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Answer Me 1988: Episode 20 (Final)

In true Answer Me fashion, this final episode is a farewell to youth as much as it is a farewell to this series and the characters who’ve burrowed deep in our hearts and taken up residence there. There’s always something about the portrayal of youth in this franchise that makes me wish I could bottle it up and keep our characters eighteen forever, but the finale reminds us that the beauty of youth is that it’s fleeting. And whether we want it or not, the time has come for growing up, and moving on, and saying farewell.

 
SONG OF THE DAY

Shin Hae-chul – “Growing Up” [ Download ]

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EPISODE 20: “Goodbye my youth, goodbye Ssangmun-dong”

On a rainy day in December 1994, somebody waits at the bus stop with an umbrella. Bora winces when she sees rain and gets off the bus, but she hardly takes a step before Sun-woo is standing in front of her, umbrella overhead. She laughs and asks if he’s her stalker, and he wonders how she didn’t know that until now.

Bora asks how his parents are doing, and he says that he’s happy to know that Mom and Ajusshi and Jin-ju will be fine without him. She wonders if he’s going somewhere, and he brings up marriage again, teasing that he’s in a rush to get married before his girlfriend ages any more.

Sun-woo wants to get married next year, and Bora doesn’t seem to object to the timeline in general, but she reminds him that they have quite the number of obstacles to overcome first. He knows and tells her that he’ll take care of it, and all she has to do is stick by his side. Bora doesn’t look quite so sure.

No-eul recoils at the sight of Deok-sun putting on orange lipstick, and tells her to stop following celebrity trends. She argues that someone told her it was pretty, and he scoffs that whoever it was surely lost his mind and/or eyesight due to love.

Flashback to: Taek grinning at her like a fool, declaring that she’s purdy. She said it’s Lee Young-ae’s lipstick and Taek said that she’s even prettier than Lee Young-ae. Deok-sun: “Do you know who Lee Young-ae is?” Taek: “…But you’re really pretty!” Lol.

He reminded her about their movie date and she told him not to cancel on her like last time, and he went in for a hug. But Deok-sun spotted Jin-ju down the alley at the last minute and ducked, and Taek had to do an awkward air-hug-spin thing that cracks me up. Jin-ju looked at them suspiciously and Taek promised to tell her everything later. Jin-ju accepted that and went home, but not before commenting on the weird ugly lipstick that Deok-sun was wearing, ha.

Bora comes home and says the exact same thing to Deok-sun the moment she sees her orange lips, and No-eul dies laughing. Deok-sun wonders where Mom and Dad are, and No-eul says they’re upstairs discussing where to move, because apparently Jung-hwan’s parents are moving too.

Jung-hwan’s parents are planning to buy a plot of land in the countryside, and though Deok-sun’s dad dislikes the idea of being that far from Seoul, the two families really like the idea of moving together and remaining neighbors. You HAVE TO remain neighbors! It would be too sad otherwise!

Taek waits at the movie theater for his date, and when people start to recognize him, it turns into a mini fan-signing with autographs and pictures. Deok-sun finally runs in, and Taek assures her that he hasn’t been waiting long. She looks around warily when he grabs her hand, but he doesn’t let go and holds it throughout the whole movie.

Jung-bong painstakingly makes a mixtape for Mi-ok, and they make a date to meet at the street market tomorrow. Jung-hwan is home and calls up Sun-woo to hang out, and still suffers from shock every time Sun-woo says Bora’s name without the “noona” attached.

Jung-hwan warns him to be careful about meeting Bora in their neighborhood because he’s bound to get caught by the ajummas. Well now you jinxed it. Sure enough, Sun-woo is mid-kiss when he looks down the street and locks eyes with all three moms. Bora turns around too, and then everyone goes flailing.

The scene is hilarious, but the aftermath is heavy, as the dads sit down for a drink with a long sigh and the moms each take to their sickbeds, either in shock, protest, or both. The kids gather in Taek’s room and Dong-ryong points out that it’s not a tragedy if they were already planning on telling the parents eventually; this just moved their timetable up.

Dong-ryong says that lots of people with the same surname get married these days, and there’s talk of the laws changing (back then you couldn’t marry someone with the same surname, especially with a name that wasn’t something common like Kim or Lee where you had multiple clans).

Deok-sun is surprised to hear marriage talk and asks Sun-woo if he intends to marry Bora, and he nods without hesitation. The group is impressed, though they worry about him being able to convince his mom when he’s never rebelled once in his entire life.

Both Sun-woo and Bora are unable to sleep that night, but Deok-sun manages to put a smile on Bora’s face when she pats her sister on the back and tells her to be strong.

Jung-hwan’s mom asks him if Jung-bong has quit studying for the bar exam altogether, and Jung-hwan hesitates but answers truthfully that he has. He makes sure that Mom is okay lately too, and she smiles to reassure him.

Jung-bong takes Mi-ok out to eat street food at the market and holds her hand as they walk. He says he’s surprised that she’d be up for this kind of food when she lives in such a big fancy house, and Mi-ok doesn’t seem inclined to explain her family’s background. They actually happen to pass by her father’s shop at the market, but Mi-ok purposely ignores Dad and keeps walking ahead. Ouch. It seems to sting her conscience though, and she stops.

Jung-hwan’s dad wakes up to find Mom sitting in the dark again, so he suggests a late-night stroll through the neighborhood. They walk hand-in-hand and he lifts her mood, and she tells him about Jung-bong giving up on law. Dad is proud enough that he even got into college and says he didn’t expect much more than that.

They reminisce about what good kids Jung-bong and Jung-hwan were even when they were little. Mom remembers when Dad was a jajangmyun deliveryman, he tried to hide when he saw the boys playing with their friends because he thought they’d be embarrassed of him. But Jung-bong took his brother’s hand and they ran up to him calling him Dad and hugged him. Awww. It still makes him teary-eyed to think of it, and he says that it still ranks as the happiest moment of his life.

Mom remembers how hard it got at times, when Jung-bong was sick and they would run out of rice. She admits to thinking terrible thoughts about just ending their misery, but she held on because of their children, and says she was able to keep living for them. Mom: “I think I didn’t raise them, but they raised me.”

Mi-ok makes a decision and turns back around towards Dad’s store, and introduces Jung-bong to her father. She proudly tells him that Dad opened up this shop all on his own and now has three of them, and Dad looks so happy to know that Mi-ok isn’t ashamed of him. Dad invites them inside, though he eyes Jung-bong warily when he seems to recognize his voice as Mi-ok’s high school boyfriend who kept calling the house.

Jung-bong tells his parents that he’s going to quit studying law and wants to work a part-time job at a local pub. Mom is disappointed but Dad is pleased that he found something he wants to do, and approves wholeheartedly.

Jung-hwan’s mom vents about it to Deok-sun’s mom, who’s still in bed over the Sun-woo-Bora problem. Jung-hwan’s mom says it’s not a big deal nowadays for two people with the same surname to get married, but Deok-sun’s mom says that they can’t even legally register their marriage or their children. So that’s really the whole reason why she’s opposed? Based on their reactions, I was waiting for some huge twist.

Sun-woo makes sure that Bora isn’t going to run away this time and braces himself before going home to talk to Mom and Ajusshi. He asks for Mom’s blessing to date Bora and marry her, and Mom tells him not to rush things because these feelings might not last. Sun-woo cringes before telling her the full truth—that he and Bora have seen each other for six years. He leaves out the breakup, which is probably for the best.

He says that he’s not asking to be married right away, but he wants to date Bora knowing that marriage is in their future, and wants Mom’s blessing. He says that he’s never once done something against Mom’s will, and even chose the career path she wanted. He doesn’t regret anything, but asks to be able to marry the person he loves. Well how can you argue with that?

Jung-hwan heads out to return to the base, and Mom and Dad run through their whole farewell routine like it’s the first time he’s visited home. He smiles and salutes them, and Mom bursts into tears the second he’s out the door.

But when he gets down the street, he spots Sun-woo drinking by himself at the pojangmacha. Jung-hwan checks his watch and hesitates, knowing he has to be back to the base by morning. But when Sun-woo looks up, Jung-hwan is sitting beside him pouring a drink without a word.

Sun-woo asks if he doesn’t have to drive, and Jung-hwan lies that his car broke down and he’s taking the bus anyway. The two friends don’t have to say much else, and just pour drinks for each other and throw them back.

Taek’s dad asks Sun-woo’s mom if she remembers how much he opposed Taek playing baduk at first. She remembers that Deok-sun’s dad was originally planning to take Deok-sun to the training center, but it was Taek who happened to tag along instead and started playing. Ha, so it’s because of Deok-sun’s dad?

Dad didn’t like the idea of Taek spending his life on baduk and not growing up a normal kid, and decided to throw everything baduk-related in the trash one night. But the next day he caught Taek sneaking a book he’d somehow kept hidden, looking up at him with fearful eyes but stubbornly refusing to give it over anyway. Dad knew then and there he’d never win against his son. He asks if Sun-woo’s mom can really win against Sun-woo, and if that’s even really winning at all.

Bora comes home and asks permission to marry Sun-woo, and gets Mom to admit that she wouldn’t oppose Sun-woo at all if they were able to legally get married. Bora says that the law is due to change next year, and she wouldn’t dare do anything to disappoint Mom and Dad. She’s positive that in a year’s time she and Sun-woo will be able to get married, and asks for their blessing. Mom and Dad just heave deep sighs.

Jung-hwan’s mom invites everyone over for noodles, and though the air is awkward between Deok-sun’s mom and Sun-woo’s mom, everyday talk quickly lifts the tension and soon they’re chatting like old friends again.

Deok-sun’s dad asks after Taek’s latest match and worries that he’s looking really thin these days, and Taek’s dad blames Deok-sun’s dad for introducing him to baduk in the first place.

Suddenly No-eul comes running in, yelling like there’s some huge emergency… and then presents all the parents with a front-page story about Taek and his new girlfriend Deok-sun. Eep.

They’re holding hands in the picture, but all the parents deflate instantly and say that there’s no way that story is true. They scoff at the idea and say that Taek and Deok-sun hold hands all the time, and when they were little they used to go to the bathhouse together. Well that’s embarrassing. No-eul is certain there’s some truth to it, but they laugh in his face.

Deok-sun waits for Taek’s match to end, and Teacher tells her that he won after 13 hours. He heard from Taek that they were dating and he thanks her sincerely, probably for taking such good care of Taek. He says they should’ve been more careful about reporters though, and reminds her of Taek’s personality; he suggests that acknowledging the relationship openly would be best.

Taek shows up behind her and wraps his arms around in her a backhug, and she tells him he did a good job before giving him a hug. When they reach their neighborhood, Deok-sun turns to him and asks him to deny the dating rumor for now. Both their parents are already in an uproar about Sun-woo and Bora, and Deok-sun doesn’t want to add to the stress and shock.

Taek doesn’t like that one bit and says he’s not going to lie. He says he did that for six years and refuses to do it anymore. Deok-sun says gently that once time passes, their parents will listen to them, but now isn’t the time. Taek won’t even look at her; clearly this is not what he wants to hear. Deok-sun argues, “I have confidence that I won’t change. Do you not?”

The parents wait anxiously for Taek to come home, and when Jung-hwan’s mom suggests asking him just to be sure, Sun-woo’s mom scoffs that it can’t be true. No-eul insists that something’s going on between them, but his mom asks if he’s trying to make her collapse. She can barely wrap her head around the two Sungs asking to be married, let alone becoming double-in-laws with one family.

Everyone files out of the house, which is exactly when Taek and Deok-sun walk through the gate together. All the parents freeze, and one by one they ask as if pleading, “It’s not true, is it?” “The article is wrong, right?”

The silence stretches longer and longer, and Deok-sun turns to Taek. He looks over at her, and then says very matter-of-factly that it’s not true. All the parents breathe a collective sigh of relief, and Taek adds, “Does it seem like our relationship would ever change?”

Deok-sun smiles at him gratefully, and then we flash back to the rest of their conversation in the car. She’d said, “I trust you. Does it seem like our relationship would easily change? I won’t change.” He softened at that, and she convinced him to take things slow. He sighed, still unhappy about it, so she added, “I’ll give you a present in exchange: I love you.”

Aww, instant happy. I love how the words just slay him. His eyes roam from her eyes to her lips, and he leans over to kiss her.

In 2016, Deok-sun interviews that back then, being double-in-laws was a bigger concern than the surname problem. She says they dated for about two years before getting married, and it took a lot of convincing on her part to get Taek to hold off on telling the parents. She remembers how busy they were back then, and says they mostly had dates in alleys.

We see their relationship progress over time, as Taek wakes up at the crack of dawn just to walk Deok-sun to the corner. Deok-sun runs out late at night just to see Taek when he comes home, and he takes her by the hand and asks for a spin around the block just to prolong their goodbye.

Future Deok-sun says they shot their share of drama scenes too, and we see Taek burst into a noraebang with a stern face and get mad at Deok-sun for drinking and partying with her coworkers. On a different day, Taek looks like he’s being scolded by a teacher as Deok-sun yells at him for lending money again. He tries his damnedest to puppy-face his way out, but she’s not having it.

Deok-sun takes out her old diaries for old times’ sake and reads through some of the entries, smiling and cringing. But she gasps to read the page about that night when she confessed to Sun-woo, and rips it out.

She takes it all the way outside to throw it away, but Taek sneaks up behind her and grabs the page out of her hand. Lol, so that’s how he finds out! He holds it up above her head while she jumps to get it back, and he finally relents and swears that he didn’t get a chance to read it.

But when Sun-woo comes home that night, Taek greets him with a violent punch in the back, hahaha. Sun-woo asks what that was for, and Taek says with a grin that he’s just glad to see him and shuffles off.

2016. Husband is asked in his interview about the best thing about dating or being married, and he says that it was being able to quit his sleeping pills. He says he went off of them completely when he started dating Deok-sun. Oh thank goodness. Those were so worrisome.

The interviewer asks when he first started liking Deok-sun, and he can’t remember, but laughs to hear that she thinks he first liked her in1989. He wonders if his wife even knows him at all, and in close-up we see a little scar on his forehead.

We go back to 1978 when Taek first moved to the neighborhood and Deok-sun piggybacked him to school after he broke his arm. Then in 1979, they were wrestling in the street and Deok-sun slammed Taek to the ground so hard that he cracked his forehead open. Both of them cried, but after getting stitched up, Little Deok-sun had tucked him into bed. They slept side-by-side, and even back then he’d held her hand as they slept.

The teen parts, we were already there for; and then we catch up to them as young adults again, as Deok-sun opens a box with a golden turtle inside. She asks what it is, having expected something different when Taek mentioned he was proposing. He says it’s supposed to represent eternal love. Pfft. He makes up for it with his words though: “Deok-sun-ah, I love you.”

Fall 1995. It’s seven days before Bora and Sun-woo’s wedding, and Bora comes home to find both Mom and Dad in subdued moods. Mom is slaving away in the kitchen and Dad is shining the new shoes that Bora bought for him, which he says fit perfectly.

Sun-woo’s mom is sending out last-minute invitations, and Sun-woo comes by to chat with Taek’s dad. Ajusshi tells Sun-woo to be as easygoing as he can to maintain a happy home, and advises him to do his own laundry and cook his own food because Bora works too.

Sun-woo assures him that he’ll do well, and though he might not be as good as Ajusshi, he watched and learned a lot over the last eight years, and says he’ll try to be half as good. Aw. Ajusshi wonders when Sun-woo grew up enough to get married, and he says that he and Mom trust him to live well.

Sun-woo hands Ajusshi a wedding invitation, and says that he’s been giving out a separate invitation to his closest friends and family: “This is my real wedding invitation.” Ajusshi opens it up, and inside where Sun-woo’s parents are listed, his name is written in beside Mom’s. Augh, and I was doing so well with the not crying today!

They both hold back their tears, and Ajusshi is speechless. Sun-woo asks him to sit next to Mom at the wedding where his father would sit, and says, “Thank you for making my mom not lonely anymore.” Ajusshi just silently sniffles back tears.

Bora watches Dad shine his shoes for the millionth time on the day before the wedding, and Mom suddenly gets up in the middle of ironing because she forgot to buy Bora a teapot, and insists that it has to be bought right now.

Bora tells Sun-woo over the phone that the mood is weird at her house, like she’s already a guest and not living there anymore. Sun-woo says it’s because they’re sad about her leaving home, and suggests she spend some quality time with Dad. He laughs at his own suggestion though, knowing that Bora and Dad aren’t exactly the chatty type.

She comes out to find that Dad has made her lunch, and they sit there eating mostly in silence. Bora asks Dad if the shoes fit for the eleventy-billionth time, and he just repeatedly tells her to eat. They say absolutely nothing of any substance or importance, yet the scene makes me cry, and Dad quietly wipes a tear when Bora isn’t looking.

The whole town and friends and family gather for the wedding. Jung-hwan rushes in just in time, and Dong-ryong presides over the event. Sun-woo enters first and his friends laugh to see him just grinning like a fool, and Mom already starts getting teary-eyed.

Outside, Deok-sun makes sure that everything is in place before Bora and Dad walk down the aisle. She checks Bora’s makeup and tries to get Dad to stop being so nervous, and tells them to just focus on not tripping.

Deok-sun whispers to Dad that his shoes are way too big (awwww, why does that pinch my heart so?) and he shushes her not to say anything. So Deok-sun quietly stoops down and stuffs two wads of tissues into Dad’s shoes to keep him from tripping over his own feet, and Dad gives her a little smile.

Then it’s time for the big moment. Dad walks Bora down the aisle and successfully hands her off to Sun-woo, and everyone claps. Taek says that Bora noona is beautiful, and turns to see Deok-sun crying all her makeup down her face.

Sun-woo and Bora turn around and approach her parents to bow, and that’s when the floodgates finally open for Bora. She’s already crying when she looks down and sees the tissues stuffed into the backs of Dad’s shoes, and she just bursts into heaving sobs right then and there. Dad doesn’t shed a single tear, but just silently gives her a little smile and mouths for her not to cry and that it’s okay.

We skip right to the picture-taking after the wedding, and Dad stops the big family photo and insists that Jung-hwan’s family and Dong-ryong’s family get in the family shot. Aw. Then the friends get their own picture, and everyone makes fun of Deok-sun’s streaky face. Unni just quietly holds Deok-sun’s hand, and they all smile for the camera.

The families head out to say their farewells before Bora and Sun-woo leave for their honeymoon, and Bora hugs Mom one last time. Bora: “I love you, Mom. I’ll live well. Thank you for raising me.”

Then she turns to Dad and puts an envelope in his hand. They say nothing, but she’s already on the verge of tears again. Bora and Sun-woo take off, and the family turns around and finds Dad suddenly gone.

In the car, Bora bursts into tears again, and Sun-woo says he never knew she could cry this much. Bora says she didn’t know either, and opens her bag to find an envelope in there from Dad. Lol, exactly alike to the very end.

Dad heads back to the wedding hall and un-stuffs his shoes before opening Bora’s letter. She says that she’s writing a letter because she doesn’t think she’ll be able to say the words, and wonders why she never can: “I probably take after you a lot, don’t I?” Tears begin to trickle down Dad’s face.

Bora: “I don’t know everything in your heart, but I do know that whenever you call, ‘Bora-ya,’ it’s because you want me to look at you. I know that putting side dishes on my rice means that you love me. Why did I act as if I didn’t know? That pains me the most and I’m sorry.”

She writes that there’s something she really wanted to say to his face before she got married, but she thinks she’ll burst into tears the second she calls out, “Dad,” so she’s writing it down instead.

Bora: “Thank you. I love you. I’ll live well with Sun-woo so that you won’t worry. It may have been a one-room half-basement, but I received so much love, and even if I’m reborn I want to be reborn as your daughter. Dad, I’m sorry, and I love you.” Dad whispers ever so faintly as he cries, “Thank you… thank you for growing up so well.”

Bora opens up her letter from Dad, and he writes that he still remembers that day 27 years ago when she was born. He wonders how she grew up enough to get married, and says that she’ll always remain his daughter no matter whose wife or daughter-in-law she becomes.

Dad: “Never forget that from the moment you were born, you were always my most treasured gem. My daughter, I love you. I can’t thank you enough for being born as my daughter.” Sun-woo holds Bora close as she breaks down in sobs.

2016. Deok-sun and Husband laugh at their group photo at Bora’s wedding and the two sisters tease each other about who cried more that day. Bora answers a call from “Stalker,” and Sun-woo asks if she’s picked out her father’s birthday present yet. Wait, I know that voice… Oh, it’s Lee Jong-hyuk! Why are you only a voice cameo?

Bora asks Deok-sun if the interview team is bugging them a lot, and says they promised not to ask for follow-up sessions. Meanwhile, Sun-woo calls back twice to offer more suggestions for Dad’s birthday present, and Deok-sun and Taek count down while giggling. On cue Bora blows her lid and yells at Sun-woo to quit bugging and calling, so then of course he just texts her to ask if she’s mad and to see when she’s coming home.

The interview continues after Bora leaves, and Deok-sun says that the most famous person from their neighborhood turned out to be Jung-bong, who’s now a celebrity chef on TV. Deok-sun envies Mi-ok because she still remembers Jung-bong’s ramyun as the best she’s ever had. Taek offers to make her some later and she turns that down right away, heh.

They get thanked for doing the interviews, and they say it was fun to reminisce and talk about their youth and the old neighborhood. Taek says that they really had fun growing up in Ssangmun-dong, and Deok-sun wonders why they didn’t know it then. She still remembers the moms crying when the families started moving away one by one, starting with Taek’s house.

We go back to moving day for Sun-woo’s mom. Taek’s dad waits by the truck as she heads over to say goodbye to the other moms. She makes jokes about their solemn faces and says she’s not moving to America, but she’s the one who breaks down in tears first. She cries, “I only knew really good people and spent really good years here.”

Deok-sun narrates that Taek’s family was the first to leave Ssangmun-dong, because Taek’s dad wanted to give Sun-woo’s mom a nice updated apartment before she got any older. Next was Dong-ryong’s family, and then Jung-hwan’s family. Last was her family, and by then their street was completely empty.

Deok-sun stands in the middle of the street just looking around at the place where she grew up, and has to be called away before she leaves. When Dad tells the mover where they’re going, he wonders if they’re going to become farmers.

When the interviewer asks 2016 Deok-sun and Taek if they’d want to go back to that time, Taek says he’s happier now because he was so sensitive to everything back then. There is one thing he’d like to do if they went back—hang out and watch videos with the gang in his room.

Deok-sun says that she’d like to go back and see her parents again when they were young, and gets emotional thinking about how much they’ve aged. She tells Taek that lately songs like Kim Chang-wan’s “Youth” really stir her heart, and he says it’s because they’re old now. Taek wants to go visit the old neighborhood, but Deok-sun tells him it’s totally different now. She went about ten years back and tells him it’s better not to see it.

Deok-sun returns to the street decades after they’ve all moved away, and it’s now uninhabited and filled with trash and vandalized. She narrates that years had passed and the street had aged too: “I couldn’t return to my youth, and I couldn’t return to that street either. Time flows, everything passes by, and ages. The reason that youth is beautiful is because of that. Because at a brilliant moment, you shine so brightly that it’s blinding, but you can never go back.”

As she moves from house to house and room to room, Deok-sun narrates that she had a youth like that once. She reaches Taek’s room and opens the door, and finds the four boys waiting for her and nagging her to hurry up so they can start the movie.

Deok-sun is young again too, and her eyes are filled with tears as she asks what they’re all doing here. Jung-hwan: “Why are we here? Where would we have gone?” Sun-woo asks if she’s crying because Bora hit her again, and she shakes her head no. Dong-ryong says they’re starting the movie, and Taek smiles and tells her to come sit.

Just like any other day, they watch a movie and Dong-ryong farts under the covers. One by one the moms call them home for dinner, just like they did in the opening episode. They get up and file out of Taek’s room, and when we cut back to him, he’s a little boy. The others are tiny children too as they each go home, and Deok-sun narrates that this the end of their story in Ssangmun-dong, 1988.

Deok-sun (voiceover): “The reason I miss that time and the reason I miss that street isn’t just because I miss my younger self. It’s because my dad’s youth, my mom’s youth, my friends’ youth—the youth of everything that I loved was in that place. I regret not having bid a final farewell to the surroundings of my youth that can never be brought back together again. To the things that are already gone, to the time I can’t return to… I say a belated farewell. Goodbye, my youth. Goodbye, Ssangmun-dong.”

In an epilogue, Deok-sun’s narration concludes: “A time so warm and innocent that I miss it painfully. Do you hear me? If you do, answer me, my ’88, my days of youth.”

 
COMMENTS

It was the most bittersweet of all Answer Me finales, but Answer Me 1988 had always set itself apart from the beginning with a more sober tone. There was an added layer of sadness in the usual nostalgia of the franchise, because this one really celebrated a bygone era and a simple way of life that no longer exists. I found myself wishing that no one would move away from Ssangmun-dong, and wanting desperately to see our three ajummas together again just to make me feel better. But nothing stays the same forever and the story was true to life in the end, and perhaps in order to say a proper goodbye to the neighborhood, our characters had to move on. The emptiness of the neighborhood made Deok-sun’s final visit and memory of the boys particularly heartbreaking. I know they were all alive and well, but it felt like a mourning of their youth, and I found myself wishing we could just close the door and stay in that room forever. Unhealthy, I know. I’m telling you, it was not unlike grieving.

I was disappointed in a few things, namely the lack of Jung-hwan in the final episode. Would it have killed you to give him a send-off, a girl, a happy future, a freaking breadcrumb in the present day? I think not. I know he’s happy and well, but by focusing most of the final episode on Bora and Deok-sun, we got so little of the other characters, and I was really sad to reach the end and realize that we weren’t going to even see Jung-hwan or Dong-ryong in the present day, or see them get happy endings in the past. It basically ensured that the gigantic Jung-hwan-shaped hole in my heart would be seared open FOREVER. Was that the goal? ‘Cause if it was, great job with that.

Taek and Deok-sun’s story got some cute development in the final stretch, though this was another case where I feel like I missed out on some of the bigger moments. I wanted to see them actually tell their families about their relationship and get permission to marry, not just talk about it and skip past the hard part. It seemed weird to build that up and not show us in the end. I do like the idea that they were always beside each other from the start and that there is no one true beginning for Taek’s feelings—he’s just always loved her, in some form or another, and their progression was as natural as growing up. I just wish there had been one last oomph of a conflict to make their love story land with more impact in the last episode, because despite driving the central mystery all series long, once they got together, their romance had little conflict to speak of. But that’s both the upside and the downside of this show, where romance was hardly the main course and there was always more time spent on friendships. It was one of my favorite things about the series and what set it apart, though a perfect show should be satisfying in all respects, and the love triangle here left something to be desired in all three characters’ resolutions.

Despite that, what made Answer Me 1988 great was that it did more than tell the story of one romance; it was a love story about family, in every conceivable iteration: the love between husband and wife, parent and child, siblings, friends. We got two families healing one another and becoming a new family, neighbors opening their homes to each other and sharing what little they had, and friends showing up for each other through life’s biggest and smallest moments. And what it did brilliantly was weave each relationship in and out of the story, peeling back new layers each time. We begin with one impression of a character, then discover bit by bit that we never knew him or her at all (think of characters like Bora or Taek’s dad). And just like in real life, we adjusted our understanding of each character the longer we knew them.

I love this kind of storytelling, where things aren’t linear and characterization unfolds gradually in bits and pieces, and our limited perspective actually makes the world and its characters seem like real people who exist beyond the glimpses we see. This writer is particularly great at that, and at portraying realistic familial love—the kind where daughters and dads alike are gruff and don’t say the words, but show their love in silent, thankless actions. Bora and her father’s love story is one that made me cry ugly tears every time, because it was so perfectly normal and encapsulated every unspoken bit of love between every parent and child. I love that for the most part, the people in the Answer Me universe act like real people, like world-weary moms and dads who don’t have all the answers just because they’re older, and flawed kids who make tons of mistakes and learn from falling down and getting back up. I love that it was a celebration of the parents’ youth too, not just the kids, and that the moms and dads did a hell of a lot of growing up too.

The drawback, of course, is when much of our characters’ inner turmoil is kept from us in service of the mystery. With a character like Deok-sun, for instance, she spent a lot of time receding to the background because we couldn’t know how she felt about Taek or Jung-hwan. She was still the same lovable, endearing girl she was at the start and matured into a thoughtful young lady, but I also wished I’d been privy to more of her thoughts as she grew up. I felt like I was there for every heartbreaking, angsty, agonizing detail of Jung-hwan’s journey (thanks for that, Show), but I saw so much less of what made Deok-sun tick, and what made her fall head over heels for Taek. I can read between the lines, of course, and certainly have no trouble guessing why a girl would fall in love with Taek. I mean, he’s Taek. It’s just that the couple’s romantic development always gets shafted when prolonging the mystery is your priority. But we knew this. It will always be the fatal flaw of this franchise.

A huge part of what made this season such a success was the lovely ensemble, full of actors who were riotously funny and could turn on a dime and make me cry like a baby. There was no one person who carried the show, but if I had to choose one, it’d be Ra Mi-ran, who elevated every single scene she was in with depth and warmth and an amazing ability to make that outlandish ajumma seem alive and real. I think her love story with Jung-hwan was my favorite of the show, in part because Ryu Joon-yeol brought a beautiful hidden depth to his character too, and together they turned what could’ve been a very simple mother-son relationship into one that crackled with humor and heart. Taek and his dad stole a lot of my tears too (though I probably cried more liters per minute because of Bora and her dad).

I was happy to see Hyeri step up to her role and do a better job with Deok-sun than I could’ve imagined. At the end of the day she was still one of the weaker actors in the cast, but only because she was surrounded by astoundingly good people. She was lovable and endearing and relatable, and because she didn’t have to carry the show, it took a lot of the pressure off and I was able to enjoy her character as one of the gang. I expected Ryu Hye-young and Go Kyung-pyo to be good, and they didn’t disappoint—they ended up getting the more intricate love story and the big finale moments with the parents that made me cry all of the tears and then some, and no one else in the group of kids felt as if they’d done more maturing than Sun-woo and Bora.

And naturally, Ryu Joon-yeol and Park Bo-gum are the runaway stars of the series, and will probably start referring to eras in their lives as pre-Answer Me and post-Answer Me. They were nothing short of amazing, and at the end of the day I love that these two characters existed, more than caring about which of them got the girl. I don’t know if I’ll ever meet two characters like them again in dramaland, but considering the way they made me swoon and cry and then ripped my heart out, maybe I’m okay with that.

I came into this series with low expectations, knowing that the third time around with a familiar setup and story from the same writer-director team would inevitably fall short. But I was happy to discover that they came into this wanting for it to be an ode to family, and that they still had gripping, heartrending stories to tell about good, down-to-earth people. The franchise isn’t a pop-culture sensation year after year for no reason—no matter how much I will endlessly complain about the ridiculous airtime (Two hours! Per episode!) or the divisive husband-hunting madness, there’s no denying the power of good storytelling, the strength of a piece of music that connects past and present, and universality of cherishing your youth and being grateful for the people you love.

 
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My goodness I want to say so much but the feels are making it hard for my brain to think of words that can express how I feel right now.

First of all I want to thank Girlfriday! Thank you for all the hard work and effort you had to put into making viewers like me always satisfied on the weekends. Thank you for following this show and sharing how you felt. You are seriously daebak! Keep up the fantastic work.

I also want to thank all those who watched and kept up with Reply '88 with me, even if I don't know who you guys are or where you guys are from. Thank you for all the viewers of the world who laughed, cried, and got angry with me. It's a really wonderful feeling knowing that I'm not the only one obsessed with this show.

And most of all, I want to thank all the people who put all their hard work on making this series as amazing as it truly was. Thank you for all the actors who made me fall in love with their characters, flaws and imperfections included. They made my heart beat fast when they needed to, and made the tears flow when they had to. I will honestly miss them so much and their little homes and narrow streets. I want to thank the writer/s who made this journey one hell of a ride. I know many are mad at the writers, but I am really grateful for them. They made this show so realistic and raw that I felt like I was part of the show. Lastly, I want to thank all the staff who worked just as hard as everyone else. They barely get as much credit as the actors. So here I am, giving them what is due, a huge two thumbs up and a warming virtual hug.

At the end of the day, no matter if we are #teamjunghwan or #teamtaek, I am so happy knowing that I was a part of this beautiful drama that broke boundaries and went beyond the limits. I don't even think there was a second lead or a main lead, because both Taek and Junghwan did such a good job that they both felt like the main leads to me. This is also one of those rare shows wherein friendship overcame and surpassed the love story. And the family, oh my god their families. They are such a bunch of imperfect personalities, that when put together make the perfect bunch. No matter where the love story went or the time that passed, the families always stayed the same, quirky, loud, but always full of love.

The show may have ended, but I will always remember them. Maybe some day in the future, I'll suddenly remember them and I'll ask myself how I think they're doing and if they've changed at all. Nah, they're probably the same weirdos I fell in love with.

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Ever so grateful to you for the recap!
This drama has touched my heart in so many ways that I've felt that I lived in Ssamundong with AM1988 cast. The ending is bittersweet. It's bitter that it ended today and knowing I'll miss them so much. It's sweet because this has been an amazing drama and I love every bit of it (yes I get frustrated at times and wished for some things but in the end I won't change anything). I didn't expect that last part in the ending. It was so sweet and sad at the same time that my tears just kept flowing even after it finally concluded. I know not everyone liked the finale, but I think it ended beautifully. For some people, please quit the hating just because JH wasn't the husband. I love his character but the show wasn't just about him.
Thank you AM1988 writer/s, staff and cast for giving us this wonderful drama!

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I totally feel the same way :(( . After I watched the series, it feels like I am part of the gang :((. It feels like I am growing like how the main characters grew. I have realized a lot of things as I watched the drama and thankfully, I have learned a lot of lessons that certainly brought a lot of impact in my current life situation. I can't accept the fact that the drama is already finished. My fan gay heart is crying :((((((. This is the best drama I've ever watched. This is a ride that I will never, ever forget.

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yea.... it was one hell of a ride!!! It brings joy to think that you are not alone to this addiction!!! Taektanium or Jungpaalie.... at the end eeryone is happy and content, so are we!!! Cheers to the completion of one of the moving n hilarious characters we fell in love with!!

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Yes :) a big thank you to the production staff , the writers, the actors for this lovely lovely story about family!

#teamSunWooBoRa manse!

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+1 big thanks and a bow to the whole team and a big pink teddybear for Taek´s dad

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Big thanks to Dramabeans and GirlFriday for being consistent with the recaps, and sticking with recapping the show. As great as it was, each episode was also a whopper of a length, so it was hard work. Thank you so much!

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Could not agree with you more about what a great show this was. So sad the drama has come to an end. I cried a lot this last episode - and that was watching it raw and only being able to understand a fraction of the dialogue. This was really an ensemble cast, and while it started out feeling to me like it was going to be a high school/youth drama, it really ended up being all about the friendships of the families and their neighborhood as a whole, not just the kids. I was so envious of the ajummas and the closeness they shared - how they loved each other's kids and families and only wanted what was best for each other. They never had ulterior motives for anything they said or did. It was just a beautiful show in that regard. Really sad it's over. It's been such a gem! (Although I do have to admit I would've liked to see JH's future.) Thank you SO much to DB for the recaps. Thank you to the writer-nims. Thank you to the commenters on this site, regardless of which ship you were on, if any. Hope you can put aside your disappointment and just appreciate it for being the good drama it was and forgive its shortcomings (they all have them, unfortunately). It's been a fun ride!

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Yes this show is very beautiful, it's really one of those rare ones that touches on family ties and friendship. The bittersweet ending really brought tears to my eyes.

I'm so glad that Taek and Deok-sun got together, the guy has been in love with her forever for goodness sake, ever since they were kids! I can't imagine how broken-hearted he would be if she has chosen Jung-hwan instead, definitely 100x more Chilbonged than Chilbong. I don't think I can see that.

Anyway, as sweet as they are together, the main thing about this show is not romance. It's really about the friendship and family, and for all of those, bravo show, bravo.

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i cried cause the drama felt like my own family it was so heart warming and cute i agree also i wanted to also see a lot of things but overall im happy, drama's dont last forever....#teamteak!!!!!!

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Ummm does anyone else feel like they been victimized by the writer? I can accept that Taek is the husband but it's like with that decision Junghwan dropped off the face of the earth, mine as well have killed his character off. Same with Dongryong, his screen time was like 10 minutes max. I was still gutted after episode 19 and fell asleep thinking about Answer Me:1988 and ended up dreaming about. In my dream Junghwan confessed to Deoksun and got the girl, I'll just pretend that's how it really ended.

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Agreed. HOW did Junghwan go from male lead to second male supporting character with no resolution ever.

Sigh. Rage.

Overall a beautiful series about wonderful families and lasting love (NOT romantic love but love for a true extended family the reaches beyond blood). I will try to not let it be tainted by the stumble at the ending; for this was a truly riveting show that did a great job filling up it's ridiculously long episodes.

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Do you guys really think that main lead is the one who gets the girl? LOL.

A character can be the main lead even if he doesn't end up with the heroine. So I don't think anyone was main lead here...everyone got equal footage.

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They are all leads..but the one who gets the girl is always referred to as the first/main lead.

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It's not about who gets the girl but how the story set up the resolution of the conflict of the main characters from the beginning. I understand the story was about family and friends, but the writers focused us in on DS as the central character and drove many plot points for each episode all the way to the end centered around her, her growth, her first love, who her husband is and etc.

Therefore, it's a piss-poor writing and a horrible thing to do to the audience/viewer to not truly resolve the story with the central character and instead resolve it through a tertiary character who was not central to the viewer's interest. After all, go back and look at all of our conversations - it was about who DS was going to end up with, not who Bora was going to end up with. And as much as we can say the series is not really about that, it really was because that's how the writers directed us and that's what we focused on and invested ourselves emotionally.

I think that's why the ending of a betrayal of a sort. They really mucked up the ending and made it incredibly boring to watch, at least for me.

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and for a change, a procrastinating male lead did not get the female lead.

reply 1988 is not your typical kdrama. those who have watched the series know this somehow.

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Your mistake is thinking he was the male lead and that he'd get teh girl.

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Yes. Jim Kirk being alone with Spock together with Uhura doesn't mean Kirk is not the lead.
(I know you probably saying wth with this Star Trek reference, but anyway it doesn't always be like that.)

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JH was never the lead of the story as a whole. I know people think his POV/focus was the point of the drama, but it really wasn't. I also do not like Taek is the lead either. All three guys are leads of their own story. The cast was ensemble and the only "lead" would be Deok-Sun.

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still pretty salty that JH didnt recieve a proper ending... like seriously... bro.. and also there was so little DR and JH... the ending sort of killed it for me

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For the viewers not to have a glimpse or at least hear about what the present day Jung-hwan or Dong-ryong are up to when they are a part of the core five just feels kinda incomplete. I mean we even find out with the interview that Jung-bong married Mi-ok and is a celebrity chef and he was a supporting character.

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True. But I guess the writers didn't want to introduce any new actors this late in the game that didn't look anything like the much-loved original characters. Kind of like when they used Jerry Yan as the older version of the kid hero in the Taiwanese movie, Our Times, which just about ruined the future scenes for me. Good thing he was onscreen for just a couple of minutes at the end. Bleargh! But some closure for Answer Me 1988 regarding Jung Hwan and Dong Ryong would have been nice, huhu...

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I disagree that Junghwan went from male lead to second male lead, because his decision to give up on Deoksun is actually consistent with his character. From the start he has always been the hesitant boy who will put family, brother, and friends first. See, he even pursued his brother's dreams!

He's not any less of a character than Taek, but Taek has always been the go-getter from the very beginning. In a way, he "gave" Junghwan a chance (the cancelled date, remember?) but the latter still did not act on his feelings.

I'm saying this not as #TeamTaek because I would've been ok either way. That's what I like about this season too: it was not too polarizing because Junghwan genuinely cares for Taek and vice versa.

Anyway, no male lead or second male lead for me because as girlfriday said, everyone carried the story. This is hands down my favorite Reply season! <3

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yeah, everyone carried the story. expecting the stereotypical build-up would be sort of... ultra-conservative

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I think it's less that JH didn't get the girl at the end but the ending was about Bora and not DS. They spent over 60 minutes - almost the entire finale - on Bora! I thought DS was the main character! You can argue about the boys but DS was truly the main character and instead she is the girl on the side, next to the bride, who had about 20 minutes of screen time in the finale. I feel TOTALLY dissatisfied with that. I don't care if they allocated 15 minutes to the other five characters, Jong Bong, the mom's etc but Deok Sun was the main character! She deserved more than a drive by ending.

They could have cut the wedding, Bora and her dad scene, JH's mom's menopause story and have had enough time for a solid satisfying ending of all of the characters, rather than just kind of oh, well youth flies by so catch it. Oh, our old neighborhood is demolished. Nope, don't know where all the neighbors ended up.

Much of the story was also about the community/neighborhood. So, for the finale to not even do a "hey, this is where they moved to" was just a total cop out. The finale was very rushed, unsatisfying in every way and completely inconsistent with the solid story-telling and detail work up to ep 19. They just completely fell apart part-way through 19 and the finale.

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Ik this comment is from 2016 but, I’m gonna reply anyway 😂 I don’t understand viewers who measure characters’ screen time and get mad when they think their favorite character didn’t get the amount of time they deserved. Like the writers have their own plan of everything they want covered before their story ends, it’s so fucking selfish of these certain viewers to be over here throwing a tantrum when things don’t go their way. DS, growing and maturing was a huge part of the drama, but the genre isn’t exactly a romance. It’s more slice of life, depicting all the neighborhood kids at different stages of their lives, that would be important for their character development in the story. Bongryong was never really one of the super main focus of the story, as much as the four families living close together. But we still got to see a very thorough character development of him ending with him making peace with his father (who actually turns out to be more like dongryong then we think) and finding his path working in a successful business with his brother. They were continuing with Bora’s character development from a couple of episodes prior to the end until the finish line. One significant part that the writers had been continually working on was Bora’s relationship with her dad. Until the very end, where they exchanged letters, we saw that they loved each other so much even in their own awkward ways. I really felt that They really are close, and maybe too similar as I tearfully watched Bora breaking down while reading her dad’s letter. Throughout the whole drama, she always cries the hardest about her dad; When she was going off to study to be a lawyer, and when she was reading his letter. Also, some viewers really think Jungwhan was the husband at first then suddenly got replaced by Taek due to the writers suddenly changing their mind or some shit. Its always been Taek from the beginning. There was a lot of hints that the writers gave out, such as when she received pink gloves from both Taek and Jungwhan. It was very clearly shown that she picked the gloves that Taek gave her.

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That's what I don't understand. It's not that I consider Jung-hwan the male lead, it's that much of the first part of the romance bit was focused on him and his crush on Deok-sun. We saw everything through his eyes, and even when Deok-sun was oblivious to how he felt you couldn't help but root for him. The only reason I ever thought he was the husband was because of how much time we spent watching him try to deal with his feelings.

The husband hunting mystery was all secondary to me anyways, but what disappoints me is that narratively it doesn't make sense to me that Taek would be the husband. If we'd spent more time on Taek and watching his feelings grow and etc. maybe I wouldn't be left with such a sour taste in my mouth. As much as I love him and Deok-sun together, my heart broke for Jung-hwan in a way it didn't for Chilbongie. The fact that they decided to almost completely disregard his character in the final episode was what did me in though. Why? As one of the show's most beloved characters, and someone who was so important to the story...just, why?

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I completely agree with you, Nads! Right from the start, a majority of the romance (aside from Sunwoo and Bora) revolved around Junghwan and Deokseon. Taek was barely involved until the last few episodes. Yes, he gave a chance to Junghwan, but does anyone notice how late he came into the love triangle?? It's quite frustrating when the writers do that. This is what I dislike about the Reply series. They center the romance on a certain character and take a complete 360 to the other guy. I question why I watch this sometimes...

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I agree. It's not that I didn't love Taek - but how could they have basically no Jung-hwan in the final episode. I still feel like my heart has been ripped out and they didn't do anything to help at all! I would have at least got over it better if there had been a hint of a new girl like there was in 1994.

Gahh, I can't believe it's over. Thank you Girlfriday for your faithfulness to a show that could not have been easy to recap.

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pretty stupid that they decided to change things up based off of viewers interests. It was really inconsistent and nothing followed a general flow. There wasnt a really good lead up to the ending. it was just BAM here you have it. there really was no point in connecting the dots because they never connected

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Seeing the reactions of Korean viewers in polls and comments, it doesn't seem like 'Korea' wanted Taek. To the contrary there seems to be a LOT of disappointment in the media that got translated.

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tough luck, they brought the disappointment on themselves.

TBH, I want to thank the JungPal fans for being so obsessed and so dead sure that he is going to be the husband that it made me accept Taek´s fate being the second lead and just wishing he was healthy at least. It made the final resolution more satisfying that way!

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Laughing at why viewers think they get a say in the writer’s story. You can like or dislike a story but you don’t get to write the original. Otherwise, get work as a drama writer.

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From what I've read, the ending got leaked and the story changed because of that.

Just curious, I read that the husband is a leftie and Taek is also a leftie, was that a dead giveaway?

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I think writer hinted a few things Taek was the husband, but it was just that they spent so much time with Jung-hwan's character that people fell for him.

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There were always major hints a Taek end, but JH fans were SO SURE he would win they actively ignored anything else. They didn't change anything.

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idk. I couldn't see how Taek could be endgame, but at the same time, I couldn't see how he could not be endgame.

Junghwan's POV was privileged over everyone else's, and structurally/personality-wise he was your stereotypical male lead. However, his actual relationship with Deok-seon wasn't a relationship. It was a smokescreen of gratuituous fan service followed by entirely one-sided angst. (And Deok-seon latching onto him after her crush on Seon-woo went bust.)

Meanwhile, Taek's POV was never really established, nor was Deok-seon's. But they had the more organic love line--it was never shoved down our throats, the show actually took time to develop their dynamic and allow for some unforced, natural intimacy between them.

In a show where literally every major relationship development has been treated like a plot twist, retconned (Taek's dad is Seon-woo's mom's oppa! Presto! Intimacy! Plot twist! Seon-woo likes Bo-ra!), or forced into existence by relentless manipulation (of course Bo-ra would rebound with her kid sister's BFF after such prime opportunities to butter her up--of course she can't spend any time on herself), Taek/Deok-seon is the one emotionally honest storyline to come out. Even if it makes Jung-hwan's existence feel pretty pointless, and makes me question the entire point of the drama (why do we need to see the roots of this marriage, considering it's just her faffing around for 16 episodes with silly crushes and then settling down?), it's still the only thing I'd call successful out of this whole mess.

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I have to agree with @juniper. I thought there were enough hints between Taek and Deok Sun from the beginning (as subtle as they were, kind of like Taek himself) to suggest Taek was a contender (Personally, I had the initial thought of Taek as the lead contender for DS when DS patted his butt in ep 1 when Taek was drinking milk and teasing him to grow up fast so he can marry her - thought it would be an irony/twist type of a ending that could've been fun).

I think the problem is that the writers are trying to be original and cute with a plot device that they have used in 2 other drama series. Therefore, it necessarily paints them into a corner because although Taek may have been the main lead from the beginning, because the writers want to keep it a "mystery" from the audience for so long they keep having to make it more and more subtle so people don't catch on. But, you definitely throw people for a loop in a frustrating way if plot points and characters become gimicky and used for the sole purpose of throwing the audience off the scent of the ending.

That's part of the reason why the ending was so dissatisfying for me: who cares about Bora! And why the emotional investment with JH if they were going to write him off so easily in ep 19. Actually, scratch that, JH started to disappear as a character from episode 15 or so. All in all - one of the worst and most unsatisfying ending ever.

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There's a lot of clues pointing to Taek since episode 1, so I don't think the writer change things up based on viewers' interest.. Unlike JH who was written with typical kdrama romantic hero, Taek's relationship with Deoksun has a different and natural built-up. It's not just BAM there you have it. Lurking on a lot of TeamTaek forums, the dots is actually connected. There's why there are lots of people who think TAek-DS as OTP. You can't see the point of connecting the dots because you never really try, and just assumed they never connected. It's a shame though, to view the writer of this drama as low as that. They even shoot SW-BR wedding nearing the finals, do you really think they have time to change the ending?

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Amen to this.

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It would have been better if they had given more plot for Junghwan, more screen time so everyone would have been satisfied. I was little disappointed to see less of Junghwan on final episode!! No matter what he is the main heartbreaker of this drama!!!

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I think this is because the final episode is a narrated from the point of view of Deokson (Lee Mi Yeon) and Taek (Kim Joo-Huk). It is only natural to assume that in real life, the friends and families of Ssangmundong wouldn't have kept in touch as often as before, and now that they're all married the focus of the story is on Deokson's family, including Taek-Deokson and Bora-Sunwoo. Jungbong is mentioned because he is like a celebrity chef now, but other than that, none of the rest of Ssangmundong neighbours are hardly mentioned. This reflects the reality of 2016.

The 1988-1999 storyline was more like a fantasy fairytale, as is often the case when we reflect upon our past. If you compare the last scene with Ep01, there is a slight difference. In Ep20, young Taek greets Deokson with a smile and tells her to hurry in. That is not what really happened in Ep01, but that's how Deokson remembers Taek now, someone who always smiled at her and was warm to her.

I like this ending very much.

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OMG I HAD THE SAME DREAM!! Maybe in another universe that's how the story ended. One can only hope.

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yep me! I totally agree. I feel like in 1994 they hyperfocused on the who-is-the-husband game (like not even divulging real names) and in this one, they did totally the opposite and as much as I loved the focus on family and friendships, I feel like 1997 will always be the most balanced out of the 3 in focusing on both family/friendships and love. I didn't bother watching epi 19/20 because the bait and switch was awful.

I feel like had they showed us DS's process of liking SW and JH and then figuring out that she liked Taek but having JH confess earlier would have still kept the mystery alive and really been good to have her realize (but also show us her process of realizing) what DR said about her liking someone rather than someone liking her. oh well...

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Half the time AM 94 felt like we were being trolled and in 88 what should have been the main love story felt like a side plot. IMO AM 97 balances the storylines better and individual scenes don't feel dragged out because they have time to fill.

Plus 97 gives NotTheHusband a LI of his own, she doesn't feel like a consultation prize but a woman who is a much better fit for him than the one he's been chasing after!

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I agree. I think the writers have used up the plot device of "guess who's the husband" way too much and can't keep it going without making the hints much more subtle - and therefore harder to figure out - and keep the plot going. I think Answer Me 1997 is still around best. I loved all the side characters and their story points a lot in 1988 but as a story on the whole, I think it was a horrible crash and burn situation.

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I was enraged watching this episode and realizing that there would be no conclusion for JH. For one of the most beloved characters to get no ending was maddening. Not even an acknowledgement that he's off somewhere leading a good life? Hell, I know that Jung Bong is a celebrity chef, but JH could be living in Antartica for all I know. I'm ok with the idea that DS and Taek ended up together. I am not ok with forgetting the JH even exists as part of this world.

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Totally agree with you.

There is no satisfaction, as we did not know what happened to Jung Hwan and even to Dong-ryong!

This drama made Jung Hwan a big part of the story from Ep 1 to 18 then made his an extra from Ep 19 to 20. No continuity at all. Is this because Park Bo-Gum is the bigger star in real life?

Closure for all five friends should have been made.

Also, they made us believe that DS fell in love with Taek but I did not see nor feel anything except her way of mothering him. Mothering/caring for him is one but the angst/longing/desire/realization that she is in love should have also been shown, for us to buy the love story between DS and Taek.

I actually feel bad for Taek as he is more in love with DS than DS is in love with Taek. DS love for Taek is the safe/lazy type, "marry someone who loves you more that you love him".

Lastly, I will make my own version of Episode 19 and 20.
Who ended up with DS is also a mystery but I will make sure that my audience will buy what I am selling. Hahaha!

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Did you miss the scenes where DS is so excited thinking about Taek that she can't sleep? Do you really think she is only choosing the safe/easy love and mothering him? Taek is a celebrity with a demanding exacting job. He had a 13 hour match mentioned in this episode yet they are still managing to date and see each other in the morning or after work. It was also mentioned that being a double inlaw is a problem but the show didn't tell us how they resolved it and got the parents to accept their relationship. I don't think she sees him as a child she must take care of, she finds him pretty hot (Hello kissing bandit Taek) and he has also done things to take care of and protect her like when she was injured and when that pervert flashed her.

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@thelady, I agree totally with you. You could start to see a change in DS's interaction with Taek after they were in China together - she just seemed to check up on him more, like bringing him pastries in the middle of the night, or simply stopping by (all alone and not with the others) just to spend time with him. But I think DS really started to realize that she liked Taek when he called off their Saturday date and she sat in the library wondering (driving herself crazy) why. Then, the soccer thing happened where he carried her all the way home. I think Taek is the only person that DS really trully liked, all on her own, and based on her expressions she never really saw him just as a friend.

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Agreed. JH. And DS and Taek really didn't get a proper ending either. Or Dong Ryong. Or Jung Bong and Mi-Ok either. What happened, writers?? Did you all have an aneurism or stroke before you started writing the finale???

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start watching this drama because of the pandemic, cause this pandemic separate us from our friends and now i am crying and feeling sad over and over again, still cannot move on from the drama and my personal thought on why deok sun nvr mention abt dong ryong and jung hwan. Maybe they died already in the future that is why deok sun have nothing to say about them especially when the ending where deok sun (in red) saw all the friends in teak's room and get teary specially when jung hwan and dong ryong calls her.

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I know this comment is 6 years old (!) but WORD UP! I feel cheated and empty that the core characters of Jung-Hwan, Dong-Ryong, Jin-Joo and even No-Eul got short shrift in the end. Especially, Jung-Hwan. Didn't he deserve a modicum of happiness, a mere mention of future happiness or success? With twenty episodes running almost two-hours long a piece, don't tell me there wasn't time. Seriously! Reply 1988 was wonderful in so many ways and deeply unsatisfying in so many others.

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I'm not joking but I did the same thing too! The whole dreaming about Junghwan confessing and I woke up really happy too, renewing my hopes for episode 20, which of course crushed me to bits.

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see.. i didn't watch this drama to support any ship. I started watching drama shipping JH and SW too, but the stories about the family & friends just took me over. I love this drama for that, it didn't matter who the husband anymore. near the end, more than about getting the girl, i was hoping that those 5 friends remained friends; compelete with all their angst, laughter, bickers, the ramyun (HAH!). I wanted them to stay in this little bubble.

If you take out the husband-hunting factor, you have to admit this is a bloody great drama!

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This, exactly! I watched it knowing that the writers are trolls, and having my heart broken from Chilbong I decided to let the show lead me to where it's going. I wasn't sure where it was going with the husband mystery, however there are lots of heart warming and funny moments with the other neighboors, that the other stories overshadowed that, for the most part. This iteration of Reply really did focus more on other things outside the husband mystery, and for that I'm grateful and I forgive them for Chilbonging my heart the last time!

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I agree, having watched 1994 and 1997 I knew to ignore all the fake clues cause the writers are trolls and instead tried to enjoy the family dynamic, the friendships and the journey. I think those of us that enjoyed the show are the ones that did not set our heart on one guy being the husband. I could have accepted any outcome as long as the writers justified it.

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Yup.
I enjoyed this show much more than I expected because I didn't focus on the love-story or whatsoever. I love both JH and Taek. And all the families, especially the Kim family.

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you hvae not been victimized by the writer. she doesnt know who you even are. and she wrote her story not yours

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Chill, it's a Mean Girls reference meant to be a funny

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I have no idea what that is. something american, I guess. not everyone gets all pop culture references.

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She wrote her story, then sold it to be produced by a tv network, to be shown to an audience and got paid for it. Yeah, we can feel whatever we want. If she wanted to just write her own story for her own edification, she could have kept it in her drawer and just read it to herself.

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I definitely feel you! I really hope to get a glimpse of how other characters are doing in the present. Most importantly, whether they are still as close before or not, and I really want to see potential love lines for dong ryung and junghwan too. I really hope to see the grown up version of jin joo too (I thought it will be nice to get go ara or eunji to play the role).

This is the only reply series that doesn't show us a glimpse of what and how all the characters are doing now in the present day. Dong ryung and Jung hwan aren't even mentioned in the present interview, very sadly. Some people on other forums guessed that, perhaps, as time passed and they do not see each other everyday unlike before, Taek and DS may have distanced from dong ryung and JH. Since sunwoo is married to Bora, sunwoo + taek + DS are the only 3 still close to each other.

However, we can all be quite assured that our kids are doing fine. We can imagine dong ryung opening many restaurants with his business mind, and junghwan being a very experienced pilot by now. Oh, maybe jung bong is even cooking at dong ryung's restuarant.

I want to assume that the kids must have created a whatsapp or line group of their own, and everyday they will be teasing each other like usual. We can also assume that the parents still meet up frequently to catch up and talk anything under the sky like before. Oh, and play go stop too.

I believe the writer wants us to imagine all that ourselves. Maybe, the show wants to convey that whatever they are doing now, whether the characters are still as close as before or not - all these are not as important as their fond memories from 1988 where they grow up with each other.

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I think they ran out of time and rushed the finale. It feels totally rushed to me. I want to know what the other characters are up to also. More than that, I wanted to watch the parents' reaction to finding out about Taek and Deok Sun, how they came around to the idea to allow them to marry, and how JH was doing, and etc.

DS is the main character. How can an ending be satisfying if we don't really see the process and resolution about our heroine!!

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How many of you stay in touch with your high school or college friends in 2016? Once I had kids, our friends became parents who lived near us.

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Considering Dong-ryong has never had any screen time, it seems a bit late to complain now lol. Even when he ran away from home, he got like ten minutes to himself before it became about everyone else.

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yes DR only storylines involve him running away and having hemorrhoids. He was really under used as a character and mostly their to counsel his friends and comic relief.

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I totally agree. I feel incredibly disappointed with the last episode. First, why was the wedding SOOO long?? Why did they linger SOOOO long on Bora and her dad and Sun Woo. I understand that Bora and her dad issue was an interesting plot point but that was NOT the main focus of this series and they could have addressed it in some other episode besides the finale. After all, Bora and Sun Woo or tertiary characters and as cute as they were at times, their story was just a bit contrived and boring if you ask me.

Also, Taek and DS TOTALLY got cheated out of their ending. Again, I don't need them to be walking down the aisle but I felt like their story was NOT given a resolution at all! So, ok, they sat in a car and said yeay we'll get married. And he even proposed in the car. Gee, thanks for the romance drama. I feel like writers are trying to find kitchy new ways to write these stories but I think that fails for me. Sometimes, people love cliche and overused romance just because they simply love it. I feel like Taek and DS's story was just rushed when we spent pretty much the entire story on DS, and instead wasted the entire episode on Bora. What??? Bora's story should have been an epilogue or something. I just didn't care that much or felt that invested in Bora's love story - having spent the entire series concerned about DS and HER love story - to really care a full 1 hour about Bora. What happened writers???

Also, JH!!! He just got written off or something after ep 19. Where did he go? That's the resolution we get for JH after 19 episodes of being invested in his love and well-being? How could they just write 2 minutes for him in the story but spend 60+ minutes on Bora and Sunwoo like the entire drama was about them? We weren't invested in them!! We were invested in DS and JH or DS and Taek. Writers, have you gone insane??

I feel so cheated and disappointed by the ending. I was able to forgive a lot of meandering plot points, slow story telling and mediocre forced conflicts as plot driving devices simply because the each character was drawn so well, acted so well and told so well. But for them to crash and burn the ending in a rush like this.... BORING. I need a new ending.

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i felt the same way about chilbong. i guess we were just trolled by the writer and the PD. but rest assured that they did not change the plot or the script.

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I know! I was so mad that i didn't get to see jung hwan have a happy ending. I was really hoping to see him (or at least hear from deok sun or taek) that he is well with his own family or at least someone whom he loves and loves him back! He sacrificed his own happiness for his friend, would it hurt to give him a proper resolution!!!

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I have been refreshing since God knows when. It's here. And it's the last!

I'll miss it.
Off to read.

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I feel u... had been doing the same!!! It was indeed an awesome drama I have ever watched!!

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It's out!!!!! Thank you so much^^

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It's here!! Thank you SOOO much Girlfriday! We love you!
I wonder whether Girlfriday would have given this series so many beans if she had known who the husband was earlier? :)

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Thank you!

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1. I know the theme is Our bygone days and bygone youth, but they don't really have to be that heavy-handed, esp. in the last 10 mins. Yes, yes, we all know we can't go back, it's sad and melancholic, but who need manufactured sadness? Can't they wrap up such a well-written series in a more organic way, instead of hitting us over the head with the notion that Once gone, you can't get your youth back? As if we didn't know that!!

2. For as much as the 3 ahjummas love and depend on each other, and the 3 guys too for that matter, tho to a lesser degree, I can't believe that they wouldn't want to move somewhere to live close together. I know that 2 of the older couples are moving to Bangyo, but what about JinJu's mom?
Personally, I'd want to see them in their new digs, continuing to have coffee and buns together everyday, and living not too far from their children.
Do you believe that DS would want to live far from her parents? Or SW from his mom? Or Taekie from his dad? So at least those couples should be in the same building, bringing dishes to each other riding the elevator!

3. And what happened to JH? The writer just decided to drop him from the finale altogether, while spending ALL that time on SW & Bora's wedding. Now I find that Uneven. JW deserves a good sendoff. Too many viewers love him too much for him to be dropped like that.

4. I didn't watch this show for the OTP, but for all the characters and their relations. So I'm hurting from not seeing them at the end. I want to see Jung Bong and Mi-ok run his restaurant together, even it it's just for a split second in a montage of send offs for peripheral characters, not just have it mentioned in voice over. I want to see who D Ryong is with, and how far he lives from the gang. And DR's parents. Are they on their own, or do they get to meet up with the other parents?

5. Middle-aged Taekie!!!
The older actor doesn't show us any of Taek's mannerisms. There is no crinkle in his smile, none of Taek's charm. He definitely bears more resemblance to the non-expressive JH. I'm not convinced at all that Taek will grow up to act like that or look like that. Don't tell me Park Bo Gum is gonna look like that in 20 years! Not that the guy is bad-looking, just that I see no resemblance. It's a cheap trick to cast an actor who looks like one guy only to have him turn out to be another guy just to troll us. I'm happy that the husband is Taek, but this older guy is not an older version of Taek. It's Bait and Switch.

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I agree with every one of your points. Although I loved this series the most out of the series, I am left feeling rather bitter about what could have been... that isn't to say that it wasn't fantastic, just that the last few episodes didn't even remotely do it justice.

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I felt the same way.... the looks of the future husband had bothered me from the beginning coz he looked more like JH, his hairstyle esp. I m feeling empty as I did not get to see more of JH in final episode...so bitter...so bitter ending!!

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on point 5) Middle age Taekie:
actually earlier Kim Joo Hyuk does have Jong Hwan mannerism, but ever since last episode suddenly he seems quieter and walks like Taekie. I'm not 100% sure. i don't know if earlier on he was told to be more like Jung Hwan to throw the viewers. I'm not team Jung Hwan or team Taekie, but I did think Kim Joo Hyuk was showing Jung Hwan mannerism.
I guess we'll never know..

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I don't know if he's told to be Junghwan at first or told to be no one. Because they could tell him to be no one, so he just playing himself, and matter-of-fact, I can see Kim Joo Hyuk just being Kim Joo Hyuk in the earlier episode. He's just as grumpy as Junghwan.

One character really jumped in last-half of the series, when he becomes quieter and how the writer dropped many hints of Taekie too.

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physically Kim JooHyuk doesn't look like either of them but I did feel that he acted more like Jonghwan in early episodes then later he acted like Taek. I think that was just part of the writers trolling us.

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They said they never told the actor who played old Taek who the husband was, just so he doesn't give it away from the mannerism. But I agree with you, Taek was so particular in his mannerism that it's hard to believe that Taek would have changed that much, would have learned to talk so openly and freely (swearing and saying mean things to DS). Again, the writers tried too hard to keep the mystery going and I think it backfired on them in this series.

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5. He doesn't look like JH either. Well, LMY doesn't look like DS either. Don't take it too seriously.

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LOL. Really, Ryu Joon-yeol wouldn't grow up to be that guy any more than Park Bo-gum would, haha. I remember reading that even the husband actor didn't know who he was supposed to be, so it's not surprising that he doesn't share any of the mannerisms that Park Bo-gum gave his Taek.

I agree that it felt weird to have Jung-hwan (and some of the others, too) be so minor in the episode, though.

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Maybe is because... Taek looks like his father in the future ;) . (I believe than I am the unic the think that. )

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Sun Woo's mom said in one of the recent eps that Taek's Dad looked exactly like Taek as a young man. Hence 2015 Taek looks like his Dad. Which appeases me a little. Still feel that Jung Hwan's story got gipped at the end. But other than the blatant JH 2015 mannerisms got toned down I can accept 2015 Taek as is. Still would've liked a resolution (of any kind) for Jung Hwan. Even could've heard what happened to Dong Ryong. I mean come on! We only heard about what happened to 3 of the 5 kiddos? Unfair.

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To be fair, they did mention that Taek's dad looked just like Taek when he was young and Kim Joo-Hyuk looks like a skinner version of Choi Moo-sung in my opinion. Haha

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Yes, he does look like Choi Moo Sung. I thought it was only me.

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1)I would have preferred the younger actors in Taek's room scene changing into the older ones eating dinner at DS/CT's house and the voiceover filling in some details.

This of course means that JH and DR would need middle aged actors to represent them.

2) Moving away from each other felt natural to me but I fully believe that the ahjummas call each other all the time and meet up when they can.

3)Not even a quick meet cute at the wedding? Or a woman in a military uniform teasing him and JH getting a goofy grin as she walked away? JH got even less than Chilbong.

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but that would be a cliché.

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Nothing wrong with a cliché when it's done right.

They're clichés for a reason.

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amen.

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I agree. Cliches, when done right, are great. I mean, this whole genre of Kdramas, or any kdramas really, are a big recycling of old cliches but we still continue to watch them and obsess over them. It's not like the formula is that different; it's just the cliches are done better for some. So, I don't mind cliches and I think this drama could've used some at the end in order to wrap it up better than how it ended.

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I agree with the older Taek. There is something in his manner as if 'I do not care' .that makes me think that it is due to the actor's short coming or else the writer made sure that the actor plays as such to confuse the viewers

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I wish they had shown them all living in the same high rise apartment building. Especially with Bora's dad being retired he would need to live near his friends and family to avoid boredom.

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I agree 100% of everything you said, @KAddictJCW. I know they had to grow up but why couldn't they continue to live in that neighborhood. I really thought that even if they moved, we would find them still living across from each other, in some other town but sharing food, and love, and stories in this new place and growing old together, this time with their kids. That was the charm of the show. That's what the show hooked us on - the charm of that little alley street where the community was loving and everyone seemed safe and insulated from the rest of the world. I wanted to see that. The writers ruined it for me. I'll have to go and dream up an ending like that for myself.

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Finally been waiting for this...

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This phrase becomes real

"He would more chilbong than chilbong himself"

wait...

it's totally in a different level,

so we can call all future epic-one-sided-love-tragedies when most viewers believed the character was a male lead by "jungpaled" now..

Aigooo....

My poor heart...

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yes now JungHwan is the new simple of unspoken unrequited love

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No words...that wouldn't be offensive at all.

Spent my time watching the finale posting on social media while drinking soju.

Anyway, for those who stuck to #TeamJunhwan, let's all support Ryu Joon-yeol. It may have been goodbye to his first love, but a hello RJY from us. During the finale, there was an increase in his followers in Instagram. If you have IG, follow him @ryusdb and drop a comment.

Thanks to the sane db readers and RJY fans.

I hope the writer doesn't write another Answer Me season within the next five years. The ratings for the finale dropped significantly because of what happened. What do you call those who practice bait & switch to innocent people? Can we sue her for emotional distress?

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the rating was almost 20% and the online rate was over 90% which insanely high.

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LOL where in the hell did you get the ratings dropped? Yeah, not at all. The ratings were 19.6% and peaked at 21.6%.

FOR CABLE. That's insanity.

You guys realize the target audience for this show is middle aged people? Not teenagers crying on the internet about shipping and their oppa being hurt. Seriously, I like JH, but you fans are driving me insane.

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And prepare for Reply 1974 or 1980 (both rumored) next year. This show was a massive massive hit that made tons of money. They''ll be another one very soon.

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and I know, like a fool I am, a total foolish of a fool, I'll watch the next installment again. Then I'll get shafted again. Then I'll cry again while typing here in DB and thanking JB and GF for writing a recap on a 1.5 hour show. Here we go. This must be insanity.

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It'll be fun. I'll join you.

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I'll join you as well. I was pleasantly surprised that this installment was so good, I thought the writers had nothing left to give after 1994

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Hope I still living.

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well last time everyone said no one can be more chilbong than chilbongie himself ... now maybe the writer will take up that challenge and create a character with one-sided love worse than Jung Hwan...omg please no

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Considering that the production pays so much attention to all the things that create a believable dramaverse in the era they intend, I don't think going even further than 1988 will be that simple. I remember reading how much time and effort it took them to get products/items/sets for 1988. Besides, going to 1974 means that most of the production was not even around ;)

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Are they doing BOTH next year? That sounds like too much too soon, tbh. I'd rather the writer take a longer break to make sure she has a better story (i.e the one/two year gap she's taken between 97/94/88 respectively).

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they should pick 1981, that´s my birth year. And it is an awesome year!

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The switch to 'Who's The Wife?' feels just as inevitable.

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I could barely relate to 1988 and only did so because I happen to know the pop reference from that era, not sure how I'm going to feel about 1980 or 1974. I guess that'll be for the much older audience. I hope they stop. Or just go nuts and do a completely different time period that no audience could relate to, like Reply 1497.

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Sorry, but I'm middle aged not a teenager shipping my oppa.

Also, I don't go around saying anything bad about anyone (except the writer) and give leeway to those of us feeling hurt and betrayed and tried to be civil over the internet but still got uncivil replies in return for voicing our opinions. People like THAT drive ME insane.

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I get being hurt, but can we move on the stages of grief already. It doesn't help that JH fans have been going around in insulting everyone who isn't him.

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And I'm not trying to be uncivil. I apologize. Just read too many comments today about this show. Most of them not good and a lot of anger going around. Didn't mean to blame you for that.

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So am I one of those insulting everyone who isn't Jung-hwan? And how can you move on in less than 24 hours? Go reply to those JH fans insulting others. They're doing a disservice to the character going around like that and doesn't deserve a reply imo.

I just found your reply offensive and thought I shouldn't reply at all but yeah, that was kinda rude and needed to be called out on. This is one of the reasons why I rarely comment on db threads anymore (only on the shows that really affected me). There's no sense of that old community spirit where if one poster was feeling bad about what happened on a show, someone else would be cheer them up and not laugh at them feeling the way they felt.

@Miranda - okay, so I hope she doesn't write another bait & switch mystery. The family stuff was great and heartwarming and one of the greatest highlights of this show.

Re: the ratings - so I heard wrong. my bad. *sue me*

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@lemondoodle - yeah, let's just move on. I also got a very uncivil reply in the OT last Friday so I'm feeling hurt on top of my JH hurt so it annoyed me. *cheers!*

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Yes, lemondoodle,
It'd be nice if you tone it down, or if you must, at least direct your anger towards the right people, instead of taking it out on anyone who is commenting on this show.
I don't appreciate being told to "not take it so seriously" when all I did was expressing my opinions on the finale in general, when I've never been on either ship.

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i've seen you go around all the latest reply 1988 recaps and you seem to be the most agressive one of the lot. these people who have replied to you before me are right. for such a beautifully writen character, are we not able to mourn for his 5 minute appearance in the last ep? no one is putting anyone down here. if a character is not dealt with justly, we, as the viewers, have every right to voice our discontent. it's like with music. as a form of art, every single drama, movie, novel etcetc is expected to face criticism if the viewers are unsatisfied. criticism does not amount to hate. you should take out your anger on the right people. a.k.a the ones who are unrightfully putting down the other characters/actors. this passive agressive attitude is annoying the hell out of me. this place is supposed to be a place for discussion, not a place to vent out your anger on anything related to junghwan. fix that and then go around telling people to stop. they'll most likely listen to a calm, reasonable person compared to an agressive, condescending person.

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@Den i agree. nowadays, people attack you for simply voicing an opinion. far too sensitive. people were far more understanding early last year.

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@ KDaddict?JCW

Uh, okay? The actors can't look the same since they are different people. You really shouldn't take that seriously. Young and older versions of characters NEVER look a like. I'm also not the only person who told you that. Don't try to call me out on that.

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@crying

I don't really think I'm the angry one.

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@lemondoodle
given the veiled abuse you have been hurling at unaware commenters here all over the 1988 Recaps, i'd recommend it'd be way more healthy to gloat over your choice of oppa going right more openly. I am reading a comment and suddenly there is a curt response, it is yours. I am reading another comment, BAM, there is another curt response, and it is again yours! This passive aggressive thing is just not right in a discussion. We loved the Drama and are trying to get on with life, can be done without the tasteless interjectory.

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saying bad things about the writer is exactly the problem. she is nobodys slave and it was her story to tell. fans are not her boss.

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it was 18.6% btw. found an article on naver this morning. still very high but i thought i should clarify

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Thank you for voicing your strong opinion always about the husband.I mean people miss all the hints that the writer placed a lot of times in different episodes.Just when you get biased by your favorite actor and refuse to look at the bigger picture,then at the end you'd keep saying they messed up the ending,or it looks forced or that the writer did injustice to JH's character.But JH never really took his acts forward to confess.His hesitations made him loose Deok Sun in the process.The time when he kept away from DS,at all those times DS's bonding with Taek kept growing strong.I wish people stop saying the same ole thing over and over.This reply series has been simply the best of all three IMO.

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^^ For lemondoodle.

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lol thanks. I guess I need to chill though.

Sorry anyone I offended. Not trying to really. I just hate to see this show bashed because of the end. I don't think the actors want that either.

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I can see how this season would be popular with middle aged people, both the 80s/90s nostalgia as well as the focus on the parents would appeal to an older audience

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"I hope the writer doesn’t write another Answer Me season within the next five years."

Really? I hope they write tons. This series had more inter-generational heart and era-capturing moments for me than the others. This one's the one that felt like regular people living regular lives, rather than extraordinary cases.

People who were looking for a straight-up teen romance might have a different take, but for me this one was pretty perfect.

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oh I agree, these Answer me stories have so much more heart than your typical rom com, melodrama, or story that focuses on chaebols. I find them more repeatable and satisfying while still offering some romantic escapism.

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I agree. This series touched my heart in so many ways. I laughed, cried, squealed like a school girl, yearned that I lived with them, and felt a lot of other things. There are so many special moments in this drama that I had to pause and internalize. It's not perfect but I hope she writes tons more for viewers who LIKE and LOVE her writing. I think it's rather childish for someone to hope the writer won't write the next five years. She never forced anyone to watch.

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+1 I love the franchise and how it always seems to get that nostalgic tone right on the money. I hope they make more similar series with some cross-over characters. 1988 had a wonderful tone that was emotionally engaging and thoughtful. It really stood out for me in the franchise and I probably cared more about the characters. However 1997 (despite being choppy at times) did have a better narrative overall.

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I watched the finale without subs, it was so satisfactorily heartwarming, leaving a contented and cozy feeling lingering in my heart. The writers and the crew did a fantastic job in creating this third series which well surpassed the AM 1997 and 1994. Also, thanks so much GF for your passionate recap episode after episode.

The way DS’s dad interacted with his children was very similar to my own dad, throughout the series, his mannerism often reminded me of my dad, bringing back those bittersweet memories from the good old days. Unfortunately, my dad did not live to see his two daughters got married, so Bora’s wedding scene struck a deep chord in me as it served as a heart-rending projection of what would have been if my dad was around when my elder sister got married.

As for Teakie and DS, I could not imagine how it would have felt like to fall in love with a childhood friend, someone so close and familiar, almost like family. Teakie’s attachment to DS was so strongly consolidated at the time when the little boy yearned for the love of his mother, but instead, found great solace in the little DS. It was able to defy the saying, familiarity breeds contempt, to enable him not only to overlook all her short-comings, but to love her whole-heartedly for who she had been, the chubby little girl and the boorish teenage girl. The same goes for Yoon-jae and Si-won in AM 1997. As for Jung-hwan, he could still contemptuously scoffed at DS’s behavior at times and was able to indulge in noble idiocy, while Taekie’s love for DS was so hopelessly do-or-die desperate and she was always tugging at his heartstrings to propel him to act impulsively and decisively at the crucial moments. The way he could be brought to tears instantaneously when faced with the dilemma of loving DS and risking losing her friendship speaks volumes, and the way he always unreservedly leaned on DS when he was totally worn out showed how much he trusted and needed her. DS is his only refuge, she is EVERYTHING to him! Therefore, it is no wonder that Teakie’s perseverance led to the end game in winning DS’s heart.

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Oemgee!! I feel you!! Agreed 1000000++++++

Taek is just sooo lovable! Of course I feel bad for Jungpal.. but his hesitant, always dragging his feet to tell DS his true feeling that I really feel disappointed in him. I think DS also feels that way.

Anyway, the best man wins! Yay Taekkie!!

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It's not JH's fault. The writer made him that way. He made JH a noble idiot that doesn't want to confess his love because his friend likes the girl..even after several years, he doesn't have the confidence to tell her and made the confession a joke. The writer is just so cruel.

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JH= The writer

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junghwan is not a real person, the writer is. if people had to criticize anyone, it would be the writer. she was in control of his actions. get over yourself and blame the right person. people like you really anger me. all the familial themes present throughout this drama really touched me and the ending emanated such a sombre, melancholic atmosphere that truly was beautiful. then i had to read your comments which totally ruined the mood. you guys complain about his hesitations and then tell people not to criticize the writer as they don't owe us anything... who do you think made junghwan hesitate? rofl. any flaw in any character, any flaw in the plot direction is all due to the writer. she really has skill in creating a warm atmosphere worthy of a true family drama but give praise where it is due and criticism where it is warranted.

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Oh come oh. JH is not separate from the writer. She wrote him. JH's character is at fault. Don't blame the writer for his faults while loving the character she wrote. So weird.

It's fine to criticize the writer for the character though.

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i'm not sure if you understood what i said but i shall reword it for you.. the writer wrote/crafted/conjured junghwan's character. all the meaningful things he did were all due to the writer. these 'real' elements which reflect reality and were embedded in his characterisation were made through the writer. she deserves praise for this. however, his hesitations, the frustrations he gave to the audience are also the writers fault because she, herself, made him behave this way. the praise and criticism should be directed at the writer. i mean, criticism is meant to improve one's work, right? we're allowed to express our dissatisfaction as viewers.

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Well, I guess the intention was to portray it in a realistic way. Many of us have crushes on people we know for a long time and never confess due to the circumstances... I get that it was painful for the viewers though and certainly they should have given Jung Hwan some screen time in the last episode, and a nice wife and children! :D

As for Taek and Deok Sun, I liked the development of their story. Of course the problem was that they didn't show us Deok Sun's feelings until the end. This was good for the mistery but took away the excitement of seeing them getting together. There was no building up for romantic tension so we would not know what was going on. If we had seen before how she spent nights without sleep, or how she felt rejected when he said he was relieved that the kiss was only a dream...things would have been different. Still, I think the writer did a very good job. I will miss this drama.

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+1 ! although JH's ending was not resolved cleanly, there was a very realistic feeling to the way his love ended for DS. Sometimes first loves just never work out and remain a distant memory of a crush. Not everyone gets to find their "fated loves" as children and go the distance

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Honestly, the way 2015 Taek and Deok Sun interact really solidified the entire thing for me. They're so fond of each other, and she touches him constantly, but it's not a mother hen thing - they clearly have a deep, affectionate love.

It's a good relationship and a charming look at how friendship can turn to love. In the end, they fit together so well and clearly are doing incredibly well together.

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Did you notice during the interview at the end how Taek was going to try and open that tin of butter cookies and DS takes it out of his hands to open it for him, almost without looking? They played that very well! Like it was automatic for her to help him open the can without even thinking - like it had become so natural for her to do things like that for him over the years. (Reminded me of all the little things DS did when they were younger to take care of Taek, like tying the shoes, staying w/ him at the baduk tourneys to make sure he ate & slept, etc.) Just like how they kept touching each other on the knees and little signs of affection like that as adults in the interview. It was nice to see how their relationship started slow and slowly just blossomed over time - such a nice, happy ending for them.

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That scene reminded me of her giving him the fork at JH's birthday party. She didn't even miss a beat then or now. It was natural to fix his chopsticks and just give him a fork when he couldn't use them. Just like it was natural to open the cookies for him.

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I totally agree about Taek and Deok-Sun. I kinda hate the husband hunt since their story could have been a lot more developed if the writer would have allowed her to show more feelings for him earlier. I love their journey from friends to lovers. And Taek just adores everything about her.
I mean, he loves her ugly orange lipstick. If that's not love I don't know what is. And I love that she believed him that it was pretty! She kept wearing it. I just kind of love that.

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Yes, the show was fantastic. I'm really grateful for the homely and yet universal stories from different generations. Though the stories appear simple on the outset, they're very sensitive observations of life. It has been really moving, and probably will go down as one of the best drama series I've seen in ever.

While I'm always a bit wary of those OTP story lines where through flashbacks, they show us how two people have been bonded for life - I think even without those flashbacks of them sleeping and holding hands as children, I believe how this couple could work. DS could always bring out that big, radiant smile from Taek, and pull him back from his hyper focused work to a more simple reality, and make him aware of the world around him. And Taek just adores her and fully commits when the time was right.

The finale was really emotional. As the recap said wonderfully - "We begin with one impression of a character, then discover bit by bit that we never knew him or her at all (think of characters like Bora or Taek’s dad). And just like in real life, we adjusted our understanding of each character the longer we knew them." And with this, we become intertwined with these characters so intimately so it can't ever wrap everything so neatly, because it's slice of life and it has to suggest they will persevere on in their own ways.

Thankfully, unlike going back to our real past, we can go back and re-watch the whole show when we want again.

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agreeeeeeeeeeee...and also, i dont think it was anyone's fault that DS and CT ended up together...and i hav no complaints about JH also...JH has done his best. Evryone has their own personality and different people acts different ways in a situation, if we love them we hav to love the whole of them.

As 'pebble' mentioned Taekie's love was hopelessly desperate and do or die thing, he needed her the most and he deserved her. life is not maths so we cant measure its worth. and their decision is well justified just by seeing the 2016 taek and deoksun's happiness. he has changed a lot and he is more expressive and doesnot need his sleeping pills any more. it would hav been nice if we were able to see their marriage, i jst want to know their frnds and parents reactions when they come to know abt them. im also little dissappointed at not knwing about DR and JH. but that gaves it an open ending. may be thats why we are still hooked into it. afterall this is not a typical kdrama. this hasnt gave us what we asked for but what it gave worths more than anything.
i dont think there were any main lead or second lead..lov u all..miss u all...
can we expect a spinn off or you tube version or something like in playful kiss ... just saiyng

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I love the way you describe DS and Taek's relationship

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Such a bitter sweet ending. Have to admit something felt like they were left hanging, making us questioning for more answer; what happened to rest of the kids, how are the rest of the family doing.

But then it dawned on me, maybe it is intentional that it was left that way. When the families moved out, like any of us who would move to a new place, we no longer keep in touch with the people we used to hang out with as often as we used to.

When the clip showing the rundown Ssamundong, I just lost it. It made me remember my childhood and the friends I grew up with and how I no longer where they are and how they are doing. And the neighbourhood I lived in is now just a block of apartments. Maybe this is what the director and writer wanted us to feel.. this nostalgia about youth and people in our youth.

Thanks Reply 1988, it was such a great journey. What an ending. One of the best drama and the most heart-warming one I've watched in my 2 decades of Kdrama watching.

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Exactly. You lose touch with people, your neighborhood looks different, and your heart breaks a little. And it's only natural that the two sisters stuck together, bringing their husbands with them - the other two boys won't have come home to the neighborhood once people left, so meetings would have been less frequent. When they married, they'd see each other less. It's just the way of things.

I thought the whole thing was gorgeously done. Captured a time and place perfectly, one that is distant enough from our present day that it truly feels like time travel. Intergenerational stories rather than wholly youth-focused. And even though I know people get really excited about "ships"... There was nothing unrealistic about how this shook out. She could've ended up with Taek or JH, but she ended up with Taek. The story about how that happened was well-told and true to the characters.

I'm not sure how they'd top this with another series, honestly.

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So true. Even when you go back, everything has moved on, including yourself.

The show has been really amazing. Just shows audiences can get entirely invested in shows that don't have high-tech CGI, action sequences, ridiculous OTT tropes etc.

Weird but it reminds me of a book like A Suitable Boy. It was a huge tome, but it portrayed such detail across various families, and once you got into that world, you were fully immersed.

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I guess it takes maturity and experience to fully appreciate this series. Not saying this to bring down the other viewer groups. What i mean is you need to have had experience with outgrowing people around you and be separated from them to not be persuaded with the husband hunting fiasco. that's why a lot of the middle age viewers related to the drama, bcos they saw their youth broadcasted on TV.

As what the director said from the very beginning, it is meant to be an homage to family and the old times. What an homage it was, perfect in every way!

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...that makes a whole lot of sense now.

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I think you're right. And when I was a teenager or in my early 20s, if you'd told me some of my closest neighborhood friends would drift away and that 50 new houses would be built in the nature preserve in my back yard, I'd've been pretty upset. That is exactly what happened, but it all happened gradually and there were small reasons for each event, so it's not one knockout punch like at the end of a TV series.

So maybe that's the difference. People who are younger watch this finale with a sense of panic because it's basically telling them that their current world is going to change drastically. Older people watch the finale nostalgically because it's already happened, and even though it hurt when it did, we all lived and made new friends and lives and homes and it's just how life is.

I mean, if you'd told me as a high schooler that my personal Jung Hwan would be living on the other side of the world right now and that I'd have last talked to him quite literally six years ago, I'd've been crushed and disbelieving, because we were unbelievably close. But as we got older he got a little meaner, and I moved away, and eventually we just became much less important to each other. I'm completely okay with how things are, but my high school self DEFINITELY would not have been, and would have thought this a terrible future. So maybe a large portion of the audience is sensing that message and rejecting it.

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That is true, but I also I think most of them are used to typical Kdrama storylines which the main story is a couple love story and the main POV gets the girl or vice versa, with a second lead who tries to sabotage the love of the first lead etc; also it has closure for all characters.

And this drama is everything but the above. I really appreciate how the writer is trying to break this mould. It's about bloody time someone shows up with a fresh concept! Some finds the lack of closure as a flaw on the story telling, I actually find it as a narrative gift.. an emotionally-provoking open ending...

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I think it was intentional too. Found it interesting that Deok-Sun didn't talk about the two guys she has no connection to anymore. Junghwan and DR. She mentioned JB. JB is married to her friend, so she'd get updates but for JH and DR she probably wouldn't much. They have their own lives. The sisters stay together and the double in laws, but the rest... well, people grow apart and things change.

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Wait, Mi-ok is still her friend but Junghwan and Dongryong - two boys she grew up with - no longer has connection with her? How so? If anything, she has a much longer history with them than with Mi-ok. And what about Ja-hyun then? If Deoksun's still connected with Mi-ok, how about Ja-hyun? She wasn't mentioned too. Are we to think they're not friends anymore?

If anything, I expected Deoksun AND Taek to maintain communication with the other two BECAUSE THEIR FRIENDSHIP WAS CENTRAL TO THE STORY. Episode after episode, we were shown how solid their friendship was. They always got each other's back through thick and thin. One even chose to give up on the girl he likes to honor that friendship. Now that the husband's identity had been revealed, we relegate the friendship to a mere plot device? Is that it?

Fine, so we don't get to see what future Junghwan and Dongryong look or sound like. But would it really be such a bother for Deoksun and Taek to even mention them? Would it really be too much to expect the writer to come up with a scenario for the gang to get together again after so many years? Maybe celebrate Junghwan's engagement or Dongryong's successful new business venture? Maybe to announce Deoksun and Taek's new baby? I mean, come on!

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But this is the beauty of this drama, no? those lingering unanswered questions. yes, it could be said that that is the flaw on the story writing; they should've mentioned the other kids.

But i compare it with my own life. i don't keep in touch with the friends i've grown up with; and trust me, i did the same things with those 5 kids in drama did, watched concert and hung out in a room for hours, slept over etc. now, i don't even know which country they live in anymore, how many kids they have. there are only 2 i keep in touch, and that is thru facebook!!

that is why it's such a bitter sweet finale for me. and for me, it's a perfect ending because i can relate it back to myself and my old self. i can understand how people are left unsatisfied tho. i just feel this drama was intended to leave the viewers that way?

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Loved this. A whole new perspective. That I am now able to look at the entire series at this light is a wonderful present, and it was YOU who made me see. Thanks very much

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@steady. You are very much welcome. I managed to convince one viewer what a great ending it is, yay! that is more than what I had asked for.

I sincerely would like to pat the writer on the back and tell her how much she has done well with this installment. This is HER story and HER message she wanted to tell. And it may not come across to all of the viewers as she has expected to be; I just want to let her know that I get it! I understand how she feels because I feel the same.

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Um, calm down. It was just a thought. They moved and things changed. I mean it would be nice if JH and DR were her friends forever, but it might not the case. People have their own lives and move away. You lose touch with others after awhile. It happens to even the best of friends.

I'm just trying to explain WHY they weren't mentioned. This writer doesn't do anything on accident.

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And on second viewing. I think the Kim and Sung family are actually still neighbors. JH's dad talked a bout moving to one place early in the drama (farming I think) and DS dad mentioned that place when he moved. And the Sung and Sung family are relatives. So I was probably wrong! So not sure what the excuse for no JH is.

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I think they mentioned JB as he is like a celebrity star chef now - more famous than Taek himself in 2016, hence they know what's he's up to. It doesn't necessary mean that they're keeping in close contact with JB though.

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Yup. There are childhood friends that I still wonder about regularly 30 years later. Now, thanks to the magic of Facebook I've found most of my school friends, but I have no idea what happened to a few.

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I understand what you're saying and drifting apart is very true to life but the series has always idealised group friendships. I just can't imagine the implication of the voiceover is that the Sungs and Chois haven't kept in contact with the Kims or the gang with Ryu Dong Ryong

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I guess different minds have different perceptions on the ending.

My take is DS never saw those friends again once they and she moved out. That was why she cried when she came back to the rundown neighborhood and went into the room and saw those 5 younger self again, because not only she missed her friends, she was longing for those times; being with them and just doing pointless stuff but fun.

That's why it resonates with me when I watch that scene over and over again. It makes me think of my childhood friends and realise how much I miss them and how regretful I am for not keeping in touch with them throughout these years. What a horrible friend I am, I know. but when you are young, you think you will be together forever!

I'm almost certain that I wouldn't feel that way if they had shown us the closure of DR & JH's characters. I would've felt content and just gotten on with my life. So for that bitter sweet ending, I am thankful to Answer Me 1988 because I'm going track my friends one by one now~

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@ Fei. You took the words right out of my mouth. I cried reading your comment because this is how exactly I feel. I felt horrible not keeping in touch but during those times I could never imagine life without them. Everyone started having careers and family of their own and before we know it, we drifted apart.

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For those who've been wanting closure to JH and DR's characters, episode 19 is dedicated for them.

Now that I've watched episode 19 with subs (horrible subs from DF, some of the dialogues are mistranslated or not translated at all!!), the writer carefully crafted and hinted their closure in the mundane talks the parents had. It still gives us an open ending for our interpretation & imagination , but episode 19 point us to the appropriate direction. It's there all along, segway into the dialogue

I love this show!

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woo hoo... thanks for the recaps. Although not satisfied with the ending, I'm content. Happy for taekie! ?

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SO GLAD that I stopped watching after E10 aired. The episodes were just too long to my liking. After getting Chilbonged and his character getting the step-sisterly treatment I don't think I could've endured JH getting a worse treatment. Once characters have served their purpose this writer just treats them ala flies in a cup of tea. So heartless! Atleast Chilbong got a girl... the makers are absolute d-bags!

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um no. This whole show isn't all about the OTP. The d-bags you say created sensational hits that topped the ratings. I do think there was a lack of JH in the this episode, but I felt that the ending was perfect, and I would not want to wish for more. And I doubt you can write anything better than those d-bags.

Please, don't ruin Jung Hwan character by writing these comments.

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lol that's true, it pains me that JH was used as a plot device by the 2nd half of the drama. but then, i digress. i can rant FOREVER about how disappointed i am in the writer's treatment of him but then i'll just get too heated. lol.

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Then you miss the beauty of it. I spent my 18 episodes thinking my ship wouldn't sail, but those two-hour-long per episodes are just worth watching. They gave so much more than Chilbong Sequel (Ft. Worse).

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I don't think where is this chilbong affiliation start, because both doesn't get the girl?
of all honesty, trash/oppa is what closest to junghwan cause for chibong, love have to be known and he fight for it over and over, he even tells najung 1st hand and 1st about his feeling,
so the point about chilbong get a girl after is consistent because he always work for his love and of junghwan doesn't get anygirl, you've seen his youth,
not all people is perfect on every thing

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May I persuade you to re-watch it again from episode 1? Now that you know the ending, please watch it without considering the whole who-is-the-husband bonanza; just take that side of the story with a grain of salt. Have another go with a fresh mind?

Watch it for the stories of the family and that good old time when there wasn't an ounce of evilness in the people we saw on the street; when we happily helped random people rather than inflicted pain. It will certainly exorcise those angers you have on the writers and leave you with longing that good old days.

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Well, I will admit that this episode was a bit painful. I’ve been a strong Jung-hwan shipper since the first episode, and genuinely believed he would get Deok-sun in the end. I am happy for Taekie (he is precious), and I think he and DS are really very cute together; it just sucks to be on the losing ship. I’m also a little angry that we didn’t get much closure for JH’s story line. The other two Replys had very clear, happy endings for every character and we didn’t really get that in this one. But I guess I just have to remember that it is because show was written so well that we feel so protective and identify so much with the characters. I don’t usually care so much about drama characters, and I know this pain and frustration stems from the awesome talent of the writers and actors.

One of the most addicting parts of Reply 1988 was the first love storyline, but, for me at least, the most poignant and unique storylines revolve around the relationships of the family, friends, and neighbors. This Reply, more then any of the others, was focused on the dynamics of a small, tight knit group of families and their struggles and triumphs. I’ll remember this show as one that made me cry and laugh and feel a million things for each and every character. It was beautifully done, and although I’m a little bitter about JH, I cannot deny that it was one of the best shows I’ve seen in a while.

Congrats to all of you Taekie shippers! I know that the second-lead almost never gets the girl, so I’m genuinely happy for you guys! Just please be gentle with us JH shippers tonight, our hearts are broken. Thanks for the recaps jb and gf! It has been a pleasure.

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On an unrelated note, does anyone else find it a little funny that Hyeri, who plays DS in Reply 1988, dated Tony An (aka Shi-won's obsession in Reply 1997)? Because I thought that was a weird coincidence.

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and with Park Bo Gum once played a role of Seo In Guk's younger brother in I Remember You...

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You know a drama is exceptionally amazing that when even though you can only understand every other sentence (I watched the Raw episodes), the show can still cause you to form tears.
The acting, the directing, the music, just everything came together perfectly to make this show. I have never been more wow-ed by a korean drama and really showed us what makes this show really shine: that everyday, people don't usually show their love for one another through long speeches, confessions and flowery words. It's the simple actions you do everyday between a father and daughter, husband and wife, and a friend to a friend.
Thank you Reply 1988 for being such an awesome series and making me realize other ways I can show my love and appreciation to my friends and families.
It was bittersweet that the drama has already ended so soon.

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Excuse me, I'm not crying. My eyes are just sweating.

What a fantastic ending to such a heartwarming and nostalgic series (even tho I was born in 89 I still feel like I lived right in ssangmundong with these characters - goes to show how good they produced R88).

Yeah, yeah I was Team JH, but I think in the end Taek fit so much better with DS and they were so cute together that I couldn't help but love this pair as well. Plus I like it when I see couples comfortable with each other, smiling all big and goofy, openly showing their affections for each other.

Can the Reply series writer PLEASE MAKE A SPINOFF WITH JH FINDING HIS GIRL PLEASE. I NEED THIS IN MY LIFE.

Thank you for the recaps!!

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am not even team Jung Hwan but yes please for a spin-off :)

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Yeah, I'm not even in Team Junghwan, but actually I'm thinking about the drama special episode. They always do this, but it's always the behind the scene footage. That would be wonderful that they make the spin-off about Junghwan, Dong-ryong, and at least how Deoksun and Taek got their permission.

But with Signal actually premiers next week, I don't think that will happen. (Unless this: Reply 1988 aired every Fri-Sat at 7:50. While Signal will air at 8:30. Let's hope that there will be a 30-minutes special episode for this.)

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I think the way the romance was executed in this instalment of the Reply series really hurt the story and left half the viewers with a broken heart and sore about the overall product. Such a shame because in all other aspects this is not only the best of this series but one of the best of all kdramas I ever watched. I wish such a talented writer wouldn’t be so obsessed with creating a mystery such as the who’s the husband question and damage her own product with her stupid insistence of baiting and switching and trolling the viewers all the time. Best mysteries are the ones which surprise the viewers by the outcome but in hindsight you are convinced that all the consistent clues lead to this natural outcome and you are not left dissatisfied. In this series in order to maintain the mystery continuously contradictory clues are dropped and not everyone is happy with the outcome and welcomes the surprise. In all honesty I cannot call this masterful writing. I do not watch love triangles as I watch a sports event. I may ship one couple over another but for me what determines whether the story is good or not is not only who ends up with whom but more importantly the process of how they get there. The amount of mystery forced into the Reply series (come on, not knowing the endgame until the very last week is ridiculous!) robs us of that process of watching a new romance unfold. To me that is the best part of a romance story. So I cannot take this writer’s stories as good romance anymore. I like the other bits, so I will probably give a shot to new dramas she will write but I will try (and probably fail again) not to board on a ship (cause unfortunately she is good at giving the viewer very swoony stuff early on to hook you) but I will know better than to believe the writer when she says “this won’t be about who’s the husband” and I will know that no matter which way the romance turned I will be extremely dissatisfied with it. Reply 1994 is not one of my favorites for this reason even though I was Team Oppa. I did not like how the romance progressed at all and the fact that the couple I wanted to see together was together in the end was not enough to satisfy me. In 1988 by episode 17 I stopped caring who the husband was because it didn’t matter anymore. Even if it was my ship it would have been too little too late. It’s a shame because it could have been a perfect drama if it was 16 episodes long and revealed its hand couple of weeks before the finale and showed the progression of the romance – between any couple.

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yes, THIS.

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I don't think the flaw is in the writing, I think the flaw is in the fan obsession with declaring for a certain pairing and then spending the next 16-ish episodes convincing each other that you're finding irrefutable evidence to support your claim. There are actual psychological studies about this - if you listen to the same theme repeatedly, you will genuinely start to think it's true, no matter the factual content.

This is a really enjoyable series if you let the mystery take a backseat. Rather than picking apart every scene for "proof" about who the husband is, isn't it more interesting to watch the modern-day scenes and wonder how the earlier incarnations of the kids could possibly grow into these people?

It's not worth rabid dedication to a "ship", really. The bragging rights when you "win" isn't worth trashing an entire series if your character "loses".

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My post clearly states that my dissatisfaction comes not from the "who" but the "how" which is very much related to the writing and story telling. I also already said I do not watch these types of stories as a sports game trying to get on board the “winning” team. I never looked for clues and spent no time on the guessing game and it wasn’t the viewer who focused on the mystery but the writer made it the main focus in the second half of the series.

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+1

some people are diverting the criticism away from the writers a little too much. the writer directs the flow of the piece. the existence of plot holes, in itself, is already a flaw in the writing. the whole atmosphere of the drama was beautifully crafted and was embued with many touching, melancholic moments. as the writer directs the flow and direction of the story, they, in turn, lead the emotions felt by the viewers. why do you think so many people root for junghwan? rather than deciding for ourselves how we are meant to feel about a character, we most often are being told what to feel by the writers themselves as they direct the portrayal of a character. as an example, 99% of dramas have a distinct male lead as the writers put in the extra effort to emphasise that relationship between the main people. this same thing happened between deoksun+junghwan at first and taek+deoksun later on. [this inconsistency is what makes the writing flawed]!!!!!! <----- *highlights*. fan culture or not, if the writer had decided to place emphasis on only one love line early on, i doubt that so many people would be complaining. becuase of this inconsistency, the writing is flawed. i wouldn't say to a great extent, maybe a very small extent becuase love lines weren't the main focus of this drama anyways. anyways, i do believe the writer deserves some flack. lol at those who blame the characters.. wuut ??

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The identification of a male lead and strong hints about him is kind of a young adult/kdrama trope, not an actual example of quality storytelling. In fact, it would considered a negative trait in most fiction.

I guess you could say the writer deserves flak if you're narrowly viewing this as "I was sold a kdrama love story" but that really wasn't the point of the show. In more general terms, the lack of massive foreshadowing/picking a male lead isn't a bad thing, it makes the story more interesting.

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These were high school kids and it is very natural to go from one crush to the other.

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*clap clap clap*

This. 100%.

I've been saying this since Reply 1994. I was on team Chilbongie and even though he didn't get the girl I was floored by the storytelling. This instalment impressed me even more that I want to go back and rewatch the whole series again to enjoy Taek's scenes with Deoksun without the possible cloud of doom roaming in the back (beach scene anyone?). I love the storytelling and yes, even though the husband hunt is annoying it's part of what makes this series so addictive. I was team JungHwan, but that's OK. Without the hunt you'd all probably be complaining that it's too predictable or that it's boring. I love how the writers twist things with red herrings because everything does come together in the end.

And I'm not hating on the shippers, I just want the writers to get the accolades they deserve for how well written this series is.

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LOL.

When Taek started to show feelings for Deoksun, I was in peril. I knew I was going to love him.

But ironically because before I shipped JungHwan and Deoksun, and I was SURE that JungHwan was the husband, I could push back the loveline back and focused on the story.

It helped that this installment wasn't all to focused on the loveline so I could enjoy the show without succumbing to shipping-focus. And I enjoyed the show more because of it.

...probably helped that Mr.Choi and Sunwoo's mom was my ultimate ship. Can we have more of parent-ships later?

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I did the same. I loved Taek but I was so sure JH was the husband that I tried not to fall for the shipping or the troll clues the writer dropped. I think it made the story more enjoyable for me that I was less invested in the romance mystery.

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Am I the only one who shipped those 5 friends??? LOL. Like Girlfriday, I just want them to stay in this little room where they stay perky and mischievous; not to mention young??

By the middle of the drama, I really gave up on the husband guessing. The family and friends stories just blew me away. Never in my life have I ever invested this much in a drama. I certainly enjoyed this show best compare to the other 2 instalments.

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Well, that's what I think too about the mystery husband. Hate it to the core, but when I think it again, probably one of the reason why I checked Dramabeans like crazy for ep 19 and 20 recap because I want to know if Deok-sun really end up with Taek or not.

It's an annoying (for us) but also a smart move (for television broadcast), because they keep the husband till the end. it make people watch it -- Ship sailed or not, angry or satisfy. So yeah, I don't know should I hate or admire the writer for the gut to raise that much emotions.

However, it's a testament that the writer really write a good characters. We as a viewer really connect with them, feel for them, and care if they are happy or not. And the writer always success is when it comes to family and friendship. From 97 to 88, whenever it about friendship or family, I just can't... the warm feeling that spread in my heart, man!

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I guess I tended to take the clues, in the same way as I took each new detail about the characters week by week. I was getting to know them bit by bit, through the stories and the layers revealed, so I also felt like I was being shown, bit by bit, how the relationships developed and grew. The couples - whoever they ended up with, or whether they stayed together - seemed part of the overall story.

I do think they use the device, and there's something to be said about why it is so compelling. Giving heartbreak through a story is also a narrative gift. I think it's like going to the theatre to watch a tragedy - you already know there will be a loser, and there will be sorrow and gnashing of teeth. But that is also a valid experience.

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Your comments is spot on thank you

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Thank you for saying this!

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This comment was flawless. I completely agree. While I think this Reply was by far the best in terms of development for side characters like the parents and siblings, it really messed up the romance story line by attempting to make it a mystery until the last possible moment, and it hurt the show overall. For me, the best romance story line was Reply 1997. It pretty was clear from the start that Yoon-jae would get Shi-won, and they basically revealed it with like 4-5 episodes to go, so we got to see the main couple as an actual couple. Although I did like Taek and DS, we didn't really get to see then act like a couple for very long, and we missed important moments, like their wedding or telling their parents about their relationship. Hopefully this will be a "live and learn" situation for this writer, because I LOVE her shows, but I don't think my heart can take another Jung-hwan/Chilbongie!

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OH.MY.GOD Reply1988! Never in my life have I ever been so invested with someone else's husband! You make me look into all those little clues like a mad person trying to figure out them. LOL. But I did enjoyed the guessing game & it was fun reading all those analyses.
However, as a TKXDS shipper, I too want a wedding scene & maybe a glimpse of their future married life. But we already knew that they're married & they look like they still love each other very dearly. So instead, you give us a glimpse of their dating life & whaddayaknow they date like anyone else.
It was quite surprising really but maybe bcuz I'm used to all kinds of grand gestures & lavish courtship in the typical Kdramas. But I'm happy that we get such a realistic portrayal of a couple in love from them. I just wish I could see their parents face when they reveal that they're actually dating. That would be priceless.
And Choi Taek! Dude just gave K-Drama heroes a whole new definition. I never thought the Choi Taek in ep 1 could become the man that he is at the end of the drama & a good kisser too lmao. His love for DS was so deep he doesn't need all those romantic moves we see so often in K-Dramas, heck, he doesn't even need a confession. He was always there for DS, always understands her, tells her pretty when she needs to hear it & very straightforward with his feeling. Any girl would fall in love with a man like that. I know I would.

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the choi Taek in ep 1 and 2 - my gosh, I thought he was autistic! then he becomes this kissing bandit! those movies nights with guys were not wasted

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Taek the kissing bandit was such a pleasant surprise

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In episode 2, I think, his response to the loud television, made him seem on the spectrum.

I think after that they pull that characteristic way back. His ability to hyper focus on one thing and calm way of speaking, and flustered in new situation and stepping back could be seen as someone who was on the spectrum but very hiigh function.

THis would also explained why his differences lessened as he got older and gained social skills. He remained sensitive to noise.

If that was what the series was going for I was happy that they showed someone on the spectrum living a satifying and complete life.

Actually I think a lot of k-drama male lead come off as if they are on the spectrum but high functioning.

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you said it well. indeed, if he was a little on that spectrum, it is satisfying how he blended in the society. in fact, some of his body language, physical behavior still looks autistic sometimes, his clumsiness and slouched walk, then at other times, it doesnt show at all. like at the wedding ceremony, talking to Jung Hwan

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You said a good reason to watch those movies.

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I swear this show makes me bipolar. Yesterday I was super happy with Taek DeokSeon revelation. Today I'm so upset and feels like there is a Ssangmundong sized hole in my heart and currently going through 5 stages of grief:

Denial: this can't really be the end right? Surely I've missed some parts of the show. How can the writer not tell us about what happened to Jung Hwan and Dong Ryo
Anger: no seriously Show, you had almost two hours every week. Can't you just show me at least Deok Seon's flashback on how she came to like Taek instead of flashbacks we've already seen? And what are Jung Hwan and Dong Ryo? Freaking extras?? This is not even a mystery show why are you leaving an open ending why?? Family dramas are neatly wrapped up at the end!!
Bargaining: ok, I'm sorry I got greedy for a Chilbongie cameo. All I really need is just for you to confirm that everyone is still friends in present day and they still meet up regularly and Taek's bday is still celebrated every year because it's tradition and they all come over for drinks. The ajummas are all living in the same apartment building right? They all still meet up to gossip everyday right?? You are making a special aren't you? This can't possibly be the last episode....you will give interviews about all the characters you didn't mention in present day right???
Depression: this is it isn't it....we will never see them together ever again....replaying 혜화동 and watching ost mvs while sobbing in my corner...maybe the next time I'll see them is in the next reply series...maybe not....sobs...
Acceptance: I don't know what that feels like....I haven't gotten there yet...continues sobbing

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I'm stuck at anger for now...hik...help me move on...

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am in denial.. i think they will have a special/extra episode to show what happened to Dong Ryong and Jung hwan in the future timeline...
How come we didn't get to see the whole gang together? That's sad, it's like they moved on... i haven't moved on... i feel like am stuck in Taekie's room waiting for them to come back and watch Top gun together

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Dongrong is in prison after getting caught running a pyramid scheme involving household products - he sired multiple children with various women, who then were promptly adopted by American families.

Junghwan died in a training exercise, when his jet crashed into another jet because the ejection seat malfunctioned. He never got over Duckson, died a virgin

Fin

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wow...if that were an alternate universe, I can actually be happy that the finale went like this instead :)

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hahahaha, very well said :) I like your five stages

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Girlfriday.

Thank you for the recaps and your comments. They are alway on point and you somehow always manages to put into words what i could never have. Thank you.

It was a little disappointing, this drama's ending but it was one hell of a ride and i believe the journey is as much as important as the destination.

Again thank you and hope to read more great reviews from you.

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Wow, what a great series. I have to admit, I did not see half of the twists coming. But they did such a great job. As expected, my heart was a little broken, but I knew that was going to happen no matter the outcome. Thanks so much to girl Friday and java beans for the amazing recaps. <3<3
And thanks to all my fellow junkies for the great comments and insights, you all rock!

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Cont.
SeGa's Kim Joo Won or TMS' Joo Jong Won don't exist in real life. But I'm sure there's a piece Choi Taek in each of us. Thank you for portraying such a realistic & relatable love story.
So please KDrama writers make another Choi Taek!
I know many people are upset we didn't get to see JH romantic life. But I believe the writer gave him justice. He doesn't need a girl as a consolation prize. That'll only reduce him to the next TW & CB when he's a much better character than them.
Lastly, seeing Ssangmundong turning into ruins breaks my heart. Knowing that I won't again see the ahjummas or the OT5 hanging out at Taek's room eating ramyun makes me a lil' sad. All those memories even if it's just a drama felt so real. Thank you writer-nim for gifting us Reply 1988. Thank you for all those wonderful characters & thank you for sharing your youth with us.

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This!! JH's character doesn't need a girl to make him happy, he was the happiest when his friends and family were happy. And that what makes his character great along. He's selfless in every way, always giving, always thoughtful, protective along with his flaw - not fervent enough...

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So finally the journey ends.... journey full of laughter n pool of tears!!! It was an awesome experience reading all the comments and thoughts of people around the world!!! Love u all!!! Thanx Girlfriday!!!

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I just went from LOVING this show to feeling bitter about it because of the last episode. I was one of the many that rooted for JH (I admit to rooting for Taek at times, he's just so cute). However, I did not like how his character got neglected after he confessed to DS. Like ok was he only used as plot device and cameo??

We only saw him and DR for like 5 minutes total while SW and BR (love them, but still) got over half of the episode for their wedding shenanigans!! This also makes me angry that TK and DS relationship was quickly shown in a ten minute sequence. And I don't like that I had this thought but it makes me wonder if they just changed the husband from JH to TK last minute. Don't get me wrong I was happy with either one of them being the end game. I love that TK got the girl because why not? He's sweet and loves her as much as JH did, but the writer went too deep with JH's love for DS that the reversal was so jarring (looking at you Kim Joo Hyuk).

Overall, R88 was a fantastic, realistic, heartwarming drama that made me laugh, cry, and feel all kinds of extreme emotions. It's just how the ends were tied (or not tied at all) that left me frustrated to the core (TK/DS wedding? 2016 of DR and JH? Jin Joo? The parents? Do all the friends even stay in contact?). This is going to leave me in a funk for the next few days.

On another note: I've definitely got my eye on the cast (especially Ryu Joon Yeol and Park Bo Gum) for their future projects. They all did fantastic jobs and I wish them all more success in the future!!

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I definitely feel like they should have revealed who the husband was earlier so that they could have spent more time tying the loose ends. As girlfriday mentioned, it seemed weird that they mentioned how their family was gonna struggle with the double in laws but they didn't even show them revealing their relationship. It almost felt like SW and Bora were the main couple since they got so much screen time for their relationship. This episode felt rushed. They should have revealed who the husband was in episode 17 or 18 and spent the rest of the episodes exploring the future of each of the families. Oh well, still really enjoyed it though.

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+1 Last two episodes felt rushed. Seemed like they were trying to convince viewers Teak and Dukon's pairing.

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Goodbye Reply1988 thanks for wonderful bittersweet ride within two months. Thanks for introducing me this fantastic cast especially Kim sajang family and Ryu Jun Yeol I will waiting your next project.

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The boys and the moms made the show happens! Props to them ??????
Forever #teamjunghwan ?

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It's always sad to say goodbye to a show you enjoyed. And overall, I enjoyed AM88. It's hard to discuss it w/o discussing it's predecessors so I'm not going to even try. AM97 is still my fave. It's still the one I will re-watch over & over again. Although I can't say I will ever re-watch this one, I did enjoy it more so than AM94. I think it doesn't hurt that AM94 kind of ripped my heart out when Chilbongie didn't get the girl (I will admit that now only b/c I hope the two years that have passed have made it safe to give my opinion). But I was really rooting for Choi Taek. I did love Jung-whan, but his constant hesitation and holding back exasperated me. When he reneged on that awesome confession, I was done trying to ship him and threw the full force of my hopes behind Taek. And I wasn't disappointed when he swooped in for that kiss to seal the deal. I really loved that he went for it. I didn't think he had it in him, but it was great to be wrong.

I remember being so excited for this drama, then kind of disappointed when they announced Lee Hyeri as lead. Overall I think she was okay. She had moments when I thought she was great--like when she thought Jung-hwan gave his bro the shirt she bought. She did well conveying her feelings with just a look. I think most of her worse scenes were when she had to cry. And she tended to cry a lot. She was better than I thought but not quite as good as I wanted her to be, but she got the job done.

As usual, the series and episodes could have been shorter, but there was so much heart that I didn't mind too much. I loved the families' bond and that's what I'll miss seeing the most.

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MY SHIP BROKE APART!!!!!!!!! The three ajumma-sisters separated! WAAAAAAHHHHH!!!!!!!!

Lol yeah, I didn't really care much for the lovelines (although yes, I am miffed that DongRyung and JungHwan are not further explored) and I'm always amused when I see people write about how obvious since the start it was whoever the husband was supposed to be. How did you guys tell? Or am I just stupid? I couldn't tell either way.

It's interesting to note that in 1994, the guy who chased and was proactive lost out to the guy who practically acts like a roosting hen in the romance department while in 1988 the guy who waited and stayed put lost out ro the guy who chased and tried to catch the girl. Says a lot about the fickleness of love, huh.

All in all, I want to give a round of applause but... PD, if the rumoured Answer Me 1764 comes to fruition PLEASE PROMISE that you'll keep each episode to 1 hr. That's it! Nothing more! I'm not even asking you to go back to your 1/2-hr 1997 roots! Please? Just no more episodes that leave me wanting to go do something else in the middle of the episode? I BEG YOU PLEASE!

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and please...please...no more who's the husband game. no more. I'm spent. Honest.

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Seriously, if all they want is just show how the past eras was they should forego with the husband hunting.

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please go back to 30 min like R97 :)
there were many times when I feel: does this show really need to be 1.5 hours long??!!

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I think just like youth, PD can't go back to that time when things were simpler and shorter any more (sobs).

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1974! Nineteen seventy four!

Not 1764! Omg, that's literally during the Joseon era, what was I thinking?! (Although that is during King YeongJo's reign during which the Crown Prince Sado incident would have happened which would make for good drama... hmm...)

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haha lol it seemed to make sense to me

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Agree with the wailing about the ajhumma brigade breaking apart and the long episodes. '97 barely remains my favorite mainly due to episode length and it feels like tighter editing.

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I put off my scuba diving to refresh this page for this recap! Will gladly dive now and re-read this later! Loved this how beginning to end and even the recaps never fail to draw some tears from me even when I haven't watched the episode yet! This franchise is the best!

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Thank you Girlfriday. A few comments/questions:

1. I am wondering if Sunwoo was the male of the series and I just didn't get it because I am used to the male lead ending up with the female lead because I tend to watch romantic Kdramas. Because it seems to me like he's the guy with the most screen time although that could just be my perception. In family / neighborhood dramas are the leads always (mostly) people who end up with each other? Or can they be two characters in the same family or on the street who aren't dating (well, I suppose that's obvious if they are in the same family, but y'all know about all the fauxcest).

2. Girlfriday would you still give this show the same number of beans you have it at year end?

3. I personally think I would be a little heartbroken no matter who DS ended up with, loved both the boys. I don't know if I'm glad or sad they didn't tie all the storylines up with a bow.

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I'm most curious about no 2) too! hahahahaha

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"I was disappointed in a few things, namely the lack of Jung-hwan in the final episode."

I'd say the second half of the whole drama.

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Okay, from the get-go I should say that I was/am a Taek-DS fan. However, I have some problems with how their story played out, alluded to by Girlfriday above.

1. The moments I REALLY wanted to see - the ones I've waited all season for - happened OFF SCREEN. I was waiting for the reveal to the parents, for any kind of closure between DS and JH, to see some really swoony kisses, and especially I was thinking we would get more insight into the way DS behaved in the past in a way that we hadn't while the writer tried to keep the husband mystery alive.

Don't get me wrong, what we did get was good, but I needed more!

2. What the hell happened to everyone else?! DOn't make this a story about everyone and their mother and then only follow the two girls in the final episode! I want to know who JH married. I want to know whether the families live near each other.

Do they have reunions? Are their kids friends? Is everyone living well? Is everyone healthy?

These are the kinds of questions I fully expected answers to. I am so sad we're not going to get them.

Ugh, this show. So much good and so much bad all together.

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PS. I feel like I missed some big things... Does anyone know what on earth Taek had to talk to Junghwan about at the base in ep 19?

And why did the incredibly accurate fortune teller suggest changing DS' name to SooYeon in high school? Was this ever explained?

Thanks in advance for any help! :)

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Yes, I was wondering about that too. What else did Taek go to Junghwan for?

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You didn't miss them.

They were just never explained, sigh.

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I FULLY AGREE. It's not that the series was bad, it's that the last episode failed to answer many of our questions and just seemed very rushed, full of holes and just not well written or prepared compared to the rest of the episodes. I wanted to know what happened to all of the 5 friends. And I wanted to see DS and Taek's love played out better. Even when they asked Taek the question of when he fell in love with Deok Sun, it sort of answered it (i.e., from day one) but I feel like there could have been a better answer, more concrete, like this one moment when he realized it. For a great series, the finale just fell way way short.

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First of all, I'm not in any ships. I just want to share my feeling about the ending. It is my least favorite ending of all the reply series. So many questions was left unanswered. One can argue that it's about family and friendship, so feeling sad because of the husband hunt didn't go as you pleased is not quite right. But for me, the main plot is still about the husband hunt since it was already presented from ep 1. We saw flying clues here and there that JH was the husband. Even the future husband acted like young JH (but not on ep 20). We also saw how DS and JH fell for each other. Many thought that JH was the endgame. But somehow, JH was sent to backburner. DS-Taek falling for each other was rushed, I don't know when DS realized her feeling for Taek. And the ending, oh, they only showed a glimpse of JH. What happened to him? What about DR? What about the gang? Did they still hang out together? What about the parents? What about JJ? What happened to the graduation ring? After JH gave his blessed for Taek to pursue his love to DS, it's like there's nothing happened. How's his relationship with DS? Did DS and the rest of the gang finally know about his feeling to DS? What happened to the pink shirt? And what's with the last scene? Why did DS cry? And we're back to what happened in ep 1. All these are only DS's dream? And other questions. Is the ending open-ended? It's too open for me. What a bitter(not)sweet ending. Thank you for the recap GF.

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Also, I think I'll stop watching the MVs of the OSTs in the CJENMMusic Official YT playlist for a while to regain my sanity because everytime I watched them, I keep seeing JH's face (and DS') as the cover picture. I have to remind myself that he is not the main lead. However, for being not the main lead, he got quite some OSTs dedicated to him (and DS). Sigh...
For you who's curious, here's the link.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcOf-jV0-p1gkrWzZwEa5hvlTaregBNne

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Where are you Junghwan ah... are you living a happy life now Junghwan ah...

I guess it's too much to ask for a proper closure for the characters we spent months watching and getting emotionally invested in...

I'm thankful to the production team for giving us such great characters but I'm also incredibly glad it's over now.

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This is out of my watchlist. Why no proper send-off to other chRacters??

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There there Jungpal fans!! If it's any consolation, he's gonna be the bigger star out of the other ones....

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I only just read the recap and haven't even finished watching raw with no understanding what so ever about what was going on. Having said that...can I ever be MORE disappointed at the shafting of Chilbong's non story of a wife to a...Jung Hwan's non existent love story what so ever?? I think I'm going to cry...REALLY REALLY HARD!! I'm squeeing at DS and Taek, honest! But...NO LOVE STORY FOR JUNG HWAN? I just...can't. I can't. I need a hug, a big one at that. I need ice cream, dark chocolate, anything.

R1988 in a hindsight might end up being my favorite installment. In hindsight. Not now. Right now, let me just cry some more for Jung Hwan.

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I can't forget that one comment that said if JungHwan didn't get the girl he'd be the chilbongiest chilbongie ever. You were right, fellow commentator.

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To my fellow Junghwan lovers, I wrote a fanfic for an alternative ending with junghwan ending up with deoksun. hopefulky this is of some solace to you. Enjoy!
http://www.asianfanfics.com/story/view/1076725/answer-me-1988-alternative-ending-reply1988

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they really didn't throw us JH lovers ANY BONE to chew on! not that the happiness of JH's life is premised on relationships but we spent so much devotion he had to DS and we never saw any concrete steps taken by JH to move on with life post DS! a car pulling up a-la '97's joon hee would have been enoughhhhhhhh. I'm glad whenever there was a Taek DS scene the writers didn't let JH be there though that was good if not I would have hurled something at my computer.

but i adore this episode, I was like a mama when I saw sun woo walk down the aisle, I was just so proud of him at that point my heart could burst.

i think from then on i couldn't stop crying, and when DS came into the room where they brought us back to the beginning i think i died for a while. it was just all the feels ALL THE FEELS THAT DAMN NEIGHBOURHOOD.

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Thanks for the recap.

The two funniest scenes of this episode.
"when Sun-woo comes home that night, Taek greets him with a violent punch in the back, hahaha. Sun-woo asks what that was for, and Taek says with a grin that he’s just glad to see him and shuffles off."

I'm not sure what Taek's petty vengeance towards SW was for. Rejecting DS or having DS crush on him in the first place.?

"Sure enough, Sun-woo is mid-kiss when he looks down the street and locks eyes with all three moms. Bora turns around too, and then everyone goes flailing."

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Taekie was a little jealous. It was cute.

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lol. it cracked me up toooo, taekie gaving taht violent punch to sunwooooooo

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I think it was for rejecting DS cause to Taek, she is perfect. She is pretty and fun and warm and absolutely fantastic to him. so even if he feels a bit jealous, it makes him gasp how Deok Sun could be rejected by anyone. I think thats why he initially stepped back for JH as well, cause everyone SHOULD be in love with his perfect girl

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Thanks. Now that's what I think he was upset about. How dare he reject such a wonderful woman.

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Thanks GF for the recap- I am pretty much in agreement with your impressions about this drama! The world is so different now from back then, that I wish neighborhoods like Ssangmun-dong still exists today. I just wish there was a more proper send off for all our characters in the present time. Off to wait for the subs for the finale!

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Wanted to vote 5 stars but my fingers were too slow and ended up 1 star!

I love this series. The ending wasn't the best but I will still take it. I grew up in the same era (not in Korea) so could relate to so much that was going on then. Nostalgia at its best.

Thanks for all the recap!

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Why just abandon Jung-hwan like that? Totally makes it seem like he was just a red herring, and that sucks because he was a great character. I can't say I was on one ship or the other- I knew it was going to hurt, whoever she ended up with- but I expected some resolution for whoever was left behind. We got basically none. :(

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Agreed! I personally favoured Taek with DS but I ADORED Junghwan. At the end of the day that was kind of the problem for everyone, wasn't it? This is about more than just shipping. We love them BOTH.

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It's finally over! I dropped it at 11 but am now continuing it while skipping on other stuff. I don't think I like how the characters were handled in the end but the family stuff are too good to ignore so I'm watching it for those.

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Not gonna lie. Those last 10 minutes got me like crazy. I cried until i cant even speak. Then i continue watch n i cried again. Still got my tears drop reading this recap. Show took all my feels i dont think i have anymore left.

I realized i care more about the characters rather than OTP. so sad im not in the gang. So sad i dont live there. So sad they are not real.

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This is so stupid! Writers giving in to crazy teen fangirls thirsting for bogum's ass! #teamjunghwanforever

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I don't think that is what happened.

but it is quite lovely and perhaps worth giving in to.

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haha, great reply Yumi

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Girlfriday,

I wondered how you managed typing without a single typo. I was reading through tears-covered eyes. I truly had a hard time reading coz my tears just kept coming.

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Waahhh!!! And it ended ???.
I will miss this series :(

Although i have been JUNGHWANed, i still love him and his sweetness.

I will miss their street so much! ?

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