630

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 ]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

 
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.

 
RELATED POSTS

Tags: , , , , ,

630

Required fields are marked *

I wished for a little more DS/TK, buuut on the other hand i can see why they didn't show their wedding/coming out to the family. It would have just been basically a repeat of SW/BR, and Bora was older so she gets the wedding. Sucks being a middle child!

I will have to say, I like that DS and TK were basically no drama. They loved each other forever, DS' love just grew into a more romantic love over time. It was natural to watch. And as much as I was shipping JH/DS before, I can't help but think that TK's personality just fits DS so much better. He loves her and isn't afraid to say it. To him, she's the most beautiful person in the world, even in ugly lipstick. Everyone else made fun of her, but he said she was pretty. She NEEDS that. She really does. They both helped each other grow into more secure and strong people, and I love that about them. For all the husband drama, the final OTP was something so simple and straightforward. I really enjoyed it.

It broke my heart to see the neighborhood torn down. I wish everyone could live together like in the past, but it's not realistic. People grow apart and things change. The families don't see each other like they did in the past either.

It goes without saying I wanted an update on everyone. Just a line about how JH was doing would have been nice. Same with DR. I'm a bit sad they don't have a real connection to the Sung family now.

Anyway, I'm going to miss this show. Honestly, I wish they would have extended it a bit. It would have been nice to see everyone for a little bit longer.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Agree with everything you said.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Initially, I was quite upset over Taek being the husband. But after thinking I realize Taek needed Deoksun more than Junghwan needed her. No other girl can understood and mother (let's be real here..) Taek as well as Deoksun did and does. Taek can't live without Deoksun but Junghwan can.

Deoksun might have been able to grow more as a person being with Junghwan but she chose a different type of happiness being with Taek. That's why I don't really see it as Junghwan being on the losing end of the stick.

And in my little world Junghwan is happily married with a hot wife like Jeon Jihyun and a beautiful daughter like Kim Yuna (hey I can dream, right?)

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

this. this is so true. right on. taek needed DS. i've always understood why taek would come to like DS. for jungpal it was adorable but there wasn't that key word, NEED. & i think jungpal, being the perceptive person that he is, understood that as well. i don't think anyone can handle taek like DS would. i know i couldn't lol. as much as i love PBG, taek was never a character that i resonated with. unlike many people, although i found him mature & caring, i also found him to be childish, boring and needy alot of the time lol. sorry, not sorry.

anyway, you're right. i'll find comfort in the fact that jungpal will be okay because yes he doesn't need DS. remember that fortune teller scene? the fortune teller told JH's mom not to worry about him because he'll do fine regardless. she was right.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

i would also like to add that as much as taek needed DS, she needed him as well. as a middle child, she was never in the spotlight; always overlooked. with taek, she is able to be his everything. this is why they work.

this would never be the same with jungpal. as a more reserved person who shows his affection in more subtle ways, he'll never be able to openly dote on DS and visibly show her his love like how she needed him to. she's the type that NEEDS that reassurance. that's why she always just liked guys who she thought like HER first.

although my heart hurts because i'm team jungpal till i die, the more i think about it, DS x taek do work better REALISTICALLY. narratively, it's of course JH x DS. many of us were just blindsighted because as one expects from a drama, we expect things to unfold in a story-like fashion. beginning, middle, conflict, climax, resolution and then

finally the end. we DO NOT expect progression such as "they slowly grew to love each other." HOWEVER, i need to say we did not expect it because it was veeeery badly developed. plus, when it comes to a drama/movie you have to SHOW the audience everything, you can't just bet on them coming up with their own answers/conclusions. this being so, i still think this writer wasn't able to properly show us the realistic progression of this friendship-->lovers dynamic, which is a shame. to me, the last few eps screams LAZY WRITING.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I agree that it was mutual need between the two. Sensitive middle child with self esteem issues probably didn't fit with gruff tsundere. As much as the audience loved the bickering between JH and DS, I'm not sure that's what she was really looking for in her love life. If she was, she might have gone for DR as well.

JH is a lot like Bora in some ways. JH needs someone like Sun Woo who is very confident.

And I don't think it's lazy writing so much as they were trying to trick the audience too badly.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I honestly think that Jungpal will forever be the most pitiful male lead in the whole history of Reply series. I mean, even Chilbong got a girl! Why can't we know if he did too! I just want to know what happened to him!

And it also sucks that no one else knew about his adorable crush for Deoksun, it was just him and the viewers. Even when he confessed it hurt. I just don't understand how the adult Deoksun and Taek could talk about Jungbong but not a mention of Dongryong and Junghwan about what they were doing! It's like they disappeared off the Earth!

I wanted to see Junghwan sincerely congratulating Deoksun and Taek, just to make sure that he'll be okay and move on but nope, not a whiff of him AT ALL.

I don't hate Taek at all, I just want to know where the hell Junghwan is and what he's doing.

At least he'll be here to comfort me on the V App broadcast today :-(

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Good family drama. Friendship and the main love triangle is a mess though.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

bobo ng writers! mas boring pa si taek sa skyflakes!

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Bitter? Here's some soju to help you cheer up.
Taek may be boring (I don't find him boring tho) but at least he goes after what he wants unlike Junghwan, no? And he is an excellent kisser.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Just reading the recap about the ending made me want to tear up. An ending where they leave the neighborhood, as they left the house in 1994. As crushed as I am over Jung-hwan, I loved this drama for so much more than the loveline, especially the final scene where the youngsters say "Where would we go?"

For me, Jung-hwan's "Goodbye First Love" episode was my ending for him, and one of the most memorable moments of this show. I don't have to see his happily ever after.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

You pretty much summed up my thoughts hehe :)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

"For me, Jung-hwan’s “Goodbye First Love” episode was my ending for him, and one of the most memorable moments of this show. I don’t have to see his happily ever after." - THIS, why can't other understand? this drama is not about JH love story, it is about others too, remember the focus of this drama is about family and friendship. Also SW is one of the main character OT5(-1 DR, his story more like side char for me). JH already has his story told and end up nicely (even though not happily). It's fair for me the remaining episodes gives to other character.

But yes I AGREE, that it will be nice if in the last comment in interview DS mention JH and DR too.
*Do I sound bipolar? this is how much this drama affect me.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Oh my God girlfriday thank you so much! I was crying at 3am when I was watching this raw and crying again reading your recap. The Bora-Dad relationship really speaks home to me because that's exactly me and my Dad. What can I say? This installment is my favorite. I will surely miss this gang and the rest of their family big time. For me it was always the relationship between these families that carried the show. And while I'm onboard the Taek ship I was also grieving for Junghwan. Like girlfriday said, we wouldn't be able to meet those two amazing characters again. Till next time.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This ending made me cry so much.

I hate that we never found out what happened to DR or JH or if the ajummas stayed friends or at least contacted each other every now and then. Because from how it looks now, they all just drifted apart after Ssang-mun-dong, which just sucks. You give us this beautiful, moving story about family and friendships of a lifetime, and end it with - well, it only counts when you're in the same neighborhood. Out of sight, out of mind, then?
Is the only place they can all be friends in their memories and the past? And that last picture of Ssangmun-dong after time has passed. I can't accept this at all. It really breaks my heart, more than anything else I've seen in this entire series.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

You can't help but feel bitter how how disgustingly jh was treated at the end. forget his arc being wrapped up but the boy barely got 10 minutes in a two hour episode that is simply unforgivable. it was a beautiful drama who i am sad to say goodbye to. the scenes between bora and her dad made me cry so much and were beautiful. it's a bit of a cop out that we didn't even get to see taek and ds tell their family about them. it's like sunwoo and bora were given all of their relationship progress. there's so much that hs let me down in the last few episodes. it's honestly upsetting that the writer can be like this but i suppose there's nothing to be done about it now. this show introduced me to some stunning music and really made me see the value of family relationships. when each family was leaving it was almost unbearable to watch. i felt like i had lost a part of myself. i won't forget you reply 1988. thank you for touching my heart. i will miss you all

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

can't believe it ends.I really wanted to see more of taeki and deok sun relationship but I'm not disappointed this reply series is more about family which make it fun to watch still we didn't get to see more cameo of previous reply actors that is little disappointing.it's good to see deok sun and taeki have connection before they were teens.I still can't believe reply 1988 ends.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

A greatly-lacking-yet-still-awesome episode! I love that Taekie and Deok Sun are living happy lives (I'm all for Taekie! obviously), and it's good to see that Sun Woo and Bora seemed to have remained the same throughout the years.

However, why no ending scene for the whole neighborhood characters? Just like everyone else, I don't understand how they couldn't have spared a couple of seconds to show all the other kids' present situations. I'm not even asking for actions--shots like those of the five kids shown would've been good enough.

Seriously, as much as I love Taekie, I felt bad for everyone else, especially Jung Hwan. He didn't even get a nice closure like dear Chilbongie. :(

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Because DS probably isn't in contact with all of them. Some might not even be alive. It's a bittersweet end. it's also a realistic end. People move on and their lives change. You can't go back to the past.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

plus, we can just imagine what they are doing. imagine whatever

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

i legit cried for hours after i watched the finale ????
there was no JUSTICE for JH!!!
DS and CT... you guys... YOU GUYS!!!!!!!!!!!!! HOW COULD YOU?! HOW COULD YOU?!?!?!!! TO YOUR BESTFRIEND?!?! TO YOUR BRO, TAEK-AH!!!!! WHY DIDNT YOU SAY ANYTHING WHEN YOU MET JH AT HIS CAMP?!?! YOU SAID YOU DIDNT COME TO TALK ABOUT DS?! WHAT ON EARTH DID YOU GUYS TALK ABOUT?!?!! WHY DID YOU NOT TALK THINGS THROUGH WITH JH? WHY DID YOU JUST ACCEPT THAT HE'S GIVEN UP? DO YOU REALISE HOW BIG OF A SACRIFICE JH MADE FOR YOU IN ORDER FOR YOU TO BE HAPPY WITH DS??! WHY COULDNT YOU AT LEAST PAY YOUR RESPECT TO HIM?!?!?! ??????? DS!!! DEOK SUN!!!! i cant even talk anymore.... im just... im just really disappointed at the ending.... i was hoping for DS and JH to meet... even for a BRIEF moment... even for a minute or two... for those two to meet and acknowledge each other's feelings.... and resolve it in a peaceful manner... but WHAT IS THIS?!?! at the end JH DISAPPEARED.... he had to act PERFECTLY FINE when they met at CT's room.... i couldnt imagine how heartbroken he must have felt when he finally gave up on DS... how hard it must have been for him to try forget her... his first love... ??? his first one-sided love... and he had to deal with it ALONE... ALONE!! ?? my poor man, KIM JUNG HWAN!!! ??? i know this is all just a drama, but i cant help getting attached to each characters in this series... putting the (tragic) JH-DS-CT love line aside... i would like to thank this drama for existing ❤️ this drama will forever be one of the bestest drama i've ever watched❤️ although it wasnt as perfect as it could have been, i will never forget how bitter-sweet but at the same time comforting it was for me to watch this drama? it hits home, and it hits home HARD ?? i appriciate all the lessons that this drama taught me... about how family will always be there for you, through thick or thin.. through laughter or sadness... through hardships and through victories... thank you. ❤️ family is indeed our love 'till the end (내 끝사랑은 가족입니다 // R88 poster tagline) ❤️❤️❤️ it's amazing how i feel so 'close' to this drama despite the culture and huge generation difference i have with the drama's setting... respect to the writers and PD for making R88 - even the former reply series - so RELATABLE and TIMELESS... ???? 인정!!!!!! 인정!!!!! i would also like to thank the actor and actresses for making R88 characters alive!!! thankyouthankyouthankyou!!!! i believe they will achieve an even greater success than this drama!!! RYU JUN YEOL, IM WATCHING YOU!!!!! ????❤️ finally, i would like to say that i enjoyed watching this drama.. this drama and its characters will always have a special place in my heart ❤️ one day.. one day when im ready i would like to watch this drama again ❤️ once again, thank you, R88 ❤️ even if there are questions still left unanswered, i think i can now say my farewell to this wonderful, wonderful drama (about FAMILY, NOT necessarily the loveline... im sorry im...

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This drama simply leaves you in tears.

As in, I guarantee crying action.

I feel exactly the same sadness I felt when I watched the last episode of the Wonder Years. You know, the part wherein Kevin and Winnie kept in touch over the years, only to part ways in the end.

For me, Answer Me 1988 ends, but doesn't end.
Just like growing up.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

At least Daddy-Sung was still alive, not like in the Wonder Years.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I dont know about you but I am disapointed. At least a scene of TeakSun wedding? Why not? and JH, my wound will be bleeding like forever :(

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

... still in denial.. i'll come to that acceptance... some day...) good bye deok sun, noeul, bora eonni, jung hwan, jung bong oppa, sun woo, dong ryong, taek.... jinju... good bye ahjummas, good bye ahjussis, good bye ssamundong, good bye reply 1988.... ❤️❤️❤️❤️

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

my soul is dead. nothing realy matters anymore

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Dammit, my heart was always torn between Taek and JH, and now I am sad for JH…. Why wouldn’t the creative-team pull a Schrödinger Cat here and made us all happy? A parallel storyline about JH where he didn’t hesitate and approached DS when he had a chance, and henceforth….

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Good job R88 team. You made me laugh, cry, feel angst, and fall in love and the feels. This is the kind of series that I can re-watch and re-watch.

I will miss all the ajummas and the dads and most specially the gang who are all warm.

How I wish I grew up in a neighbor like this and the kind of friendship that they had. Full of love and charm ****cries****

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

OMG. I was waiting till the end to see if we get good send off to Junghwan, but no, the writers just dropped him after the wedding and didn't even consider how much us viewers wants to know what happen to him afterwards. I agree that people move on and live their lives, but people rarely have this kind of friendship and first love and we all want to know what the hell went after the wedding. It was just too much time wasted on the wedding. I can't believe i have to to sleep after this finale. How the hell would I get any sleep when I keep wondering about Junghwan. I am happy for Taek and Doeksun but atleast give us something so that we can be peace with the finale. I just wish they would have made this finale however long so that we can get closure on all the characters. I am just bumped out.

thank you for the recap!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This could have truly been one of the best kdramas of all time but the writing REALLY stumbled in Ep 17-20 and not just because JHxDS bait and switch.

They took a fully realized character for who the audience would want a conclusion and dropped him. DR didn't get a real end or actually any development. Their were story lines introduced and then dropped. The writer lost steam and really lost an opportunity to make some wonderful truly legendary.

But writer has an out if she decides to take it. Reply 2001 featuring Jinjoo as our lead. She is sassy and fun already. Make her a college freshman and do a campus drama with cameos from everyone. It also will give an awesome opportunity to finish character stories from '88.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Heh, Jinjoo would be cute but she can't be THE lead. The lead is always Sung Dong Il's daughter. :P

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Oh man... I don't know how I feel about the ending. Episode 18 & 19 kind of killed my soul a bit. I wanted more closure for Jung hwan and I definitely didn't get it.

I love the familial love part of this show so much, but I definitely wasn't on board for the love triangle/husband hunting in this series. It left a bad taste in my mouth because I felt so privy to Jung hwan's struggles and growth (especially in terms of his unrequited love for Deok sun) that this ambiguous happily ever after for him on this show has left me feeling very unhappy and empty. They don't even give us anything to go on!

Yeah, okay, I'm fine with Taek getting the girl, good for him, but is it too much to have wished for more from Deok Sun about her feelings? I know the writer deliberately made Deok sun's feelings a hidden thing, but it still makes me feel cheated because I couldn't even get a proper rejection from her to Jung hwan. This possible what-if and in another universe mind of feeling that she and Jung hwan could have ended up together kind of kills me (if only he had confessed and been rejected!). If only I had seen him happy with someone else, it would have made me feel so much better but now I'm just bitter that the writer didn't even bother to give us a proper ending for him.

Unfortunately I don't think I can ever rewatch this show despite all the amazing familial love and friendship in it because seeing Jung hwan on screen being unrequited again and without a proper ending will be shards of ice stabbed in my heart.

I'm pretty sad that I can't end this show with good feelings.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

The ending though reminds me of ending of titanic.saaddd.... i miss all of them ssamundong resident already

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I loved this show so much and it was my weekly dose of warmth and "aww" moments. Also, thanks to Girlfriday for the awesome recaps!

I loved both the final couple and the ending but I agree that I feel forever empty and left hanging because we don't get to see what happened to Jung-hwan or Dong-ryong, or the rest of the families, let alone see those important moments in Taek and Deok-sun's relationship. The focus was so much on the wedding (Bora and dad made me cry though, of course) that everyone else got shafted which I find unfair and as someone who loves Taek and Jung-hwan equally, I'm heartbroken at how JH was barely there.

But still, I keep coming back to this series and loving it each time, despite raging about the live triangles each time. Because the show does everything else so damn well. xD

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

What to watch now that the show is over? This was my highlight of my week for the past 10 weeks. I wish we could've had more time to see the developments after Bora and Sunwoos wedding. Even passing updated would've been fine. But it's over now so I'll just have to move on. I guess I'll have to scope out upcoming dramas for a new 8-10 week obsession.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I literally sobbing right now. It's hard to say goodbye to this amazing drama. Never before k-drama made me feel so happy & heartbroken like this. I definetely would watch if ever they made a new installment of reply series. Good job to the writer, PD and especially to all actors. And thank you girlfriday for recaping this drama.??

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

My heart still (and will always) hurt for JH.. However, I got to admit this drama is the best drama I have watched so far. Yes, the husband guessing game is frustrating but luckily this drama focuses on kinship and friendship more. The kinship and friendship in this drama are so heartwarming.

I cry along with Bora during Bora and her father's scenes. Even though they are awkward together but deep in their hearts, they know that they love each other a lot and this is so touching. Sometimes, it is just too difficult to say the "I love you" to our beloved family members.

I am thankful to this drama for teaching me a lot of life lessons and I definitely enjoy the time when I laugh and cry because of the characters. This drama will always have a special place in my heart. Thank you, reply 1988. ❤❤

P.S. Thanks for letting me know about RJY through this drama. I will look forward to his new dramas or movies.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Does anyone know why being double-in-laws is a no-no, even a bigger one than a same surname marriage that can't be registered by law?

I'd have thought that it's great to have your 2 daughters marry into the same family of your very best friend. Still scratching my head on that one.

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

It is legal (allowed by the law in 1990), but people are just uncomfortable with the idea.

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

They assume that the reason is that it complicates the relative relationships (as to how to call them).

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

And can you imagine how awkward it could get if one couple breaks up or something.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ah I see. I really don't think there would have been that much drama with DS/TK marriage in the end.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thank you so much dramabeans for the recaps all this time. Thank you PD nim and writer nim for introducing us to the lovely ssangmundong family especially Kim family. I don't care about the husband hunting because I ship SunBora couple since the beginning. In future, I just waiting for the next project of Ryu Joen Yeol & Ryu Hye Young, please show me more of your talents guys!!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I hope it comforts everyone after watching the finale to remember the fortune tellers words when JHs mom asked about her son's fortune. She said: that one will do just fine on his own.

Thank you R88 for all the feels and the crazy roller coaster ride. I'm a little relieved to go back to my sanity.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Brilliant. Truer words never spoken.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Can someone please enlighten me why the families moved out of the neighborhood? Is it a bad or poor neighborhood? It was perfect, they were all close to each other. :(

Silly question, does Ssamundong exist in real life? XD Why did they all have to leave? :(

The ending was... bittersweet? It made me tear up, but I'm glad that DS and Taek ended up together. Sad for JH but I'm sure he moved on well, and he's happy for his best friends.

JH taught me to grab opportunities in life! If you want it, grab it before someone else takes (or Taek-s hehehe) it. So I'm learning Korean now, my old forgotten goal.

0
5
reply

Required fields are marked *

Maybe because it became old rundown district? I don't think they had to move out. But in the show, Sunwoo family moved to an apartment (which has more comfortable living), and JH/DS families wanted to move to a house with big yard where they can even do farming/growing (within their means).

And I think Ssangmundong still exist.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ssangmun-dong

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thank you.
Yes I read JB's comment about farming. Do you think Kim and Sung families ended up living near each other? *can't sleep, thinking of this* lol

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'd like to believe that they really do, live near each other. Ra Mi Ran and Bora's mom visit each other every day over some kimchi and sweet potato. Of course, Sun Woo's mom would stay at her in law's house from time to time. Not only because they're besties, but Bora's mom is her double in law. They spend every new year together. Of course. No question asked.

Jung Hwan, after his many years being a military pilot decided to go commercial, and that was when he met his future wife. He's learned from his mistake, so he took his chance without doubting himself 1000x.

Dong Ryong decided to also open a noraebang adjacent to his restaurant. He worked together with Jung Bong to develop new recipes, and became so successful. He and Jung Bong came up with a franchise idea and it took off.

Every year on Taek's birthday the gang gets together again. Just like in reply 1997 and reply 1994, their friendships still go strong. This time their kids get in with them.

There. This is my ending. I don't believe that friendship and family bond that strong which span decades would just fall out because people move. I witness it in my own sister's friendships. They still have annual reunion, and often when they feel like it, they get together just because.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

+1 I think JH and DS's families moved to Pangyo where was kind of country side (but only about 1 hour away from Seoul) and had mostly farm lands. But they did the good move -land values up- because the town has been developed and filled with apartments since then. (Someone can correct it if this is wrong).

0

yes, they live near each other. Remember ep 17 ( can't remember the exact ep lol) in which they discussed their future homes? JH's dad mentioned that they will move to Pangyo. and in the final ep, DS's dad said to the driver that they want to go to Pangyo, like JH's family

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

finally the finale!! I'm gonna miss all of the characters in this series a lot T_T

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

although d journey was heart wrenching to d point I couldn't think of any drama except this series,it was worth it.
when d family move out like any of us who would move to a new place,we no longer keep in touch with d people we used hang out with and as often as we used to_--this is so true and i agree that not giving the rest of d neighbours closure was intentional@pebble
all d same its been long since I felt like this over a drama even with the damn heart breaks for jungpal(I'm #teamtaekie always) so thumbs up to everyone who contributed to d drama even the fan war was ridiculous but appreciated becos it shows how much people are invested in d drama.(lollz)
thanks girlfriday for making my days on Saturdays n Sundays.
with love all d way from Nigeria...

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Feel so empty now that Reply 1988 is over. Was quite disappointed by the ending initially, but after rewatching the last episode a few times, I have come to accept it.

Perhaps the writers just wanted to portray something more realistic, like how one's hesitation at the crucial moment can make one go from being a main character to a second lead. And how things will never be the same again, after years go by--families move away from the neighbourhood, etc. It's a bittersweet ending, just as life is bittersweet when we feel nostalgia and reminisce the past.

Being a JH x DS shipper, I was not happy when the husband turned out to be Taek. But it made sense too, on how friendship and mutual understanding could eventually develop into romance. Looking back, Taek was always there for DS when she needed him (e.g. stalker incident), and she was always there for Taek when he needed her(e.g. in Beijing, when he's tired). A relationship built on familiarity, etc.

I pity my poor JH, but that's life I guess. When she was showing signs of liking him, he ignored her advances and moved away. When she misunderstood him, he didn't explain himself and always passed off his true feelings as a joke. Although JH didn't end up with DS, I wished that the writers could've at least given him a nice ending, like finding his true happiness elsewhere.

I was not satisfied with the ending because of my expectations: I wanted to see the reactions of the family and the gang when they find out that DS and Taek were dating. I wanted to see the gang still being close in the future, and know how they were doing etc. This ending left so many things open and unanswered which makes me feel a void in my heart and feel unsettled.

But overall, it was still a good show that made me care about it this much and something that I looked forward to every Friday and Saturday. I'll miss you, Reply 1988.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I agree. I feel like it was meant to end on a bittersweet note to make it realistic. It would've been nice to see them all together in the end, but really, as time goes by, it can be hard not to drift apart if you're separated.

I wonder if the writer left everyone's futures (as in, 2016-future) open to show that they've all sort of drifted apart and to show that Deok-sun and Taek don't know how everyone's doing. As sad as it makes me, if that were true, it'd be rather realistic and it'd (sort of! still not satisfied though, lol) be easier for me to understand and accept the ending.

The Reply Franchise never fails to amaze me. I'm really going to miss Reply 1988 too.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think the biggest gift the writer gave to JH its his understanding at episode 18, when he finally realize that your worst enemy not others, not destiny or fate but your own hesitation. This hopefully will help him to find his own happiness as in romantically. For JH, his goal is to become "human" cause if anyone remember in the first episode DS said "in that time he is still "half human"

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I don't quite understand why everyone's saying it was a bait a switch kind of thing. I feel like there was a bunch of foreshadowing and that they gave out plenty of hints pointing to the fact that the husband was Taek.

I'm upset that Jung-hwan and Dong-ryong had such short screen-time though :(

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

When DS focused on her own things and wasn't really mad at JH anymore I thought that was probably the end of it. This stuff happened well before the timeskip, and also around the time the stuff with Taek. JH was the only one who was still hanging on. DS had moved on a long time ago.

I know people think the pink shirt is such a big deal, but DS saw JB wear his shirt again and she didn't care, or make any connection to it. The shirt was a test that JH failed, so that's what upset her more than anything. Meaning he didn't like her, so she gave up. So yeah, there was huge hints that DS wasn't that into JH anymore.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

When they revealed that he had quite taking the sleeping pills because of her, it made me think that they had been planning him to be the husband earlier than I might have though. I mean they always made such a big deal about it and I can't imagine how else he would have quite.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

they were definitely planning for Taek to be the husband, the sleeping pills were a plot device for Taek to assume the kiss was a dream and to keep the husband a mystery from the audience

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Aside from being a convenient cover, never quite saw the reason for Taek to take sleeping pills as he always seemed dogged tired by the time he got back from the training center.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I haven't watch these last two episodes. I'm glad I boarded the right ship this time!

Thanks for the recaps!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

although d journey was heart wrenching to d point I couldn't think of any drama except this series,it was worth it.
when d family move out like any of us who would move to a new place,we no longer keep in touch with d people we used hang out with and as often as we used to_--this is so true and i agree that not giving the rest of d neighbours closure was intentional@pebble
all d same its been long since I felt like this over a drama even with the damn heart breaks for jungpal(I'm #teamtaekie always) so thumbs up to everyone who contributed to d drama even the fan war was ridiculous but appreciated becos it shows how much people are invested in d drama.(lollz)
thanks girlfriday for making my days on Saturdays n Sundays.
with love all d way from Nigeria....

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I cried.... so much.... wtf. Smiles all the way yesterday, and tears today.

I'm sad that Jung Hwan and Dong Ryong didn't even get a mention. Jung Bong and Mi Ok got a mention, but none of the other two. They're probably still in touch with Jung Hwan... since it sounds like their parents are still living next to each other. Taek and Sun Woo's parents don't need to live near them, but will definitely be looped in because they're family. :) Dong Ryong is up in the air, though.... There's no indication that there are any ties... although they're probably somewhat in touch. Maybe they go to Dong Ryong's restaurant sometimes.

I know that friends may move away from each other and lose touch... but I don't think these five friends would lose their friendship. There was nothing they didn't know about each other for 20-some years. And they had no problems that couldn't be overcome by their friendship. Even if they were only to see each other once a year... or gather still for Taek's birthday... or gather for their kids' (and I will just assume at least some of them, if not all, have kids) :x Could we have an adult cast gather for Taek's birthday again, please? No? T_____T

I'm happy that the Ryu family and the Kim family were invited to the family picture.... HEART. And I love that Taek was holding Jin Joo's hand. Ugh, I just love Jin Joo's relationship with her brothers.

Taek's and Deok Sun's relationship was really sweet, even on the down low... but I wish we'd actually seen the parents' and friends' reactions. I figure that her family's reaction would have been something like when Il Hwa and No Eul were speculating as to who Bo Ra's boyfriend was - ecstatic.. with Dong Il happy that he really is getting Taekie as his son-in-law (like with the first baduk celebration we saw in the series)... Would it have been followed with worries on being double in-laws? How would Taek's family have reacted? I assume the friends would have just teased them about it... while they smile widely.. until Deok Sun hits one of the guys for something they say. :x

Did they hold off on telling the parents about their relationship status until they set the date in 1996? Or would the parents have known by Sun Woo and Bo Ra's wedding?

Why did Taek walk off when the two families were seeing the newlyweds off?

That ending really choked out all the tears in me, though. I love the nostalgic stories about the bygone days... and it always makes me sad about growing up... but I don't want to give up what I have now, either. There are days when I wish I could go back to my younger days, even if they weren't that great, but my husband has no interest in going back to the past at all. lol.

Thank you for the recap... I can't wait to watch with subtitles and cry over them again. I don't want to let go. T_____T

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

Oh, I believe that Taek was the one driving Bora and Sunwoo away, actually. I don't quite know why, but yeah... He didn't just walk away.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Oh, yeah, that's right! There's a clear shot of him driving. I guess he didn't really need that "seeing off" farewell... I don't think I could see through tears at this point. XD;

But lol!! They make the one who can't park to save his life drive the newlyweds off?

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

If I wasn't hallucinating at the time (I could have been honestly, I should have been asleep and not watching a drama) I think I saw Taek driving the car the newlyweds were in.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

too many feels so i'll make it as quick as possible:

1) still pissed at this series' progression and timing narration.
2) this series would've done much better without the husband hunting theme
3) jungpal ahhhhh <3 you will always remain my favorite character in this series. my main lead. & for this, i am so disappointed in how this writer treated you especially at the end (and the second half of the drama.) for someone who commands so much presence when he's on screen, it pained me to see the writer throw you into the background and i felt that was an injustice to you as an actor and for jungpal.
4) i agree with girlfriday, we really grew up with and walked the steps of jungpal's first love journey alongside him. THIS is why i am convinced that without the husband hunting theme, we could've come to know and care for the main couple as well. this writer is good, she just went wrong because tbh, she got greedy w/that whole mystery thing.
5) THEY WERE TOTALLY SQUAD GOALS. they made me wish i grew up on a street with a few friends and loved my neighbors as much as they did.
6) narratively, i still think jungpal x DS for endgame would've made such a stronger and lasting impact. it's that kind of ending that makes you wanna shout, FINALLY. YAS. after all that angst, yes! like girlfriday said, taek x DS never had conflict really. everything was unfortunately rushed. i guess they tried to stick true to life but at the end of the day, i think jungpal x DS would've just been better (and made more sense) narratively. their career choices, the confession/ring scene, and etc. the writer could've utilized these scenes along with some flashback scenes from jungpal's and DS' POV to truly build and create a beautiful ending for them. *le sighhh* what could've been...
7) ryu jun yeol will always be the true breakout star of this series. SO many #teamjunghwan and his domination on popularity polls. the support for him humbles and astounds me. i am glad his brillance was realized by so many people.
8) the assembled cast was brillant. although this did not end up beinging the fav of my reply installment, this is my fav cast. so good job casters & directors!
9) a big F U to the writer for stringing us along and for her treatment of my poor baby jungpal but then again, thank you. without you we wouldn't have gotten a drama (that was SO strong in the beginning--even if it continually went downhill, the first half was beautiful.) i will always remember this drama.

it truly played with my emotions and i came to care so much for some of the characters. aside from nice guy, this is the only other drama that i religiously comment on on forums and was so attached to. i cannot finish the last few eps (i'm stopping at 16) my heart cannot bear it. maybe someday i will have the strength to return and watch it. after ryu jun pal headlines HIS own drama and gets the girl & some smexy kiss scenes. LIKE HOW DARE THEY WASTE THOSE LIPS? UGH. it's...

0
7
reply

Required fields are marked *

Well, PBG is holding a fan meeting for 3,000 fans. Both PBG and RJY are breakout stars.

Just don't hate on PBG for no reason and say that RJY is the most popular. That is very immature.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

lmaooo, read what i write before you comment. it really makes you come off as just angry and defensive for no reason.

RJY IS the true breakout star of this series. he was a no name that exploded in popularity after this series. PBG already had a following and interest due to his dramas hello monster & cantabile. actually, MANY ppl watched this drama cuz of him in the first place. so yes, technically RJY is the breakout star. that much i am right and won't take back what i said.

and when did i hate on PBG? granted, my comment was RJY centered because he resonated with me more. and about popularity, when did i say he was more popular than PBG in general? i said he had more votes in POPULARITY polls which again, is true. but when did i shit on PBG? as a fan of his i would never do that. i didn't even write about PBG in my comment so you need to take a seat. don't go around calling ppl immature for no reason & don't project what you THOUGHT i wrote into what i actually wrote. ugh.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

that would be me. i decided to stop watching Reply series after getting scarred by Chilbong. (i actually stop watching 94 halfway then cont after a year) too much unfairness n heartbreak.

then I knew PBG is playing one of the lead in 88. damn it i have to watch him. RJY is definitely the star after this series

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

And you don't have to be so rude to the writers. If you don't have anything nice to say, just don't type it at all. They gave us a wonderful work, Reply 1988 that was a hit. Without them, none of this would have existed.

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

again (like for the comment above), at least read my comment before you say anything. of course i am frustrated with the writers but i THANKED them as well. so, you can leave. bye FELICIA. ^^

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Why can't [ ] be rude to the writer? Can't anyone state their opinion anymore without getting bashed or criticized for being 'negative', 'hateful', etc. It's not as if she's going to read this and if she does, then good for her. At least she'll know that people weren't all that satisfied for the reasons mentioned above.

And how about you then? Being so rude to those you assume are being rude to the writer. Kayla was not even saying that AM1988 wasn't wonderful. Calling people immature isn't nice at all and I think was more rude than people voicing out their dissatisfaction with one aspect of the writer's work.

Realistically, we all want a Taekie in our lives. If I wanted to watch a sweet, lovely love story, then I would've been satisfied with DS-CT. Don't get me wrong, I'm happy for them, I really am, but it just doesn't have the same impact emotionally if JH-DS was the end game instead because of what happened during the earlier episodes. I go watch kdramas that have some, well, drama, about interesting characters lives. Something exciting to take me out of my busy, everyday, real life. And the chemistry with Jung-hwan was so good it made me giddy and happy while it lasted.

However, narratively ... I still have no words to describe why it felt like a betrayal. That's why a lot of fans were using the phrase "Bait and Switch". It felt like the writer was more concerned with the ratings than logic and sense. It felt like Miho not coming back to Woong-ah, Taeyang not ending up with Joo-goon, Bong-sun not getting back together with Chef Sun-woo, or Heejin not getting her happy ending with Boong-do. 말이 안돼, right?

Yes, AM1988 was a hit. And I feel that Jung-hwan's character contributed a lot to why it was so. It felt a disservice to see his scenes during the last few episodes dwindle after building him up so much in the beginning.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

the writer was never obliged to just do what the fans wanted. she has no debt to them.

if anyone feels betrayed, it is that they are betrayed by their own expectations. but it is not their story to tell.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

this writer is so cruel to her characters, she made dongryong suffer for 3 episodes from hemorrhoid, just to make taek carrying deoksun.. and they made junghwan suffer even more longer.. ugh.. sorry guys I just still angry because what they've done to junghwan.. it's not because the husband is taek.. i'm okey with that, I don't even care anymore.. I think I'll still be upset for at least one week.. and stil got teary eyes evertime I think about junghwan.. and i'm not going to download 2 last episodes, for me this drama only has 18 episodes and it's about junghwan and his beautiful but sad first love story..
hope to see ryu jun yeol in another great project that I can watch, I love trash oppa, but he only choose film projects after answer me 1994.. hope ryu jun yeol next project is drama, ocn thriller maybe? ah sorry for my poor english..

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

your first sentence got me laughing so hard. I never thought of that.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ok, this is going to be long. While AM1997 remains my favourite series from this franchise, story wise, I undoubtedly rank AM1988 the highest and will proceed to defend the story below. Sorry in advance about the incoherent/rambling.

First off, thank you for the recaps. This helps non-Korean viewer like me a lot in understanding the storylines, the dialogues and especially the cultural significance of the events.

So now, onto the lengthy post...

1 As an avid fan of "Slice of life" stories (manga, manhwa, movies, dramas etc.), I might be one of a few that find the finale satisfying. Slice of life stories are never about happily ever after, they portray periods of people’s lives, filled with love, tears, angst, happiness and laughters. This type of stories isn’t about closure, most of the stories I’ve seen are open ended and bitter-sweet. They give you food for thought and memory (maybe a little bit too much food with the whole trollings and hints for the husband) and they give you the chance to write up your own ending for the lives of the characters. This series stayed true to its form. It gave us a peek into the stories of five young friends and their three families, growing up, growing old and bonding together in 1988 (and 1994). The way the story was written, it leads us to believe that these people treasure the time they spend with each other, treasure the memory... But that’s it, a memory no less. I believe that even as time goes by, the characters will continue be there for each other when time calls, they will be in each other life.

2 Another point is that for me, AM1988’s finale is a three-episode finale. JH’s got his closure on episode 18 and 19, solidifying himself as a good man, always caring about other people’s in his own way. DS’s non-reaction to his confession in episode 18 was nicely done. What else do you want her to do in that situation? She already moved on from her crush since 1989, it was a crush of a highschool girl, nothing more, nothing less. Crushes aren’t meant to last, don’t let the romance highschool drama trick you to think otherwise (trust me, I was eighteen once, aeons ago :P) and at the time of the confession, she was already aware of her feeling about Taek (and remember the reason she lied about the kiss was because she didn’t want things to be awkward between the friends), so any thing but silence and smiling gratefully would be out of character.

3 I really love the love story between Deok Sun and Taek and do not agree with a lot of people that it needs something major happening to make it excited after they got together. The love between them happens to be on the rarer side of the world, blossoming from an unique friendship to a gentle love between a man and a woman. Yes, seeing them together does not give me butterflies or fast heart beat but the feeling of calmness, peace and happiness. Isn't it something we always yearn for?
(I think I am running out of characters for this comment, might...

0
7
reply

Required fields are marked *

I agree with all three of your points ( though you sort of got cut off(?) at the end )

slice of life stuff are my favourites

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Oh, I did not realise that. Thank you for pointing it out.

I was saying that I'm running out of character so might come back to add more later.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

point 3: exactly. Taek gets a breather, he is revived through Deok-Sun. They both find the balance and answer in each other. They are together because not being together has never worked for them. Even when they were not dating they were together all the time. they both have pressure to perform well, one as a baduk player and the other as a nothing-special middle child. but from each other there is no pressure, there is only acceptance. They just match like puzzle pieces. you cannot completye the picture if they are not side-by-side.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I like what you said :)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

i agree with you. totally agree with you

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

100% agree with you, this drama is more to slice of life style. K-Drama watcher maybe not familiar with this style that why lots of them demand for happily ever after for each and every character as per other K-Drama.

And I'm very happy that somebody else have same opinion with me, JH already has his finale in ep. 18/19 and the writer delegate the remaining episodes for other characters in this drama.

the most legit argument (but to late) is about DR, since the beginning DR never got his story fleshed out to us, he is more side character compare to the other 4 kids, even compare to Bora (Bora share her half story with SW though).

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Great insights. It was a true slice of life drama that required the viewers to think on their own. Not a typical neat romance as it is an ensemble piece about 5 friends and 3 families.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Just from reading the last 2 recaps, i wanted a lil proper closure for jh. He doesn't necessarily need a girl to cameo as a future love bc i have spent 18 episodes on his love for ds...i won't believe he will love someone else so easily. What i wanted to know by the last episode from reading the previous recap (ep 19) is what he and taek talked about...why, once he found out taek like ds, did he put his love on hold. Reply 88, u got some explaining to do. Unless it was mentioned (in ep 19) and i just haven't watch it yet.

This is the only reply series that i can't wait for it to be dubbed so i can get my mom to watch it. The 3 ahjummas are like my mom and her friends. .living in a small town and always hanging out on weekends (sometime even weekdays)...and their children being best friends...or at least I'm still best friend with mine.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

oh damn, Bora and Dad. why´d you do this. oh damn. wait a second while I collect myself. that is so....true to life

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Life ruined. Ship sunk. Drama ended. Answer me series ruining me since 2012 (both in a good and bad way).

Thanks Girlfriday for the recaps. Thanks for the hard work.
Is this really the intended ending or the writer felt challenge because of how the story leaked for the last few episodes? Is there or not and did they or not filmed 2 different endings? Did the one-week break did us good or worse? Is this our “punishment?”

And the whole timeline, 16 & ½ episode on their youth (2 years) and the next 3 & ½ episode on the next 20+ years. What gives? As much as I enjoyed the youth but the adult portion is sorely inadequate.

This could have gone down as my favorite installment this series but this ended up being the installment I am most frustrated with. We all know the drama at some point is not about the husband search but the story, the warmt, the family and friendship... but the husband search is still the fundamental that somehow we are all invested in...

I have always been Team Deoksun happiness… but the writing for this character annoys me no end. Sure she was young and indecisive. But the changes were just too sudden when we see her reciprocating Taek, not that I doubt it. It just doesn’t make sense for Junghwan.

It’s not as though whoever got married to the female lead is winning Powerball. And it’s not about disrespecting Deoksun's choice. But if Sunwoo is first love and Taek is her choice, what does that even make Junghwan? Is it too much to wish for a fair end game? At least Shiwon and Najung know whom they love. We never know whom Deoksun loved until ep 19.

I actually wished for some confrontational scenes between Deoksun and Junghwan which is more than her asking if she should go for a blind date but about that damned pink shirt or just “do you like me”? That would be somewhat satisfying.

I think I am really frustrated is because I never see Taek doing anything for Deoksun but everyone just baby-ing him around because he is their “treasure”, the star baduk player. I mean he is the sweetest character around and he does things kindly by the side too but he just didn’t share Deoksun’s history or memories from high school. He was around but not much...he just wasn’t there. The throwback to when they were kids were a nice touch… but they were kids… anyone had a fair chance. Was it just make to convinces us that he had loved her since young?

Being Team Trash, I have a lot of respect and fondness for Chilbong because the character is written with pride. Najung and Chilbong knows it was not meant to be. And I like that the closure given was that Chilbong said it’s hard and he need time (to get over it) and its fair and at least that when they are much older, they were not awkward.
And many Team Chilbong do admit that they knew Chilbong is not end game and that Najung and Trash were the OTP. I think this is one thing many Team Junghwan cannot comprehend. Girlfriday is right. This leaves a gigantic Junghwan hole...

0
7
reply

Required fields are marked *

comment was too long... yikes...

...in my heart forever.

Sure being Team Junghwan, mostly Junghwan has himself to blame for his insecurity, his hesitation, his bad timing, his valuing of friendship more over love to actually ever showed Deoksun he loved her or confessed to her … he truly is the greatest noble idiot ever… I really feel the writer did the character a disservice.

And how does an adult Deoksun reminisce her youth in the interview but a large chunk was for a character that was never ever meant to be. And what does that make adult Taek, that his wife is reminiscing about other men(though they were all friends)? This hurt my mind thinking…
Were we too confident because of the mannerism of the older version seems so alike the younger Junghwan? Because he was wearing some airforce pilot looking jacket with an emblem and he might have pick up smoking when he is older? Even Sunwoo’s mom said Taek’s dad look like him when he was young. Why not get an adult Taek that looks like his dad rather than Kim Joohyuk whom look more believable as an older version of Junghwan than Taek. Even all the past interview scenes of the older couple don’t match up. (Junghwan would have more reason to say to Deoksun “be nice to me” – as his evidence of being patient/big-hearted to Deoksun vs Taek whom she had done everything she can to care for him). Booyah?!

I mean heck, even in some interview Yoo Yoonseok was alluding that Park Bogum character is so much like Chilbong… we were all too confident.

Or if we were to talk about how the 2 previous female leads choose their husband – president hopeful vs a grouchy judge or star baseball player vs a surgeon? Which we are so sure of course it will be airforce pilot over a star baduk player right? Writer-nim, you got us good there.

With the dust settle now, I don’t even know what to make of the past 12 weeks being totally craycray and insane over the drama. But credit where its due, thank you for the families’ stories and the warmth shared… It’s only this romance that I can’t fully get behind but yay for Sunwoo’s mom and Taek’s dad, Sunwoo and Bora and even Jungbong and Mi-ok (plus Sung Dong Il and Lee Il Hwa forever, Cheetah Ahjumma and Kim Sajang… so much win, Dongryong and dean dad and cute Jinjoo) … Just I can’t for the main lead couple…

With bittersweet memories, I will miss the neighborhood, the moms the dads, the friendship.

Lastly… Junghwan ah… thank you for existing. Thank you Ryu Jun Yeol for showing us the awesomeness he brought to this role. Thank you. This noonna was at least happy for a while.

I have never been so upset with a drama before in my 10+ odd years of watching K-dramas. Nor shipped a ship that sunk. But this drama officially had me. Now that it’s over… nothing like some makguli and soju can’t overcome.

Drink up! #thereisnoanswerinanswerme1988

0
6
reply

Required fields are marked *

I like that 'thereisnoanswer' hashtag. I'm gonna use that. Thanks for your post. Cheered me up a bit.

*lifts up shot of soju* Jjan!

0
5
reply

Required fields are marked *

Glad I did... Jjan!

Sharing some funny / not so funny things, me and my girlfriend found on SNS and some forums/comments site.

1. Taek won the girl, Junghwan won the viewers.
2. Its ok Junghwan, don't worry the viewers wants to marry you now.
3. Maybe the writer should really make it really makjang and write Junghwan off in some glorious airforce crash (brutal I know but at least I know my heart will bleed with pride)
4. Maybe she should just marry Dong Ryong.
5. The search is for Sunwoo's mom husband (this was cute).
..........and so many more to mention.

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

Actually, Taek won the viewers too :3. Lots of people were taeken by him. Not just Jung Hwan.

0

Yeah, I've been stalking IG as well. ;) Honestly, #teamjunghwan is taking it very well compared to #teamchilbong who are still bitter after 2 years. I mostly feel a "let's move on" vibe from fans. I guess all the rants were already said after episode 19 and most of the hurt were gotten off our chests plus soju helped out a lot!

0

Just to reply notebell. No doubt Taek won the viewers too with Park Bo Gum earnest acting. It was just some random comments I happen to chance upon on SNS. ^^

0

A lot of people like Taek. Even shipping side, it was 60/40. Some fans are just more noisy than others.

0

Thank you girlfriday for the recap and your insight for this show. It's always a pleasant to read yours.

I never thought that i'll be so much invested to this show. Despite our dissatisfaction of how the writernim didn't make us to watch "happy ending" for the rest of the characters and not the see the present them..i could say that im satisfied enough with the ending.

As much as i want Junghwan to be the husband..i just cant deny that DS' heart is belong to Taek from the very beginning. She just needs time to realize it. And they are cute and even in sync.

As for team junghwan..no matter how fool he was...we should be proud of him. He realized it..it's his fault..but then he moved on. He is the best son, best brother, best friend you could ever asked for. His character is well written and Ryu Jun Yeol brought the character to live that made us cant help but to fall to deep.

What saddens me is not Junghwan not showed up on my screen until the very last moment, but simply because i must to say goodbye to this beautiful Ssangmundong. I feel like i lived there.

Thankyou for making this show! Saranghaee! :')

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

First drama ever to make me cry. Like, big ugly sobs and runny nose - the works. As heartbroken as I am about Junghwan not getting the girl or getting a true closure in the grand finale, ultimately he was so beautifully written and played that I am OK enjoying and appreciating him as he was presented to us. I am so happy that the big romance was never the focus, and if anything I loved that the writer subverted popular expectation by shifting the focus elsewhere in the finale. I think had they gotten rid of the adult cast and kept the husband mystery more subtle I would have loved the resolution even more. Regardless, this show was never about the romantic love. And to the end, to see Taek and Junghwan's love for each other intact was the best gift for me. And the ahjummas. And the dads. And the best of group of friends. What a lovable, warm, nostalgic, PERFECT ode to an era gone by...thank you to the best series of the franchise, for the tears and laughter and heart. This has shot to the top of my best drama list and suspect will remain there for a LONG time!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm sorry if I'm too selfish. All I want to know in the last episode of Reply 1988 is how Jungpal deals with his broken heart, how he can move on so fast, how he can a big heart like that, how he finds his happines. Is he marry? is he dead in war? or he just become a great soldier and marry with a beautiful woman when he's traveling? or wwhat? All of questions pop up in my head and I don't have the answer. Now, I look like haunted ghost. Omo!
And what happened to uri counselor? What about Dongryong? is he become a dancer? is he enter a college? is he marry someone else?
I thought Junghwan has seen less than Jinjoo.
Writernim, after you killed Junghwan's character so much, is it fair for him not having his story's life in the end of this drama? Really? How could you so cruel?
I'm still confused and I don't really understand what's going on.
I remember once, that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle got so much hate for killing Sherlock Holmes to end the series of Sherlock. He asked her mother why everybody hated him so much? Then her mother replied, 'Son, if you want to end the series of Sherlock Holmes why you have to kill him in the story?'

So, writernim, why Junghwan got less scene in the last episode? why you not tell us about his dealing to all shit happened in his life? why you make him a lead actor then? why? If Junghwan doesn't Deoksun's husband, I'm fine with it. With all fate that you explain in 18th. But, how come he doesn't get his happiness after all this time? after his struggling not to show his feeling and so on. Please, answer my question. I mean, if you're really want to kill his portrait so bad. Just send him to the war and we can hear that he's dead in peace.

Am I too much? I don't think so. You, yes you. You made Junghwan's portrait so perfect. You made us love Junghwan.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Quite disappointed with the ending. You took that one week break for this crappy ending? Seriously?

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Aww, I realy wanted to see cameos from Chillbongie and the others from 1997. I wanted to see if Jinju was Chilbongie's wife, then that would have made it a perfect ending and I can bear to watch the reply with Chilbongie in it.

Either way, I am so happy that Taekie got the girl. I was so disappointed that chilbongie didn't that I didn't try to get so caught up of the husband game. But Park Bo gum was such a great actor it just made me root for him.

This reply series was better than I expected. I really like this one the best out of all three. Mainly because I was Jinju's age at that time and remember the 80's well. It also reminded me that times back them were so much different and that we knew our neighbors so well that they were almost family, so similiar to us when we were growing up here in U.S. The families of the apartment neighbors knew each other so well, but now that I live in the suburbs and am making more money than I ever thought I could, I sadly don't know who my neighbors are really. The 80's was a great time.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ugh..your last point about not knowing who our neighbors are really tug me. So true. When ever I visit my parents in Indo I still say really warm hi to my parents' neighbors because I grew up with them and consider them part of family. Now that I have my own neighbors, they're at best, acquaintances.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I love these series more that previous one.more heart-tugging story of family and friendship that makes me remember bout mine too.
The only thing that lacking is they make wedding scene of bora and sw instead of taek and ds.that make me sad.no sniplets of how they get their parent's approval and bits of their married live scene. But I'm happy taek is the husband because I love PBG so much.after that brilliant remember you'psycopath.
Thank you for recapping.it was really fun ride although with fan war.hehe

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I like my marmalade bittersweet -_-

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *