D-Day: Episode 10
by odilettante
We’ve officially hit the half-way mark, but I’m mostly left wondering how many times Director Park will keep trying to close the hospital before it sticks and in fact remains closed (is there a drinking game for this yet?). I’m not sure we’ll ever find out, especially since Hye-sung always seems to barge in and save the day at the last second (but not without paying for it on his end, of course).
For an episode that is woefully absent of Ddol-mi, it’s still surprisingly zippy as our minor characters begin to step up and reveal their strengths. It also helps that we’re actually beginning to experience the world outside of the hospital and getting a glimpse of how the general populace is getting through the aftermath of the earthquake.
EPISODE 10 RECAP
Ddol-mi is left on the plane to transport the patient to Busan while Hye-sung, Dae-gil, and Ji-na prepare to head back to Mirae Hospital. Hye-sung wishes her well over the two-way radio, but the flight attendants won’t let Ddol-mi use hers, so she has to content herself with waving from the window of the plane. Aw, it’s sweet and sad how Hye-sung watches the plane take-off and fly away.
Back at the hospital, So-yul, Sister, and Jung-won are sterilizing the stainless steel tools in a bot of boiling water since they’ve run out of disinfecting alcohol. Chief Kang points out they they can boil the metal equipment, but they still need to find a way to sterilize the plastic and rubber tools. The electricity may be back on, but their supplies are perilously low.
A fact that Director Park’s right-hand administrator delights in pointing out to Chief Kang, because in addition to the low supplies, they’re also still low on fuel for the generator. She yells at him for using up so much fuel on taking the elevator when he and Director Park beat them to the heli-pad. Ha! Even so, he says that with no supplies and limited power, they should just give up and close the hospital, for real this time.
Ja-hyuk is busy trying to get supplies to the hospital, but because the bridge is out, the support team isn’t able to get through. The fire chief promises to look for another way, but Chief Kang is on the radio, calling for Ja-hyuk and demanding to know when they’ll be getting supplies and support.
He explains the situation to her and she reminds him that if they don’t get the promised governmental help, they won’t be able to continue. She cuts off his excuses about the delays to tell him that this isn’t about who is at fault, it’s about saving lives. Voice breaking with emotion, she explains the pain of seeing a patient die in front of her eyes that she could have saved, and living in the hell of knowing that her son is out there among thousands of others who may be dying, too, yet they are helpless to do anything about it.
Ja-hyuk sounds like the quintessential politician as promises that he’ll find a way to get her the supplies soon, she just needs to wait a little longer. But as soon as he sets aside the radio, he bitterly wonders if he should stop acting the politician with hollow words of apology and reassurance, and instead tell Chief Kang the truth.
Woo-jin is not impressed with the way that the staff is trying to sanitize everything and he refuse to use the tools since there’s a chance it will cause an infection if they weren’t disinfected properly. But it’s not like they have another choice — unless, of course, they close down the hospital.
It’s two-against-one for hospital closure as Chief Kang fights back, insisting that they’ll be getting supplies soon. But Woo-jin refuses to put his patients’ lives in further danger and risk infection. A very smug Director Park reassures Chief Kang that she has done admirably as the Director of Emergency Measures, but because they didn’t get the aid they were promised from the government, the hospital must now close.
For the final time, Chief Kang sits down in front of the hospital’s intercom. Taking a deep breath, she begins her speech, informing everyone that due to the damage from the earthquake and the lack of supplies, the hospital will be closed starting from now. Her apologies aren’t enough to keep a riot from breaking out as a few furious guardians blame the twins’ father for deciding to use their hard-found fuel for the generator instead of the boat and their escape.
Just then, Hye-sung and his crew return triumphant with a fuel tanker and supplies truck following them. Yay! When he realizes why there’s such a melee in the waiting room, he rushes to the intercom office and turns it off, wanting to know what she’s doing now that the supplies are finally here. He takes her seat and turns the intercom back on, telling everyone that the hospital will remain open.
Furious, Director Park runs through the hospital to yell at Hye-sung, demanding to know why he’s going against the hospital director’s orders. Hye-sung plays innocent, pointing out that they were originally closing due to lack of supplies — but now they have supplies, so there’s no need to close. Simple!
Woo-jin reminds him that these supplies will run out quickly and they’ll just have to do this all over again. Does Hye-sung just live for today without thinking of the future? Hye-sung: “I have to live for today so that there’s a tomorrow.” He adds that while Woo-jin and Director Park may believe a hospital should only provide care to patients if there’s no risk or danger, for him, if there are doctors and patients, it’s a hospital, no matter what.
In the quiet of the break room, Hye-sung idly wonders about Ddol-mi — if she made it back safe, if she reunited with her family and enjoyed a home cook meal, if she’s washed off the stench of Seoul.
As he tries to get some sleep, he studies the notes stuck to the top of his bunk — one of the notes has a wad of gum on it with a note from Ddol-mi, warning everyone that she’s going to claim it again (and that she hasn’t brushed her teeth in three days). Puts the kiss in a new perspective. But Hye-sung reaches for the radio in his pocket and tries to call Ddol-mi, even though he knows she won’t be able answer. Aw, poor love-sick puppy.
Ja-hyuk arrives at the hospital, wondering why there are so many people leaving after the supplies and fuel arrived. The hospital kept good on their promise to return the fuel that was given for the boat and so some of the patients will be sailing to safety.
He’s there to meet with Director Park, who informs him that they won’t be able to use the supplies he sent, so they should be sent to another hospital. They just don’t have the staffing available to keep the hospital open, even with government support. Ja-hyuk promises that Mirae Hospital will get priority assistance, especially now that they roads are starting to open, so they don’t need to worry about running out of supplies.
Plus, he’ll make sure that the government will create a special emergency law to prevent lawsuits against the hospital in this time of emergency. Now that’s reasoning the director understands, and it looks like the hospital will stay open. For now, at least.
Chief Kang is so happy to hear this, but Director Park has a condition — he’ll keep the hospital open only if Hye-sung leaves. Everyone knows it’s a power play, and Chief Kang is furious that Director Park would fire one of the most competent doctors they have while they’re so short-handed. Ji-na asks if it’s just because the VIP patient Hye-sung saved has been safely transferred, so Hye-sung is no longer responsible for any patient.
Director Park agrees that’s partly it, and then points out that Ji-na also handed in her resignation, so technically she no longer works here, either. But it’s also because Hye-sung challenges authority and performs risky surgeries without permission. He broke his promise to obey the hospital director, and so he — and his mother — are officially kicked out.
Even if Hye-sung has to leave, it’s cruel to evict his comatose mother, but Director Park reminds Chief Kang that they need that bed for other patients they could actually save, and besides, wasn’t she the one who discharged sick patients to free up bed-space for those on life-support?
She’s ready to argue with him, but Hye-sung quietly agrees to leave. However, he begs for them to continue to care for his mother since it’s impossible for him to take her with him. Ugh, Director Park practically beams with glee at Hye-sung’s humble bow, but he still insists that Hye-sung needs to take his mother and go.
Ji-na follows her father, ordering him to cancel his order. She warns him that if he doesn’t let Hye-sung and his mother stay, she won’t let it rest. He’s not intimidated by her threats though, and says that if necessary, he’ll even abandon his daughter. No surprise there, since he’s made of evil. He points out that she would have had a better chance if she’d come to him begging instead of using threats.
The nurses are prepping Hye-sung’s mother for transport as he quietly sits by her side. But Woo-jin enters the room and orders them to stop — he’ll take care of Hye-sung’s mother.
When Hye-sung thanks him, Woo-jin reminds him that even though he’ll be caring for her, he can’t guarantee that nothing will happen to her. But the best way to make sure she’s safe is for Hye-sung to avoid the hospital completely so the director can’t use her against him. Aw, that means he won’t be able to visit her.
Ji-na overhears this and as she approaches, Woo-jin asks if she’s just there to yell at him for stepping in too late. Instead, she quietly thanks him. As he walks away, she calls out that he’s not like the director, after all. Thank goodness.
Outside the hospital, Hye-sung leans against his motorcycle and gazes at the building that’s made up such a huge part of his life. Ji-na finds him there and hands over a note from the twins’ father. He thanks Hye-sung for everything he’s done, and promises on the twins’ birthdays, he’ll tell them about Hye-sung. As the twins’ father and mother make their way to the boat, they pass the place where Hye-sung freed her from the car, saving her life — and the life of her sons.
That’s the reason Hye-sung is a doctor — to save lives — and it perks him up enough to get ready to go find his brother to tell him about their mother. He’s surprised when Ji-na starts putting on a helmet, too, and she reminds him that she no longer works at Mirae Hospital, either. They ride off along the cracked streets of the city.
Aw, both the deaf girl’s father and Mr. Kang are surprised that the other didn’t get on the boat and instead decided to stick around to help out at the hospital. Mr. Kang: “I’m a person who gets uncomfortable in a comfortable environment, so this hospital is perfect for me.” These two are the best.
Hye-sung and Ji-na find the firefighters as they’re continuing their endless search-and-rescue, and when Captain Choi spots them, he waves them over to come help with the victims they’ve found. At the sight of a hand sticking out from under a sheet covering a dead body, Hye-sung flashes back to the moment when he tried — and failed — to save the men trapped in the hospital rubble.
He’s sweating and shaky from the anxiety attack as he checks out the patient on the table, and even though he tries to hide it, Ji-na still can tell something’s wrong. She respectfully takes over while Hye-sung discreetly tries to gain control of his nerves. The paramedics don’t have all the necessary supplies, though, and the patient will need to be transported to the nearest hospital.
Captain Choi is delighted to have Ji-na and Hye-sung with him, because it feels like they can now actually start to save people instead of just find them. But in order to save people, they’re going to need better tools and medicine, so Hye-sung tells Ji-na to stay there while he goes back to the hospital to get more supplies.
As he rides through the streets, he slows down to watch the people pick through the rubble, looking for anything usable as they attempt to put their lives back together.
Ji-na is organizing the supplies from the paramedics when Woo-sung arrives, and she tells them that they actually came here for him. Since Hye-sung isn’t allowed back into the hospital, he needs Woo-sung to be the one to regularly check on their mother.
Hye-sung may not be allowed in the hospital, but he’ll stand outside of it to talk to Chief Kang. She’s incredulous that, having just been fired, he would beg for such a large amount of medical supplies. He warns her that if he doesn’t get some supplies, the majority of the patients transferred to the hospital will be corpses. There’s a wide world of difference between experiencing the earthquake from the relative safety of the hospital versus what it’s like out on the streets.
If she can’t help him, then just let him in and he’ll steal what he needs, and she can deny she knew about it. He’s already treated as a criminal here — who cares what else will happen to him so long as he can try to save some lives out there. Chief Kang angrily reminds him that if he acts too rash now, he could lose protection for his mother. But she also can’t bear the thought of people dying, so with a sigh, she tells him that she’ll get the supplies for him.
Director Park happily relaxes in his office, enjoying a hot cup of coffee. Woo-jin, to his credit, seems to be unable to relax, and Director Park asks if it’s because he’s upset that they canceled the order to close the hospital. Woo-jin says he knows the director has a reason for everything, and Director Park turns those words around on Woo-jin, since he believes that Woo-jin must have had a reason, too, to go against his orders and keep Hye-sung’s mother. It’s apparently the first time Woo-jin has disobeyed the director (and here’s hoping it’s not the last!).
Just then Chief Kang knocks on the door. She’s armed with her most diplomatic manner as she politely requests the hospital institute a Disaster Medical Assistance Team (DMAT). Annoyed, Director Park wants to know why she’s trying to stir things up again, and Woo-jin points out that the nation isn’t equipped for DMATs, much less a small private hospital.
But Chief Kang points out that’s the reason they should institute it — it will look impressive that the nation’s first private hospital is able to do something the government can’t even do. Director Park is momentarily swayed by the promise of glory, but he points out they don’t have the resources. She reminds him that they’ll be getting government support, and the more patients they see, the more profitable it is for the hospital.
Woo-jin says there won’t be any medical staff willing to go out on the front-line, but Chief Kang reveals that Hye-sung came to her, asking for supplies to help the wounded out on the streets. That’s not exactly the name to use in order to get Director Park’s support, though, and he accuses her of just trying to get Hye-sung reinstated. But if Hye-sung is willing to do the dirty work saving lives while Mirae Hospital gets all the credit, then they might be able to come to an agreement. Deal!
Chief Kang gets the supplies ready and, aw, Hye-sung just assumes that Sister will be joining him out in the field. Yay, the little Han River Hospital team is reunited!
In his office of evil delusions, Director Park practically licks his chops as he realizes that this kind of action could propel him to greater things — or richer things, at least. Even Woo-jin seems disappointed by Director Park’s greed.
Chief Kang isn’t just losing some of her staff to DMAT, she’s also losing So-yul, who’s decided that the shelters will be in more need of psychiatric care than the patients here, since she knows there will be people struggling with PTSD. Chief Kang asks her to look for Dong-ha while she’s at the shelters, and So-yul creates a flyer to add to the wall of missing people.
As she enters the school gym that’s been set up as a shelter, she stops in shock at how many people are there, lying side-by-side, their only belongings what they could fit into a suitcase. As she settles in at the volunteer table, she spots a familiar profile — it’s none other than cranky Myung-hyun, who’d walked out of the hospital the day before.
He’s sleeping on his little strip of gym floor when she slaps him awake, in disbelief that he could just sleep when there are people who could use his expertise. She orders him to help her, but he refuses, not willing to take that responsibility. Ugh.
She tells him that Mirae Hospital is still open now that they have plenty of supplies and fuel for the generator, so he’s essentially playing hooky. He’s surprised to hear this, then scrambles to his feet and digs out his white doctor’s coat as Ja-hyuk arrives with a fleet of reporters in tow.
Ja-hyuk is there to hand out bottles of water and meet with those in the shelter, where he also does his political duty of reassuring the people that the government is working night and day to help restore the city. Meanwhile, Director Park is writing up the terms for the DMAT, much to his administrator’s surprise, but Director Park’s got his sights on obtaining more power without enduring any of the risk.
As Ja-hyuk is getting ready to leave the shelter, So-yul confirms that they’ll be getting more support. She also wants to know if he’s heard anything from the other shelters about Dong-ha, and he admits he’s been busy with his work so he’s had someone else looking for him, but he reassures her that he loves Chief Kang’s son like he was his own.
Aw, Dae-gil is the intern assigned to the DMAT (along with Sister), and even though he grumbles that he’s only a representative of the hospital sent to take care of the supplies, Hye-sung is delighted to see him again and hug-drags him to the medical tent.
It’s now 60 hours after the earthquake, and as the firefighters try to clear a way through the rubble from the swimming pool, they accidentally set off a small avalanche of broken walls. They scramble for safety, and once the dust clears, Director Park’s brother-in-law, still trapped, coughs as he looks over to his son. He calls out his name, but the boy is motionless and unresponsive.
COMMENTS
Well, thanks a lot for such a depressing cliffhanger, Show. At least I can remind myself that this is Dramaland and we’re not going to kill off a kid, especially one who has a name and who is important to other characters in this drama.
In fact, this is possibly a way that Hye-sung might be able to get back at Director Park — by being the one who saves his nephew’s life and the life of the man who actually owns the hospital. That would be sweet justice, wouldn’t it? The doctor Director Park fired is the one who saves the president of the hospital.
I’m glad that we’re finally venturing out of the hospital walls, even though I’m not sure why it took us until the halfway mark to get there. I’m excited to see the kind of drama that will take place as brother and (literal) brother work alongside each other rescuing people. This was the kind of medical show I thought I was getting into at first — one that showed the drama of being first responders on site, not just the political intrigue of trying to avoid malpractice suits.
I’m also excited that So-yul is out with the people. I’ve been a little frustrated with her for feeling so helpless, because I’d think people who’ve just gone through the grief of losing family members and their entire home to a national disaster could surely use her professional expertise. So I practically cheered when she decided to take that step and go out to care for the people in the shelters. She’s been a pretty inconsequential background character up until now, but I’m hoping she’ll be able to take charge and make sure everyone is doing their duty all the while she helps people through their PTSD and grief. And hopefully find Dong-ha, too.
As much as I appreciate Ja-hyuk working so hard to save the citizens and the hospital, I’m a little suspicious that he’s all talk and no action when it comes to Dong-ha. I suppose I shouldn’t be since, hey, he is a politician. But if Chief Kang finds out that Ja-hyuk has been too busy doing press jaunts to make him look good on tv (while still being helpful, yes) and little effort has been made to find her son, well, I have a feeling that’s going to be the end of the relationship.
Like I said above, I don’t believe Dramaland will kill off a kid, so I’m pretty sure we’ll find Dong-ha eventually. But I’m not sure it will be through Ja-hyuk’s efforts.
Maybe Ddol-mi will find him, because there’s no way this show will convince me that she’s not coming back. Of course she is! And not just because she’s one of the leads and it’s ridiculous to have her disappear halfway through, but because she won’t be comfortable just staying in the safety of Busan if she knows she can help save lives in Seoul. Plus, I’m pretty sure she’d like another chance at that kiss, now that she’ll have had a chance to brush her teeth.
At any rate, our little team needs to be reunited so they continue to save lives and sass each other and be the heart of this show. I need my little ramshackle family, born in a state of emergency, to continue to save the day as the fight against mother nature and the greedy powers that be.
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Tags: D-Day, featured, Ha Suk-jin, Jung So-min, Kim Young-kwang
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1 AnahWolf
October 24, 2015 at 12:32 PM
I'm starting to love this show! Even if its becoming more and more dark, it might beeven better :D Thank you and I love you show ;)
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Chanelboy loves Jang Ki Young Argh
October 25, 2015 at 10:10 PM
I'm afraid will get depressed watching disaster end of doomed day kinda's movie/drama.
It won't go that way right?
I just start picking the first episode
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2 Itenoria
October 24, 2015 at 12:41 PM
I've actually turned it into a drinking game. Got tired of screaming at Director Park and Woojin and I just raised a glass and hit fast-forward every time they show up. Urgh! Very annoying annoying man.
I've watched episode 11 & 12, with the help of a recapper and let's just say I think this disaster drama is going to ensure that things get worse before they get better. Prepare your tissues, it's going to be a rollercoaster of a month. *goesofftoweep
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3 Rungirlrun
October 24, 2015 at 12:52 PM
I don't get this show. Is it actually legal in SK to close down a hospital amidst a national disaster? Where are the Red cross? The military? coast guards?international aid? And if the roads are blocked to give supplies, helicopters? South Korea is not a third world country and I would like to believe they have more capabilities to provide during a national disaster
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Miranda
October 24, 2015 at 10:55 PM
The reactions confuse me, especially the idea that if the success rate for a surgery is low, then you shouldn't do the surgery. I may be missing something in translation here, but aren't we talking about things like a 95% chance of in-surgery death versus a 100% chance of death in the next few hours? The doctors keep talking about surgeries like they're elective and without them the patient can live, I genuinely don't understand.
Basically, they keep saying "it's too risky" and culturally, where I'm from, that would be referring to a patient's long-term survival rate, but at Mirae the doctors seem to be saying it's too risky for THEM and their careers.
Some of the motivations sound too weird to be true, but I wonder if they actually ARE true (SK doctors are exposed to too much risk, SK patients and their families have unrealistic expectations of the medical field, there is no national mechanism to provide medical aid in a natural disaster) and this entire show is a convoluted way to highlight problems in SK's medical and government fields?
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Silverlens
October 25, 2015 at 6:21 AM
One of the reasons why i would rather be a doctor in a 3rd world country rather than in a developed country is because there are more cases and different illnesses to treat which would mean a lot more practice.
First world countries that don't deal with emergencies like natural disasters are often blanketed and protected from having to deal with critical choices that people have to make in such situations, so i understand their immediate helplessness and cowardice at this point a bit as it has just been 2 days.
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Miranda
October 25, 2015 at 6:01 PM
I guess? But I thought doctors have to rotate through all practice areas during their residencies, so they'd be at least aware of how emergency medicine works. And overall, I still don't get the "if we operate he might die, so let's do nothing and he'll definitely die" line of argument. As far as I can tell, no one's been talking about not operating for some quality-of-life reason.
In an entire hospital, there can't be just ONE doctor and ONE nurse willing to practice emergency medicine. It's like when women go into labor on a plane and the baby eventually gets delivered by a psychiatrist, a physiotherapist or a dental surgeon; at a certain point, you're the last rung of the medical ladder standing between a person and possible (or assured!) death. So I get the dramatic motive in D-Day only having one doctor who pushes boundaries, but to have ALL of the others saying "go to another hospital!" (there are not any) and "it's too risky" (for whom!?) is bizarre. I feel like we're missing a character who argues for allowing certain patients to die from horrible injuries with family while their pain is being managed rather than during surgery.
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Missbluz
October 25, 2015 at 11:19 PM
There are cases where you can't do anything, even if you're a specialist in that area, it's simply too late to intervene. As well as the fact that they are in a disaster which means that their resources are limited. They will be wasting effort and medication on a patient that doesn't have a chance at surviving.
Think about it, if you're a doctor in a disaster with little resources and you have two patients, one is horribly injured and requires surgery and another who is less injured but still requires care. Which one will you chose to save??
Remember the triage they did back at Hangang Mirae? They did the same thing, they also left some patients who required surgury to die and focused on those who stood a chance.
Sometimes doing nothing is the most human thing you can do.
Miranda
October 26, 2015 at 3:49 PM
But that's just it - they never SAY that.
I can list all sorts of reasons why they'd do what they're doing, but they never say it's because another patient needs the time/attention/medicine or that it's not the humane care choice. Instead, each and every argument seems to be "I'm worried I'll get sued".
4 Beverly A
October 24, 2015 at 1:19 PM
The 'hospital closing/ Director Park" thing is getting very, very old. This adds almost nothing except distraction from an otherwise pretty good story. Please, enough already!
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alua
October 24, 2015 at 1:25 PM
It's like a broken record. It adds nothing!
And all these individuals that wear doctors' coats but run off at the slight indication that they might have to do some work... (or otherwise getting into a debating match of why nothing should be done).... why did they become doctors?
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Adal
October 24, 2015 at 3:46 PM
Completely agree. His character is uni-dimensionsal at this point. The actor must even be getting tired of his one note character.
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5 alua
October 24, 2015 at 1:22 PM
<I don’t believe Dramaland will kill off a kid
For a disaster drama, that's a pretty bad reason not to kill off a character.
10 episodes in and we haven't lost a single character that is significant or significant to one of the leads or the more important supporting cast.
This episode was the least logical yet and without Ddolmi making an appearance that made watching it even worse. :-(
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Silverlens
October 25, 2015 at 6:23 AM
"I don’t believe Dramaland will kill off a kid"
(Spoiler?)
... I believe writer will have her faith in dramaland broken this time around.
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6 myra
October 24, 2015 at 2:13 PM
Isn't the other jtbc drama-AWL-premiering today? I haven't read anything related to it lately, so I'm not completely sure as it's not on the currently airing drama list here..
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Itenoria
October 24, 2015 at 3:26 PM
Yeah. Awl aired today. So you can find the raw version. The subbed is not out yet though. Waiting as well for who will recap the show, if it gets recapped that is. I'm still slightly painted that no one is recapping The Merchant: Gaekju 2015/Master of Trade. That's a damn good show as well.
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Adal
October 24, 2015 at 3:54 PM
That's being recapped at Viki. It depends on the country you are viewing it in, so I can say it is true for the US. I'm not sure if it is licensed in other countries. Is it really a good show? I have been meaning to watch it, but I am a bit leery of Jang Hyuk, not that I don’t love him, but he tends to play all his characters the same way. And after watching two or three successive dramas of his, he tends to get quite boring.
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Itenoria
October 24, 2015 at 5:19 PM
Well, I think that's the fascinating thing about Saguek's. They're such large productions with so many sprawling characters that the focus is not on one person for too long; meaning you don't get bored, or at least if you do get bored with a character, the attention would shift pretty quickly to another character. That's the case for me with The Merchant Gaekju: 2015. From Jang Hyuk's Chun Bong-Sam, to Sil Go-Ae, to his sister, the shaman/peddler, the noble woman with sad eyes, the head merchant, the cunning merchant that acquired Chun's Gaekju with his just as vile brother, to name a few. There're so many characters being developed simultaneously that it was such a treat to watch. From the very first episode, I was hooked. Just try watching the first five episodes and see for yourself. At that point, we haven't seen Jang Hyuk playing Bong-Sam yet, just child Bong-Sam, so you can get a feel of the drama before Jang Hyuk shows up. If you like the progression, then you can proceed to the later episodes where we see the characters grown up and the story further taking shape.
I live in Nigeria, Lagos to be precise, so I actually can't watch videos on Viki :(.
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Adal
October 24, 2015 at 6:38 PM
Thanks for your recommendation, I'll definitely go check it out :-)
7 miroufleur
October 24, 2015 at 2:33 PM
Thank you i love this show despite it flaws. The first scene is beautifully shot i miss ddolmi in action but still this episode was very interesting, the team went outside the hospital to save lives.
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8 crazyahjummafan
October 24, 2015 at 5:44 PM
There's something about this drama that grips me...I don't know what it is. It has plot holes and pot holes, but I look forward to it every week, and even watch it raw, which I don't for even the other dramas that i enjoy and are better written, eg, Twenty Again.
But I am glad that they have started the DMAT. That was quick thinking of Chief Kang. She's smart and most times knows how to manipulate the greedy Director.
I'm hoping that the second half of this show would show the team working outside the hospital.
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9 crazyahjummafan
October 24, 2015 at 5:50 PM
Just can't understand the fat doctor. How can he be so irresponsible? He went back to look for his family. They are safe, and all he does is sleep when there are people dying? I suppose it's because he's got Director Park n Woojin as 'good' examples. Frankly, I hope he gets the disciplinary action taken on him after everything settles. If they just let him n Director Park n Woojin go, I'll be very upset.
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sw33tnshie
October 25, 2015 at 4:09 PM
yeah, i wanted to shot him a few time....espec in the upcoming episodes!!
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10 Yuna
October 25, 2015 at 10:21 AM
I feel goosebumps every time they talk about hospital profits in the midst of this catastrophe. That evil director should have been a businessman instead, not a doctor. He's not saving lives, he's saving money for his own greed. He's a devil in disguise.
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bjharm
October 26, 2015 at 2:07 AM
will all private hospitals are indeed a business thus making the director more a businessman than a doctor. But as someone has already said this is a disaster drama where in the real world the government would taken control of all resourse privately own or whatever to meet the needs, thus the hospital would come under government control for the run of the disaster. It really is a hard plot hole to get over and just dismiss and makes it difficult to just cover with the old suppend belief one normally uses in K-dramas.
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Yuna
October 26, 2015 at 8:49 PM
Yeah I know. Hospitals, educational institutions and some religious institutions are deemed businesses. But my point is, in a disaster like that, can't they put aside first their vested interest and fulfill their duty to save lives as what they been expected to do as doctors and what they sworn to? Can't they be humane?
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11 JYC
October 25, 2015 at 10:31 AM
It's a great show, I enjoyed this episode as much as I enjoyed the last nine but every time Director Park pops up, I have this uncontrollable urge to fling my tablet halfway across the room. I do believe that Director Park has a personal goal he would like to achieve but in my opinion, it would be better to reveal his goal and let the viewers watch him work towards that goal instead of making him threaten to close the hospital every now and then like two owners of a café arguing about which day they're going to be closed. It's frustrating to watch and getting boring real quick.
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12 Drama Maniac
October 25, 2015 at 2:13 PM
please recap episode 11 and 12
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13 Cassie
October 26, 2015 at 7:53 PM
I just watched Dr DMAT which was recommended by someone in the comments of another D-Day episode. I'm here to pass on the word and recommend to watch the two final episodes because a big earthquake happens and it's pretty cool to see how paper plans are put to action in a decent way for television fiction.
I ignore all the flaws (there are many) of this show and it's good. The Director and Dr Woo Jin piss me off so much.
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Yuna
October 26, 2015 at 8:56 PM
Add to your list the fat doctor as well, Dr. Myung-hyun. They' are bunch of jerk and insanely annoying.
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