

Jung Woo wakes up bound and gagged by the ahjumma, who walks into the room wearing the baseball cap and puffer jacket we saw the killer of the rapist wearing from the peephole.Īhjumma grabs a bottle of pills and goes over to Jung Woo, saying that he could have lived if he just stayed quiet and not investigate. Maybe it’s the camera colors amplifying that particular bright shade? I was really amused in this scene when the taillights of the cars are the same bright hot pink color as Soo Yeon (and sometimes the male leads) lipstick has been in this drama. On the phone is the hand scribbled note “My daughter is dead.” Jung Woo’s partner starts freaking out but the captain says they need to keep looking for clues.

They hear his phone ringing and find it in the trash pile. The cops track down Jung Woo’s cell signal to a landfill but can’t find him. They set up a wire tap at the house where Eun Joo makes her obligatory 3 second appearance to comfort the worried Mom. They head to Soo Yeon’s mom’s place to see if he went home. Ahjumma looks down at the unconscious Jung Woo and says that she warned him to be careful.īack at the police station, everyone is frantic when they can’t reach Jung Woo.

Jung Woo is tasered by cleaning ahjumma, who checks his cell phone and sees frantic texts from Jung Woo’s partner about the cleaning ahjumma’s background (something happened to her daughter Bora 5 years ago) and warning him to be careful around her. A tiny bit of good did trickle out of this episode – Hyung Joon candidly told Soo Yeon he was jealous of her feelings with respect to Jung Woo, and Jung Woo finally put himself in Soo Yeon’s shoes and realized why she would want to avoid him and her past. But these three are testing my limits by mostly being so damn static in the face of all this rushing convergence of past and present.

I have patience for Soo Yeon’s pain and understand her desire to forget her past, I have empathy for Jung Woo’s youthful cowardice and understanding of his clinging to guilt, and I have compassion for Hyung Joon’s woefully childhood woes and his need for vengeance.
#Tomorrow with you dramabeans ep 11 crack
What couldn’t be solved if everyone was shoved into one room with a crack therapist and forced to talk about their feelings and issues, and then return to the real world to do something with their issues rather than playing dodge and feint. Visually the drama is also losing its melancholy dreaminess, devolving into a sullen moroseness, much like the mood of most of the characters in this drama. Did MBC switch PDs because I want the old one back. This was the first episode where I thought the PD was terrible at the helm, his directing discordant and flat. Then the writer tosses in the kitchen sink of crimes – kidnapping, rape, murder, death by drowning – to add a dash of mystery and create some narrative momentum, but that doesn’t work either because it’s done so haphazardly and slipshod.
#Tomorrow with you dramabeans ep 11 series
It’s just a series of extremely improbable bad things continuously happening to good people, and then the good people are all hurting and suffering while warily circling each other. I’m finding myself emotionally and mentally checking out of Missing You. Okay, that’s just a really gorgeous shot of Hyung Joon so I had to lead with it, especially since I couldn’t find much in this episode to keep my interest.
