn't bother me at all, I quite like her even though sometimes I don't understand her and her really short skirts. :)

I hate MaRi. I hope her character has a good explanation or backstory because so far I'm really tired of the obssessive second lead female that makes no sense and exists solely for plot development. They never even kissed and KJ is cold with her which says they didn't have a romantic relationship but she knows way too much about him. How? Stalking doesn't offer that much info.

Another hole: KJ spent a whole year living with YJ's mom faking amnesia and she didn't tell him about the lost brother? At least that is what I think they are.
Is he going to be a doctor after 1 year of study? His mother would have tried to fix him in US right? All kinds of doctors and therapies and nothing like this seem to have happened. Which hospital would accept him back???

I'm thinking more and more Big would be better if it didn't try to be a comedy. I enjoy the Hong Sister's brand of silliness but it needs to make some sense for me otherwise it's just a mess.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

every week change the vision I have of the show! let´s see what´s going ontomorrow!

I only worried about the preview because I really don´t like Mari character... and seems to be more lead role :/
She´s funny but her ego and to be above the people feelings withher desires irritates me a lot :( I usually never like those types of characters.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

im so excited for next ep .

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I initially liked that they switched bodies because it gave Da Ran a chance to see what her fiancée has been up to (possibly cheating). It was actually a twist I wasn't expecting--KJ to discover that the body he's in has actually had some secrets and he innocently uncovered them for all to see. However I was hoping that YJ would wake up by now. There's too many questions I still want answered. Was he really going to leave Da Ran before their wedding? Or did the ticket have something to do with the meeting that his mom, father, and he were supposed to have? Also we found out that he had feelings for her before she fell and got hurt. It was practically love at first sight, not obligation. And he had a ring he bought for her. We also found out that he didn't ever tell Se Yeon how he felt about her. So although we don't know how far he went with her physically, we do know he wasn't completely invested in her emotionally. So the most important question is what was he going to tell Da Ran about his feelings? Even though I abhor cheating, all these little clues make it seem that YJ's character may be redeemable. I feel like he may be better than I thought. They have a chance to do something deep with this storyline. Cause let's be honest cheating is a reality for a lot of people. It would be good if they used an outsider, KJ, to expose the problems in their relationship and lead them to both be better people for each other. He was the first one to notice that she was being naive and mistreated. And he actually tried to help her show some guts. He could also show YJ how she should be treated. I was hoping he would become a catalyst for their relationship. But I doubt they will go that route. I'm just hoping they at least tie up these loose ends. The story shouldn't just be about the love development between KJ and Da Ran, it should also at least resolve Young Jae's feelings for her. And when we can't get that until he wakes up.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ah, yes! I agree with your comment so much. I'd really love for some development with Da Ran and Yoon Jae, but I'm worrying about how that will go. Because it can only move forward when he wakes up from the coma, but I worry the drama will tease us with the coma storyline for a few more episodes. :( I'd really love for Yoon Jae and Da Ran to be together in the end.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Hmm, I haven't seen the latest episodes because I'm waiting on dramafever, so I apologize if my comment has been Jossed by ep 7 and 8. ;)

I disagree with most of the end analysis. D: Mostly because I don't see Kyung Joon and Da Ran's relationship as romantic, but a friendship, and also want Kyung Joon and Ma Ri to get together. Like, I didn't see Kyung Joon proposing to her as anything romantic, but rather him being desperate to marry someone who knows him. If he married Se Young, then any hope of being Kyung Joon would be lost forever. Se Young would always see him as Yoon Jae, and since Kyung Joon has had problems through the whole drama with being loved for being him, that would be the absolute worst scenario for him. But Da Ran knows the mind inside Yoon Jae's body, so she is the only person he can be himself around. Not in a romantic sense, but in a mental health sense. He was depressed for the entire drama, but it seemed like living as Yoon Jae for a year, without anyone knowing he's not Yoon Jae, hit him harder than he had anticipated. Whenever he reacted to just hearing Da Ran say his name, it made me so sad. How lonely he must have felt during that year in the US.

I'm excited that Ma Ri realized who he is -- especially on her own. Da Ran always knew who he was, and still has problems separating him from Yoon Jae's body, but Ma Ri was the one who came to Korea for him, stayed by his comatose body, learned on her own that he was in Yoon Jae's body. Ma Ri was the one searching for him when he had no hope that anyone cared about him. For that reason, I think it would be better for him to end up with Ma Ri than Da Ran romantically. I can't wait until Ma Ri's backstory with Kyung Joon's mother is revealed.

I'd be disappointed if we don't learn more about Yoon Jae through Kyung Joon. If he lived a year as him and was about to mimic his personality so well that Da Ran was fooled, he must have learned a lot about Yoon Jae's life. If some of the mystery behind Yoon Jae isn't revealed, I'll be really disappointed. :/

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Very late but here's my take on Episode 6.

Landing the story a year later is what the show needed, as girlfriday rightly pointed out. Da Ran has grown from her break-up with Yoon Jae, Kyung Joon has grown as an adult using Yoon Jae's body. And they've been thrown into each-other again, making their conflict that much more potent.

At the end of the day, Da Ran will probably always see Kyung Joon as a kid, and rightfully so. There's what : 8 years of difference between them 2 at least ? I mean I see people 3 *months* younger than me as kids, whatever arguments they try to throw at me, so I'm pretty comfortable with Da Ran treating Kyung Joon as a kid everytime, I love it lol. Kyung Joon is more comfortable in his adult body but I'm not really buying him becoming a doctor just by studying/reading for a year. However brilliant he may be, humans don't come with genetic memory and doctors are brilliant at what they do through experience.

Anyway : Ma Ri putting the pieces of the puzzle together and nailing the truth is the second thing this show needed. Although coming across as mildly deranged in some situations, she genuinely cares for Kyung Joon, though I don't really care if it's out of pity or guilt. That it's her that puts the pieces together to nail the truth is fitting. Girlfriday's view that it's also fitting that it's a 19-year old that solved the puzzle is also fitting because a body-swap is not a rational/adult explanation to what happens also makes great sense (and I wonder why I didn't make that connection >_<).

This is starting to look really good now. Hong Sisters are diabolically good and thus far they are certainly keeping me on the edge. How I would love it that Yoon Jae in Kyung Joon's body wakes up, that would be like... opening Pandora's box XD

Many thanks for your review Girlfriday, what would I be without you making my day brighter :D

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

AWWWWWW, GIRLFRIDAY! I thought you would elaborate and write a novel on Yoon Jae-sshi's body's hero walk! I had to come back and read this synopsis just for that but I'm disappointed! LOL! I think I rewinded that scene like a billion times! Enough is enough for me. (AHHHH! *pulls hair out* Gong Yoo is too gorgeous! Almost as beautiful as Won Bin! :D)

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ok, I take that back! Gong Yoo has a great smile! GREAT hair in this drama! So he's just as beautiful as Won Bin!!! My LOVES!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

ugh, I hate Mari!
get away!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I love Gong Yoo and Lee Min Jung ♥

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

what will he do now? He has two fish.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *