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Heirs: Episode 2

The romance gets going lightning fast on this show, though the show itself is still rather slow to get started—it still feels like we’re in the introductory phase where everyone takes a turn in the spotlight to show us who they are. It doesn’t make for a fast-moving hour, but in general I like the world and the people, that is to say, I like looking in on the screwed up world, and I like the mystery behind their intricate relationships.

The couple takes center stage in this episode, and they have an easy rapport and a breezy chemistry that works for me. The tone of the show is far more contemplative and less rom-com-y than Secret Garden or A Gentleman’s Dignity, but I actually like that it feels a bit more like a throwback angsty teen flick than a comedy. So far, so good.

 
SONG OF THE DAY

Young Joon (Brown Eyed Soul) – “Driving Road” [ Download ]

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EPISODE 2 RECAP

After ditching our homeless, passport-less heroine Eun-sang in the street to wait for her sister alone, Tan turns his car around and shows up at her side. They stare at each other intently, and then he offers to take her to his place.

She asks, “Is your place really safer than here?” He thinks about it and says he doesn’t know if it’s safer for her, but it IS nicer. Why did that sound like a come-on?

She decides to chance it, and her jaw drops as soon as they enter his ginormous house. He plops down on the couch and she looks around for his family, but he says he lives alone. That freaks her out more than anything, and she starts speaking in half-jondae: “W-what are you? Are you a drug dealer? A gangster, perhaps?” Ha.

He agrees just to mess with her, inching towards her with every word. I love that she grabs her backpack like a shield, but he leans in close just to point out that the door she’s leaning on leads to her room. Cheeky.

She finally gets to sit down and process the crazy that happened today, and sighs to relive her sister’s betrayal. Hunger pangs soon overtake her angst though, and she realizes she hasn’t eaten all day.

She sneaks out to the kitchen, only to find canned food and sports drinks in the fridge (Who keeps cans in the fridge?) and eats straight out of cans in the dark. That’s just sad. Tan finds her stuffing her face guiltily, and she swears she only ate stuff that was past its expiration date, and slides over a five-dollar bill to pay for her meal.

He asks how she lives that she eats expired food, but doesn’t get an answer. He asks her name, and only gets a, “Thanks for letting me stay here for the night.” Tan: “That’s a long name.” He says that none of this is charity—it’s repayment, since his friend stole the bean powder meant for her sister.

Meanwhile, Big Bro President Won is preparing to head to the States for a business trip, and Secretary Yoon (Chan-young’s dad) tells him that President Choi (Young-do’s dad) called to suggest he stay at one of their hotels.

Won notes that he’s already playing nice with Jeguk ever since he got engaged to RS’s president (Rachel’s mom), and that stops Secretary Yoon in his tracks. Aw, is she an old flame? Won continues to be an ass to Secretary Yoon, who’s still loyal as ever to his father and doesn’t hesitate to show it.

We meet Dad for the first time as he chats pleasantly with his ex-wife (the second wife with no kids). Chairman Kim is in a wheelchair, and Madam Jung tells him to stop being nice—it won’t get her to remove herself from the family registry.

He chuckles and says he has no intention of ousting her; after all, she’s the one who brought Tan’s mother into this house. She points out that it was better than the alternative, with him hiding his affair outside of the house.

Meanwhile Tan’s mother Madam Han has her ear pressed to the door trying desperately to hear what they’re saying. Won catches her red-handed, which is clearly a normal sight around here. She just rolls her eyes and announces him at the door.

She tells Won that his mother is here (by which she means stepmother, technically), but Won bites back that his mother is not in this house. She rolls her eyes again: “Fine. Ajumma. The ajumma who raised you is here! And this ajumma is leaving now.”

He walks into the room, and Madam Jung feels the icy non-greeting from Won. Theirs was clearly not a warm relationship, but she still feels slighted, and she points out that she did raise him for ten years. He snarks back: “I’m sorry I only amounted to this after you raised me for ten years.”

Dad has to call a cease-fire, and then tells Won that he should take Tan with him to his business meeting in LA. Won chafes at the idea, but Dad makes a point of saying that it’s not his company yet. He’s taking Little Bro, and that’s that.

Madam Han hilariously yanks Madam Jung aside, and despite the fact that they’re rivals, they’re surprisingly comfortable and frank with one another. Madam Han wants to know about her upcoming meeting with Rachel’s mom, saying that it’s in-law business and she should be in the know.

Madam Jung puts her in her place: “Who’s your in-law? Tan is MY son, have you forgotten that?” OH. Well that’s news to me. Also, do they have the most complicated family registry or what?

Madam Han counters that Tan sure would be happy to find out that his mother gets treated this way, while Madam Jung spits back that being called madam for a few years has made her think she’s a wife in this family. “But as long as I’m alive, you are just my husband’s mistress.” Dayum.

As she holds back her tears, Tan writes: “Another woman’s bags, another woman’s house, another woman’s husband… a pitiful person who spends her whole life wanting others’ things. That person is…” And his phone rings with a call from Mom.

Eun-sang finishes the thought: “Mom?” She’s calling her own, of course, and her eyes fill with tears as she lies through her teeth about unni’s beautiful house with a green lawn and how tanned she is from the California sun (Mom answers with taps on the phone’s receiver).

Tan overhears the whole conversation as he stands at the door with a sandwich, and I do love the look in his eyes every time he inadvertently catches her at her most vulnerable moments.

He shoves the sandwich at her and wonders about the dollar sitting on the nightstand, which she says is for the long-distance call. He says that she sure spends her money freely, and then she adds the dream catcher as payment for the room.

She tells him it wards off bad dreams and only pretty dreams are supposed to come through the holes. Tan: “Does it not bring pretty women?” He hangs it over his door with a smile, and then watches from the backyard as Eun-sang barricades her door, and then proceeds to undress in plain sight. He nearly chokes on his sandwich and runs inside in a hurry.

She wakes up in the morning to the nicest view that money can buy, and Tan watches her, taken with her smile and just suspended there. I swear, if he keeps staring that intently, I might not make it to ten weeks.

She finds him on his way out to school, relieved that he’s not a drug dealer after all, and jumps to get her things packed so she can be on her way. But he throws out excuse after excuse why she can’t go now—her sister’s diner doesn’t open till later, there are no buses here—and suggests she come with him to school since she mentioned always wanting to see what kind of schools people go to here.

So they drive up the coast and she warns him that she’s going to stick her hands out of the car. He lets her be embarrassing for one minute, but then smiles to see her enjoying herself.

He goes to class while she sits outside taking in the scenery, and he steals glances at her out of the window. In the first non-soul-cringingly-embarrassing English scene in this drama, the professor talks about beautiful words in the English language, and says that a survey put “mother” at the top of the list. It makes Tan pause.

True to slacker form though, he doesn’t turn in his essay that’s due today, despite the fact that he wrote one. The professor’s pretty zen about the whole thing, wondering if maybe he wouldn’t find more purpose if he started to turn things in. Rather wise.

He heads out and finds Eun-sang elsewhere on campus, watching a pair of Korean girls put up flyers for a party. She notes with a wisp of jealousy that she was just looking at kids who had met good parents. He assures her those parties are lame anyway.

She thanks him for everything and says her goodbye, intending to go find her sister on her own. He lets her take about two steps before insisting he’d rather ditch his next class and go with her, and she’s geeky enough to wonder why anyone would want to skip math class. What.

There’s more bad news at the diner though, because unni quit her job and skipped town. Her ex-boyfriend shows up just as upset because she took his money too, and when he starts demanding it back from Eun-sang, Tan steps in to get violent.

But the ex has two halfwit goons who start chasing them, so Eun-sang grabs Tan’s wrist and starts running. This whole scene is ridiculous, but I do love how much he’s enjoying the handholding and running.

He gets another call from Rachel that he ignores yet again, leaving her fuming in her gilded hotel room. She gets a call two seconds later and snickers thinking it’s Tan crawling back to her… but it turns out to be Mom. Ha. Spiteful, I know, but I enjoyed that.

Mom assumes she’s with Tan and asks what he said about her engagement to Young-do’s dad, and insists that Rachel tell him—isn’t he best friends with Young-do? Rachel: “They’re not friends.”

Back in Seoul, Young-do arrives at Dad’s hotel on his new motorcycle and goes to work in the kitchen scrubbing dishes. We hear from a pair of chefs that he’s been doing this every vacation since junior high, an order from Dad to learn the hotel business from the ground up if he’s to inherit the company someday.

He does as told, except he won’t do it with a sunny attitude, and talks back to the manager like he already owns the place. He hears that the police chief is dining here, and Young-do points out that that seems like a duty much more suited to him than washing dishes.

The chief prosecutor is dining with his family, and son LEE HYO-SHIN (Kang Haneul) assures dad and grandpa that he’s preparing well for his college exams. God, it’s a stifling atmosphere, with a father, grandfather, and two uncles all telling him exactly how he should be planning for his future. Thirty seconds in this room tells us that failure is not an option in the Lee family.

Young-do enters the room to introduce himself, and checks the service just as his father would, earning praise for his good manners. But the way he pours Hyo-shin’s water with a menacing undertone seems like there’s plenty of bad blood between these two. He fills the glass to the brim and says pointedly that he looked thirsty.

A few minutes later, Hyo-shin is knocking on Young-do’s door (he seems to live in the hotel, which makes sense) and asks to use his bathroom, and goes straight to the toilet to throw up his lunch. Huh.

They’re not friendly, but they’re on pretty close (and antagonistic) terms, given that Young-do knows about the upchucking habit. He calls Hyo-shin “sunbae,” but talks down to him, and wonders why he came all the way up here to lose his lunch. Hyo-shin says that it’s better than running into his father in the bathroom.

Young-do thinks it weird that Hyo-shin would show him any weakness, while Hyo-shin counters that Young-do has shown more faults than he has. I… can’t tell what the hell is with you two, but I kinda like that I can’t tell.

Back in LA, Tan continues to ignore his phone while Eun-sang buys coffee. She moons over drinking her americano in America, needing at least one happy memory of being here. Tan balks at that, and asks if she really doesn’t have a single good memory.

He pauses expectantly for her to think of them, but when she changes the subject, he actually gets pissy with her. Hee.

She sees a group of friends taking pictures together, and it triggers an idea for how she’ll get back home. (I suppose I should’ve guessed that her sister stole her plane ticket money too, but who buys one-way tickets?) She messages her buddy Chan-young online, since she doesn’t have his phone number memorized.

Tan peers at the message and wonders if it’s her boyfriend, and she says he’s a “boy” and “friend.” He doesn’t see how she intends to get this guy’s help when she doesn’t even know where he is, and she cries defensively, “He’s in my heart!” Hahaha. He’s so jealous.

He drops her off at home with his keys while he takes the cab back to pick up his car, and on the way he starts snooping into her online life because she left the account open on his phone. That’s when he finally learns her name, and sees the kinds of messages she posts.

Among them are: “I wish Freddy and Jason would make up,” and “I don’t wanna go to work today. On a rainy day in spring, I should be watching Texas Chainsaw Massacre.” Ha.

He finds what he’s looking for—pictures of Chan-young—and there’s a hilarious split screen where he imagines them conversing and interjects annoyed asides. It’s priceless. But one post leaves him wide-eyed: “I hate it that Mom is having a hard time. Down with Jeguk Group.” The cop finds him and hands off Eun-sang’s passport.

Back in Seoul, Bo-na pouts at all her unanswered calls to boyfriend Chan-young, wondering if he’s already found a pretty American girl to date. Young-do watches her hysterics and flirts that she’s pretty when she’s clinging, which rankles his buddy who’s obviously sweet on her. I get the sense that Young-do purposely says the most hackle-raising thing he can think of in any situation, just for shits and giggles.

This time Chan-young finally answers her call, and she asks why he hasn’t commented on the selca she posted online. He says he turned all that off because he couldn’t study, but he checks on her insistence, and that’s when he sees Eun-sang’s message.

Eun-sang packs her bag and heads up the stairs to leave… where she runs into Rachel, just arriving. Gah. They recognize each other from the airport, but Rachel’s more interested to know who the hell she is and why she’s at her fiancĂ©’s house.

Eun-sang thinks that’s weird—the owner of this house is in high school. Rachel says they were engaged at seventeen, and that still doesn’t explain what she’s doing here. It only gets worse when she learns that Eun-sang spent the night, and turns her bitch dial up to ten as she kicks her suitcase down the stairs and then orders her to open it so she can make sure she didn’t steal anything. Good lord.

Eun-sang suffers the indignity of opening up her bag to prove that she’s not a thief, and Rachel spills the contents out just to be extra obnoxious. She tells her to clean up her trash, and Eun-sang is left holding back her tears. She sits outside at a park with her bag, with nowhere to go.

Bo-na paces back and forth, wondering why there’s still no response to her selca after two hours. She’s hilarious. Young-do tells her to dump him and date his buddy Myung-soo instead, and she calls him crazy three times, deflating poor Myung-soo.

Young-do is all jokes until the mention of Tan, when Myung-soo says that Rachel went all the way to LA to see him. Bo-na seems to be on Young-do’s side of whatever this feud is, because she tells Myung-soo that she hates hearing Kim Tan’s name.

Eun-sang goes to book a ticket back to Seoul, but finds that she’s short on cash, as expected. She asks to reserve it anyway, but then realizes that she still doesn’t have her passport.

Tan comes back home and asks where Eun-sang went, and Rachel points out that it’s been half a year since they’ve seen each other, but that’s all he’s got to say? So then he tosses in a half-assed, “You’ve gotten prettier.”

He sighs to hear that she told Eun-sang that they were engaged, and when she asks why he didn’t come to the airport to greet her, he doesn’t even bother to open his eyes as he gives the excuses that it was too far and too hot. She asks point-blank why he agreed to this engagement in the first place, and he says matter-of-factly: “So that I don’t have to marry you later.” Ouch. Also, do you people do everything backwards?

Eun-sang rings the doorbell, and Tan yells at her for leaving without a word. She’s just here for the cop’s card so she can get her passport back, but before Tan can tell her that he has it, Rachel says she threw it out in the trash.

Eun-sang races to the trash bins, and Tan tells Rachel to butt out. She heads down to grab her purse when she hears Tan’s phone go off, and reads the message from Chan-young with his phone number. I want to point out to her that deleting that would just give Eun-sang more reason to lean on Tan for help, but I think self-foot-shooting is her style.

Tan comes out to find Eun-sang digging through the trash, and asks if she’s crying. She says she’s been trying not to cry, but no matter how hard she tries to escape her life, here she is, next to the trash all over again. She cries that there’s no twist to her story.

He apologizes and hands her the passport, when suddenly two NEW thugs show up looking for him. What in the what? Why does this keep happening?

There’s literally no explanation, since the only point is to give them another reason to hold hands and run. So they hold hands and run. (I’m sorry, did you just run from Malibu to Hollywood? Pwahaha.)

They duck into a movie theater to hide, and Eun-sang gets lost in the movie, but doesn’t understand the dialogue. Tan starts translating for her: “She says, ‘If I’m going to trust you, I need to know who you are.'”

And then he starts making up his own lines: “She says she met someone yesterday. Her name was Cha Eun-sang.” Eun-sang wonders how he found out her name.

Tan: “But now there’s something she’s curious about… Do I… maybe… like you?”

 
COMMENTS

It’s interesting how different Tan is with Eun-sang, and that he consciously has many faces: the heir and (outwardly) dutiful son, the party boy, the thoughtful writer, and the slacker who couldn’t care less. My favorite thing about him is that he’s actually too lazy to rebel properly—he admits so himself, and it’s evidenced by his engagement to Rachel, which is the path of least resistance. Do as you’re told, and keep your head down. There’s something nicely subdued about the character that keeps him interesting, because he represses his conflicts instead of acting out. The go-to chaebol archetypes get played in the other characters—Won, Young-do—so it’s really (really) great to have a hero who’s a shade more realistic, grayer in motivation, and a little lost.

The exiled prince metaphor works perfectly for this character, not just because the family is, as javabeans pointed out, set up like a carbon copy of Joseon royalty, but because it encapsulates the wasted potential in the hero—he could be great, a leader, a future king, but gets his wings clipped and caged because his existence poses a threat. The fact that we begin here, where he’s accepted his lot in life as the extraneous son who’s supposed to hide to survive, makes his arc a fascinating one. The two moms conflict isn’t even the usual birth secret, and I’m interested to know why they chose to make him the son of the de facto concubine rather than the queen—it’s playing chess with your children for the sake of the inheritance, and it’s at least strange enough that I find it interesting rather than just the same old. At least I hope the answer isn’t the same old.

Though two episodes of setup doesn’t feel as zippy as I would’ve liked, I do enjoy the way we get introduced to characters. There’s simmering animosity underlying every interaction that makes me curious about the backstory, but it’s nice to let that inform present attitudes without dropping The Past into our laps. With the exception of the main couple whose first meeting is onscreen, everyone else has a history we aren’t privy to, and I love feeling like we’re only hitting the tip of the iceberg with all the relationships. That kind of storytelling is engaging without gimmicks, and I think the show is strongest when it uses that.

On the flipside, then there’s the reaching for yet another excuse to get the couple running from thugs (because that’s the only way to ignite romance, apparently—sparks via mildly threatening surfer goons), and then I basically want to spork my eyes out. I mean, does the Candy really need to be digging in the literal trash to feel like trash? Is that necessary? We geddit. She’s poor.

That aside, I do think the couple has sparks—the lingering moments, the intense gazes—all of that is golden, and I really like them together. She’s pricklier than he is, which is great, but also not so down on herself and so doom and gloom that she can’t just enjoy a nice day like an eighteen-year old should. I can actually see how and why he’s taken with her, and frankly that’s not always a given with romance. Sometimes I watch sixteen episodes still wondering, And why do you two like each other again?

But he keeps seeing her at her worst, when she’s down on her luck and at her wit’s end, and there’s this fantastic silent empathy happening that I just love. The show is still finding its footing (and being outside of Seoul is most of that, I’d wager) but I like where we’re headed with the couple. Attraction happening this quickly means it leaves a lot more room for unexpected turns, and that has me excited for what’s to come.

 
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Lee Min Ho, you had me at your first smoldering stare...I'll stay and watch just for that factor alone.

So it's a pleasant surprise that the OTP has good chemistry, and that the main female lead is strong and sassy, despite some obvious Candy moments.

Woo Bin does bad really good, like bone-chilling good. So I look forward to the rest of his character development, since this boy can act.

LMH, what can I say? Not the best acting chops, but stare at the screen pretty like that and I can watch that for a full hour. It factor for sure.

Liking the rest of the supporting characters, as well. Definitely getting a Gossip Girl vibe with most of them.

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The make up team is killing me! KWB was borderline vampire looking during the kitchen scene and LMH's overly done makeup and lipstick is just way to distracting for me.

The running away scenes killed me because they combined the streets of Hollywood and Downtown San Diego into one chase scene.

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Candy better grow a back bone soon and reserve a couple of slaps for rachel.

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So, it sounds like there is all this cool potential for the guys in the show...but what about the girls?

I like that Eun Sang is "not so doom & gloom" but where does she go from there? 0_0 I haven't started watching the show yet, and am just going by the re-cap so what is everyone's thoughts?

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Recap is better than the show.

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Yeah. I totally fist pump this comment.

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Lol, no no, I meant thoughts on the girls of the show. Like what does everyone think? Are they as interesting and filled with seemingly hidden depth as the guys ?

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Not really. Candy is just candy unless she decides to be a gold digger or something completely different than we have ever seen in Kdramaland or *shudders* she falls for the second lead. Woudn't that be totally refreshing? Rachel is a bitch and right now she is just a bitch. If there is any depth to her, I have not seen it yet. Krystal is being Krystal. Totally harmless but no value add. Guys are most interesting. LMH (Tan) is the least interesting.

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Thanks for your opinion! It seems that way to me, too from the recaps. I'm a little disapointed in Krystal's character (so far)--I think with some good direction and writing she could be really fun! She's a pretty girl, she actually CAN speak English, lol and I feel like she could be layered if someone believed! XD

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My take so far on the girls, no. Other than Cha Eun Sang likes horror movies, that was pretty unexpected character development lol. I think the Mom's are more stand out than the girls. I am looking forward to what they do with the teacher (Im Joo eun's character).

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Yes, looking forward to Im Joo Eun to appear. lub her in Wild Romance, she was the saving grace of the show while Jessica did just the opposite.. IJE, that girl CAN act. full stop

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Im Joo Eun is always cool, it should be fun to see how ice-prince-wanna-be-king Won falls for her. I was also surprised to read that Eun Sang likes horror movies! Lol, I wonder why???

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The show is good, and the recap is not better than it, but I know that is not the question you asked right?

TBH I think Eun Sang is the character with the least amount of growth possible. I just don't see where her character can go. I love her in couple scenes, but she is not my favorite female character.

Rachel is my fav so far. Here is a girl that is bitchy, but she isn't bitchy for no reason at all like some would like you to believe. Her mom seems like the type who sees marriages as business mergers, so she goes from one to another. This I think puts Rachel off, and has kind of disillusioned her (when it comes to her relationship with her mother and also her own engagement). Kim Tan has not been the best fiancé either. He doesn't talk to her, and even though he hasn't seen her in over 6 months didn't pick her up from the airport, and then avoided her phone calls for 2 days (more than that because he wasn't answering while she was in Korea), she goes to his house, and their is a female there, who she finds out spent the night. I mean hello? Who wouldn't be a bitch? I actually think she wants her engagement and by extension her marriage to be one of love so she is not like her mother. So here she is trying to make things work with a disinterested Tan.

I think in the process of this engagement failing, she will have to end up dealing with her relationship with her mother, and her views on marriage itself. I want to see what happens with her.

Lee Bo No I am not sure about, because we still don't know much about her and Kim Tan's relationship, and what inner conflict she will be dealing with once he returns.

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I don't agree. I think that Rachel is in love with the idea of being engaged or married, not in love with him. I think she s in for a hard fall. Bo Na I dunno... she might end up just being eye candy for the guys, so far she shows little sign of anything else.

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I never said she was in love with Tan. I said she wants her marriage and engangement to be one of love, so she is trying really hard to make it work. Why else would she fly all the way to see him> Clearly she wants them to build something genuine. Too bad for her Tan does not feel the same.

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From what I can figure out, she hardly even knows anything about Tan, and she strikes me as being a lot more interested in "possession" rather than actual love. She may also have some starry eyed vision of "true love", and has not figured out yet that you can't force it.

I keep forgetting that these people are supposed to be teenagers, and thus relatively stupid in life's lessons, so perhaps I transfer what I know into what I think they should also know :D

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@ LoveIt and Windsun33. - the points you make are compelling as to Rachel's motives. However, as much as I hate that type of character, I hope she can grow her own spine and drop Tan like a ton of bricks! He said he got engaged to her so he wouldn't have to marry her?!!

If that was me he'd be lucky if he could crawl to the phone to call 911.

She obviously doesn't know what a real relationship should feel like, her mom is NOT a good example. I will give her props for trying, I just hope her character can evolve into her own. As girlfriday said she seems to be the kind that shoots herself in the foot. Ex: throws stuff out of suitcase; hurry leave before Tan gets back. ???

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LoveIt & Windsun33 --

You guys have interesting views on Rachel! I am actually hoping LoveIt is right but leaning more towards Windsun's opinion--just because the roles Kim Ji Won has been taking are usually more like that, aren't they?

Part of me also thinks she wants to one up Yong Do in some strange way by being with Tan, lol. She seems childish right now, but hey! 18 more episodes!

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I really want the girls to have more depth, but I don't know if they will. For example, since we're shown a little of Rachel's life, we can see why she's a bitch to Eun-sang, even if we don't agree with her. I would love it if Eun-sang and Rachel eventually found common ground and became prickly, bickering friends, much as I hope Tan and Young-do will.

It is frustrating when the guys, pretty as they are, get well-written characters, while the girls are all varying levels of Screechy Vacuous Bitch. Here's hoping they develop a bit more.

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That seems to be one of the somewhat annoying things about k-dramas - the only girls that have any depth are the evil harpy ones. There are exceptions, but there seems to be a definite bias.

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I really like that scenario. Maybe they could make the guys jump through a couple of hoops. With flames. Onto one of those Runningman ouchy mats. Multiple times. :)

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Indeed! I really don't want this to be another story where the girls are actually props to the guy's story even though the leading lady (here being Eun Sang) is actually the one whom the story is about! It's so weird! Lol.

I love the guys but I wanna watch the girls get some of the writing pie, too. It is just the first two episodes, though, so who knows. Maybe something will spark.

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BTW-- Thanks for all the comments everyone!! :D

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the episode was pretty slow

there are curious moments about the side characters that make me itchy.

Tan is...well...lazy is the right word. the kind of lazy you become when you think you are out of reach and no one will ever know what and if you are doing. be careful, being away from home doesn´t mean you are free.

I thought perhaps the staring contest was too long but hey, maybe he thinks he won´t make sense if he says anything. like ... he is a bit stricken and he just cant find the words.

I am helping the message on here, arent I

not just Tan but the whole show feels lazy

but under Californian sun, you wouldnt be able to get more movement out of me either than from a squished cockroach.

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Ha

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Go back to KOREAAAA!! plsss!!
seriously I can't take any more bad english !! english is not my first language but I watch many american series to make me cringe while listening to this shit :// it feels like watching a reeeeeeally bad soap opera -_-

and I don't know why I'm not attracted to LMH anymore sigh! I really liked him back then while watching BOF but not anymore

I like choi jin hyuk, Woo bin, min hyuk and Kang ha neul more and I'm really interested in them more than the main pairing don't know why :/

idk care if they say CJH character is mean, to me all I can see is him.. gimme his side story pretty plzzzz

rachel was a bitch seriously! I feel the Blair Waldorf vibe from her! and I remember hating blair at the beginning before loving her the most back then while watching GG but idk if I'm gonna love rachel or not .. anyway I'm waiting for her interaction with Woo Bin I feel like they have the best chemistry right now.

krystal and min hyuk .. seriously I don't know what he likes about her ! she is a typical annoying candy girl (besides krystal can't really act .. seriously).

about the main leads okay Idk they might have a breezy chemistry but I can't feel it! is something wrong with me?! I seriously can't feel it !!

I felt chemistry between so ji sub and hyo jin, lee jun ki and shin min ah, Hyun bin and Ha ji won, gong yo and lee min jung (though Big was a big disappointment even the chemistry didn't save the show)...etc
but her I don't feel anything I'm like watching their scenes and having no reaction :/

any way let's wait and see it's still the first 2 episode we have 18 to go!

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There was barely any English in this episode though. Like.. lol

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I know but I can't stomach it! and LMH seriously can't speak English clearly when it's a whole sentence, he is trying waaaaay too hard.
when he said "it's not your first time" to that cop I was like come again?!!!
I seriously want them to just go back to Korea.

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Krystal is not a typical annoying candy girl -- Park Shin Hye is a Candy girl. Krystal is obviously rich -- at least her character is, although I think she is probably rather well-off in real life too.

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ha so PSH is the candy girl, so I guess I don't know when to call a character "candy girl", anyway I can't stand krystal's character and yeah I'm talking about her character, sure all of them are lovely in the real life.

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There's a lot of interesting things about this drama, though my expectations were super low.

Love the chemistry between the couple, that's what I'm going to be watching for.

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I quite like most of the main characters in this drama but I kinda hoped it would be more of a comedy :/

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Romance is picking up and it's a good thing but the way to get there feels absolutely artificial... I blame the American setting which doesn't work so much (color me disappointed) and the Director: Step on it if you don't want us to fall asleep. Thank you.
What I preferred in this episode was the Min Hyuk scenes and the bromantic scenes (Kim Woo Bin has chemistry with everyone on screen: That's insane.)
I saw that the scene between the 2 moms which was in the trailer has been edited and it's a good thing: No slap.
Also, I liked the confrontation between Kim Won and Smart Dad. Those 2 will work together at the end, I can smell it.
Preview for ep 3 seems promising. Let's wait and see.

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That was a very interesting scene between Kim Won and Smart Dad. Interesting and telling. Looking forward to more.

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i love LMH and PSH!!! i HATE that rachel wench!!! omg wanted to slap her!!!

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I can't agree more about the intense look and the chemistry between the main leads; really expected that. Someone mentioned lee min ho doesn't seem to enjoy himself but i think thats the beauty of his character, it gives him much more depth.

Contrary to so many people, the character i like the least are kim won bin and kim ji won, i find them so predictable and annoying!

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I agree except for Kim Ji Won, I love her.

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Aside from Eun Sang (whose storyline is as predictable and cliched as possible).. I'm actually liking the rest, much to my surprise.

I love that the hero isn't the arrogant rich spoiled guy... He has depth. I like his understated moments.

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Understated? But wait... I thought that meant he can't act. People are simplistic. But I totally agree on everything you said.

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The Malibu to Hollywood run was funny, but what got me was starting at home in Malibu, driving north along the Pacific and ending in... Redlands. Bahahahahah! That's a heckuva drive!

I'm really enjoying this. LMH is turning up the smoulder volume. Can't believe she hasn't combusted yet.

Bring it on Heirs!

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I keep seeing comments about Rachel and I agree her character is hateful. But it's harder for me to stand Bo-na's character, it's insanely frustrating watching her for some reason.

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ameeeen.
The actress for rachel is doing a stellar job (we all hate her character) but bo na's character is made worse by krystals horrendous acting.

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I am finding Krystal mostly just boring so far, but she has not really had any serious lines yet either. Her acting skills tell me she should go back to singing.

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I think the thugs that they run away from at the end of this episode, is the boyfriend of that white girl that's with them. In ep 1, Tan warns Jay (surfer dude) to be careful about that girl's boyfriend finding out they went to a party together (or something like that). So I think that was the girl again, and I'm assuming that's why the guys were pissed.

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You hit the right spot. I'am looking forward on how all of them are really connected to one another. I mean, why does Young do and the brother hate Kim Tan? Why does Eun Sang's mother has the control with Madame Han. I think this drama is plain and simple but I'm most likely asking for more.

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I'm really excited about this show because of all the potential bromances! The past couple dramas by the writer has had some really cute guy friendships! Plus I am so happy with the chemistry between our leads!

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Okay, this episode flowed more smoothly and I enjoyed it much better. My word - Woo Bin is awful - and I have to say I kind of love it. I am totally getting the sageuk vibe now with the modern twists. I look forward to the next episode as there was a ton of juicy subtext rippling every where and I can't wait to see it all unravel.

I'll be glad when they are done with the American scenes as I still find the stereotypes to be unnecessary and quite honestly... just lame. It's exactly why I don't hardly watch many American shows anymore because so many shows fall into that trap - and I am American.

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Same here. :)

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I'm loving it, its good not amazing yet but I have a feeling that we just have to wait for them to go back to korea for the cuteness to start

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I like this episode so much.i love that the leads are falling for each other without even realizing it. My hubby lee min ho is really amazing in this drama

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About who's Tan mother, I think is backwards. The family know he is the son of the misstress, but in public he plays the part of the son of the second wife. Only in that way (specially in this Joseon-esque version) he could get to make a "good" engagement arrange.

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ROFL --
I thought I was the only one who noticed they had to run like the Flash to run from Lee Min Ho's beach house to Hollywood. Those random thugs must also be superhuman, LOL. It's okay though, I'm sure they do all sorts of crazy locale tricks in Korea that I would never notice. I get lost easily, but since LA is my hometown I even noticed their little warp from the beach to Hollywood. Oh yeah, and as mentioned above -- he sure lives far from his University in Redlands, hehehehe!!!!!

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I have a feeling that they're not going to be back in Korea until episode 5... Hope I'm wrong though!

I hope Choi Jin Hyuk smiles at least once in this drama.

Also, I was thinking that maybe instead of Rachel deleting the message sent by Chan Young, she called him and told him where Eun Sang is.

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They did 3 weeks filming in California, so I am assuming they won't go back to Korea until the end of ep6. What I have not figured out yet is the trigger for apparently all of the characters to all go back at once.

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Tan?

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Me, too, about the Rachel/Chan Young bit. I presume Rachel knows Chan Young since the rich kids hang out together, so I assume she recognized him in his message and called him demanding, "Come pick up your friend right now."

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If I am not mistaken, the goons at the end of ep 2 were related to the American girl who has been flirting with Tan. Perhaps the boyfriend of American girl (Tammy?) is angry because he thinks Tan is pouching his girlfriend.

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I'm completely confused about the family relationships. I am never quite sure when someone says Oppa if they are real brother or just boyfriend. I also can't quite make out if people are really married or just mistresses. The concept of a "second wife" who is really just the mistress but some times calls herself wife just messes with my brain.

I'm a believer in one wife, children with the one wife, no mistresses. Anything more complex than that (like the 2 mistresses in I Summon You Gold) is just weird to me.

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From what I get, monogamy is just a theory for rich men in Korea. In RL, seems to be different. I wonder if rich women are so easily allowed to have a second "husband" by the society... I'm all for gender equality even if it goes wtf.

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all of us here. lets just continue watching the show until the end. it is fun reading all the comments here. For those who say Lee minho acting is flat, i was wondering how do you supposed he was to act? for me it fits his role in this first few episodes.

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@BIA
SPOT ON!! HIGH 5! I totally agree 200%. BOF adapted from the manga should not be used as a yardstick. let's look at the new role that he is portraying now. I think it suits him to a T for the moment.

the comments are sheer enjoyment! thanks to everybody who participated.

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I'm head over heels for this drama....love it ;)

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Thank you GF for making this show a little clearer. But instead of laughing my head off at the awesome badness of the first episode, I mostly sat and went "Huh?' for this one. And then "meh". Don't think I'll be able to stick it out for this one.
When LMH and PSH shared the "smoldering" stare, all I could think was "What is this, a Latin American soap opera, or did LMH just forget his lines and decide to stare instead?"
And the American stereotyping is getting seriously offensive. Don't show me any more fat, brutish men. Brutality against women is the main reason I don't watch much American TV anymore. I guess they thought the scene with the fat guys running would be funny, but it just came off as lame.
Sigh. Sorry, show. I have better things to do.

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You're right, he actually forgot his lines. I was one of the few LMH fans who skipped classes and watched the shooting.

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Hallelujah, Surfer Dude's gone! I, too, wondered how they got into downtown from Malibu, but whatever. I enjoyed that she initially grabbed his wrist, though, rather than vice versa.

I thought we'd be back in Seoul by now, but my guess is that they spent a looooot of money on the LA shoot and have to get as much as they can out of it.

I agree that the contemplative atmosphere is better than straight-up rom-com, although I worry that it points to major angst and makjangy stuff down the line. Also, nobody does adorable petty crushes like Lee Min-ho. He's like a less psychotic Goo Joon-pyo! I love it.

So- explain the registry stuff again. Is Tan a threat because he's under the actual second wife with no kids, or because he's under the mistress who might eventually be on the registry? Is Madame Han actually married, or just living in the house? Second Wife is still married, right? Can you actually have more than one wife in Korea? I know you could in Joseon times, but I don't know if it's carried over.

Also, would Rachel's mom's Jeguk's shares go to Young-do's dad with both their marriages? Is that why it's bad? I didn't quite understand Young-do's jibes back there in episode 1.

Also also, all this merger boardroom crap is going to get really involved and boring in the back nine, isn't it? Unless Delectably Suited Forest Demon is in every one of those shots, I am fast-forwarding, so help me.

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Lol. Mmmmm, yeah Delectably Suited Forest Demon should be in all boardrooms. Although, I may not be able to read the captions then. :)

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Do you know why I love this show?

It is because all of you Beans in this forum. You beans are so much fun. Some of you are so witty that it brightens my day.

Reading all about what everyone is feeling and writing about what I am feeling without really caring if anyone will judge me makes me feel good.

I really don't think this is a good drama. But I will watch it till it becomes intoerable.

It is fascinating that all the hype worked and so many of us are watching the drama and discussing it.

Can you imagine the fate of this drama if there was no PR machine behind it?

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Im just gonna throw it out there that Tan and Young Do's big beef has something to do with Young Do thinking that Tan spilled a secret about his (YD's) sexuality. my guess is that his feelings were or are directed towards Hyo Shin.

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Ha! Even if you're wrong, thanks for giving an impulse to fan fiction land (and my imagination).

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LOL the run from Malibu to Hollywood is hilarious, as well as the trip to San Diego- that must be a loooong car ride.

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hahaha...i will try to do it tomorrow, run from Malibu to Hollywood.

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remember its dramalang ke ke ke ke ke ke ......fantasy comes in what the heck where in the world did they run that fast....

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Warm fruit right out of the can makes me gag.
I always pop the can in to chill it first.

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I think this drama turned out better than I expected. There are good and bad things. So far, I am digging the chemistry between the main leads and the set up of the relationships between the heirs.

BUT I am already annoyed by the female characters. Must they always fight over a guy? Can't we have girls that get along? I don't even mind frenemies (as long as there is some hints of genuine care underneath it all...like in IHYV) It's even worse since there are 2 generations of it....argh! I guess I should have known better since strong female characters were never this writer's forte...

Nevertheless, I will still be tuning in for all the pretty! haha

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i love the drama,more so the chemistry of the two leads .i'm looking forward for more eps to come.i totally love LEE MIN HO!!!!

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Does anyone know the name of the song that was playing when PSH was changing her clothes in Lee Min Ho's house? Thanks ^^

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This is why I asked why they had to go to Cali to film to begin with. Awkward English script and acting is torturous for actors and viewers alike. And stereotyping, however unintentional it may be, ruffles quite a few feathers. Hurry back to Korea ASAP. The best place for K-drama filming is Korea, nowhere else. Fill your drama chock-full of Candys, hot chaebol jerks, bad cops, alcoholics and gamblers. People might complain about stock characters, but they won't complain about you stereotyping Koreans.

LMH isn't exactly the best actor out there. But undeniably he has that star quality especially on the screen, small or big. I think his charm will grow as the drama progresses.

Why is everyone calling the Kim Ji Won character Rachel? Her name is pronounced Ra-Hel. I'm calling her Hel for short.

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Hel. Like that, it fits.

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Show you can do better!..Episode2 was ok tho!

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Yes! I feel the same way as girlfriday. I feel like the real story haven't begin yet so I am constantly waiting for the "real" part of the story to occur...I am assuming when they go back to school in Korea. Or just go back to Korea. Period.

I really like this drama so far! I feel like rewatching the 1st 2 episodes just so I can wait til next week.

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you have got company. I have watched both episodes for 3 times already. Anticipating for next week...

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There was so much goodness in this episode, that I'm just wondering how I'm going to wait for Wednesday. I do think LMH usually does better acting, but maybe the un-interest comes from the lazy-ness of his character and that they're still in LA. I think things will get much better once they're back in Korea. Even so, the fact that I'm just all smiles and happy most of the time up till now, tells me I'm gonna enjoy this show, which is what I came for~ <3
Another thing, Idk how some of you can't see the chemistry yet, but I think you'll be seeing it in the episodes to come.
Also, this is just the second episode people, give the show a chance to find it's grounding (Probably when they head back to Korea). I'm so curious about all the characters and they're stories, and the romance is also great!
All in all, keep it up Heirs! Fighting~

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I think there's alot of people harshin on this show because it failed to deliver on it's hype. It's also taking show a little bit longer to really get the ball rolling. So i get that. Some people also came in with notions that park shin hye and lee min ho are not going to have an ounce of chemistry. But they're building a good rapport in my opinion. The previews confirm this for me, where they show them starting to chill more as friends. Friends before lovers. They started off on good terms. that's a change, huh?

On the other hand, I am enjoying it as it is. In fact, it actually exceeded my expectations. Instead of being all fluff and eye candy, there's actually something there. Conflicts that i care about. Relationships that i can get invested in.

Stuff that happens in LA i don't give a rats ass about, like the chases and the stereotypical americans (yay! we added an overweight middle aged man carrying a beer and a black thug. Sigh)

But looking at heirs OVERALL, it is a decent show. It is enjoyable, and that is pretty much all. aside from the awkwardness resulting from filming in the states, i really don't have much complaint.

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know what? i really enjoy reading the recaps. not only because it is clearly described per scenes but i admire the vocabularies/terminologies used by dramabeans.sometimes i still need to look for the meaning of the words used.ha3.kudos to you guys for being a very proficient in english.

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During the filming in LA, Lee Min Ho's fans who watched the shooting daily mentioned about this "run" twitted that it took more than 6 hours for LMH to shoot that episode because he couldn't run. Some of his fans twitted and laughed, because he just couldn't run the way the Director wanted him to run.

Park Shin Hye patiently did the retakes when she did well in the first shooting, and she got tired with running that she sprained her ankle.

That's the story behind the run.

The surf board? No! it was not LMH but his double. But it was him who swam with the surf board but not in deep water.

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Thanks for the recap! I think this second episode was a lot better than the first, especially in regard to the pacing. It seemed more focused and coherent. Also, in contrast to what some others have been saying here, I actually think Lee Minho's doing a good job acting-wise.

That being said, I'm still on the fence, since both episodes felt very much like introductions and I don't think we've gotten to the main story yet, but, dare I say it, I'm looking forward to next week to see where this show is going.

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What happened to the Lee Min Ho I watched in Boys Over Flowers? He was good then in his acting.

He seems to deteriorate with time, or as he gets popular. The zeal I saw in BoF is not here in Heirs. I thought he should be better as time goes by or as his experiences build up. But, he is lifeless. I sense some sort of "laziness" or "taking things for granted"? I hope I am wrong.

I watched all his dramas since BoF, but ....overall BoF is still his best for himself.

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yes ^I second that! I reeeeeally loved him back then in BOF but idk what happened after that, I can't find this spark that made me fall in love with him back then! I hope I'm wrong though.

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Surfer thugs just sounds like an oxymoron to me. Doesn't compute.

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It's all true - I know because I watched "Surf Nazi's Must Die". :D

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Overall I am sort of liking this drama, despite all the stupid stuff and errors - or perhaps because of them. It hardly compares with shows like IHYV or Master's Sun, but neither is it as bad as YTBLSS or ISYG. And at least the US parts, half the fun is in watching closely for the WTF's.

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Heirs is just okay.

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I think this episode is better than the first even though it is kinda slow. But being a die-hard fans of City Hall; it was also a bit boring for the first 4 episodes but then it got better and better if not the best kdrama ever for me.

I like Cha Eun Sang. Yes she is poor but she is not intimidated with rich people and she has a strong personality originally and I like that she is into movies, her genre preference is blooded thriller and her idol is Freddie Krueger.

I wish that this drama will move toward friendship and romance of those high-schoolers rather than schemes that rich people does among themselves. Wouldn't it be great if they do a movie for a school project with CES as the director and Kim Tan as the writer. He seems to love writing... hee hee

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All those who say LMH has lack of zest in his acting. His character is SUPPOSED TO BE LACKING OF ZEST. Imagine doing nothing all day, except to play and spend money, with no real aim in life, especially with no real love from your family.

I think LMH's doing a good job so far for HIS character. Let's hope life returns to the character when he returns to Korea.

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@NEKOL i totally agree with you. How can he act full of zest if the character he's portraying is the opposite? :)

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Exactly!!! I actually find these comments funny, because they clearly don't understand what is going on in the show, even though the show clearly explains it. At first you have his brother telling him to have no desires, telling him to basically do nothing. Kim Tan is too lazy to party, too lazy to care, too lazy and doesn't care enough to pick his fiancé up from the airport, too lazy and uncaring to answer the phone. He is a character that has suppressed his desires, and basically only shares his thoughts in his writing. Therefore, if the audience is getting lazy, flat and disinterest from his character then he is clearly doing his job well. lol

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haha. Right.

I wonder how different it would be had people not seen lee min ho portray gu jun pyo in BOF.
There were alot of comparisons of heirs to BOF and i can imagine people making that unconscious connection in their minds and expecting lee min ho to put on a show for us the way he did in BOF, when he's really doing enough with what his character is and the material he was given. Kim Tan is a more contemplative hero than gu jun pyo. He also seems to be alot more mature.
I don't think an actor can get lazy (or can they? then they just need to quit the industry because there is no point to their job in which their purpose is to entertain and nothing but).
I'm really looking forward to the development of kim tan and how lee min ho is going to portray that. Perhaps kim eun sook decided upon a 180 of Gu Jun Pyo to further distinguish herself from BOF. She's doing a good job, there, cause i don't get BOF vibes.

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Outside of the fact that there are rich students and poorer ones ( with the love story being between one poor and one rich kid), there really isn't much more these 2 shows have in common. I agree with everything you said.

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In addition to the theme of not disconnecting the character's laziness to LMH's portrayal of it, I think there are a lot of viewers who said they were going to lower their expectations for Heirs, but clearly have not done so.

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thanks to all who understood the character that he plays. HIGH 5s to Nekoi, BIA and LoveIt.
I have this gut feeling that ASA they arrive in Seoul and when the two boys {KT and YD} start to fight over CES, then, the REAL action begins plus all the rest happening simultaneously incl. ES's mum whom I adore already.

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Agreed. The majority of people posting on here about his poor acting are the same people that didn't want him to play another GJP type character. So he isn't now, and is portraying a character that is completely different - someone lost, aimless, and restrained - and they complain about the lack of fire and 'zest' behind it. It is frustrating to read, and I'm not even a LMH stan.

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These are people who would not have been happy with anything he did tbh. It is so transparent to me.

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kudos! well said.

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