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Forest of Secrets: Episode 16 (Final)

It’s the end of the road, and those who have been escaping justice for far too long will be called to pay the price. But the villains in this drama have never been straightforward, and in this final episode, events once again take an unexpected turn. Shi-mok, Yeo-jin, and their team challenge everything they thought they knew before, with the hope that this long fight can finally be over.

 
FINAL EPISODE RECAP

Shi-mok stares at the last picture remaining on his white board, recalling his then-superior Lee Chang-joon telling him that prosecutors were different from those they needed to punish. Just then, Clerk Kim bursts into Shi-mok’s office to inform him that a man with Secretary Woo’s name went to Taipei yesterday. Shi-mok tells him to alert Interpol and arrange to send investigators to Taiwan.

Chairman Lee calls his son-in-law and asks him what he’s plotting by moving Yeon-jae’s money, making her leave the country, and then trying to steal Chairman Lee’s profit from the bank. Chief Secretary Lee says calmly, “Eun-soo… You’re the one who killed her, right?” The chairman tells him to stop being ridiculous, but his son-in-law says that Chairman Lee must have ordered Secretary Woo to do the deed and leave the country.

Chairman Lee asks if he’s doing this for money; after all, the killer was caught already. Chief Secretary Lee says that someone else killed Eun-soo—he would know, because he’s the one who killed CEO Park and attacked Ga-young. Pardon me, but holy shit.

Chairman Lee straightens in his chair. Chief Secretary Lee says that Yoon was only the blade—he himself held the handle of the knife. Chairman Lee asks why, and his son-in-law promises that he’ll find out soon.

He asks Chairman Lee to be honest now that he’s made his own confession, but Chairman Lee denies everything. Seeing an incoming call from Shi-mok, Chief Secretary Lee excuses himself and hangs up, the conversation successfully recorded. Chairman Lee orders one of his secretaries to freeze all of Chief Secretary Lee’s financial accounts.

Shi-mok tells his former boss that he’d like to meet, and asks Yeo-jin to go to Taiwan with Gun to arrest Secretary Woo. Shi-mok informs her that Chief Secretary Lee was Yoon’s accomplice, and tells her where he’s meeting him.

Chairman Lee remembers slapping Secretary Woo when he confessed to killing Eun-soo. Chairman Lee told him to leave the country immediately, and to get rid of the stuff he brought with him, which includes a piece of paper with “DT” on it (the one Eun-soo drew), and a file folder and what looks like a USB.

Now, Chairman Lee’s new secretary informs him that Chief Secretary Lee has a personal safety deposit box at Hanil Bank. Chairman Lee goes there and opens up the safety deposit box, but finds only a blank sheet of paper, much to his frustration.

Dong-jae follows Chief Secretary Lee from the Blue House after overhearing him banning entry to anyone from Hanjo as he left carrying a bag, but he loses him at a traffic light.

Yeo-jin, tracking Chief Secretary Lee’s location, tells Gun that the man is heading to his rendezvous spot with Shi-mok, and wonders why he’s letting himself be tracked so easily.

Shi-mok arrives at an semi-completed building, and finds Chief Secretary Lee on on of the higher floors. (Ack, what are you doing? Why would you meet a murderer in a tall building with no walls?!)

Shi-mok notes the luggage as Lee greets him and says cryptically that he still has a long road ahead. At Shi-mok’s questions, Lee confesses to instigating Yoon to kill CEO Park and hurt Ga-young, but denies responsibility for Eun-soo’s murder.

Shi-mok asks why he did it, and Lee replies that he should have refused to introduce CEO Park to the then-small and unremarkable Hanjo Distribution when CEO Park’s business was failing. He didn’t know then that the company had been purposely kept from the limelight so it could be used for an illegal transfer of assets. He says it’s the one thing he regrets—that misjudgment.

Dong-jae and Yeo-jin both arrive below, surprised to see each other, and look up at the building. Back inside, Shi-mok asks why Chief Secretary Lee asked him to come here. After a pause, Lee comments on the nice weather, then talks about how it will be once he’s arrested, imprisoned, and interrogated by his hoobaes.

“Please come with me,” says Shi-mok. Chief Secretary Lee takes a step back toward the open wall behind him. “Should I become the defeated and get dragged around as a captive? Or shall I choose to vanish on the battleground?” he asks.

“Sunbae-nim,” says Shi-mok, and Lee smiles as he says that he likes the sound of that. Shi-mok walks toward him, and Lee moves back, telling him to slow down. But Shi-mok suddenly lunges forward.

Yeo-jin and Dong-jae turn in shock when a body falls from the building and crashes down on a pile of lumber near them. Yeo-jin approaches the body of Chief Secretary Lee and spots Shi-mok above (although she doesn’t recognize him from that distance) and tells a near-catatonic Dong-jae to stay and guard Lee while she goes to check.

Dong-jae suddenly snaps out of his trance and runs over to his fallen boss, shaking him and begging him to wake up. Lee weakly raises one arm, and Dong-jae clasps his hand and desperately tells him to hold on. “You still have a chance, Dong-jae. Do not… follow my path,” Lee manages to force out, before he goes limp.

Yeo-jin approaches Shi-mok, her weapon cocked, and is dismayed to recognize him. She tells him to raise his hands and turn around, which he does. “Did you push him?” she asks. Meanwhile, in Shi-mok’s office, a breeze blows Lee Chang-joon’s picture to the floor.

Police and paramedics have arrived, and Gun tells Team Leader Choi that Lee jumped off before Shi-mok could even arrest him, after confessing to being Yoon’s accomplice. Team Leader Choi asks if the two men might have fought alone up there, but Gun assures him that Yeo-jin saw Lee jump. Yeo-jin glances over at Shi-mok at this.

Team Leader Choi says he’s not accusing Shi-mok of intentionally pushing Lee, just that he could have done it by mistake while trying to arrest him, but Soon-chang says that Dong-jae also witnessed it.

Chairman Lee’s secretary informs him of his son-in-law’s suicide. The news gives the old man pause for a moment, but he immediately tells his secretary to write a press release saying that Lee Chang-joon committed many corrupt acts while in the prosecutor’s office, that he ordered the murder of CEO Park to cover those crimes up, and that he took his own life out of guilt. The words seem to pain him, but still, that’s cold.

After the secretary leaves, Chairman Lee calls his son-in-law a fool for giving up his life, and tells himself that was just the man’s fate—there was nothing he could do. (Is that a tear I see?)

Shi-mok spreads the contents of Lee Chang-joon’s bag on Chief Prosecutor Kang’s desk. “As a prosecutor, I want to do it,” says Kang, “But Shi-mok-ah… I don’t want to lose this position.” The section chiefs burst in as a group to ask if the news about their former boss is true, which Shi-mok confirms.

Shi-mok sympathetically asks Chief Prosecutor Kang if they should start. After a long moment, Kang agrees that they must, and Shi-mok passes around folders full of documents and USBs to the section chiefs.

They contain two years’ worth of never-before-seen evidence of Hanjo Group’s crimes, including intellectual property infringement, illegal sales of real estate, unlawful transfer of assets, tax evasion, and violating the Foreign Exchange Act. There’s also evidence of them colluding with public officials and politicians to evade the law and influence personnel decisions.

“We’re so dead, aren’t we?” says Chief Prosecutor Kang wryly. After a tense silence, one of the section chiefs holds up his file. “Why should we die? They’re the ones who have to die.” Kang nods and advises a full-on, decisive attack as the only way to emerge victorious. Shi-mok bows and respectfully asks for their help, and the section chiefs nod, determined.

Yeo-jin visits Yoon in jail and tells him that his accomplice confessed and jumped to his death; at his unsurprised reaction, she deduces that this was part of their plan. She asks if Lee Chang-joon told Yoon that Secretary Woo killed Eun-soo, and if that’s why he kept silent. He nods, and she prods for intel about where Woo might be now, but Yoon says he doesn’t know.

After a pause, Yeo-jin comments that he must have thought the rest of the special investigation team were idiots while they searched everywhere looking for the killer while addressing him so politely—they probably looked pathetic to him. Yoon replies that being part of the investigation team was the first time in two years that he felt like he could breathe.

Tears gathering in her eyes, Yes-jin grinds out, “Shall I go tell Mr. Park’s mother that the prick who slashed her son to death said he felt like he could finally breathe? Or shall I go tell Ga-young’s mom?” Unable to hold her tears back any longer, Yeo-jin finally cries.

Yeo-jin: “In this country, there are so many parents who lost their children unfairly. Do all of them brandish knives? You’ve stabbed them, too. They’ve done everything in their power to overcome their losses, and you made all of their efforts go to waste. But you feel like you can breathe now?”

She leaves the room, slamming the door behind her.

The news media is in a frenzy over the newly exposed evidence left behind by Chief Secretary Lee, as teams of prosecutors invade both the Bahn and Hanjo Group headquarters with search and seizure warrants. Yeo-jin’s team also deploys to various locations to investigate all these new leads, while she and Gun head to Taiwan to hunt down Secretary Woo.

Chief Prosecutor Kang and Shi-mok call Bae Sang-wook in for questioning, and when the assemblyman denies everything, they play a recording of his damning recent conversation with Chief Secretary Lee over the intercom.

Chairman Lee arrives at the prosecutor’s office for questioning, swarmed by reporters. He gives them a self-righteous speech about how he’s responsible for 30% of the country’s GDP and has created countless jobs, and how he’s “terrified” that the country will go into decline because of the current “unreasonable rage” against corporations. He declares loudly that history will prove him innocent.

A voice calls out that even toddlers have shame, but that same voice points out that Chairman Lee hasn’t become a human being even after killing someone. It’s Young Il-jae, and Chairman Lee protests that he had nothing to do with Eun-soo’s death, but Young is talking about Lee Chang-joon: “You killed him.”

With that, he leaves Chairman Lee in stunned silence.

Night falls, and Chairman Lee’s interrogation drags on. Yeo-jin and Gun return from Taiwan, Secretary Woo in tow, and slump in exhaustion at their desks. They report that Woo refuses to blame the chairman for anything.

Chief Prosecutor Kang yawns across from Chairman Lee in the interrogation room as the man continues to deny his guilt. Lee says the prosecution is pretending they have decisive evidence against him, but in the end they need him to admit that he did wrong, or they wouldn’t have kept him this long. “But no matter how hard I rack my brain, I’ve only done good things,” he says smugly, and takes his leave.

As Chairman Lee is about to exit the building, Shi-mok and a group of his hoobaes line up to block him. Shi-mok tells Lee to come with them, as a stretching Chief Prosecutor Kang joins them—having held onto Lee just long enough for the arrest warrant to be issued. Ha!

Chairman Lee addresses Shi-mok and tells him that if the Lee family collapses, Korea will collapse. “It won’t collapse,” says Shi-mok flatly, and nods for his colleagues to take the man away.

Shi-mok slouches at his desk, rubbing his head with a sigh. He’s about to call Yeo-jin (aw), when he receives word of a visitor. It’s a coldly furious Yeon-jae, who announces that she’s going to destroy Shi-mok using every means at her disposal for daring to provoke “us.” Shi-mok asks her if that “us” includes her husband, which makes her drop her smile and clench her fist. “You killed him,” she says.

Shi-mok gives her the letter that Chief Secretary Lee left in the bag he gave Shi-mok. Lee’s voice narrates as Yeon-jae reads, and we see him sitting at his desk that last day, writing his suicide note. He says that the country is collapsing, as is the safety and security of ordinary people. For nineteen years, he says, he’s watched that hole of destruction grow as he arrested pitiful, poverty-stricken people during the day and spent his nights entertaining the filthy rich and helping them escape justice.

Lee says that if the corruption had been moderate, he’d have ignored it and enjoyed its benefits, but at a certain point it became unbearable. He asks that the evidence in the bag be declared confiscated from him while on the run, not the belongings of a traitor who stabbed his father-in-law in the back. Lee asks to be remembered as a chaebol’s loyal dog, comfortable until his final moments, because he knows that’s the only way for the evidence to be useful and credible.

We see him watching Yeon-jae as she slept, secretly recording meetings where shady deals went down, meticulously recording phone conversations, and snooping through Chairman Lee’s office.

His letter continues that the corruption in this country is no longer just a malaise; it’s taking countless lives. He says that neither time nor money can save this failed system, only the blood sacrifice of many people. We see Lee’s body fall from the building again, and Shi-mok and Yeo-jin discovering his letter.

Lee Chang-joon: “We’ve already missed the time it could’ve been healed by normal means. I must not forbear any longer. I should not wait for someone else to clean up the filth in my place. If I wait and stay silent, this entire country will be covered in filth in no time. Now, I ought to open my mouth, point at those who have done wrong and reveal the secret behind the curtains that had been kept closed. I hope that this is the beginning.”

Yeon-jae finishes reading the letter, places it on the table, and silently leaves. Shi-mok watches her go.

At his trial, former police chief Kim pleads guilty to all of his charges and declines a defense, with Team Leader Choi and a tearful Soo-chan watching in the audience. When the judge asks him why, Kim says that he wants to apologize to the police officers who are working hard for honor and justice, and that he hopes they won’t turn out like him. The judge sentences him to three and a half years in jail.

Yeo-jin questions an up-and-moving Ga-young about the other men she met, but the girl irritably says that she’s still sick and she doesn’t remember. Her mother comes to pick her up, but Ga-young is back to her old self and complains that her mom is embarrassing before telling her to go away. Yeo-jin was walking away, but at this, she turns around and comes back.

Yeo-jin lifts her notebook as if to smack Ga-young, and the mother immediately covers her daughter’s head protectively. Yeo-jin tells Ga-young to look at what her mother is doing despite how rude she’s being to her. She says that Ga-young is incredibly lucky to be alive after her ordeal—she’d better reassess how she’s using this second chance.

Yeo-jin and Gun join Jung-bon and Shi-mok’s clerks to celebrate Jung-bon’s new job at a big law firm. They wonder what Shi-mok is doing, but soon catch him on TV, being interviewed on the talk show he appeared on two months ago. The host remarks that Shi-mok has kept his promise of catching the culprit, with only a few days to go on his self-imposed time limit. Shi-mok agrees, but says that he’s here today to say something.

Shi-mok says that the evidence left by Lee Chang-joon had not been collected as insurance against the betrayal of his co-conspirators, as had been officially announced according to Lee’s final wishes. The host is surprised to find out that Lee was willing to disgrace his name in order to give the evidence more weight, and Shi-mok’s friends murmur in sudden sympathy. The host wonders if one should look at Lee as a criminal or a righteous man.

“He was a monster,” says Shi-mok. He says that Lee killed someone thinking it was a sacrifice for the greater good, but no life is less valuable than another, adding that Lee deluded himself into thinking that he had the right to mete out punishment, and was a monster created by these times.

Shi-mok quotes Yeo-jin’s words after Kyung-wan was beaten, about people being able to do corrupt things because they can get away with them, and says that if people keep their eyes open and speak up, things will change. That’s the prosecutors’ job, points out the host.

At that, we see Chief Prosecutor Kang watching from his office, as does Young Il-jae from his home.

Shi-mok acknowledges that they’ve failed as prosecutors by bending the law for the wealthy and powerful and by protecting criminals instead of ordinary citizens. He says that Lee Chang-jun was the accumulation of those failures and the prosecutors were his accomplices. Shi-mok bows his head to apologize as he says that he still feels they have a chance, and quotes his mentor’s words that their most powerful weapon is the constitution.

Shi-mok: “The prosecution will no longer
be swayed by those with power, and rise again to fight. We’ll exercise our rights on indictment accurately. We’ll remember that the people are the ones who truly hold the power to appoint us, and devote ourselves to you. We’ll take responsibility. We’ll strive to become fairer and more honest. We’ll do our best to make sure another such monster will never emerge from our ranks.”

Smiles and nods spread through the studio audience as he speaks, and when Shi-mok ends his speech with a bow, he’s greeted with applause.

Jung-bon says he can understand Yoon a little for losing his young child so horribly and then watching the criminals get away scot-free. Gun says that’s no excuse to take the law into his own hands, though, especially when there are still people like Shi-mok and and Yeo-jin, and even Gun.

Clerk Kim is just happy to see Shi-mok being awesome on TV and predicts that he’ll get promoted to section chief this time, and does a cute dance. Clerk Choi reminds him that Shi-mok is probably going to the U.S., and the mood instantly deflates. Yeo-jin looks disappointed.

Dong-jae catches Shi-mok outside his home, saying that he watched the show and he wants to honor Chief Secretary Lee’s last words. “Believe in me this once, Shi-mok,” he says. He takes Shi-mok’s hand and pleads for one last chance.

Chairman Lee arrives for his trial in a wheelchair, and he claims over and over to the reporters mobbing him that he’s ill.

Jung-bon takes Kyung-wan with him to see Yoon, whom his law firm will represent, on the young man’s request. Kyung-wan asks Yoon, “Did killing my father make you feel better? I heard you lost your son in an accident. I lost my father at your hands.” He asks if Yoon is satisfied, if things went the way he wanted. Yoon just cries, unable to speak.

Kyung-wan waits for a bit, but when he gets no response, he gets up to leave. “I’m sorry,” Yoon finally says to Kyung-wan’s turned back. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry.” Kyung-wan closes his eyes, gives a shaky nod, and leaves without looking back.

Outside the prison, Kyung-wan thanks Jung-bon, and tells him that he got a job at a golf course. Jung-bon congratulates him.

Shi-mok tells Chief Prosecutor Kang that Secretary Woo is still insisting that he acted alone, and they have no proof that Chairman Lee ordered Eun-soo’s murder. Kang tells him to go after the Hanjo corruption charges first.

Kang reflects that they’re nearing the end now—they’ve investigated nearly everything in the files. He tells Shi-mok that his U.S. trip has been canceled; he’s being transferred to Namhae (on the southern coast). Kang reveals that Chief Secretary Lee was the one who brought both of them here and gave them the power to investigate this case, even though they’d both been in unfavorable positions.

Shi-mok recalls something Lee said to him before he died: that he searched for someone to give his burden to for a long time. “I thought he made me into the chief prosecutor to appease me, but he was actually looking for someone to support you.”

Kang grumbles that they should really be giving Shi-mok an award, and apologizes. Shi-mok says that it’s okay. “You did support me,” he says, and thanks him with a bow and a faint smile. Aww. I love these two together.

As he walks out, Shi-mok remembers Chief Secretary Lee’s final moments, and now we see a part of the conversation we weren’t shown before. In the building, Lee had told him that he believed in Shi-mok’s integrity and knew he wouldn’t be swayed, but would unflinchingly chase the criminals to the end. He’d contemplated for a long time who he should give this burden to, and Shi-mok was the only answer.

Shi-mok called him sunbae-nim, as we saw before, and Lee smiled to hear it. Now, Shi-mok remembers all the moments Lee promoted him and singled him out for attention; he remembers Lee’s vow never to stand before him as a defendant. And then those final steps backward, asking Shi-mok to approach more slowly… Shi-mok closes his eyes, then looks up for a moment as though trying to stop tears.

Yeo-jin arrives at the police station to applause and ribbing from her teammates, who ask to meet her boyfriend so they can check him out. She finds a bouquet on her desk, with a note from Jung-bon congratulating her on her promotion.

Yeo-jin dismisses it as a friendly gesture, but Gun says that he got promoted too, and he didn’t get anything—Jung-bon is clearly making a play. Yeo-jin finds lipstick as well, which leads to more giggles from her colleagues. She tells them to stop being ridiculous and get back to work, but she goes to the bathroom later and puts it on. She’s admiring herself when she gets a text from Clerk Choi, telling her about Shi-mok’s transfer.

Yeo-jin meets Shi-mok at a pojangmacha that evening, and she notes fondly that he’s even drinking alone now. He grumbles mildly that she’s late, and she tells him not to be so stiff, or else he’ll end up alone in Namhae.

She asks what he’ll do with his apartment, and when he says he’ll lease it, she tilts her head at him and tells him to rent it to her for a reduced price. He flatly says he’s already listed it for much higher, haha.

Yeo-jin tells him to sleep on her porch when he comes to Seoul, though the wind might freeze his face, and he says that he will. He pours her a drink and congratulates her on her promotion, and Yeo-jin says with regret that her promotion ceremony is tomorrow, at the same time he’s leaving. Shi-mok asks why that matters, and she rolls her eyes and tells him to forget it. Dear Lord, this man.

Yeo-jin asks if he’s done with his work, and Shi-mok says that he is, except for Dong-jae, whom he’s left to Chief Prosecutor Kang. She asks why Shi-mok didn’t arrest Dong-jae, and Shi-mok replies that he never trusted Eun-soo, even though she begged him to so many times. So he’s not going to believe in Dong-jae either, but he’ll watch him.

Yeo-jin takes out her notebook and gives him a drawing she made of him, telling him laughingly to look at her gift and practice smiling. He makes a face, but puts it in his breast pocket. (On the left, next to his heart. Just saying.)

Yeo-jin asks why they’re sending him to Namhae, and Shi-mok tells her that a lot of the higher-ups have been arrested, but they’ll probably soon be released on special pardons.

Yeo-jin lifts her glass. “Goodbye, though I won’t be able to see you off.” Shi-mok lifts his. “Good luck in your new position, though I won’t be able to watch the ceremony.” She smiles, and they clink glasses and drink.

The pojangmacha owner brings Shi-mok his noodles, and Yeo-jin complains that he only got one bowl—besides, wasn’t the soup here too salty? He whispers that the owner has changed, which makes her laugh. Shi-mok asks what happened to her lips (she’s still wearing the lipstick), and she laughs again while touching them, asking if it’s pretty. He tells her it looks strange. Can I just watch these two doing this forever?

Yeo-jin and Gun are given special awards for their hard work in catching the two murderers, and are both promoted one rank. They salute their colleagues in the audience, and their team members give them a standing ovation.

Meanwhile, Shi-mok says goodbye to his clerks, thanking them for everything, and they thank him as well and tell him to take care of himself. He shakes their hands and smiles at them, and they sadly watch him drive away.

Clerk Choi and Clerk Kim return dispiritedly to their office, only to find out that Dong-jae is their new superior. As he settles in to Shi-mok’s old office, he receives a phone call that makes him go shifty-eyed. He closes his blinds before reclining in his chair and schmoozing like nothing at all has changed. Oh, Dong-jae.

Yeon-jae visits her husband’s grave. “You should have told me,” she says tearfully. She asks him if he’s at peace where he is now, and cries as she apologizes.

Next, we see her entering her father’s old office; she’s now the CEO of Hanjo Group, and her secretary (Chief Secretary Lee’s former assistant) calls someone to let the chairman know that they’re working on getting his arrest suspended.

Ten months later. Shi-mok drives along the southern coast, changing channels on the radio, when he stops on a song that reminds him of a trial he watched as a young man. Then-Section Chief Lee Chang-joon had played the song for the judge, saying that the song was banned in 1968 for showing Japanese influence. He read from the original poem, which describes a homeland that has been corrupted by lies, its people turned to slaves, who must endure pain and humiliation.

Lee apologized to the poet, who had been fired from his teaching position back then, and thanks him for his wisdom. Shi-mok’s fellow students had clapped along with the rest of the audience, whispering that it would be amazing to serve such a great section chief.

In the present, the radio switches over to the news: The prime minister is being criticized for abusing his power, and of course, he denies all charges.

Shi-mok arrives at work soon after and receives a call from Chief Prosecutor Kang, who asks him to return to Seoul. The National Assembly has unanimously chosen Shi-mok to lead a special investigation into the prime minister’s corruption scandal. Kang tells him to be there in two days—and to do something about Dong-jae when he comes too, because the man hasn’t changed a bit. Shi-mok agrees.

Shi-mok gazes at the picture from that fateful dinner party at Yeo-jin’s, which he has framed and sitting on his filing cabinet. He returns to his desk and is about to return to work when he looks up at his computer screen, where he’s clipped Yeo-jin’s gift. Shi-mok smiles—a warm, real smile.

 
COMMENTS

Waaaah, it’s over! What an epic, moving, incredible finale. I can’t discuss everything I loved about this show, because then this would be a thesis (the dialogue in this episode alone was so good that I had to restrain myself from quoting every line). This episode was all about Lee Chang-joon, who is truly the most complex, sympathetic, realistic villain I have ever seen in a drama. His path to corruption was both relatable and tragic, because he started his career with so much idealism and heart, inspiring his hoobaes to be good men. Shi-mok modeled his own moral code as a prosecutor after Lee’s, and I think that’s why he was so harsh on him in his speech on TV—the disappointment was that much greater when Shi-mok found out the true depth of his superior’s corruption. And yet he still genuinely grieved for him.

The two men always had such a fraught, tense relationship, locked as they were in a cold war since the beginning of the drama. Yet even as they were challenging each other openly and undercutting one another secretly, there was always a sense of mutual respect and admiration for the other’s abilities. Their history was unspoken, but it was there (and the same echoes of a broken past relationship were present in every scene between Lee Chang-joon and Young Il-jae).

In the end, even though Lee chose Shi-mok as his warrior, the one to carry out the fight he’d been preparing for for so long, his redemption was incomplete. Lee was brave enough to secretly collect all the information needed to take down Hanjo and its associates, but he lacked the courage to live and pay for his crimes—in the end, he took both his own life and the lives of CEO Park and Ga-young far too lightly. As Shi-mok said, Lee deluded himself into thinking that he had the right to make judgments about the value of a human life, which no person has.

Besides, the real work is not done by one dramatic gesture, nor by a succession of blood sacrifices as Lee wrote in his suicide note. Shi-mok refuses to subscribe to the notion that more people must die in order to fix the rotten ways of the world. Shi-mok sees his duty in conducting every part of his job as a prosecutor with integrity and courage, refusing to back down on the “small” things, because closing one’s eyes to even those will lead to more corruption down the line. I love that Shi-mok quoted Yeo-jin about this in his interview, because she’s the one who taught him that it’s not worth sacrificing one’s morals in the present in the hopes of a bigger victory in the future—which is exactly what Lee Chang-joon did, and what led to his eventual transformation into the monster that Shi-mok described.

It was wonderful to see all of our characters get satisfying endings, even if some of the baddies didn’t exactly get their just desserts. It’s fitting that a show with the heartbreaking realism of Forest of Secrets would leave us with a system still riddled with corruption, where the powerful and the slimy are up to their old tricks, but our team members are still fighting their hardest to catch them.

This show has never given us the slightest whiff of preachy-ness, but it leaves us with a timely and surprisingly encouraging message: The fight against evil is not a sprint, but a marathon. We win if we continue to fight; the ones who have lost are those who lose themselves to temptation, to greed, to revenge and arrogance. The system is undoubtedly flawed, but it serves the people—and the authority to mete out justice is vested in the power the citizens have given to law enforcement, and not the prerogative of any one person.

And finally, Yeo-jin and Shi-mok! I was disappointed when Shi-mok was transferred so far away, but I’m not mad. It gave us that lovely farewell scene in the pojangmacha, with Yeo-jin laughing and teasing Shi-mok, and him watching her with quiet enjoyment as he answered all her questions with a comfort and openness that belies the stiff, uncommunicative prosecutor we met at the start of this show.

And that picture! I was giggling like a giddy teenager at the entire exchange. He grumbles every time she gives him a drawing, but I love that he keeps them all safe, and I think it’s very logical to assume that she has a special place in his heart considering that he looked at her picture every day for ten months, and smiles at the thought of seeing her again. (Also her asking if she looks pretty in that lipstick? My ship has sailed, I don’t care what anyone says.)

The show has left us with that perfect ending that we get so rarely: It’s superbly positioned for a second season, but the story feels complete, and it gave us excellent resolutions for all its plot lines and characters. So while I’d love another season because Shi-mok, Yeo-jin, and their motley gang have grown so dear to me (and because I will watch anything this writer does, from now until I die), I’m okay with leaving it here, too. I can imagine all these characters continuing on their adventures, forever changed by this one investigation that brought them together and shook up their world.

 
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That scene that had Shi Mok lunged forward as LCJ stepped backwards to the edge? The anguish-stricken look on Shi Mok's face as he realised what was happening? That just killed it. Together with his "sumbae-nim..."

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Are chaebol's really so powerful that they can open other people's personal safe deposit boxes and freeze their accounts? Scary if it's true. Kinda scary even just that it's believable enough to Koreans to put into a show.

And one of the fun things about watching kdramas is seeing what kinds of things are credible enough show to Korean audiences. I used to think the common "make a phone call - kill the story" bit was hard to take, until I read about an actual Korean politician being recorded bragging that he could do exactly that. Now I'll believe almost anything.

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According to some Korean news stories, it is more common than it should be. Most of the people tossed in jail for the Sewol disaster got there because of corruption, not action on the ferry. But yeah, the "make a phone call" to kill the media is 95% BS. Korea is the most wired nation in the world - anyone smart enough to dig dirt is smart enough to upload stuff to US servers and YouTube.

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Actually, the make-a-call thing is REAL. Just a few years ago South Korea had an epic Prime Minister blowup. They had a vacancy, and the first 2 nominees got rejected because of some sort of scandals. Then the president (the one who just got tossed out) nominated a real mister-clean type, but soon after a recording surfaced of him bragging that he could kill any news story with a phone call. Really. He didn't deny having said it, but he got confirmed anyway -- a cynic might say because they were out of candidates how could even pretend to be clean.

Then some businessman who had been called to testify about something committed suicide (yes, that happens too) and left behind a note listing people he had paid bribes to. You guessed it, the new PM's name was on the list. And he finally met a story he couldn't kill. So now I'll believe almost anything.

But back to my post above, I would have thought South Korean banks would keep safe deposit boxes, you know, "safe" and it would have been harder to get into someone else's than to kill a news story. Was I wrong?

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That was my thought and question exactly!!! Is it really so easy for someone with money and connections to get into other people's safe deposit boxes?

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I might not have this right, but I think in the previous episode they discussed a bank owned by the family, so maybe all the accounts in question are in banks controlled by Chairman Lee. It still shouldn't be that easy, though.

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When i first started this drama because my sister said "you should check this drama" me:why? Sis "because this is the type of drama you would watch. Dark, thriller kind of drama" (she's a rom-com type but she understands me well) . Never would i expect her recommendation turned to be my happiest drama dose ever. And i think i've turn out to be a bit smart after watching this wonderful drama, thanks to all the brain-exercises.

Lee Chang Joon, i always love villains more than hero, and you top all the villains i have in my list before. Thanks to the writer & director for giving such life and explaination to the character, it was great 16 episodes of know him. I usually don't judge villain much since a story doesn't give more than 1 background story of why villain changed to monster, but this drama open up intellectual discussion of a character, just from the 16 episodes. I agree on someone's comment on ep 15 that drama-school should use this drama as reference for their teaching.

Before this, i agree on recapper saying that she wish they would go deeper into ShiMok's brain surgery story/after-effect, but now i see why it's a powerful device in this story. ShiMok being chosen to carry the burden because he's so rational. Lee Changjoon might become like ShiMok if he's having the same surgery? Probably. But the realism came from YeoJin, who for me is the most real character -for everyday people- out of the main characters (you can't get a neighbor like Shimok or Lee family easily in daily life) but YeoJin represents 'us'. What we can do, we should do, amidst the corruption that surrounds us, no matter which country or which side of the world we live in.

This is exactly my 1st comment about this drama back in ep 2: this drama is like everyday life, no exaggeration, no dramatic responses, just straight to cases and handle it the way it should be.

And Seo Deongjae as the character i always write on the comments, i like the closure on him because it feels closed to my job. People can't change overnight, even if there's huge murder happened near them.

Oh Yoon~ i nearly cry again when i read the recap of him asking for forgiveness from Park's son. I can imagine the scene exactly, right now. Amazing actors, both Yoon & the son.

"Yeo-jin takes out her notebook and gives him a drawing she made of him, telling him laughingly to look at her gift and practice smiling. He makes a face, but puts it in his breast pocket. (On the left, next to his heart. Just saying.)"

-I silently clap my hands under my table in office. I giggled like a child. The ship definitely sailed-
That said, this is an awesome recap. And also on other 15 episodes. Thank you thank you thank you. My life is a lot happier for having a place where i can read & agree on this drama. Beanies of Forest of Secrets, i will miss you!

*i can write thesis too if i were to comment on each single awesome thing of this drama. I shall stop here*

I won't...

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Wait, a new case? I smell second season.... ❤❤

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Shi-mok is one of the kind. I will miss him so much.

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Our Building of Doom here looks a lot like the one from Lookout. New recurring character?

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Exactly what crossed my mind. Look, another prosecutor teetering on the edge!

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I hope it won't become the new, upgraded version of "Truck of Doom".

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Is Truck of Doom planning to retire soon?

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Maybe he should (Truck of Doom), seeing how many misses he had in this show.

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This drama always had ways to stun me. I was not prepared for Lee Chang Joon's suicide. His whole mission and sacrifice was so sad.

Forest of Secrets is one of the best and most satisfying dramas I've ever seen. Maybe the only one that was well-written from beginning to end without a wasted moment. There were some moments that lingered on some characters and their expressions, but I never felt bored. The BGM was nicely done too. Never distracting. This entire show felt like a deep and intelligent film experience.

I'm so happy that Jo Seung Woo had such a great role in such an excellent drama too. I really liked him since seeing him in God's Gift - 14 Days (but this drama ended on a very bad note).

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"This entire show felt like a deep and intelligent film experience"

Exactly! I'm honestly reluctant to even call this a drama, bc it's so refreshingly unconventional by any k-drama standards.
Someone mentioned this before, but it really was just like a 16-hour film

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There are many similar real life political corruption incidents that this writer used as inspirations for her story ??.

In the back of my mind from the last presidential scandal:
-Corruption, bribery, embezzlement and the abuse of power.
Most notably between The former CEO of construction firm Keangnam Enterprises Sung Wan-jong and the former Pres Park's people.
Sung's suicide note implicated several high government officials, from Prime Minister Lee to Park's chief of staff Lee Byung-kee etc etc....
- Large chaebols Companies. Their powerful role in the country's economy, tax evasions, foreign bribery etc etc.
-nuclear power scandal (a bit older though)
- prosecution system (corruption and unfairness).
Pres Moon is or has established an independent body empowered to investigate and indict all top-ranking government officials.
-improper interrogation and human rights issues.
- and more.....

This show felt like a current day sageuk to me and loved it. Hundreds of years from today some writer and director might make a real sageuk out of this lol.

I love the realistic ending for most if not all of our characters.
Chairman Lee was basically right about the contributions of large chaebol companies to the country's economy but he forgot to mention the corruption part of it lol.
Yoon who was consumed with revenge found out the hard way that revenge does not make it right or make one feel better. He is no different from CEO Park but he is less of a monster at least he realized it and apologized to his son.
Then there are those who are incapable or not ready to change like Dong-jae and Ga-young. I was waiting for Yeo-jin to bitch slap that girl.
Lee Chang-joon wow! Yoo Jae-myung ?.

Thank you all for making this drama a fun and intriguing watch ? ??....

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Shi Mok's warm smile at the end was so sweet!! ❤️❤️❤️

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ahh it was the cutest! all the more cuter because it was so rare in this drama.

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I also love that at the end they replayed all the moments when he smiled, my heart was warmed even more ♥♥♥

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Thank you for the lovely, thoughtful recaps! This show is sooo far above the rest of the shows. There were so many awesome moments in this episode that truly deserved standing ovation. The dialogues were so smartly written and with the subtle FoS opening theme playing during Shi-mok's interview, it gave a feeling of hope and belief and the drive to do the right thing at the right moment. I loved how he quoted all the people who had helped and supported him during that time. Especially Yeo-Jin.

Yeo-jin! She is my ultimate girl-crush ever!!! ❤ She was so warm, friendly, funny, caring, supportive while being unrelenting in her morals, fierce, and soooo badass! She cracked Shi-mok's unfeeling exterior and thus formed the most awesome duo ever to be on TV! It's so adorable how Shi-mok formed a normal friendship bond with her with teasing and relaxing and just comfortable in her presence. Also in my heart, they go further than friends in my heart because it's difficult to
stop fantasising about my ship! ?

Lee Chang-jun made a terrific villian. Murdering and hurting for the greater good has been a well debated topic in many novels but this show showed the more sympathetic side to Lee's downfall. Going from being the good, upright, cool prosecutor admired by his hoobaes, to a corrupt individual deluded and driven to expose the prevailing corrupt at all cost, with no need to collateral damage in the process. His love for his wife was bittersweet. They had a complicated relationship but loved each other nevertheless.

Overall this show is hands down the best show of 2017. I am grateful to all the beanies who made me watch this show by posting FoS related posts. I am gonna follow this writer to my death! Forest of Secrets rocks! ❤

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What a beautiful ending! I agree with all the other beanie comments about the show and it's villain. I would like to add my thanks to the recappers (@laica and @sailorjumun) for their wonderful recaps and thoughtful analysis. I had a great time discussing this drama with fellow beanies.

I'm very happy that Shi-Mok and Yeo-Jin ended happy and safe by the end of the show. My favorite scenes were Yeo-Jin's ceremony and Shi-Mok and Yeo-Jin drinking at the pojangmacha. I needed these happy scenes to recover from all that happened before. I loved that the writer did not romanticize corruption or vigilante justice. I loved that Shi-Mok and Yeo-Jin were able to be clear eyed about the possible outcomes of all their hard work. They didn't expect that everything would be fixed and become ideal and instead took even the not so good outcomes in stride (special pardons, transfer to a remote place, etc.). What great characters. Yeo-Jin in particular is one of my all time favorite characters. A great role model.

This show was one of the best drama viewing experiences I have had in a really long time. I wish the writer will do another show hopefully with the same cast soon.

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I hope this drama will set a higher bar for all the other police/criminal dramas to come. It was well written, had the perfect cast and left me wanting more after each episode. A perfect world would consist of season after season of this drama.

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No kidding. I am so tired of seeing all the totally inept cops in dramas used as a bad plot device.

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Yeo-jin and Shi-mok are the best non-romantic romantic couple EVER!

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I just ship them indefinitely whether they become good friends or something more later ♥

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This show truly was brilliant. I loved the subtle yet powerful approach of the show from the acting, the sound effects, camera work and so on. There were no hysterical crying but I cried with all of them. From Yoon's grief, Lee Chang-joon's silent goodbye, Yeo-jin's sorrow and even Dongjae made me believe that he will truly change after seeing him cry and hearing Secretary Lee's final advise to him. I also appreciate that the case was solved one clue at a time and how everyone from the police, the clerks and the prosecutors all contributed in solving the puzzle. Just like the real world. It's not just Shimok or Yeo-jin suddenly connecting the dots and dramatically saving the day. There were no grand speeches but for me the message the show was trying to convey to its audience was made loud and clear.

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Rest assured those late night phone calls did not end when shi mok left seoul. It seems to me he phones her whenever he feels stressed or lonely. <3

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< It seems to me he phones her whenever he feels stressed or lonely

And the show hinted at that – I really like that the show gave us that tinsy tiny moment that at the end of a hard day Shi Mok was about to call Yeo Jin just before Yeon-jae paid him a visit. They could have just gone straight to her visit, but inserted that detail. Which is precisely what makes the show so good. Because details like that accumulate and give us insight into the character (and thus YJ & SM's friendship/relationship) more effectively and genuinely than all the overly dramatic gestures in rom coms ever manage.

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All the little on-spot details are one thing that made this show so good.

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I felt like the ending was quite rushed and I wish there was more detail on exactly what the case against hanjo was. it was just kind of oh documents said hanjo is corrupt and so be it. and then the show ended

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And thank you also Laica for the brill recaps 

This show was just superb. Tight plotting, nuanced characters and a story that was real post-impeachment, post-Sewol, state of the nation stuff - something that takes it well above the common or garden thriller. And overall, of course, a damned good watch.

The last episodes showcased so much of what made is special. This isn’t a world of black and white – we didn’t get fed a single view of Yoon, e.g. So many povs on his actions over the last 2 epis – perspectives from the cop, his victim’s son, his co-workers, and his ‘sponsor’. No easy answer – we go from a heart-breaking comment about the autopsy to our most empathetic character bluntly calling him out for murder.

Similarly the magnificent Yoo Jae-Myung, the grand manipulator at the centre of everything. A man who condoned a murder, participated in fraud, culpable on all levels – but who believed every word of that speech he gave HSM when he was nearly arrested and ensured he, and the wonderful Kang, were in place to enact his plan. You realised very early this episode that he intended to die but so early was a shock. But perfectly timed – his voice coming back to explain his actions midway and at the end as a reminder of where he started. The only annoying thing in the entire series was Netflix translated ‘sunbaenim (sp?’) as his name, missing all of the layers of that word when HSM used it. There wasn’t a note wrong in any performance, and obviously CSW & BDM were superb, but YJM’s performance will be hard to beat this year.

And it was funny. Kang’s ‘we’re so dead aren’t we’ mirroring Idiot Kim’s earlier ‘we’re screwed, aren’t we boss’: the poor Division heads every time they ended up in a room with HSM: and, super-spy Dong-Jae. If you’d told me he’d be alive by the end a few weeks ago I’d have laughed but his cockroach survival skills as he bounced between everyone happily telling them what he knew (even if it was about cranes from somewhere) just made you smile and you could see why almost the last line was Kang’s ongoing exasperation with him (poor little office minions!). The fact he’d managed to ransack the office and apparently miss everything in that bag was more than a little hilarious – but not as much as when HSM bluntly told him to die so he’d find out who the culprit was.

I’ve been recommending this everywhere to people who’ve not watched a Korean show before. Sure there are some bits they won’t get – like when LYB finally turns up in court in a wheelchair, chaebol speak for ‘I’ve lost’ (explainable to anyone in the UK as the Ernest Saunders defence). But it was the 2nd my husband had watched and now he’s asked me what’s next, pointing out how high I’ve set the bar. Where on earth do I go from here except down!

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Nothing, maybe Signal becausr its almost as good. Missing Noir M, possibly. Goodluck this is a tough act to follow.

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About Netflix, they translated sunbaenim that way because there is no equivalence words in english to express it. That's just too bad but at least this translation is available to anyone, whether they watch a lot of kdramas or not.

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Signal. Misaeng.

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What a wonderful show! I thought Tunnel was the drama of the year for me but NOT anymore because FOS takes the cake undoubtedly! When are you gonna see a show that only has one case for the WHOLE drama and still not get bored? And the fact that you will suspect everyone of who is the big bad boy of the show (yes, including Shi Mok and Yeo Jin).

Is it just me that is having a hard time watching current dramas airing because I am still in awe of the perfect ending (especially Criminal Minds because I can't help comparing it because of the same genre)? Help me!!!!!

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season 2?????

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While Jung Bon may be a minor character, I appreciate the steps he'd done in bridging Yoon and Park's son. I thought that was very hopeful. Yes, the misdeeds can't be undone, but remorse and forgiveness for them is something I hope for, and it's for their own good.

Another thing is how Jung Bon and Det. Jang didn't have a good start, but they ended up being friends.

A phenomenal series. I've never felt this away about any series before, and never have I been so emotionally invested in the characters.

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The smile that can be interpreted in many ways (Mok-nalisa smile? don't kill me):
1. This guy is pretty cute, and Yeo-jin said it's drawn after me so I must be pretty cute myself *smirk*
2. Oh yay! I'm going to be housemate with Yeo-jin soon!!

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Moknalisa smile? LOL!

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Yes! Housemates.

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Forest of Secrets : thank you for such an amazing ride :) ?!
Plot, acting, production, show you delivered everything so well from the start until the end.
Without hesitating one of my fav’ dramas, just as Signal was the highlight of 2016, I think we find his little bro for 2017 ^^ .
I usually don't like open ending, but there are a few with which I feel satisfied : Gaksital, Signal and Forest of Secrets, I might not recall all, but these ones are memorable.
Goodbye Shi-Mok and all characters, take care and maybe see you in a season 2 ;) * don't forget to smile :) *
Paksu ???

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I'm wrecked. Where to go after this? Since watching the last episode, every drama I tune into sounds like Charlie Brown's teacher and I find myself getting snarky äbout the acting or the plot or the dialogue. Secret Forest, you were perfect in every way. Now what??

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LOL! - no kidding. Just last night I tried to watch School 2017, and quit about 7 minutes in as they pulled the 9,874th version of how Stupid Korean Girls Cannot Ride a Bike.

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<9,874th version of how Stupid Korean Girls Cannot Ride a Bike

...cannot ride a bike, leaves it in the middle of the street somewhere unlocked, somehow gets it back on campus, throws a hissy fit that broken chain hasn't been magically fixed.

Now what? Is a good question indeed, sigh.

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Can't believe it's over, i will miss this drama so much :(

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Well damnit. I'm busy this morning, but I can't NOT comment on this finale.
For the moment, I'll just say that this show was so amazing and such a great ride. Definitely set a new standard for me.

Thank you @laica and @sailorjumun for the great recaps that heightened the experience of watching this show.
And ofc all you wonderful beanies for the great discussions and insights. I'll check y'all comments later today❤️

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I am at the airport, about to board a flight and still commenting!

At least by the time I'm at my first layover (in 2-3 hours), I'll have more comments to read....

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It is hard too see this drama go, even if I am completly satisfied with it. Ever since finishing the last episode, I feel empty inside (the way I felt after finishing the last Harry Potter book) and I will need a mourning period before starting something new.

So I would like to address my thanks to Laica, Sailorjumun and Heads for promoting such a wonderful show.

Thanks as well for the beanies who followed and commented this show with such passion. I feel we weren't many to watch it, but we watched it and loved it harder for that!

Of course, I wish to express my admiration for all the drama team: writer, director, actors, etc. I am so impressed at the result and the trust this show put into its audience.

I love that ending which was so in line with reality: no lobotomy here, no drastic change of history, only a small but hard won success for people who fight their hardest with courage and principles to uphold the law.

Of course there would never be enough of Yeo Jin and Shi Mock's relationship to satisfy me. But I know that they have formed such a deep relationship that my imagination can take over to their own kind of happily ever after!

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This show was BRILLIANT for start to end! Loved the ending n keeping my fingers crossed for a season 2?

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And its a SMILE!!

I am just going to make it short and say, this drama literally made my weekends for the past 2 months and i am so gonna miss this incredible show and the characters whom i have grown so fond of.

I am gonna miss the team interactions and most importantly my OTP ship Yeo-Jin and Shi mok scenes. They are so adorable and they really suit well together. The ending scene is PERFECT!

Can i say, that i partly watched this drama to see more of Shi-mok's smiles. Though there were very moments, but when he smiles, it tugs your heart. Who would have thought we would go crazy seeing a male lead smile.. Only SOF can do this to us.

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Ah yes, the perfect ending with that well-practised but natural smile. Now that he's got it down right, he can practise it in front of the team and surprise everyone LOL. ?

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yup, and this is why we need a season 2 ASAP to witness all of these things, and all our imaginations come to life, but i doubt that they will continue with another season, because the ending seemed to give closure to all characters.

I must say this show ruined other shows for me.. I want to watch shows which are on par with this show .. All other dramas have become washed out infront of this amazing drama..

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when he smiled, i literally squealed out loud "oh my god, the baby's been PRACTISING!!" i'm pretty sure i should be really ashamed, but i think i'm too far down the hwang shi-mok shaped rabbit hole for salvation LOL.

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I didn't realize it's been two months. So the show was basically real time!

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I have postponed this drama after episode 1 because I know I won't be able to wait for their next episode while live-watching. Now I can binge watch this drama safely :)

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Who wants another season with our irritating and irrepressible Dong Jae feeling the sharp end of the whip and jumping to attention whenever Shi Mok is around? ?

I definitely want a new season with Shi Mok choosing all his previous team-mates for his next Special Investigation Team, and stealing back his two Clerks from Dong Jae. ?

And not only lots of scenes of the group having meals, and Yeo Jin and Shi Mok at Pojangmachas but also scenes of Chief Pros Kang and Shi Mok having informal chats and drinks. ?

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I started watching it again from the beginning. Knowing how it ends, it's like watching a new show, and I'm seeing new details or interpreting them a different way. I'm paying a lot more attention to Chief Kang, who I kind of ignored first time around. Also, in just the first three episodes it's even more apparent that Dong Jae is somehow both really good and bad at his subterfuge.

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Dong Jae was such a bully with Yeo Jin over the phone. I really wanted him to get smacked. He's been getting away with too much. I want another season of him suffering. LOL.

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The biggest mystery in the show is how that guy managed to avoid jail, or at least a punch by Yeo Jin. But I binged the first few episodes again last night, and while I thought before maybe he had a bit of a crush on Eun Soo, now I think there's actually a parallel between Dong Jae and Shi Mok where Dong Jae thought of himself as a mentor to Eun Soo, giving her (bad) advice on her first case, chastising Shi Mok for not congratulating her, and he took her death as badly as anyone. When he caught her snooping in his office he took that as a betrayal (and maybe there was a big jealousy when he assumed something was going on between her and Shi Mok). Of course, worst mentor ever, and he did strangle her, but he felt really bad about it and told her not go get into that situation again.

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I'm typing my last comment for this drama with the bittersweet feeling of saying goodbye. The last time I felt truly attached to a kdrama was with Signal.

It had been a crazy 2 months for all of us and even thought the drama didn't reach, say, Reply level of popularity, I genuinely wish that the writer, PDs, actors, staff and crew know that their efforts were very much appreciated and that they were able to produce a gem that, once again, sets the bar higher for future kdramas. I hope this will encourage more channels and producers to make more quality dramas with depth and complexity. It doesn't have to have romance always! :)

I will miss our Shi mok, the stoic hero who turns out to be sensitive after all; Yeo Jin, who believes in justice and doesn't compromise; Eun Soo, whose relentless effort cleared her family name; Lee Chang Jun... LCJ, Chief prosecutor Lee, Chief Secretary.. Where do I even begin? He reminds me so much of Machiavelli's Prince - a figure who fervently believes that the ends justifies the means. I always knew his climb to power was a means and having a hand with Moo Sung's murder was only a step to further a goal - to root out corruption from the core. It is true that, if viewed this way, we may think of him a revolutionary but this doesn't change the fact that he comitted murder(using Yoon). A life is a life. Can anything bear greater weight than this? I wish someone had told him. If he truly believed in justice and equality, why must he be excempt of the consequences of his crimes (his own corruption and murder)? His own action went against what he was fighting for. I just wished someone was there to tell him his scheme wasn't the right way to go about it. Even Shi mok believed in him. This episode showed how much he looked up to this sunbae. He was his model/inspiration ffs... oh well.

Anyways, I liked how they sorta made it open-ended but just enough to make a proper closure for the entire drama. This, again, reflects reality, because corruption is an ongoing battle. Revealing the corruption today doesn't mean there won't be anymore tomorrow. I appreciated this so much.

Thank you, recappers, beanies, for this wonderful ride!

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Been waiting too long for this recap! thanks @laica for making a wonderful one. I am still moved by reading this recap (and the comments below are LIFE), just like when I was watching every minute of this brilliant ending ever.
I really couldn't watch anything after this, only 2 Days 1 Night to fill my empty soul. Any suggestions to cure this withdrawal syndrome?

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" and because I will watch anything this writer does, from now until i die." Laica, FACTS. This drama is one of the best tv shows I've ever seen, just wonderful. Talk about payoff.

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I just finished ep 16. I don't know what to say.

1. I cannot believe this was written by a new writer. What is his or her background? No one even knows how to write a coherent story much less a riveting, tightly plotted drama. Right to the end.

2. I don't recognise half ok, 2/3 of the male actors. But how can or how did the production even manage to cast such a powerful cast. I did not see the actors. I was looking at the people or person as if they are real live people.

Like I said, I have no words. This drama is beyond praise for me. I think I have just watched a perfect drama. Ok it's a procedural drama but how can it be so well written? I spent half of the last 4 episodes crying FOR the bad guys.

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I think this show brought out the best in the actors. I'm starting to notice them in other shows (I spotted Jung Bon and Eun Soo recently) in standard kdrama roles, but here they are different and intriguing, plus I kept wondering if they're really an evil genius. Even to the very end, I kept expecting to find out Jung Bon was behind all of it.

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The writer maybe new to dramaland but she is a filmmaker writer/director. She doesn't have a lot of films under her belt yet.
Dramaland need to, not only borrow actors from Chungmuro but also writers and directors.

Most of the main actors are movie actors and stage actors.
Dramaland has been overrun with crappy idol acting that this drama was a REAL treat.
Yay for the casting director for casting talented actors who can actually do the job and more.

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School 2017 is a perfect example of those "crappy idol dramas". Forest left me with such high standards that I am reduced to searching for really old shows I might have missed - not much currently running that attracts me.

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Ha, you're so right. I was mostly sobbing over the two men (aka the murderers) everyone, including us as the audience, has been looking for, huh.

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So far my all-time No.1 has been Signal, and it gave its place to FoS.
I enjoyed every bit of this show to the core, seriously doubt if I will ever find any other show close to this masterpiece in near future.
I will miss you Shimok sooooo much. (And his SMILE!)

P.S Am I the only who enjoyed the opening them music? Whenever I hit play button, this magnificent orchestral sound caught me off-guard.
Again said, this is the closest show to the PERFECTION ever.

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I like the opening visual sequence, too.

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I've never given 10 points to any drama ever in mydramalist, not even Signal or Healer (my personal fave) but I think Forest of Secrets deserves it ????

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Thank you, @laica and @sailorjumun for recapping this show, it has been a pleasure to read your thoughts on it.
I think FoS touches the same strings in me that 12 angry men did back when I saw it first. I love that fulfilling feeling, I hardly have it anymore.
I just have to dig myself out of the post FoS slump.

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I had tears in my eyes just reading the recap!

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This show is not about romance yet I found the most emotionally riveting moments watching kdrama in this show. I am in the minority but I think the chemistry of Shi-Mok and Eun-Soo is off the chart, but I don’t know what it is but it feels so raw and real. Was it sibling type love or was it romantic?
She definitely looked up to him, but was it just affection, gratitude, and respect? He was extremely rude to her, but he would stop whatever he was doing to check how she was doing - before the press conference, when she was down and drinking alone and so on. And the strong way he reacted after her death. What was it?
Their total screen time together probably adds up to maybe 15-20 minutes but their relationship left a lasting impression on me.

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Best drama of 2017. Great writing, plot flow, cinematography, and great performance from the whole cast. Never stoop to undue sentimentalism, never preach, yet always keep up the suspense and tension. Kudos to the writer!

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Okay, so I finally have time to officially send off this gem of a show.
I won't say a lot since what I could say has already been said by many others...but

What a satisfying ending this was! This show ended on such a high note, but also tinged with that sense of realism that we've come to expect from it. It was bittersweet and perfect. And I don't say this lightly, because rarely do dramas (in my experience) end and feel like they're not sacrificing something or lacking it.
Our baddies got their comeuppance, our gang is doing great... but just because this fight is over doesn't mean the fight against corruption is. I loved that this show emphasized that this is only a battle in a war.

I expected good things from this drama, but it exceeded my expectations and then some more. I truly thank everyone who was involved in this: the actors, director, writer, crew, etc.
Thank you for creating this masterpiece, with amazing and fleshed-out characters. It will be surely surely missed.

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Definitely would enjoy a Season 2. Great drama!

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Corruption is an universal problem more or less and cannot be wiped off in a day or two...we need more people like Hwang Shi Mok.

Mastermind Lee Chang Jun/Yoo Jae Myung literally stole the show in the final episode both as the character and the actor.What a complex character...having appeared just as another shallow,corrupt official we have seen in many dramas-and not only in K-Dramas.Who would have thought of the depth of his character back then...

Kudos to everyone who put his/her effort for the creation of this amazing show.

Honestly I'm not either rooting for a second season or anything romantic for Shi Mok, I would like to remember him as he was in FoS.

Thanks to the Beanies for their excellent recaps.

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One question I have and hope someone would be able to answer is why was Shi Mok transferred to Namhae? I didn't quite understand. Wasn't he also promoted? But a transferral to such a far away place sounds more like a demotion to me...?

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He was transferred because someone higher up in the chain didn't like how much influence he'd gathered with the public by being willing to expose corruption in the government. It was a "demotion"- not a reward for a job well done. ShiMok himself declined the promotion to Section Chief and the trip to the U.S.

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I believe Shi Mok declined the promotion and trip earlier but in the sense that he was asking Chief Kang for more time to follow through on his two month promise, but it seemed everyone expected him to go to Texas now that the case was more or less solved. But he explained to Yeo Jin that people weren't going to stay in jail long, so I interpreted that to mean higher-ups like the supreme prosecutor were still afraid of taking orders from the likes of, for example, if not Chairman Lee than Yeon Jae.

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Bravo to everyone involved with this wonderful drama. Bravo!

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Thanks for the recap!
Best crime drama EVER!
LCJ is proven as best villain ever written in drama, his meticulous plan, constantly keep us in grey area till the end. It was sad that in the end he wasn't able to chin up and face his wrong doing punishment, but I do understand why he choose to takes his own life and pass the baton of fighting against corruption to Shimok.
As for Yoon, can we just get him more job after this? I can feel his pain, his so-called-regret on killing someone's dad, though he know when he take this darker path there would be no point of return but he still torned by his decision to do so.
Hail to the OTP! Pochangmaja scene, that last flashing smile of Shimok, I want them got together in season 2! (if there's any season 2)
Thanks for setting the bar so high on crime drama, enjoy the every minutes of 16 episodes!

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I don't know why but I have been, from the moment she showed up, fascinated by Lee Yeon Jae, the wife of Lee Chang Joon. I initially wrote her off as the rich bitch who was outwardly perfect, tailored and smile-y but inwardly spoiled, selfish and empty. But in the last few eps especially the show kept throwing out moments that suggested otherwise like the revelation that she chose Lee Chang Joon because he was noble and passionate about justice instead of the Sungmoon guy who was just another boring rich guy. Or the conversation she had with her husband about how she doesn't regret meeting him. Or her complete 180 in her conversation with Shimok after she reads her husbands suicide letter (ok that moment killed me 'cause she walked away from her initial accusations because she recognized the heart of her husband in the words she was reading. She doesn't say a word and just walks away!). Then there's her soju chat at his grave which gives the viewer the sense that she would have sided with him, and that they would have fought together. Someone I wrote off as probably pure evil ended up simply being a family woman who loved and admired her husband and wanted to trust him. Although I'm not on the season 2 bandwagon, I would love to explore what kind of CEO she would be and how she would proceed in life especially in the aftermath of her husband's actions. Will she follow his heart regarding justice and responsibility towards society or will she become the powerful, hardened and corrupt CEO her father was? Seeing her take her father's seat at his desk got me all wondering!!!

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I noticed the actress recently in City Hall and Love Not Marriage. She's really perfected the outwardly poised and calm exterior with the fixed smile, but with a hint that something else is going on inside.

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I just rewatched the episode where Chief Kang tasks Yoon with the background check on Shi Mok, and then Yoon reports the details of the surgery directly to Lee, who says "That's not good." That scene reads totally different now.

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I really feel like I have to rerun it to catch up with tiny details that I've missed the first time. I didn't really pay attention to Chief Kang and my biggest question is, had Lee Chang-joon already prepared Hwang Shi-mok to be his warrior ever since the first time he discovered Park Moo-sung's dead body?

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