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Tunnel: Episode 2

With its moody atmosphere and keen emotions, Tunnel’s opening week is as compelling as it gets. Leaping forward thirty years into the present this hour, we watch our brash detective struggle with life in the modern world. But while fish-out-of-water antics are always entertaining, it’s the lonely stranger-in-a-strange-land-vibes that have curled their tentacles into my heart. I’m glad you’re back, Choi Jin-hyuk.

 
EPISODE 2 RECAP

In the dark tunnel, Kwang-ho struggles to come back to consciousness after his knock on the head. Picking himself up, he looks for the culprit as the air ripples around him.

Elsewhere, a desperate-looking young man in a white car careens through traffic, chased by another car. Meanwhile, Kwang-ho emerges from the tunnel, and behind him, the once-young vines grow and wither in the space of a moment over the tunnel’s mouth. Creepy.

The hunted young man (Vixx’s N) loses his pursuer at a busy intersection. He rummages through his glovebox for something, and his license identifies him as… Park Kwang-ho? He’s so busy that he nearly doesn’t see our Kwang-ho crossing the road and slams on the brakes just in time.

Our Kwang-ho leaps out of the way and orders the young man out of the car. But the young man is terrified to see the other car has caught up to him and speeds away. The other car hotly pursues him.

A confused Kwang-ho returns to his police station. His head is pulsing, and he calls out for maknae Sung-shik, but the station seems empty. He looks up at the sound of tapping, and is dismayed to see some other man at his desk.

Kwang-ho confronts him, and the man introduces himself as Lieutenant KIM SUN-JAE (Yoon Hyun-min). Ohhh…! Kwang-ho mutters that he must be a lunatic from the local prayer house and throws him out, locking the door behind him.

He returns to (what he thinks is) his desk, and wonders idly what the smartphone lying on it is. Noticing that the phone is different, he dials his chief, but a woman answers and tells him he’s got the wrong number. Only then does he notice his changed surroundings, from the computers in place of typewriters, to… well, everything.

He clutches his head as the old overlaps on the new. He takes a look at a printout, which turns out to be a transfer order for someone with the same name as his, although he’s confused by the 1988 birthdate (“It’s 1986, though”) and the even more ridiculous 2016 transfer date.

By then, Sun-jae returns with a key and furiously confronts Kwang-ho. Irritated, Kwang-ho squirrels away the transfer order, and then, quick as a flash, he cuffs Sun-jae to the bars of the holding cell. Sun-jae demands to be released, wanting to know his identity.

Kwang-ho doesn’t have time for him, since he has a criminal to catch. But finding no one else there, he heads out with a big flashlight, ignoring Sun-jae’s shouts. Once outside, however, he looks around in bewilderment at the bright lights and high-rises, his thoughts following in voiceover: “That night, all of a sudden, the world that I knew changed entirely.”

The officers arriving in the morning are shocked to find Sun-jae cuffed to the railing, though he’s now asleep. The older one, Detective KWAK TAE-HEE (Kim Byung-chul) gleefully takes pictures as his chief arrives. The noise wakes up both Sun-jae and Kwang-ho, who was asleep at his desk.

Kwang-ho uncuffs Sun-jae, explaining to the others that the guy kept saying he was a cop. As soon as Sun-jae is free, he shoves Kwang-ho, demanding to know his credentials. With a sigh, Kwang-ho tells him, “I’m Hwayang Precinct’s Park Kwang-ho,” which makes the chief (Jo Hee-bong) peer at him. Ohhh, I wonder…

Current maknae SONG MIN-HA (Kang Ki-young) also recognizes the name and perks up. Styling himself as a sunbae now, he introduces the newbie, saying he has no prior experience in violent crime. (Kwang-ho scoffs to himself that he’s been in violent crime for ten years and is a sergeant, not a corporal, thankyouverymuch.) The chief continues to stare at him.

Aloud, Kwang-ho agrees that that’s his name but he’s not that guy before walking out. The chief examines the transfer order, while detective Tae-hee laughs at Sun-jae being mistaken for a lunatic, adding that it’s true, since he tears out anytime he hears that a young woman has been murdered.

Maknae Min-ha hands over Kwang-ho’s heavy, old-fashioned handcuffs to the chief. A flashback shows Kwang-ho training maknae Sung-shik in using such cuffs. (I knew it, Sung-shik is the chief, isn’t he?) Meanwhile, Kwang-ho wanders the streets trying to get his head around modern Seoul, frantically wondering what’s happening to him.

The chief’s nameplate finally reveals that he is indeed Sung-shik. He roots through his desk until he finds an old photo of Kwang-ho and the ’86 team. Talking to himself, he says the newbie can’t be Kwang-ho’s son, and orders his personnel files.

Back in 1986, Kwang-ho’s entire team, including his wife, is in the tunnel looking for him. Sung-shik finds his torch, but they fear the worst when they find the bloodstained rock that the culprit used to strike Kwang-ho. Yeon-sook faints dead away at the sight.

Kwang-ho returns to his old residential area and retraces the route to his old home. But when he reaches the site, he’s stricken to find that it’s… gone, replaced by a busy road.

Yeon-sook comes to in a hospital and hurries to leave, but the doctor (who is also our medical examiner, Dr. Kim) gently tells her that she’s expecting. She’s stunned by the news.

In the present, Kwang-ho slumps at the roadside where his house used to be and finally accepts that this really must be 2016. “Yeon-sook-ah, where are you?” he asks, “Why is this happening to me?” He suddenly remembers collapsing in the tunnel. “If I can go through the tunnel again, I can go back,” he reasons.

Energized, he hops into a taxi, but is taken aback by the driver, who is none other than 1986’s Reporter Oh—or his doppelgänger, anyway. Kwang-ho asks Driver Oh if he knows of any tunnels in the area, and ever the opportunist, Oh takes him all around the houses to rack up the mileage.

But Kwang-ho catches on and refuses to pay after being dumped in some random place. While they argue, a woman boards the taxi. Driver Oh tells her he can’t take her because Kwang-ho has yet to pay, and she coolly says she’ll pay his fare along with hers. Driver Oh leaps on the offer and drives off with his new passenger, leaving Kwang-ho fuming.

Kwang-ho looks at the area he’s been stranded in. Recognition fills him as he takes in the building in front of him: it’s the old prayer house, which has now become a psychiatric hospital. That sparks a memory of a road sign he saw for the asylum the night before at the tunnel, and he realizes he’s close. Just then, an alarm sounds from the hospital, and a nurse runs out screaming. Torn for a moment, he runs into the building.

Lying in the dirt, a phone vibrates. Back at the station, Min-ha reports that he can’t reach Kwang-ho, which dismays Sung-shik even more. Oh no, it’s not looking good for the younger Kwang-ho, is it? He dispatches his team to the incident scene, but he keeps Sun-jae back to tell him that he’ll be paired up with Kwang-ho from now on.

Kwang-ho passes through a cordon of medical staff and arrives at the grisly scene of a woman with a pencil embedded in her neck, dead. He sees a distinctive tattoo and recognizes her as a once-cocky woman called Lee Seon-ok, whom he once questioned over the death of her fiancé.

It seems that the fiancé used to beat her and her younger sister, and Kwang-ho gently appealed to her to think of what might become of her sister. Just as she was about to open up, Kwang-ho was called away, and by the time he came back, she was back to denying everything. In the present, Kwang-ho sighs that she was caught after all.

Detectives Tae-hee and Min-ha arrive at the scene and are surprised to find Kwang-ho leaving it, considering his earlier outburst. He repeats that he’s not that Park Kwang-ho and pushes past them. He passes Sun-jae, too, who digs at him not to come back.

Kwang-ho finally locates the tunnel. “Yeon-sook-ah, wait just a little longer, I’m coming,” he says, grinning. He sprints in, calling her name, and emerges triumphant at the other side… except nothing’s changed. Confused, he goes back in, still to no avail. Each time he fails, he becomes a little more desperate.

In 1986, Yeon-sook returns to the tunnel to search for him. Catching a glint of light in the gravel, she finds the whistle she had given him and starts sobbing uncontrollably. In 2016, Kwang-ho doggedly keeps running, roaring her name.

And somehow, his cries reach her across space and time. Her head whips up as she hears him call her name, his voice echoing through the tunnel. Full of desperate hope, she heads to the tunnel mouth, and he runs towards her… and past her, a specter still trapped in the future. As his cries fade, so does her hope, and she collapses into sobbing again, as if she senses just how far away he is.

Kwang-ho, too, crumples up with a strangled cry. Tears pouring down his face, he wonders why he this is happening to him, “What did I do so wrong?”

Morning finds Kwang-ho back at the Hwayang police station. Looking over the transfer order he pocketed the day before, he figures that he’ll have to live as the other Kwang-ho until he can go back. He enters the station on Sun-jae’s heels and quickly scans to see if the younger Kwang-ho showed up. He hasn’t.

They have a team briefing on Lee Seon-ok’s case, and Kwang-ho is shocked to learn that she killed three people. Arrested in 1990, she was admitted to the hospital after serving her sentence. Just as Sung-shik forms the words, Kwang-ho asks if anyone had a grudge against her and says they should investigate the families of her victims.

He’s grudgingly impressed that Sun-jae has already collected that information. They report that there was no CCTV, and Kwang-ho inwardly wonders what this “CCTV” is, but on hearing that Seon-ok had a female visitor right before she died, he immediately guesses it must have been the woman who took his taxi.

Chief Sung-shik sends Sun-jae and Kwang-ho to track down the taxi. On the way, Kwang-ho awkwardly apologizes to Sun-jae about the handcuffing incident. “Don’t apologize,” Sun-jae replies brusquely, “Just have a wretched time of it from now on.” Haha. He takes a further dig at Kwang-ho for remembering the taxi by its look rather than its name: “Didn’t you learn Hangul?”

Meanwhile, Sung-shik calls an old hyungnim to ask him about the Park Kwang-ho who transferred from there.

The detectives successfully track down Driver Oh, and he tells them he dropped that woman off at the university. Using his cell phone, Sun-jae calls in a report to the chief that the daughter of Seon-ok’s last victim is a student there, and they’re heading over. Kwang-ho looks on, wondering whether Sun-jae’s device is a telephone or a radio. It’s a confusing world, isn’t it?

Sun-jae tracks down the daughter’s current class—which is being taught by the taxi-lady, whom we should now introduce as SHIN JAE-YI (Lee Yoo-young). She notices him. “Every crime leaves a trace,” she tells the class, throwing him a glance.

The PA system crackles with Kwang-ho’s voice, and he announces that he’s looking for the woman who paid his taxi fare the day before so he can pay her back.

After class, the daughter tells Sun-jae that she was with her mom in Busan the day before. Her alibi is confirmed a moment later by Min-ha, so he lets her go. He pauses as he encounters the professor leaving the class, and across the hall, Kwang-ho catches sight of her and calls out.

In the now-empty classroom, Kwang-ho plays around with the touch-screen operated lighting, fascinated. Sun-jae tells Jae-yi that the patient she visited the day before died. But when the news doesn’t move her, he asks the reason for her visit.

She tells them she’s a psychologist who studies female serial killers, and she was there to interview Lee Seon-ok. Kwang-ho scoffs and asks why she would study lunatics. She, in turn, asks him why he catches murderers when the victims are already dead, and he has no answer.

Sun-jae checks Jae-yi’s alibi with the dean. The dean confirms it, explaining that facilitating her research was a condition of Jae-yi’s recruitment from England, and that she had even written a thesis on the topic. She assures him that Jae-yi’s interest is purely academic. But this lady is kinda creepy all the same, you know?

Sun-jae asks her what her professional opinion is on Jae-yi as a fellow psychologist, observing that spending all your time studying the psyches of murderers might affect one’s own moral compass. With a smirk, the dean asks if he’s thinking that Jae-yi could have killed someone. “I didn’t say that,” Sun-jae replies.

Jae-yi watches the detectives leave before the dean finds her to ask for a word.

Sung-shik meets the hyungnim he called earlier, and they reminisce a bit about the past. Hyungnim tells him that he looked for photos of (the younger) Kwang-ho after Sung-shik’s call, but they had all disappeared. Sung-shik tells him that back in 1986, his team was broken up after a detective disappeared. Hyungnim recalls that that detective was Sung-shik’s sunbae, whom he had missed desperately, and he realizes that he was also called Park Kwang-ho.

A body was never found, Sung-shik says, “But… a person who vanished has reappeared before me, looking exactly as he did thirty years ago.” Hyungnim laughs that he must have had too much to drink, but Sung-shik remains deeply uneasy.

The medical examiner rules Lee Seon-ok’s death a suicide, explaining how the wound was self-inflicted. This guy is creepy. Noticing the new face, he eyes Kwang-ho with interest and asks his name, introducing himself as MOK JIN-WOO.

Sun-jae isn’t convinced by the verdict, and the medical examiner suggests he discuss it with the owner of the pencil. As the detectives head out, Sun-jae complains about Kwang-ho speaking banmal to him (since he outranks him), and Kwang-ho reminds himself that he’s meant to be an ’88-er. He gets huffy, and Sun-jae stalks off without him.

Seeking out Jae-yi (a.k.a. the owner of the pencil), Sun-jae asks her again why she visited Lee Seon-ok. She places a recorder on the table and we flash back to the interview. Lee Seon-ok was clearly suffering from psychosis, first acting distressed, then cackling. She confided in Jae-yi that everyone thought she only killed three people. “But actually, I killed my father, too,” she hissed.

Jae-yi showed no reaction and left her with one final question: “You can’t kill people anymore. But if a murderer can’t murder, is life still worth living… or not?” Jae-yi tells Sun-jae that Lee Seon-ok had smiled then, and we see that Jae-yi’s pencil had fallen at her feet.

Back at the police station, Kwang-ho tries to figure out how to go back and asks Min-ha if they at least caught the 1986 murderer. Min-ha doesn’t know and tells him to ask the chief, who was here then. Astounded, Kwang-ho asks the chief’s name, but before he can find out, a woman interrupts, looking for (the real) Kwang-ho.

He tries to hide, but she only turns out to be his new landlady, and she takes him to his new place. He lets himself in, dumbfounded that even a house has materialized. He throws himself down on the bed and shouts, “Hey! Stop giving me this stuff and just let me go home!” to the universe at large.

Yeon-sook gently shakes him and he wakes up to the sight of her face. Bolting up in delight, he engulfs her in a hug. “This is 1986, right? Not 2016?” he asks. She laughs that he must have been dreaming, and he agrees he was. He hugs her again, confessing that he thought he wasn’t going to see her again. This has got to be a dream.

Someone bangs at the door, and he opens it in his pajamas, thinking that it’s Sung-shik, but it’s 2016’s Sun-jae. Eyes widening, he cries out for Yeon-sook… and wakes up, still in 2016. Sigh. Of course it could never be that easy. Clutching his head in his hands, he howls Yeon-sook’s name.

Elsewhere, a woman kicks on the ground, struggling against an attacker. But then she falls limp, and we see five dots marked on her ankle. How…?!

The next morning, Kwang-ho tries to figure out how to get to the police station by bus. He observes other passengers touching the card-reader and attempts it himself… with his bare hand, which of course gets him thrown off. But then he spots a patrol car and snags himself a ride. Lol, an ’80s man is nothing if not resourceful, even when he finds modern jeans way too tight. Hahaha.

When he arrives at the office, chief Sung-shik introduces Jae-yi as their new consultant psychologist — not a profiler, as she corrects Tae-hee. Kwang-ho scoffs. “Hey, foolish agasshi. You don’t study criminals, you catch them,” he tells her, adding a comment about her being a woman.

Appalled by his rudeness, Sung-shik points out that she’s come to help them, and this time, it’s Sun-jae who retorts that he never asked for it. Done with the introductions, Jae-yi leaves, saying that she’ll be back when they have a case.

The phone rings, and Min-ha finally answers it after a pitched argument with Kwang-ho about who’s the maknae. Immediately grave, he reports that a dismembered body was just found on a nearby mountain.

The entire team are at the scene. Kwang-ho shouts for them to stop as he spots something: five black dots on the heel. “How on earth can this be here…?” he asks, remembering how the last victim in 1986 had six dots. “Six, not five?” the medical examiner had asked then. “One is missing.”

Well, it looks like they just found it.

 
COMMENTS

I’m afraid of jinxing it by saying it, but Tunnel is giving me some strong Signal vibes, along with a big dash of God’s Gift—14 Days—and only one of them ended well. But life is short, so I’m prepared to be an incautious optimist!

I’m so glad Choi Jin-hyuk is back in dramaland, after how good he was in 2014’s Pride and Prejudice. I feel like he’s gone even deeper into this role within just two episodes. While the fish-out-of-water setup is full of obvious conflicts and comedic potential, what really stands out is the emotionally rich undertone, which Choi Jin-hyuk brings to painful life. This is not a comedy, and you don’t forget that; even its funny moments have an undercurrent of gravity and unease. But while Kwang-ho’s predicament is a tragedy in every meaningful way, it’s offset by an equal current of human warmth, which is a quality Tunnel’s predecessor (Voice) sorely lacked.

Kwang-ho’s desperation to return “home” evokes the sharpest pathos this episode. He isn’t taking it stoically—he’s desperate and disorientated, and although he’s proven both adaptable and resourceful, being cut off from Yeon-sook is killing him. I love what this says about him, that his attachment isn’t to the world he knows, but to the person he loves in it. His situation reminds me of those fairy tales about people being taken under the sea only to come back a hundred years later, no older than the day they were taken, but everyone they knew and loved is dead.

But luckily for Kwang-ho, it’s only thirty years, and I’m dying for him to realize who Sung-shik is. Watching Sung-shik watch Kwang-ho was another highlight of the episode. It’s such an odd and fascinating contrast to have the one-time maknae now become Kwang-ho’s senior, but it’s enriched by the fact that Sung-shik’s lived those thirty years that Kwang-ho skipped. His seniority isn’t a mere technicality, but actually a product of experience. More than the clash between Kwang-ho and Sun-jae, I’m looking forward to seeing how Kwang-ho and Sung-shik will match up now.

This hour also brings into relief just how different the culture of the present time is. For example, where few people would have blinked at casual sexism in the ’80s, I winced right along with Sung-shik at Kwang-ho’s rude comments. But the past portions also offer us a window into an era swept away by an increasingly digitized world, not just in its visuals, but in that unhasty quality that marks a willingness to take time over living.

For now, we’re left with a fistful of mysteries, most of which I suspect will take all show to unravel. Apart from the time slip itself, there are so many questions. Who is the younger Park Kwang-ho? Why have his photos disappeared? How is he connected to our Park Kwang-ho? Who’s chasing him and where has he disappeared to? Was that dog-murdering kid the real culprit back then, and if so, where is he now—or more importantly, who is he now? (That creepy medical examiner is my candidate—the best place to hide is at the base of the lamp, right?) Can he time-travel? No no, can I time-travel? To Saturday?

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I was pleasantly surprised that we get the girl to play the genius character here. And for once, that genius title wasn't a mere dramatic exaggeration of good enough. Jae-yi seems to build her life around 'understanding criminal's mind' concept, to the point of her being just as scary and unnerving as her subjects. Her blank, calm gaze send shiver down my spine.

The scarier thing in this eps though, was the circumstances around Gwang-ho's time traveling ability. In most stories, time travel always come in package with fish-out-of-water moment. But here, Gwang-ho basically being set up to live someone else's life. When that older cop said the real Gwang-ho's photos has completely disappeared and make identification impossible, it totally gave me goosebumps. Sure, It did make his life much easier, but at what cost? Someone's life? (It's safe to assume the young Gwang-ho is lying somewhere after his accident)

And if my theory is right, and the killer also somehow getting transported to the future together with Gwang-ho, it makes me shudder to think he may be out there, living a completely normal man's life. I can't imagine how creepy it would be for the people around him when the murderer step into another man's life without them none the wiser.

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I think kwang ho is the person that act different when he is alone and act normal when he is with someone.

Like how he thought he actually can go back, how he questioned the environment only when he was alone, and didn't become so fish out of water in ridiulous way,
he observed, confused but afraid to ask cause he was once people who know how a lot of things works

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That's true. Though I also mean that generally he got it easy compared to other time-traveling hero. He already has a home, job, and more importantly, identity. Eventhough those are technically not his, nobody really questioned it since the young Gwang-ho's photo conveniently disappeared. I wonder though, if the higher being is the one who purposefully set all those things up for him, or there was a twistier explanation for that.

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im guessing the younger kwangho got rid of all traces of himself when he went on the run from that mysterious pursuer.

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I agree, I don't think all traces of him mysteriously vanished either - I think he went out of his way to remove all of his photographs etc. But I also don't think Young Kwang-ho knows about Older Kwang-ho, so he's not removing those traces to pave the way for Older KH to live as him, but to conceal himself from his pursuer. The other question that remains then is, is the pursuer connected to the dot murders/is he the dot murderer, or is what he's involved in something way bigger? It really does feel like Signal, I hope it stays tight, smart and emotionally engaging.

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I thought it is too convenient that everything physical about the younger KH is erased from the files. I mean, does that point to a bigger conspiracy in the police force? How can the photo on his application form be missing too? What case can he be onto that requires such drastic measures to erase him from the face of the earth?

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Kwang-ho hasn't showered in 30 years. Brooding shower scene, please.

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Yes please!! Hahahaha

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oh god! He probably already did after changing his clothes near the end of the episode. He complained about how tight his skinny jeans were.

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I just made the connection that young Kwang-ho (N) must be the police officer our 80s Kwang-ho replaced. Is N's character his son?

There must be a way to return to the past. The serial killer was able to travel to the future to murder victim #5 and returned to the past to kill #6. The question is did he kill more in the past that our hero doesn't know about or does he come back to the future to kill more and Kwang-ho will catch him there?

It better not be the medical examiner - that would be stealing the plot directly from [SPOILERS]

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At first, I thought N's character must be Kwang-ho's son. But he is a '88 liner, and Yeon-sook is already expecting in '86. So, not match?? Then there is also the female psychologist, Shin Jae-yi, who has the same family name as Yeon-sook. I don't know if that's just a coincidence or something more meaningful.

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It's already 1987 in the past. So it is possible for the kid to be born in 88.

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If I am not mistaken, it's September 1986 (that's what Kwang-Ho Says to himself). If Yeon sook fainted at the tunnel within a few days of searching for Kwang-Ho, and was diagnosed then, the child could only be born in 1987. It could also be one of those unimportant red herrings, she could have just got a birth certificate later for her son, or changed his date on paper.

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I think the latest date we saw them in was January 87? So unless Yeon-sook had a 12-month+ pregnancy, it's not possible for him to be our KH's son. According to the promos, our KH has a daughter he has to save...lots of people said Jae-yi was his daughter in the last recap, was that a guess or did the show tell us and I missed it?

She's a Shin, her mother's a Shin, but also, she was married, I don't see any reason for her daughter not to take her father's name, unless Yeon-sook remarried...but even then, if she wasn't going to give her kid her dad's name, wouldn't she at least get her put on the step-dad's family registry? Much more stigma, especially in the 80s, for fatherless kids and husbandless women...

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Well we will have to wait to see who is PKH kid, at first thought young PKH could be his kid as Chief mentioned when he saw PKH it cant be PKH son?, not mentioned daughter?, is true that previously it was mentioned about the plot that PKH travel to the future and will need to save his daughter but writter could had changed this part of the plot, plus for now we know that who is in trouble is young PKH.
When i was watching this episode thought that JY could be the sister of Lee Seon-ok and she grow up knowing what her sister did and is why she study female killers.
Maybe neither JY or young PKH is PKH kid and writter is just trying to mess up with our brains as people already pointing out why young PKH can't be the son and the only thing that make a connection ti PKH is the last name Shin which was his wife last name.

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Maybe, but you can't go by family name in Korea dramas because so many people have the same last names.

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Ugh I was not expecting that spoiler! >__<

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Sorry!!! It's not too much of a spoiler if that helps...

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The main girl is his daughter

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I like this show! The scenes from the past were just like in Signal! The stark contrast between the police investigation methods of the past and the present is kinda interesting. Back then, did they really just round up a number of suspects and interrogate them simultaneously? Lol. If that were to happen now, the police would probably be sued for defamation or something.

I have this wild theory that the hero can only return to his original timeline with the whistle. If the young PKH that he "replaced" was really his son, maybe the mom passed on the whistle to the son, and it's inside one of the boxes in his rental. Old PKH sees it, uses it, bam! Back to the past. :)) At least I'd write it that way if I were the writer lol.

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Shouldn't the whistle be on him when he time travels? But it is right now in the past with his wife. If your theory rings true, he can't get back to the past now.

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That doesn't seem likely when he never used the whistle at all - he just lost it. But I do think he'll come across it in the present day - probably his wife passed it on to his daughter, and that's how he'll recognise her.

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Interesting theory! I didn't think about the importance of the whistle.... Liked it!!! hopefully it wil play some role in the whole story...

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will * (sorry for the typo)

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I'm really liking this show. The first two episodes were a good setup of the past and present settings.
I'm soooo ready to see Kwang Ho & Sun Jae team up and catch some bad guys.

I was already excited for their bromance, but it's even sweeter when I realized Lieutenant Kim Sun Jae was the little baby Kwang Ho held back then! ^^

And if that close connection wasn't enough, I was ectastic when I learned Sung Shik is his current Chief!! :D

Yeon Sook's and Kwang Ho's tunnel scene was heartbreaking. I wished she had yelled out his name in some desperate attempt to reach him. I wasn't sure if she truly heard him though. Still kinda worried about her safety.

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I loved that too: baby Sun-jae is now Lt. (hottie) Sun-jae and Sung-shik is now chief. Looking forward to seeing where everyone else is, and who (or what) they have become.

And I am so glad to have Choi Jin-hyuk back on my screen. He does comedy and heartbreak so well. His crinkly-eyed smile is so adorable. I hope he gets back Yeon-sook by the end of the show, so we can see that smile again.

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Lee You-young has a Modigliani quality to her.
I'm thoroughly enjoying this new drama. OCN seems to be making some seriously gripping crime shows.

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I don't know why but the actress acting as Yeon-sook reminds me of somebody. I am not sure but doesn't she looks like Suzy?

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She reminds me of Han Hyo Joo

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Maybe you're thinking of Jo Jin-woong's first love in Signal? cause it's the same actress! As soon as I saw her, I thought she could not be long for this world, so I was relieved every time a new dead woman appeared that it wasn't her. I'm a terrible person!

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I first thought she was Seo Hyun Jin (OHYA, Romantic Doctor Teacher Kim)...

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Didn't Seo Hyun-Jin guest star in this episode as the 1986 version of Lee Seon-Ok (the serial killer who died with the pencil in her neck)? I was so excited to see her!

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My head tells me this can't be right, but I feel like it's been a while since I was this head-over-heels for a drama hero this quickly. Even after only two episodes, I feel I've gotten to know fairly well how he interacts with the world around him in his own unique way. I love how simple but how pure and strong his love for his wife is, how he adapts to the ridiculousness of jumping from 1986 to 2016 without flailing mindlessly, and how he didn't even notice computers or an entirely different look to the police station because he was narrowed in on an unfamiliar face.

Like you, Saya, I also love that him being removed to an unfamiliar time is played more for emotional resonance than comedy (though it's not without comedy -- that first meeting with Sun Jae where both men were simultaneously trying to assert authority over "this crazy guy who thinks he can fool me into thinking he's an officer"was hilarious. I can't wait until they settle into a reluctant friendship). Shows that make me laugh a lot make me remember how much I enjoyed them, but it's the stories that squeeze my heart that really stick with me.

And to top it off, I'm thoroughly invested in the mysteries as well, especially the question of the younger Park Kwang-ho. Why is he being erased? Was our hero replacing him a lucky coincidence or planned? Who is he? Is he even still alive? I have a feeling we won't find out much about him until later in the show, and it's going to drive me crazy waiting (in a good way). At first, when I saw the two characters had the same name, I wondered if N was somehow playing a younger/flashback version of Choi Jin Hyuk, but I couldn't figure out how they were going to get around their two VERY different voices. lol. This is vastly more interesting.

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I'll be very disappointed if in the end they can't come up with a logical explanation why Kwang-ho's photos have been missing, except for that one photo from his former hoobae. I mean because removing any past records is the most convenient way for this story to make Kwang-ho's past identity non-existent to present-day characters.

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I like KH's adaptation skills, how in control of his own emotions and mind about the time slip when he is with other people and his confusion when he is all by himself. No wonder he is a cop. I like a cop who can keep his cool when placed in unpredictable situations.

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The killer It might be the reporter. He has a "doppleganger" in the future but if the killer can also time travel then that would explain why they look the same. He is just probably acting to cover his footsteps.
Thanks for the recap Saya :). I also agree I wish I could time travel to Saturday.

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Yeah the reporter was so suspicious when he "happened" to be in the police station following each murder of a woman, and the way he was the first one to deduce that the murders were all committed by the same person. Not only that, I did not feel like he was approaching Sun-jae's father for cooperation for his article but rather to provoke him about his wife's death.

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I wonder if the killer can time travel. It doesn't seem as simple as running through the tunnel once to get to the other side of time. And why is the fifth body found in the present time line?

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Wow! That was a great guess! The possibility of the reporter / taxi driver being the Serial Killer is High. Because only Reporter Oh and Park-Kwang Ho looked the same from the past! Even the chief grow older now. Wow, I can't wait for the next episode

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Loving this show so far coz apart from the timeslip part, which is very "Signal," I like the mystery behind the identity of Park Kwang-ho, both in the past and the present. I'm watching this in real time. I hope I won't be disappointed with the twist and turns of this drama. Also, contrary to some speculations about who's the killer, I hope it's none of the existing characters. I mean many of them can be shady like what @Blueribbon said about the journalist/taxi driver. But, would that mean they will be dealing with the same case for the rest of 14 episodes? And the whole story will just revolve around how can Kwang-ho go back and forth to the past and present to resolve the mystery?

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Besides the Signal vibe, this show also reminds me of Tomorrow With You, just because they travel thru the tunnel.

As for young modern Kwang-ho... If he isn't old Kwang-ho's 1st son and isn't disappearing because the bad guy is after him, then maybe time is out of joint and he was Kwang-ho's 2nd son (explains) the birth year discrepancy) and he is disappearing because he wasn't born because daddy time-jumped. Remember how in Signal they would change the future and all the paper records would change -- kinda like disappearing photos of young Kwang-ho ???

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I agree that young Kwang-ho is the second child of Kwang-ho and Yeon-sook. He will remain unconceived unless his father gets back in time to get the job done. Which, as the killer seems to have solved the problem by killing his 5th victim in the present day and returning to kill his 6th in the past, is entirely possible. Pretty neat trick - kill in the past and escape to the future.

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But then, wouldn't the "2017 chief "know about "86' detective Park" sonS/daughter? I mean, would he lose all contact with Park's wife and not have a minimum interest about them? kinda strange, since they (Park and 2017 chief - sorry forgot the name) seemed pretty close in the 80's...

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This is the major problem with time travel story lines. Once you start dealing with multiple time lines it gets just so complicated. So I just usually go with it if the characters are engaging and the plot is compelling. But no, the chief wouldn't know about Kwang-ho's son because the moment Kwang-ho shows up in the present, the time line becomes that he disappeared 30 years ago under mysterious circumstances and that son was never conceived. All the chief now knows is that he once had a colleague who was also named Park Kwang-ho and this new guy looks an awful lot like him. And there are many reasons why, in this time line, the chief might not know what's happened to Yoon-sook. She could have moved back with her family to have her baby, remarried, died of a broken heart (I hope not this!) etc.

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Yeah, that's right, whenever I watch anything involving time travelling I try not to think too much about the plot (or lack of it) or the logic of the show....cause it's simply not logical/realistic (at least for now) the concept itself. But I do like to keep guessing what's gonna happen...according to certain/my logic...the most obvious thing would be to think that she's in fact pregnant, but the lost of her husband making her too sad to keep living in that place,would make her change the city and try to have a fresh start somewhere else (even with PKH child) :)

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no he wouldn't,
in time travelling the fact changes but it will not always the same fact for people that is not informed

when the time travelling act begin, that's when the real fact get blurred, people don't remember what it supposed to do

1st time : kwang ho goes missing and the case is unsolved
the chief and people's memory while the time travelling happen

2nd time : kwang ho goes back and the case is solved
the chief memory and people memory before and after time travelling happen

so the one linear time-line in this occasion is,
the killer and kwang ho meet at the tunnel,
he goes to the future, kwang ho goes to the future and solve the murder in the past

the memory of solving murder will not happen unless the time travelling ends

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Can't wait for the next episode...

... and Choi Jin Hyuk...

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Same here!!!

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I agree with the beanies anove who said the 88er Park Kwang Ho removed the photos on purpose. I am equally curious if he ditched his phone on purpose too. When the other police officer tried to call 88er Park the phone was in the woods ringing. I'm hoping that question is answered in future eps. Also so far Tunnel is better than Voice, which became stupid by ep 2. Hopefully the smart writing continues.

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Yes to Tunnel > Voice (so far). I like mystery-solving dramas, but I was kinda turned off with the 90s treatment of the action scenes in Voice. I like those crime profiling scenes in Signal, hunting the antagonist (and miserably) failing, without all those action scenes I've seen a hundred times in any Van Damme and Steven Seagal movies. :))

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Agreed Nuguu, especially when they sacrifice story for action ( cough cough K2 cough cough). Give me story everytime and then I can better appreciate the action.

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Choi Jin Hyuk is back, Yay!

I wasn't planning to watch this now but I just couldn't wait till it ends and I'm glad I didn't, I didn't watch Signal so I have nothing to compare this show with but I'm loving it.

Can't wait for the next episode.

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Please watch Signal!! You won't regret it. :)

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Remember when Kwang ho and Sung shik were searching around a crime scene? There was this pipe (?) where Kwang ho flashed his light but it kept flickering..i have this feeling that..that might be the way back to past! I Think!
Also....how come no one's talking about Sunjae being an A.R.M.Y? 1st Save me..then Fire...(uh huh! I believe he's the other tenant at Kwang ho's house)..
P.S Song Min Ha?? Song Marin + Shin Min Ha?? LOL

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I thought the sound director must be an A.R.M.Y. My fangirl mode is instantly activated ㅋㅋㅋ Can't wait to see next episode (and silently pray to hear some BTS' songs)

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YAY! Someone finally calls out the BTS songs! I'm late to the game here. Just finished episode 2 on April 4th and jumped into DramaBeans to read the comments and see who would be the first person to mention BTS! I hope that means our other tenant is a youngster and we'll have an entire drama with BTS songs blasting from his apartment! It can't be The character played by N that was bleeding in the car chase because then we'd should be listening to music by VIXX.
Anyway, I'm liking this a lot but wanted more reaction from him about cell phones and DNA.

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After lurking here for quite some time, I finally felt that I have to contribute at least a bit.
First and for all, thanks for the recappers who have recapped quite some series, and sometimes even explained some things about Korea, that I didn't know. And thanks for all those discussions, where sometimes even more was explained and other times were even very entertaining to read. (Cheese in the trap, piano's, anyone? :P) Thanks all!

Tunnel is probably the first series I've watched since You Who Came from the Stars and Signal, that made me go "AARGH" when the episode ended, because I was really sucked into the story, and wanted to know how it would continue.

My take on the Kwang-Ho 2016: If he's indeed just a corporal from another precinct, I don't see how he could have erased all his photo's, from resume's, personnel files, etc. And if this corporal is indeed the Kwang-Ho we saw in the beginning, wounded, fleeing from an unknown hunter, then I think, that Kwang-Ho 2016 is part of an undercover operation, that's gone horribly wrong. Which would also explain his deserted smartphone. This way you woulnd't have to juggle different timelines, although it's very convenient for Kwang-Ho 1986.
Does it have anything to do with the 1986 case? I don't know.
But I do hope that:
- Kwang-Ho 2016 is still alive.
- Kwang-Ho 1986 rescues him (my imagination is just running wild on this one hehehe)

The whistle scene:
I totally agree with the recap that Kwang-Ho 1986 love his wife very much, she means the world to him. And I think she knows that too. So while it may be shocking to her, finding a bloody stone, and his flashlight, the finding of that whistle, if even more painful. I think that Yeon-sook realizes that Kwang-Ho would never leave that behind. Unless he's dead. Which makes hearing his voice even more agonizing, like "They killed my husband, and now his spirit is stuck here, trying to find his way back to me..."
That's how I interpreted that scene.

If this drama stays as strong as the 1st two episodes, I think I'll have to add this one on my list of favorites.

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typo: "...if even more painful" = "...is even more painful"

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SunJae and KwangHo partnership is interesting to see. While i like the actor that plays MinHa. The actor that plays TaeHee is the creepy ghost in Goblin. Despite his previous role I think I like them already.

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Aside how wonderful and gripping this drama is I couldn't help but notice -
Is the sound director an ARMY perhaps?
There was a lot of BST love going on from the lieutenant's earpiece to kwang ho's noisy neighbour in the morning lol

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A little late starting this drama. Do I really have to see the cast in winter wear when it is middle of summer in Korea.

It is as intriguing as any time travelling drama,but this time a police detective of old school. Really old school as Kwang ho himself speaks quite rudely I noted.

That professor is a bit iffy also. I somehow think the ladies serial killer also time travelled when Kwang ho did.But strangely how the killer killed his/her 5th victim in the future and then the 6th victim in the past. Seems like maybe the 5th victim was so far undiscovered before the 6th victim was killed.

I have not finished Voice ep15&16.Haih too many dramas.

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