Lee min ho and jandi6/4/2023 ![]() ![]() Jun-pyo spits blood (and whoa, fake-blood overload there), saying, “I can’t do that.” Incredulously, Jae-ha asks, “Do you want to die?” Jun-pyo responds, “I don’t want to die, but if you’re going to kill me, what can I do.”įor what it’s worth, since he’s being paid off by Mama Kang, I doubt Jae-ha means to kill him - just maim him a little. Now Jae-ha instructs him to vow, on camera, that he’ll give up Jan-di. Since begging won’t help Jun-pyo (ostensibly they’ll continue beating him after letting her go), Jan-di yells at him not to do it. Jae-ha offers to send Jan-di away - if Jun-pyo begs for mercy on his knees. Sobbing, Jan-di screams for them to stop. At Jae-ha’s instruction, the guys beat the heck out of Jun-pyo. Jun-pyo bursts in, his foremost concern for Jan-di’s safety, and asks Jae-ha to let her go. It seems his feelings for her were genuine, however: “Yeah, I wanted revenge, but as we became friends, I thought that if you came to me, the revenge didn’t matter.” He’s nearly crippled now, “but he smiles whenever he talks about you.” Jan-di asks why he’s bent on revenge - what exactly did Jun-pyo do to him? Jae-ha answers that technically it was his brother who was wronged - he was F4’s rooftop victim. But, “The moment you rejected my proposal, the goal in my game became one thing: Gu Jun-pyo.” It’s too bad Jan-di turned him down, because Jae-ha was planning on splitting the money (from Madam Kang) with her. He points out the irony of a guy losing his girl at his own mother’s order. Jae-ha admits his villainy and claims credit for everything. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser. I think I’m just going to excise Episode 11 from my memory, to the extent I can without plot difficulties.Īudio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Episode 11, in its context, did not make much sense - and we shouldn’t have to fanwank a story to make it comprehensible. It just has to make sense in the context of the story. ![]() Over-the-top cornfluffery is part and parcel of this drama at this point. (Only one person is credited for scriptwriting this series, so this is a rhetorical question.)ĭon’t get me wrong, it was still flawed and cheesy, but I don’t mind cheesiness. Does one writer get the odd-numbered episodes, and another the even ones? Because this isn’t the first time I’ve noticed Tuesday episodes are much better than Monday ones. 243 FebruJanuBoys Before Flowers: Episode 12 by javabeansĮVER so much better. ![]()
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