Gap-dong: Episode 15
by javabeans
It’s interesting to see how far you can take a story despite knowing all the pieces in advance, because by conventional storytelling standards that makes for a less satisfying payoff. I’d argue that this is a ball that Gap-dong dropped that it needn’t have—it could definitely have played up the suspense in numerous ways without sacrificing story—but even so, I have to say that the show manages to be entertaining enough anyway. If you let go of the what-ifs and take the beats as they come, it manages to engage you with its study of character motivations and reactions, and with this episode I find myself wondering both how the killer is going to get away with it with the circle tightening around him and how they could possibly catch him despite that.
SONG OF THE DAY
Human Race – “Go” [ Download ]
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
EPISODE 15 RECAP
Mu-yeom asks for Tae-oh’s help in catching the real killer, but Tae-oh isn’t very interested in playing along. He’d get nothing in return, nor would he feel any sort of satisfaction in helping his fellow man for unselfish reasons.
Half-seriously, Tae-oh proposes that he’ll do it if Mu-yeom grants him a favor in return—to kill Tae-oh. I suppose death is the only thing that would ease Tae-oh’s misery right now, and he perks up eagerly when Mu-yeom appears to consider it. Which is when Mu-yeom proposes that game of chicken that sounds like a metaphor but is in fact not a metaphor.
As we’ve already seen, this takes them out to the open road, and both drivers get behind the wheels of their respective (and matching!) cars. Just before they zoom off, though, Mu-yeom is hit with a piercing pain in his head—remnants of that bullet that lodged there, perhaps?
Ji-wool accepts a ride home in Section Chief Cha’s car, and as they’ve been friendly for years, she openly chats with him about her concerns for Mu-yeom, and how he’s started to see hallucinations of women asking for his help. Furthermore, he’s undergone a medical evaluation, and she doesn’t think the result came out good. Chief Cha feigns concern, but files this information away with a glint in his eye.
The race is on. Tae-oh and Mu-yeom race toward the end of a cliff (and let’s just ignore the part of unreality where there’s a paved highway that literally just ends, like we’re watching something out of Speed: The K-Drama Years), both gunning full-speed ahead despite the quickly approaching drop-off. Mu-yeom focuses straight ahead while Tae-oh casts nervous looks over at him, and it’s Tae-oh who brakes first, swerving away from the bluff. Mu-yeom’s car screeches to a stop with mere feet to spare.
Again, we’ll ignore the part where this is totally not how you play chicken and just buy what they’re selling. In any case, the end result is: Tae-oh loses. Mu-yeom notes, “So you did want to live after all.” This is a realization that shakes Tae-oh himself, who hadn’t believed it of himself.
Mu-yeom tells him to remember this feeling of fearing death. Tae-oh says unconvincingly that his reaction is only because he didn’t like the idea of dying without knowing who Gap-dong was, but Mu-yeom isn’t buying it. Still, Maria gives the okay to tell him the truth about Gap-dong’s identity. As he drops the bomb, we jump over to see Chief Cha looking up Mu-yeom’s brain scan findings, where he reads about the hallucinations.
Tae-oh reacts to the information with skepticism, though he can tell from their demeanor that they’re serious. They head to the site of Gap-dong’s eighth murder, where Tae-oh essentially takes on the role psychopath consultant: He imagines himself in the killer’s role, going through the steps as he would react to them.
Tae-oh suggests that Gap-dong realized he’d been mistaken to kill the victim (Officer Crybaby) but had no choice but to proceed anyway. However, the letter doesn’t quite fit in, and he wonders if she may have had insulted his pride before dying. But speculation is all Tae-oh can offer, and he says he doesn’t know the answer.
That wording—not knowing an answer—captures Mu-yeom’s attention, and now he imagines himself as the killer. In this scenario, Gap-dong strangles her thinking she figured out his identity, not giving her a chance to explain that he misunderstood her conversation.
Mu-yeom checks his hypothesis with Tae-oh—that Chief Cha grew enraged at the thought that he’d had it wrong all these years, worrying needlessly about being discovered for no reason. That would explain his violent reaction to reading her love letter for the first time, wouldn’t it?
Tae-oh isn’t exactly forthcoming with his thoughts, but it doesn’t matter because his telling reactions are valuable to Mu-yeom and Maria. He requests some time to rest and think it over, not ready to assume the role of Gap-dong’s hunting dog.
Back in the prison, Tae-oh meets with his team of lawyers and tells them that he wants to live after all. One of the slick suits applauds this change, saying that his will to live will help them win in the courtroom, but the main lawyer looks conspicuously worried. What’s that about?
Mu-yeom returns to the station and treats Chief Cha like nothing is amiss. He reports back on his meeting with Tae-oh, saying that Tae-oh had insisted he knew the real Gap-dong, though he’s not sure whether to believe him. Chief Cha advises him to keep an eye on him and see how it plays out.
Tae-oh is allowed out of prison on house arrest with the ankle monitor, and Mu-yeom keeps up the act for the other officers’ benefit, demanding that Tae-oh tell him who Gap-dong is. Then he meets separately with his inner circle—Hyung-nyun and Ki-ri—to discuss their actual strategy.
Mu-yeom is still trying to find ways to get that statute of limitations suspended, which has been known to happen in cases of an accomplice stepping forward or the criminal fleeing the country. That’s their best bet, and they’ve been looking into Cha’s application for residence in Spain, as well as his application to study in the States. He sets the others to the task of checking travel records in and out of the country.
Meanwhile, Chul-gon is off in Japan to talk to the scientist who worked on the DNA analysis from the old Gap-dong case. If all goes well, he may be able to get a hold of that DNA information believed to be lost.
Mu-yeom’s sidekicks complain to Chief Cha about Tae-oh’s unnecessary release from the prison and urge him to send him back in. After all, Mu-yeom has been glued to his side and is being manipulated by the criminal. They’re maneuvering Chief Cha according to plan, and he decides to meet Tae-oh in person.
This is their first big face-to-face, and Chief Cha sits across from Tae-oh and asks who Gap-dong is. Tae-oh strings him along for a while, answering vaguely, making it deliberately unclear whether he’s hoaxing or whether he knows something valuable. Tae-oh wonders whether the police can even do anything if he divulged what he knew, and Chief Cha assures him not to worry—they have Gap-dong’s DNA and can get him, if Tae-oh just tells them who it is.
We don’t see how he answers, because we cut forward to afterward, when Tae-oh tells Mu-yeom that he isn’t convinced that Cha is the killer.
Chul-gon meets with Mu-yeom to fill him in on his trip to Japan. He knows that in the States, the discovery of DNA can get a statute of limitations extended, and had hopes that this will be one way to do so here. But all the evidence was destroyed there too, leaving them back at square one.
Chul-gon hands over a vial of evidence, telling Mu-yeom that it’s a sample from his father. “My prejudice was frozen in time, over the last twenty years,” he says. Now he’s returning it, acknowledging that Mu-yeom’s father isn’t a suspect any longer. This hits Mu-yeom hard as he thinks back to his father’s death, then sees the scar on Chul-gon’s finger. “I think I’ve paid back the price of that finger,” he says, ready to share his new information.
Maria sits down with her parents that evening and thanks Profiler Han for helping herself and her mother all those years ago. He was the one who put them into witness protection and sent them to Australia, and she credits him for saving her. Her eyes well up with tears as she confesses, however, that she also feels guilty for having suspected him—she’d been simultaneously grateful and doubtful over his reasons for protecting her, and she apologizes for it now.
And because of her certainty now in apologizing, Profiler Han sits up straighter and asks, “Have you recognized Gap-dong?”
Just as Profiler Han is being informed, so is Chul-gon, which I find frankly confusing because I could have sworn these two men already had a clue, although admittedly the drama never made it explicitly clear. But that’s what you get for playing suspicions deliberately opaquely—we forget what you do and don’t know.
Chul-gon is stunned at the revelation, but also galvanized, wanting to get right to work nailing Chief Cha. But Mu-yeom tells him bitterly that he’d hoped Chul-gon would have a better solution and asks for direction—what do they do? How do they get him? Chul-gon vows that they have to get Chief Cha no matter what, even if they have to sell their souls to reveal the truth. Frustrated, Mu-yeom asks why the truth has to be so devastating, and what meaning it could have now.
The next day, Mu-yeom gathers with Chul-gon and Profiler Han to discuss the case, laying out all the bits and pieces that support the theory that Chief Cha is the villain. Profiler Han urges them to be circumspect, reminding them that they’d gone after Mu-yeom’s father with more evidence than they have now. He decides to sit this case out, not confident enough in it, but that’s before he’s told that they don’t actually have any DNA evidence on Gap-dong.
Tae-oh suggests a solution to the conundrum by saying they can achieve the results they desire by overlooking one small technicality… and faking the evidence. They can arrest Chief Cha on suspicion of being Gap-dong, take his DNA sample, then drop some of that into Gap-dong’s sample. That’ll yield a 99% match, and Cha is sure to be convicted. It’s deeply unethical, of course, but that’s why you’ve got the psychopath on hand to guide them past that sticking point, isn’t it?
Mu-yeom clearly doesn’t like this idea, though it’s tempting. Tae-oh has no problems with using foul means to get the desired ends, saying that there’s no such thing as complete justice. Seeing that Mu-yeom and Maria are reluctant to agree, he concludes, “Then you two don’t have certainty that Cha Do-hyuk is Gap-dong.”
Afterward, Maria admits that she’s swayed by Tae-oh’s argument and would rather take his approach, which startles Mu-yeom. She argues that it’s better to get the criminal than to lose the chance again. Mu-yeom’s initial spurt of jealousy that she’d side with Tae-oh grows stronger and mixes with his disappointment, and he asks if she’s been drawn in by Tae-oh.
Maria bursts out that she’s Gap-dong’s victim and wants him put away—it would be too much if they let him go now. She leaves in tears, and he watches her go.
Officer Young-ae takes a swim, during which we see that she’s been watched from the shadows by an unseen figure. It’s no surprise, then, that she runs into Chief Cha afterward. While he waits for her to change, he loses himself in the memory of Victim 8, and we see that he had in fact assumed that her chat at the cafe was about him being Gap-dong, and she hadn’t had the chance to deny it. Now he understands the real reason for her reaction, and it troubles him.
Chief Cha asks after Mu-yeom, and she replies that he should be fine with the doctor always at his side. Chief Cha mulls this over.
The boys have taken a liking to Maria and pester her to read to them. Ji-wool arrives and frowns to see the sight, and tries to offer the boys some candy. They’re not interested, though, and turn back to Maria instead, and Ji-wool pouts. “I shoulda taken that 5 billion,” she grumbles. Ha, yes, go and marry the killer rather than play second fiddle. Ji-wool is such a teenager (and it cracks me up).
Mu-yeom starts to knock on Maria’s trailer door that night, but hesitates, their disagreement ringing in his ears. She experiences similar conflict, wanting to go outside but hesitating at the door. He settles for a text instead, asking her to at least hold hands as they fight. He waits expectantly for a reply, but doesn’t get one.
Chief Cha dines with the district attorney, who brings up new and interesting information: that Cha had once suspected him of being Gap-dong, and that if they hadn’t both agreed to cover “it” up, the district attorney could have been mistakenly accused of being the killer too. Lordy, just how many people did something stupid with evidence that threatened to implicate themselves?
The prosecutor on the Gap-dong case joins them, and the district attorney explains that he wants to smooth over their relationship and get them working together on the case. The men exchange pleasantries, but as we know, Mu-yeom has clued the prosecutor in on his suspicions. We see in flashback that the prosecutor has also filled in the district attorney—which means this dinner is a setup. The DA and the prosecutor don’t betray this knowledge to Chief Cha, though I wonder if Cha is clocking the sharp looks the prosecutor is sending his way.
Maria visits Tae-oh’s cell to discuss the case, and amusingly, Tae-oh is clearly dying for a taste of her coffee. He mutters at her for engaging in “torture,” which is so absurd coming from the guy who committed actual torture. Perhaps it’s the dissonance that makes it funnier? In any case, Maria rejects his proposed plan, saying that they can’t risk Chief Cha finding out that the evidence was fabricated, thereby destroying their entire case. She tells him to think up a better plan, and leaves him her coffee for good measure.
The same issue is being addressed in Profiler Han’s office: Chul-gon argues for going forward with the plan, and Mu-yeom refuses to falsify evidence. Mu-yeom points out that if they got the criminal this way, Chul-gon would be the cop who caught Gap-dong who couldn’t tell anyone how he did it.
Maria sends a conciliatory text that night, inviting Mu-yeom over to eat in cute aegyo language. She’s cooked up a storm and asks him to forget what she’d said before, and they sit down to a flirty dinner, replete with kisses… which then get interrupted by little monks demanding bedtime stories, ha.
Mu-yeom pores over his Gap-dong notebook, looking at the first victim in particular. He tells Maria that Chief Cha knew her since childhood, which rather puts a different slant on the matter, doesn’t it? He says that this is why he feels he might be able to understand how Gap-dong could be the hyung he knows. I suppose he means that understanding the relationship to Victim 1 should shed light on why Gap-dong started his killing spree.
Chief Cha gets a message alerting him into the inquiries of his flight records. That gets him thinking, and now we see Tae-oh’s response to his question of Gap-dong’s identity. Tae-oh had pointed his finger directly at Cha, making him tense… and then said blandly that Cha’s collar was askew. When Cha had barked that he didn’t really know, Tae-oh had laughed sheepishly. Heh, I’ve gotta say, it’s pretty satisfying watching the copycat screwing with the original.
Chief Cha heads for the prison despite the late hours and requests a private interview with Tae-oh. At least our guys aren’t too far behind the curve, because Ki-ri warns Mu-yeom that their inquiries have come to Cha’s attention. That’s certainly not good that he found out, but at least they’re not in the dark about it.
Tae-oh tells Chief Cha that he hasn’t decided yet which side he’ll work for, and Cha lays it all out there, telling him to choose between his death or his freedom. It sounds tantalizing, the promise of “freedom to stop yourself” that he dangles in his face, as though offering to give him the secret. Tae-oh looks tempted, hopeful, and fearful all at the same time.
Mu-yeom decides he has to face Chief Cha one last time as his hyung and not the killer. Meeting that night, he says that he’s figured out who Gap-dong is—but more important than his identity is the truth of the case. Chief Cha plays dumb, but Mu-yeom states plainly that he’s considering faking evidence linking Gap-dong to his suspect to enable an investigation. Chief Cha tells him the DNA evidence was destroyed, and there was never a guarantee that the evidence came from Gap-dong himself.
So give up this idea, he advises, because Gap-dong will reveal the frame job. Chief Cha adds, “The DNA was destroyed from the outset. Wouldn’t he have made sure of that?” Well, Mu-yeom has his answer—Chief Cha has covered his ass. And as that realization sinks in and hits hard, Mu-yeom hands him his old copy of Crime and Punishment, saying meaningfully, “Didn’t it feel heavy?”
COMMENTS
I’m guessing Mu-yeom is referring to Chief Cha’s secret, carrying around the burden of his crimes (and the fear of being caught). The wording is vague enough that I’m sure Chief Cha could find a way to wriggle free by continuing to feign ignorance, but on the other hand, the opening is there for him to finally step forward. But despite that room for ambiguity, the mystery is pretty much out in the open and Gap-dong has essentially revealed himself to Tae-oh, which is a curious choice for a drama to make with two weeks still remaining. On the one hand it’s nice to have a scenario that’s the opposite of God’s Gift—14 Days because we have adequate time to process the villain’s true identity and work out the details, rather than being shown a last-minute twist and getting almost no time to sit with it before the show cuts to an end. But at the same time, now everybody knows the truth, and even the villain is cluing in to the fact that his cover is slowly being chipped at, and where is the suspense going to come from?
I did enjoy Chief Cha’s proposal to Tae-oh, and I want them to do more with that before they dispel that tension. I’m not sure they’ll make the most of that because of the way they defused the brewing tensions in this episode, but it would be much more effective to play on Tae-oh’s malleability in terms of allegiance. Well, I suppose he’s got no allegiance to anybody but himself, so perhaps it’s more accurate to consider it as the two sides vying to claim his selfish interests for their own purposes. And it’s an intriguing question—can a monster stop his own urges, or is Cha just saying that to save his own hide? Will Tae-oh fall for it, or will he decides that the glimmers of feeling he has experienced are enough signs to hang his hopes on, that he can overcome his suffocating ennui. Because maybe if he figures out how to live with himself beyond the boredom and the detached urge to act on his murderous impulses, maybe he won’t need to cling to a reason to stop—feeling emotion will be enough to do that for him naturally.
Speaking of split allegiances, I liked seeing the rifts surface with several of our relationships, and actually wanted them to be played out a little bit more thoroughly. For instance, Maria and Mu-yeom having their ideological clash over how to deal with Tae-oh’s unethical proposal. It’s completely in character for both of them to react as they had, and that’s such a natural source of conflict that it seems a bit pat to work it out so soon—even if it’s cute having the kisses and reconciliation moments. I don’t necessarily want artificial angst arising to keep them apart, but this is a built-in one that’s organic to who they are.
Same goes for the two older men, with Profiler Han always being the cautious one and Chul-gon ready to charge in with his hunch and hot head. Just when you think that the main conflicts have been resolved, you see that no, there are actually other very ordinary but important, human conflicts that arise in the wake of the big case being solved. The crime never ends with just the victim’s death, and the ripples are far-reaching. That’s definitely something this show is adept at exploring, and that, more than the mystery or the whodunnit question, is what keeps it going. (Even if I could stand for things to be going just a little quicker, just sayin’.)
RELATED POSTS
Tags: featured, Gap-dong, Kim Ji-won, Kim Min-jung, Lee Joon, Sung Dong-il, Yoon Sang-hyun
Required fields are marked *
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *
1 missDVM
June 6, 2014 at 10:05 PM
THANK GOD. I have been waiting for your lovely recap ALLLLLLLLLLLLL day.
I lurve you.
Thank you again! Great insights!
Required fields are marked *
2 hipployta
June 6, 2014 at 11:03 PM
Confirming that there is no evidence because he destroyed it...*sigh*
The next two weeks...what will happen
Required fields are marked *
3 mary
June 6, 2014 at 11:35 PM
really sad because this episode does not have any scene between Ji Wool and Tae Oh :(
Required fields are marked *
kakashi
June 7, 2014 at 2:27 AM
has SJR been casted yet?
Required fields are marked *
the50person
June 7, 2014 at 3:33 AM
HA. ?
Required fields are marked *
4 Lilly
June 7, 2014 at 1:00 AM
So glad I read about this show on Dramabeans. I marathoned it to catch up. This show absolutely rocks. It is going to have to be one of the best shows for this year for me. TY much Beanies.
Required fields are marked *
5 kakashi
June 7, 2014 at 2:17 AM
I don't think it's a highway they race on but a small (private?) airport runway. during the race and when they stare into the distances together (seriously, pretty scenery, but WTF?), you see some small airplanes in the back
Required fields are marked *
6 CaroleMcDonnell
June 7, 2014 at 5:51 AM
The anger Cha/Gap Dong felt when he twsted the letter felt like the anger of someone who realized he had made a mistake; psycopaths hate making mistakes. Their pride and all. Did this girl hurt his pride even so long after death by making him feel like a fool for "not knowing" the real reason she said "That's Him?"
I really love the whole found family aspect for Maria, Mad Monk, Monk, and the boys. What an oasis of sweetness and peace! Just so healing.
Tae Oh don't disappoint me here. What do you want to do to gain freedom? Can you sacrifice your opportunity to be free just to help the woman you love (and your nemesis) achieve the greater good? I so wish they had shown us some internalization where we'd see how Tae Oh actually felt about finally meeting his god/idol? Was he just amazed? Flustered?
The (non) love story between Maria and Tae Oh wasn't explored so much in this episode. I wanted to see more of Tae Oh's angst over that. But love, loved, loved, the evolving of the Maria-Mu Yeom relationship. And I thought their argument was perfect! Not dragged out, as often happens in K-dramas. The timing/length of their disagreement/conflict was spot on. Sometimes I get so angry at dramas for dragging out conflicts just for the sake of dragging them out...and the suspense often feels just plain old artificial and manipulative.
The secret of freedom from urges: Cha has it!!!! And can give it to Tae Oh. Wow, a chance for self-deliverance. But is it a cure-all applicable for ALL psycopaths? Would the same remedy work for Tae-Oh? Will Cha even tell it? Worse case scenario: Cha dying without giving the cure to our copycat.
Thanks for the recap.
Required fields are marked *
owl
June 7, 2014 at 8:37 AM
"Cha dying without giving the cure t our copycat."
Wow, the ultimate curse. But I wonder if Cha just changed his style continued to kill, with Ji-wool slated as his next victim~ and of course, Dr. Oh as the till we meet again future victim.
Required fields are marked *
CaroleMcDonnell
June 7, 2014 at 4:44 PM
Yeah..i did wonder why Ji Ul and Cha are constantly together. But he's her neighbor, no?
Required fields are marked *
Ennayra
June 12, 2014 at 2:17 PM
I kind of hoping that Tae Oh would join Chief Cha so they can be evil together and plan dastardly things and give the good guys some more frustration. If this was real, of course I wouldn't hope that, but since it's a drama, "Go to the dark side, Tae Oh... Well, further into the dark side."
Required fields are marked *
7 cm
June 7, 2014 at 7:05 AM
I'm sorry but can someone clarify how you play chicken? Isn't it two drivers drive fast to something (cliff, themselves, etc) and the loser is the one who swerves? I'm just curious but what is wrong with how they're playing..
Required fields are marked *
kboogbee
June 7, 2014 at 8:28 AM
A game of chicken is when two drivers drive towards each other. The idea is that whichever driver yields first is the chicken. If neither driver yields then the worst possible outcome (a collision) occurs.
Required fields are marked *
CaroleMcDonnell
June 7, 2014 at 4:47 PM
Chicken Race or a Chicken Run was first done in the movie Rebel without a cause with James Dean. Whoever jumps out of the car the last-- but survives-- as both cars and drivers head toward the cliff is the winner.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7hZ9jKrwvo
Required fields are marked *
8 Aly
June 7, 2014 at 9:01 AM
i just want to say that cha is such an amazing actor. i mean he was ok as just the cop but as it has been revealed who he really is, his talent has really shown. in the last episode when he said to maria " did it feel good to win" and when that expression came over his face i swear i was really shaken by it. i think it's his facial expressions that really shock me. how he goes from normal looking to totally sinister. he has a lot of potential and i hope they really let him go with the flow when it comes to his character. overall this episode felt kind of weak. although chul gon finally finding out was one of the most redeeming moments for me. i was just glad for him to finally have that answer after all these years of searching.
Required fields are marked *
9 Tara
June 7, 2014 at 1:46 PM
The ever-changing faces of Section Chief Cha gives me the creeps! Now that he's established as the real Gap-dong -- anytime he smiles, it's unnerving enough to bring chills up my spine just thinking of the evil that is lurking beneath his calm and self-assured demeanor :/
Although now the important players are now in the loop about SCC's true identity, it's of concern that now he's aware of the growing suspicions of those around him. I don't know why they weren't more careful in looking up his travel history...now he knows they're poking around, it's giving him a heads-up to feign knowledge and cover up with lies.
Now that he's aware of Mu-yeom's hallucinations, thanks to Ji-wool spreading the word...it looks like he's looking into bringing suspicion onto the main player who figured out his identity in the first place! His interactions with Tae-oh were also creepily done...the copycat finally being able to meet his hero, and it's not who he expected at all. Enough to the point he doesn't think he's the real GD...which, from psychopath to psychopath, isn't it odd that he wouldn't get those vibes from him?
I had assumed that both Chul-gon and Profiler Han knew that SCC was GD, so to see their reaction (well, CG's mostly) was a bit priceless -- that the serial killer he was looking for was in fact a fellow cop and friend. I betcha he shuddered, thinking of how GD was standing with him as he investigated the murders he committed! (I would have)
I really believe that they gotta look into the details and history of the first victim. That has got to hold the key as to why SCC started killing and his motivations behind continuing until his "last" murders of vic 8 & 9 (Crybaby and her friend).
Obviously, we're aware of the letter and his mistaken assumption that they knew his identity...but was that really enough to stop the urge to kill? For all we know, he could have continued killing since...just in different methods so that they couldn't be linked to the original GD killings (or maybe their bodies haven't been discovered yet). Who knows at this point.
The final scene where SCC basically confirms that there's no DNA evidence because he destroyed it...I feel like he's baiting MY and possibly trying to lure him into his set-up -- especially with his sudden interest into his hallucinations. I do hope MY has backup and not be falsely lured into whatever SCC has in store for him.
Required fields are marked *
10 CaroleMcDonnell
June 7, 2014 at 4:49 PM
I really don't know why they keep using Crime and Punishment. As you said before, it's the wrong book to use to illustrate serial killer issues. I guess because Tae Oh feels guilty but the reasons for the killings in the different stories are so different. Unless we're led to believe that psychopaths are like Raskolnikov in that they want to get rid of the vermin/evil people of the world.
Required fields are marked *
Marina
June 7, 2014 at 6:37 PM
Why they keep using Crime and Punishment? Because they didn't really read it. Just glossed over it. Or most likely for the name of the novel that sounds right in a crime show.
If any of this particular dama writers understood Raskol'nikov,(Раскольников) they wouldn't have used the book. Compared to Kdrama's psychopathic villains, and there are at least a dozen of them, in each and every drama; Raskolnicov is a virgin nerd, the type who gets bullied in high school.
A question for Javabeans' e-book part 2 (I enjoyed part 1 on Kindle) Do Koreans like Dostoevsky much in real life? I had to read and research all his works in original language. What a torture. Real Panishment (Наказание) :)
Required fields are marked *
11 Cocoboo
June 7, 2014 at 7:33 PM
It was strange how there was a seemingly random scene of Young Ae & Chief Cha.
She kinda looked like the first case victim, a girl that Chief Cha knew back then too.
Made me worried about Young Ae's life.
I was actually a bit scared for Tae Oh when Chief Cha visited him so suddenly after he learned about the tip.
I rather see Tae Oh pay for his crimes in jail and not be another one of Chief Cha's victims.
Speaking of his victims, Ji Wool could be another one with all her encounters with him.
Required fields are marked *
12 john
June 8, 2014 at 2:50 AM
javabeans~
Thanks for the recap. So they really did play a game of chicken. Ok.
I really am ok with it, because I got to see Dr. Maria wearing some white Go-Go boots. Not quite full fledged Go Go boots but still awesome.
Who tipped off Chief Cha that there inquiries into his travel plans?
Why is Chief Cha creeping on Officer Young-ae ? Not to kill another female police officer is it? Watch out Young -ae!
Ji-wol, please be careful. She's so trusting when it comes to men in general and with psychopathic killers in particular.
Ji-wol's candy no longer works on the children, but Chief Cha readily takes it, (taking candy from a baby).
Ji-wol is sweet and Chief Cha's probably itching to kill her. He looks her over as she's buckling up and he has a pleased look on his face. It was creepy. Subtly creepy.
I liked the scene where Chul-gon gives Mu-yeom 's father's DNA back to him. Also, when Maria thanks Profiler Han.
Smooches with Mad Monk and Maria. Looking forward to the next episode and recap.
Required fields are marked *
CaroleMcDonnell
June 8, 2014 at 1:20 PM
ooh, you're so good! IF Chief Cha gets stressed, he might kill again. And yeah...who tipped him off? Someone not in the PD and so was clueless about the info? Someone IN the pd who trusts him or........?
Required fields are marked *
Ennayra
June 11, 2014 at 8:05 PM
I'm getting a little paranoid because very time Cha is in a scene along with someone, I think he's going to kill them. But he's only been alone with people in places where I'm sure there is cctv coverage, or at least I tell myself that in hopes that no other people will die in this show.
Required fields are marked *
13 Ennayra
June 11, 2014 at 8:03 PM
I'm really enjoyiing this show. Not enjoying the fact that the chicken run wasn't a dream sequence. Seriously, how did they break him out of the mental hospital without anyone knowing? I just need to forget about that scene and move on.
I'm really curious as to the mystery of the first murder. And is there any chance that Cha's wife knows something is a little off with her husband? She looked worried when Maria brought the kids over to play with her daughter.
Yoon Sang-hyun is growing on me, as he does in every drama if I'm being honest with myself. He's styled well here - the best I've seen actually. I saw him first in Take Care of the Lady and all I can remember is he wore a lot of plaid. And then he did the lawyer thing for a few dramas - suits are nice, but they were boring suits. I like his rogue cop outfits :-).
Required fields are marked *