Answer Me 1988: Episode 20 (Final)
by girlfriday
In true Answer Me fashion, this final episode is a farewell to youth as much as it is a farewell to this series and the characters who’ve burrowed deep in our hearts and taken up residence there. There’s always something about the portrayal of youth in this franchise that makes me wish I could bottle it up and keep our characters eighteen forever, but the finale reminds us that the beauty of youth is that it’s fleeting. And whether we want it or not, the time has come for growing up, and moving on, and saying farewell.
SONG OF THE DAY
Shin Hae-chul – “Growing Up” [ Download ]
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EPISODE 20: “Goodbye my youth, goodbye Ssangmun-dong”
On a rainy day in December 1994, somebody waits at the bus stop with an umbrella. Bora winces when she sees rain and gets off the bus, but she hardly takes a step before Sun-woo is standing in front of her, umbrella overhead. She laughs and asks if he’s her stalker, and he wonders how she didn’t know that until now.
Bora asks how his parents are doing, and he says that he’s happy to know that Mom and Ajusshi and Jin-ju will be fine without him. She wonders if he’s going somewhere, and he brings up marriage again, teasing that he’s in a rush to get married before his girlfriend ages any more.
Sun-woo wants to get married next year, and Bora doesn’t seem to object to the timeline in general, but she reminds him that they have quite the number of obstacles to overcome first. He knows and tells her that he’ll take care of it, and all she has to do is stick by his side. Bora doesn’t look quite so sure.
No-eul recoils at the sight of Deok-sun putting on orange lipstick, and tells her to stop following celebrity trends. She argues that someone told her it was pretty, and he scoffs that whoever it was surely lost his mind and/or eyesight due to love.
Flashback to: Taek grinning at her like a fool, declaring that she’s purdy. She said it’s Lee Young-ae’s lipstick and Taek said that she’s even prettier than Lee Young-ae. Deok-sun: “Do you know who Lee Young-ae is?” Taek: “…But you’re really pretty!” Lol.
He reminded her about their movie date and she told him not to cancel on her like last time, and he went in for a hug. But Deok-sun spotted Jin-ju down the alley at the last minute and ducked, and Taek had to do an awkward air-hug-spin thing that cracks me up. Jin-ju looked at them suspiciously and Taek promised to tell her everything later. Jin-ju accepted that and went home, but not before commenting on the weird ugly lipstick that Deok-sun was wearing, ha.
Bora comes home and says the exact same thing to Deok-sun the moment she sees her orange lips, and No-eul dies laughing. Deok-sun wonders where Mom and Dad are, and No-eul says they’re upstairs discussing where to move, because apparently Jung-hwan’s parents are moving too.
Jung-hwan’s parents are planning to buy a plot of land in the countryside, and though Deok-sun’s dad dislikes the idea of being that far from Seoul, the two families really like the idea of moving together and remaining neighbors. You HAVE TO remain neighbors! It would be too sad otherwise!
Taek waits at the movie theater for his date, and when people start to recognize him, it turns into a mini fan-signing with autographs and pictures. Deok-sun finally runs in, and Taek assures her that he hasn’t been waiting long. She looks around warily when he grabs her hand, but he doesn’t let go and holds it throughout the whole movie.
Jung-bong painstakingly makes a mixtape for Mi-ok, and they make a date to meet at the street market tomorrow. Jung-hwan is home and calls up Sun-woo to hang out, and still suffers from shock every time Sun-woo says Bora’s name without the “noona” attached.
Jung-hwan warns him to be careful about meeting Bora in their neighborhood because he’s bound to get caught by the ajummas. Well now you jinxed it. Sure enough, Sun-woo is mid-kiss when he looks down the street and locks eyes with all three moms. Bora turns around too, and then everyone goes flailing.
The scene is hilarious, but the aftermath is heavy, as the dads sit down for a drink with a long sigh and the moms each take to their sickbeds, either in shock, protest, or both. The kids gather in Taek’s room and Dong-ryong points out that it’s not a tragedy if they were already planning on telling the parents eventually; this just moved their timetable up.
Dong-ryong says that lots of people with the same surname get married these days, and there’s talk of the laws changing (back then you couldn’t marry someone with the same surname, especially with a name that wasn’t something common like Kim or Lee where you had multiple clans).
Deok-sun is surprised to hear marriage talk and asks Sun-woo if he intends to marry Bora, and he nods without hesitation. The group is impressed, though they worry about him being able to convince his mom when he’s never rebelled once in his entire life.
Both Sun-woo and Bora are unable to sleep that night, but Deok-sun manages to put a smile on Bora’s face when she pats her sister on the back and tells her to be strong.
Jung-hwan’s mom asks him if Jung-bong has quit studying for the bar exam altogether, and Jung-hwan hesitates but answers truthfully that he has. He makes sure that Mom is okay lately too, and she smiles to reassure him.
Jung-bong takes Mi-ok out to eat street food at the market and holds her hand as they walk. He says he’s surprised that she’d be up for this kind of food when she lives in such a big fancy house, and Mi-ok doesn’t seem inclined to explain her family’s background. They actually happen to pass by her father’s shop at the market, but Mi-ok purposely ignores Dad and keeps walking ahead. Ouch. It seems to sting her conscience though, and she stops.
Jung-hwan’s dad wakes up to find Mom sitting in the dark again, so he suggests a late-night stroll through the neighborhood. They walk hand-in-hand and he lifts her mood, and she tells him about Jung-bong giving up on law. Dad is proud enough that he even got into college and says he didn’t expect much more than that.
They reminisce about what good kids Jung-bong and Jung-hwan were even when they were little. Mom remembers when Dad was a jajangmyun deliveryman, he tried to hide when he saw the boys playing with their friends because he thought they’d be embarrassed of him. But Jung-bong took his brother’s hand and they ran up to him calling him Dad and hugged him. Awww. It still makes him teary-eyed to think of it, and he says that it still ranks as the happiest moment of his life.
Mom remembers how hard it got at times, when Jung-bong was sick and they would run out of rice. She admits to thinking terrible thoughts about just ending their misery, but she held on because of their children, and says she was able to keep living for them. Mom: “I think I didn’t raise them, but they raised me.”
Mi-ok makes a decision and turns back around towards Dad’s store, and introduces Jung-bong to her father. She proudly tells him that Dad opened up this shop all on his own and now has three of them, and Dad looks so happy to know that Mi-ok isn’t ashamed of him. Dad invites them inside, though he eyes Jung-bong warily when he seems to recognize his voice as Mi-ok’s high school boyfriend who kept calling the house.
Jung-bong tells his parents that he’s going to quit studying law and wants to work a part-time job at a local pub. Mom is disappointed but Dad is pleased that he found something he wants to do, and approves wholeheartedly.
Jung-hwan’s mom vents about it to Deok-sun’s mom, who’s still in bed over the Sun-woo-Bora problem. Jung-hwan’s mom says it’s not a big deal nowadays for two people with the same surname to get married, but Deok-sun’s mom says that they can’t even legally register their marriage or their children. So that’s really the whole reason why she’s opposed? Based on their reactions, I was waiting for some huge twist.
Sun-woo makes sure that Bora isn’t going to run away this time and braces himself before going home to talk to Mom and Ajusshi. He asks for Mom’s blessing to date Bora and marry her, and Mom tells him not to rush things because these feelings might not last. Sun-woo cringes before telling her the full truth—that he and Bora have seen each other for six years. He leaves out the breakup, which is probably for the best.
He says that he’s not asking to be married right away, but he wants to date Bora knowing that marriage is in their future, and wants Mom’s blessing. He says that he’s never once done something against Mom’s will, and even chose the career path she wanted. He doesn’t regret anything, but asks to be able to marry the person he loves. Well how can you argue with that?
Jung-hwan heads out to return to the base, and Mom and Dad run through their whole farewell routine like it’s the first time he’s visited home. He smiles and salutes them, and Mom bursts into tears the second he’s out the door.
But when he gets down the street, he spots Sun-woo drinking by himself at the pojangmacha. Jung-hwan checks his watch and hesitates, knowing he has to be back to the base by morning. But when Sun-woo looks up, Jung-hwan is sitting beside him pouring a drink without a word.
Sun-woo asks if he doesn’t have to drive, and Jung-hwan lies that his car broke down and he’s taking the bus anyway. The two friends don’t have to say much else, and just pour drinks for each other and throw them back.
Taek’s dad asks Sun-woo’s mom if she remembers how much he opposed Taek playing baduk at first. She remembers that Deok-sun’s dad was originally planning to take Deok-sun to the training center, but it was Taek who happened to tag along instead and started playing. Ha, so it’s because of Deok-sun’s dad?
Dad didn’t like the idea of Taek spending his life on baduk and not growing up a normal kid, and decided to throw everything baduk-related in the trash one night. But the next day he caught Taek sneaking a book he’d somehow kept hidden, looking up at him with fearful eyes but stubbornly refusing to give it over anyway. Dad knew then and there he’d never win against his son. He asks if Sun-woo’s mom can really win against Sun-woo, and if that’s even really winning at all.
Bora comes home and asks permission to marry Sun-woo, and gets Mom to admit that she wouldn’t oppose Sun-woo at all if they were able to legally get married. Bora says that the law is due to change next year, and she wouldn’t dare do anything to disappoint Mom and Dad. She’s positive that in a year’s time she and Sun-woo will be able to get married, and asks for their blessing. Mom and Dad just heave deep sighs.
Jung-hwan’s mom invites everyone over for noodles, and though the air is awkward between Deok-sun’s mom and Sun-woo’s mom, everyday talk quickly lifts the tension and soon they’re chatting like old friends again.
Deok-sun’s dad asks after Taek’s latest match and worries that he’s looking really thin these days, and Taek’s dad blames Deok-sun’s dad for introducing him to baduk in the first place.
Suddenly No-eul comes running in, yelling like there’s some huge emergency… and then presents all the parents with a front-page story about Taek and his new girlfriend Deok-sun. Eep.
They’re holding hands in the picture, but all the parents deflate instantly and say that there’s no way that story is true. They scoff at the idea and say that Taek and Deok-sun hold hands all the time, and when they were little they used to go to the bathhouse together. Well that’s embarrassing. No-eul is certain there’s some truth to it, but they laugh in his face.
Deok-sun waits for Taek’s match to end, and Teacher tells her that he won after 13 hours. He heard from Taek that they were dating and he thanks her sincerely, probably for taking such good care of Taek. He says they should’ve been more careful about reporters though, and reminds her of Taek’s personality; he suggests that acknowledging the relationship openly would be best.
Taek shows up behind her and wraps his arms around in her a backhug, and she tells him he did a good job before giving him a hug. When they reach their neighborhood, Deok-sun turns to him and asks him to deny the dating rumor for now. Both their parents are already in an uproar about Sun-woo and Bora, and Deok-sun doesn’t want to add to the stress and shock.
Taek doesn’t like that one bit and says he’s not going to lie. He says he did that for six years and refuses to do it anymore. Deok-sun says gently that once time passes, their parents will listen to them, but now isn’t the time. Taek won’t even look at her; clearly this is not what he wants to hear. Deok-sun argues, “I have confidence that I won’t change. Do you not?”
The parents wait anxiously for Taek to come home, and when Jung-hwan’s mom suggests asking him just to be sure, Sun-woo’s mom scoffs that it can’t be true. No-eul insists that something’s going on between them, but his mom asks if he’s trying to make her collapse. She can barely wrap her head around the two Sungs asking to be married, let alone becoming double-in-laws with one family.
Everyone files out of the house, which is exactly when Taek and Deok-sun walk through the gate together. All the parents freeze, and one by one they ask as if pleading, “It’s not true, is it?” “The article is wrong, right?”
The silence stretches longer and longer, and Deok-sun turns to Taek. He looks over at her, and then says very matter-of-factly that it’s not true. All the parents breathe a collective sigh of relief, and Taek adds, “Does it seem like our relationship would ever change?”
Deok-sun smiles at him gratefully, and then we flash back to the rest of their conversation in the car. She’d said, “I trust you. Does it seem like our relationship would easily change? I won’t change.” He softened at that, and she convinced him to take things slow. He sighed, still unhappy about it, so she added, “I’ll give you a present in exchange: I love you.”
Aww, instant happy. I love how the words just slay him. His eyes roam from her eyes to her lips, and he leans over to kiss her.
In 2016, Deok-sun interviews that back then, being double-in-laws was a bigger concern than the surname problem. She says they dated for about two years before getting married, and it took a lot of convincing on her part to get Taek to hold off on telling the parents. She remembers how busy they were back then, and says they mostly had dates in alleys.
We see their relationship progress over time, as Taek wakes up at the crack of dawn just to walk Deok-sun to the corner. Deok-sun runs out late at night just to see Taek when he comes home, and he takes her by the hand and asks for a spin around the block just to prolong their goodbye.
Future Deok-sun says they shot their share of drama scenes too, and we see Taek burst into a noraebang with a stern face and get mad at Deok-sun for drinking and partying with her coworkers. On a different day, Taek looks like he’s being scolded by a teacher as Deok-sun yells at him for lending money again. He tries his damnedest to puppy-face his way out, but she’s not having it.
Deok-sun takes out her old diaries for old times’ sake and reads through some of the entries, smiling and cringing. But she gasps to read the page about that night when she confessed to Sun-woo, and rips it out.
She takes it all the way outside to throw it away, but Taek sneaks up behind her and grabs the page out of her hand. Lol, so that’s how he finds out! He holds it up above her head while she jumps to get it back, and he finally relents and swears that he didn’t get a chance to read it.
But when Sun-woo comes home that night, Taek greets him with a violent punch in the back, hahaha. Sun-woo asks what that was for, and Taek says with a grin that he’s just glad to see him and shuffles off.
2016. Husband is asked in his interview about the best thing about dating or being married, and he says that it was being able to quit his sleeping pills. He says he went off of them completely when he started dating Deok-sun. Oh thank goodness. Those were so worrisome.
The interviewer asks when he first started liking Deok-sun, and he can’t remember, but laughs to hear that she thinks he first liked her in1989. He wonders if his wife even knows him at all, and in close-up we see a little scar on his forehead.
We go back to 1978 when Taek first moved to the neighborhood and Deok-sun piggybacked him to school after he broke his arm. Then in 1979, they were wrestling in the street and Deok-sun slammed Taek to the ground so hard that he cracked his forehead open. Both of them cried, but after getting stitched up, Little Deok-sun had tucked him into bed. They slept side-by-side, and even back then he’d held her hand as they slept.
The teen parts, we were already there for; and then we catch up to them as young adults again, as Deok-sun opens a box with a golden turtle inside. She asks what it is, having expected something different when Taek mentioned he was proposing. He says it’s supposed to represent eternal love. Pfft. He makes up for it with his words though: “Deok-sun-ah, I love you.”
Fall 1995. It’s seven days before Bora and Sun-woo’s wedding, and Bora comes home to find both Mom and Dad in subdued moods. Mom is slaving away in the kitchen and Dad is shining the new shoes that Bora bought for him, which he says fit perfectly.
Sun-woo’s mom is sending out last-minute invitations, and Sun-woo comes by to chat with Taek’s dad. Ajusshi tells Sun-woo to be as easygoing as he can to maintain a happy home, and advises him to do his own laundry and cook his own food because Bora works too.
Sun-woo assures him that he’ll do well, and though he might not be as good as Ajusshi, he watched and learned a lot over the last eight years, and says he’ll try to be half as good. Aw. Ajusshi wonders when Sun-woo grew up enough to get married, and he says that he and Mom trust him to live well.
Sun-woo hands Ajusshi a wedding invitation, and says that he’s been giving out a separate invitation to his closest friends and family: “This is my real wedding invitation.” Ajusshi opens it up, and inside where Sun-woo’s parents are listed, his name is written in beside Mom’s. Augh, and I was doing so well with the not crying today!
They both hold back their tears, and Ajusshi is speechless. Sun-woo asks him to sit next to Mom at the wedding where his father would sit, and says, “Thank you for making my mom not lonely anymore.” Ajusshi just silently sniffles back tears.
Bora watches Dad shine his shoes for the millionth time on the day before the wedding, and Mom suddenly gets up in the middle of ironing because she forgot to buy Bora a teapot, and insists that it has to be bought right now.
Bora tells Sun-woo over the phone that the mood is weird at her house, like she’s already a guest and not living there anymore. Sun-woo says it’s because they’re sad about her leaving home, and suggests she spend some quality time with Dad. He laughs at his own suggestion though, knowing that Bora and Dad aren’t exactly the chatty type.
She comes out to find that Dad has made her lunch, and they sit there eating mostly in silence. Bora asks Dad if the shoes fit for the eleventy-billionth time, and he just repeatedly tells her to eat. They say absolutely nothing of any substance or importance, yet the scene makes me cry, and Dad quietly wipes a tear when Bora isn’t looking.
The whole town and friends and family gather for the wedding. Jung-hwan rushes in just in time, and Dong-ryong presides over the event. Sun-woo enters first and his friends laugh to see him just grinning like a fool, and Mom already starts getting teary-eyed.
Outside, Deok-sun makes sure that everything is in place before Bora and Dad walk down the aisle. She checks Bora’s makeup and tries to get Dad to stop being so nervous, and tells them to just focus on not tripping.
Deok-sun whispers to Dad that his shoes are way too big (awwww, why does that pinch my heart so?) and he shushes her not to say anything. So Deok-sun quietly stoops down and stuffs two wads of tissues into Dad’s shoes to keep him from tripping over his own feet, and Dad gives her a little smile.
Then it’s time for the big moment. Dad walks Bora down the aisle and successfully hands her off to Sun-woo, and everyone claps. Taek says that Bora noona is beautiful, and turns to see Deok-sun crying all her makeup down her face.
Sun-woo and Bora turn around and approach her parents to bow, and that’s when the floodgates finally open for Bora. She’s already crying when she looks down and sees the tissues stuffed into the backs of Dad’s shoes, and she just bursts into heaving sobs right then and there. Dad doesn’t shed a single tear, but just silently gives her a little smile and mouths for her not to cry and that it’s okay.
We skip right to the picture-taking after the wedding, and Dad stops the big family photo and insists that Jung-hwan’s family and Dong-ryong’s family get in the family shot. Aw. Then the friends get their own picture, and everyone makes fun of Deok-sun’s streaky face. Unni just quietly holds Deok-sun’s hand, and they all smile for the camera.
The families head out to say their farewells before Bora and Sun-woo leave for their honeymoon, and Bora hugs Mom one last time. Bora: “I love you, Mom. I’ll live well. Thank you for raising me.”
Then she turns to Dad and puts an envelope in his hand. They say nothing, but she’s already on the verge of tears again. Bora and Sun-woo take off, and the family turns around and finds Dad suddenly gone.
In the car, Bora bursts into tears again, and Sun-woo says he never knew she could cry this much. Bora says she didn’t know either, and opens her bag to find an envelope in there from Dad. Lol, exactly alike to the very end.
Dad heads back to the wedding hall and un-stuffs his shoes before opening Bora’s letter. She says that she’s writing a letter because she doesn’t think she’ll be able to say the words, and wonders why she never can: “I probably take after you a lot, don’t I?” Tears begin to trickle down Dad’s face.
Bora: “I don’t know everything in your heart, but I do know that whenever you call, ‘Bora-ya,’ it’s because you want me to look at you. I know that putting side dishes on my rice means that you love me. Why did I act as if I didn’t know? That pains me the most and I’m sorry.”
She writes that there’s something she really wanted to say to his face before she got married, but she thinks she’ll burst into tears the second she calls out, “Dad,” so she’s writing it down instead.
Bora: “Thank you. I love you. I’ll live well with Sun-woo so that you won’t worry. It may have been a one-room half-basement, but I received so much love, and even if I’m reborn I want to be reborn as your daughter. Dad, I’m sorry, and I love you.” Dad whispers ever so faintly as he cries, “Thank you… thank you for growing up so well.”
Bora opens up her letter from Dad, and he writes that he still remembers that day 27 years ago when she was born. He wonders how she grew up enough to get married, and says that she’ll always remain his daughter no matter whose wife or daughter-in-law she becomes.
Dad: “Never forget that from the moment you were born, you were always my most treasured gem. My daughter, I love you. I can’t thank you enough for being born as my daughter.” Sun-woo holds Bora close as she breaks down in sobs.
2016. Deok-sun and Husband laugh at their group photo at Bora’s wedding and the two sisters tease each other about who cried more that day. Bora answers a call from “Stalker,” and Sun-woo asks if she’s picked out her father’s birthday present yet. Wait, I know that voice… Oh, it’s Lee Jong-hyuk! Why are you only a voice cameo?
Bora asks Deok-sun if the interview team is bugging them a lot, and says they promised not to ask for follow-up sessions. Meanwhile, Sun-woo calls back twice to offer more suggestions for Dad’s birthday present, and Deok-sun and Taek count down while giggling. On cue Bora blows her lid and yells at Sun-woo to quit bugging and calling, so then of course he just texts her to ask if she’s mad and to see when she’s coming home.
The interview continues after Bora leaves, and Deok-sun says that the most famous person from their neighborhood turned out to be Jung-bong, who’s now a celebrity chef on TV. Deok-sun envies Mi-ok because she still remembers Jung-bong’s ramyun as the best she’s ever had. Taek offers to make her some later and she turns that down right away, heh.
They get thanked for doing the interviews, and they say it was fun to reminisce and talk about their youth and the old neighborhood. Taek says that they really had fun growing up in Ssangmun-dong, and Deok-sun wonders why they didn’t know it then. She still remembers the moms crying when the families started moving away one by one, starting with Taek’s house.
We go back to moving day for Sun-woo’s mom. Taek’s dad waits by the truck as she heads over to say goodbye to the other moms. She makes jokes about their solemn faces and says she’s not moving to America, but she’s the one who breaks down in tears first. She cries, “I only knew really good people and spent really good years here.”
Deok-sun narrates that Taek’s family was the first to leave Ssangmun-dong, because Taek’s dad wanted to give Sun-woo’s mom a nice updated apartment before she got any older. Next was Dong-ryong’s family, and then Jung-hwan’s family. Last was her family, and by then their street was completely empty.
Deok-sun stands in the middle of the street just looking around at the place where she grew up, and has to be called away before she leaves. When Dad tells the mover where they’re going, he wonders if they’re going to become farmers.
When the interviewer asks 2016 Deok-sun and Taek if they’d want to go back to that time, Taek says he’s happier now because he was so sensitive to everything back then. There is one thing he’d like to do if they went back—hang out and watch videos with the gang in his room.
Deok-sun says that she’d like to go back and see her parents again when they were young, and gets emotional thinking about how much they’ve aged. She tells Taek that lately songs like Kim Chang-wan’s “Youth” really stir her heart, and he says it’s because they’re old now. Taek wants to go visit the old neighborhood, but Deok-sun tells him it’s totally different now. She went about ten years back and tells him it’s better not to see it.
Deok-sun returns to the street decades after they’ve all moved away, and it’s now uninhabited and filled with trash and vandalized. She narrates that years had passed and the street had aged too: “I couldn’t return to my youth, and I couldn’t return to that street either. Time flows, everything passes by, and ages. The reason that youth is beautiful is because of that. Because at a brilliant moment, you shine so brightly that it’s blinding, but you can never go back.”
As she moves from house to house and room to room, Deok-sun narrates that she had a youth like that once. She reaches Taek’s room and opens the door, and finds the four boys waiting for her and nagging her to hurry up so they can start the movie.
Deok-sun is young again too, and her eyes are filled with tears as she asks what they’re all doing here. Jung-hwan: “Why are we here? Where would we have gone?” Sun-woo asks if she’s crying because Bora hit her again, and she shakes her head no. Dong-ryong says they’re starting the movie, and Taek smiles and tells her to come sit.
Just like any other day, they watch a movie and Dong-ryong farts under the covers. One by one the moms call them home for dinner, just like they did in the opening episode. They get up and file out of Taek’s room, and when we cut back to him, he’s a little boy. The others are tiny children too as they each go home, and Deok-sun narrates that this the end of their story in Ssangmun-dong, 1988.
Deok-sun (voiceover): “The reason I miss that time and the reason I miss that street isn’t just because I miss my younger self. It’s because my dad’s youth, my mom’s youth, my friends’ youth—the youth of everything that I loved was in that place. I regret not having bid a final farewell to the surroundings of my youth that can never be brought back together again. To the things that are already gone, to the time I can’t return to… I say a belated farewell. Goodbye, my youth. Goodbye, Ssangmun-dong.”
In an epilogue, Deok-sun’s narration concludes: “A time so warm and innocent that I miss it painfully. Do you hear me? If you do, answer me, my ’88, my days of youth.”
COMMENTS
It was the most bittersweet of all Answer Me finales, but Answer Me 1988 had always set itself apart from the beginning with a more sober tone. There was an added layer of sadness in the usual nostalgia of the franchise, because this one really celebrated a bygone era and a simple way of life that no longer exists. I found myself wishing that no one would move away from Ssangmun-dong, and wanting desperately to see our three ajummas together again just to make me feel better. But nothing stays the same forever and the story was true to life in the end, and perhaps in order to say a proper goodbye to the neighborhood, our characters had to move on. The emptiness of the neighborhood made Deok-sun’s final visit and memory of the boys particularly heartbreaking. I know they were all alive and well, but it felt like a mourning of their youth, and I found myself wishing we could just close the door and stay in that room forever. Unhealthy, I know. I’m telling you, it was not unlike grieving.
I was disappointed in a few things, namely the lack of Jung-hwan in the final episode. Would it have killed you to give him a send-off, a girl, a happy future, a freaking breadcrumb in the present day? I think not. I know he’s happy and well, but by focusing most of the final episode on Bora and Deok-sun, we got so little of the other characters, and I was really sad to reach the end and realize that we weren’t going to even see Jung-hwan or Dong-ryong in the present day, or see them get happy endings in the past. It basically ensured that the gigantic Jung-hwan-shaped hole in my heart would be seared open FOREVER. Was that the goal? ‘Cause if it was, great job with that.
Taek and Deok-sun’s story got some cute development in the final stretch, though this was another case where I feel like I missed out on some of the bigger moments. I wanted to see them actually tell their families about their relationship and get permission to marry, not just talk about it and skip past the hard part. It seemed weird to build that up and not show us in the end. I do like the idea that they were always beside each other from the start and that there is no one true beginning for Taek’s feelings—he’s just always loved her, in some form or another, and their progression was as natural as growing up. I just wish there had been one last oomph of a conflict to make their love story land with more impact in the last episode, because despite driving the central mystery all series long, once they got together, their romance had little conflict to speak of. But that’s both the upside and the downside of this show, where romance was hardly the main course and there was always more time spent on friendships. It was one of my favorite things about the series and what set it apart, though a perfect show should be satisfying in all respects, and the love triangle here left something to be desired in all three characters’ resolutions.
Despite that, what made Answer Me 1988 great was that it did more than tell the story of one romance; it was a love story about family, in every conceivable iteration: the love between husband and wife, parent and child, siblings, friends. We got two families healing one another and becoming a new family, neighbors opening their homes to each other and sharing what little they had, and friends showing up for each other through life’s biggest and smallest moments. And what it did brilliantly was weave each relationship in and out of the story, peeling back new layers each time. We begin with one impression of a character, then discover bit by bit that we never knew him or her at all (think of characters like Bora or Taek’s dad). And just like in real life, we adjusted our understanding of each character the longer we knew them.
I love this kind of storytelling, where things aren’t linear and characterization unfolds gradually in bits and pieces, and our limited perspective actually makes the world and its characters seem like real people who exist beyond the glimpses we see. This writer is particularly great at that, and at portraying realistic familial love—the kind where daughters and dads alike are gruff and don’t say the words, but show their love in silent, thankless actions. Bora and her father’s love story is one that made me cry ugly tears every time, because it was so perfectly normal and encapsulated every unspoken bit of love between every parent and child. I love that for the most part, the people in the Answer Me universe act like real people, like world-weary moms and dads who don’t have all the answers just because they’re older, and flawed kids who make tons of mistakes and learn from falling down and getting back up. I love that it was a celebration of the parents’ youth too, not just the kids, and that the moms and dads did a hell of a lot of growing up too.
The drawback, of course, is when much of our characters’ inner turmoil is kept from us in service of the mystery. With a character like Deok-sun, for instance, she spent a lot of time receding to the background because we couldn’t know how she felt about Taek or Jung-hwan. She was still the same lovable, endearing girl she was at the start and matured into a thoughtful young lady, but I also wished I’d been privy to more of her thoughts as she grew up. I felt like I was there for every heartbreaking, angsty, agonizing detail of Jung-hwan’s journey (thanks for that, Show), but I saw so much less of what made Deok-sun tick, and what made her fall head over heels for Taek. I can read between the lines, of course, and certainly have no trouble guessing why a girl would fall in love with Taek. I mean, he’s Taek. It’s just that the couple’s romantic development always gets shafted when prolonging the mystery is your priority. But we knew this. It will always be the fatal flaw of this franchise.
A huge part of what made this season such a success was the lovely ensemble, full of actors who were riotously funny and could turn on a dime and make me cry like a baby. There was no one person who carried the show, but if I had to choose one, it’d be Ra Mi-ran, who elevated every single scene she was in with depth and warmth and an amazing ability to make that outlandish ajumma seem alive and real. I think her love story with Jung-hwan was my favorite of the show, in part because Ryu Joon-yeol brought a beautiful hidden depth to his character too, and together they turned what could’ve been a very simple mother-son relationship into one that crackled with humor and heart. Taek and his dad stole a lot of my tears too (though I probably cried more liters per minute because of Bora and her dad).
I was happy to see Hyeri step up to her role and do a better job with Deok-sun than I could’ve imagined. At the end of the day she was still one of the weaker actors in the cast, but only because she was surrounded by astoundingly good people. She was lovable and endearing and relatable, and because she didn’t have to carry the show, it took a lot of the pressure off and I was able to enjoy her character as one of the gang. I expected Ryu Hye-young and Go Kyung-pyo to be good, and they didn’t disappoint—they ended up getting the more intricate love story and the big finale moments with the parents that made me cry all of the tears and then some, and no one else in the group of kids felt as if they’d done more maturing than Sun-woo and Bora.
And naturally, Ryu Joon-yeol and Park Bo-gum are the runaway stars of the series, and will probably start referring to eras in their lives as pre-Answer Me and post-Answer Me. They were nothing short of amazing, and at the end of the day I love that these two characters existed, more than caring about which of them got the girl. I don’t know if I’ll ever meet two characters like them again in dramaland, but considering the way they made me swoon and cry and then ripped my heart out, maybe I’m okay with that.
I came into this series with low expectations, knowing that the third time around with a familiar setup and story from the same writer-director team would inevitably fall short. But I was happy to discover that they came into this wanting for it to be an ode to family, and that they still had gripping, heartrending stories to tell about good, down-to-earth people. The franchise isn’t a pop-culture sensation year after year for no reason—no matter how much I will endlessly complain about the ridiculous airtime (Two hours! Per episode!) or the divisive husband-hunting madness, there’s no denying the power of good storytelling, the strength of a piece of music that connects past and present, and universality of cherishing your youth and being grateful for the people you love.
RELATED POSTS
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 19
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 18
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 17
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 16
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 15
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 14
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 13
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 12
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 11
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 10
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 9
- Answer Me 1988 delays broadcast in January
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 8
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 7
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 6
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 5
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 4
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 3
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 2
- Answer Me 1988: Episode 1
Tags: Answer Me 1988, featured, Go Kyung-pyo, Hyeri, Park Bo-gum, Ryu Joon-yeol
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101 Kween Ramyeon
January 16, 2016 at 11:35 PM
Goodbye, show. You've shown what television and family drama can achieve. It's astounding, in the day and age of lack of attention span, you've managed to hold viewers week after week for the duration of a full length movie, with just simple, everyday stories of ordinary people. Even though the show was set in Korea and a certain time period, you've made me think of my parents and the universal idea of "parents, friends and friendship, and love and loyalty. Even though the characters had incredibly dorky haircuts and passé clothing, you made us fall in love with them as people.
And yeah, the delayed subbing has meant I have a lot of Korean popping up spontaneously in my head now and can understand the basics. So it's been educational too!
Good job!
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102 Dilys
January 16, 2016 at 11:40 PM
What gets to me is that Junghwan was so intricately well-crafted to make us hurt. They made us love and root for him through 18 episodes for there to be that extra punch in the gut when he shrivels in the end. It was shown time and again that he actually was capable of big and small gestures to show love to his family, and it feels like they made him unable to do the same for Deoksun just 'cause.
This is not to say Deoksun and Taek don't make sense, but that's just the saddest part, either ship makes sense, just as in real life there are many people who are compatible with you or able to grow compatible with you, but circumstance has just as heavy a hand as your own volition in determining who you end up (I mean, if "ending up" with someone is your thing). And the producers just didn't make the circumstance and volition points add up for the Junghwan ship.
Thanks for the recaps girlfriday! You have no idea how much closure this recap gives me! Now I just need to actually watch episodes 15-20 lol because I've been just skimming through them in hopes of going through the whole thing in one go until the point JH/DS get together but alas, the show wanted a million extra cries from me instead.
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103 DAWN
January 16, 2016 at 11:41 PM
First of all thank you very much for the early recap.
All things has to come to an end one day..Well, now we too have to move on from Ssangmun-dong and from Answer me 1988. The last episode made me teary eyed even watching the raw episode of a language I couldn't understand much. That much was the emotional effect Answer me 1988 had on me. May be, having born in that era, I could relate to the simple lifestyle and the relationships back then and of now .It was like living in Ssangmun-dong for past 10 weeks as a silent spectator watching the life roll for these 5 kids and their families, their shared happiness and sorrows. I have never felt so connected to any drama as this one (may be because I was also an 18 year old in 1988).Even with the flaws, it is a well written and directed drama. Well acted, as they felt real than an act. Congratulations to the writer who did this wonderful story , the director who made it look it so real and the actors who gave life to the lovely characters of this drama. Like what Girlfriday said Ryu Joon-yeol and Park Bo-gum are the stars of this drama.Even though it was a whooping 1 ½ - 2 hour episodes, I was never bored watching it this long. I really enjoyed it. Thank you very much.
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104 bd5
January 16, 2016 at 11:43 PM
Haven't watched the end yet, so don't don't know who Deok-sun ends up with (not that I don't have a pretty good guess as to whom it is) - but while the husband "guessing game" continued for 1988, it really doesn't matter who DS ends up w/ as the show was more about the daily lives of the families living in this neighborhood block.
Not that it wasn't the same for 1994 (being more about the daily lives and "family" that came about from living in the boarding house), but 1994 just went too far in dragging the Chilbong one-sided love (still, the everyday interactions and humor were enjoyable and well worth watching), when Na-jung never really showed an interest in Chilbong that way.
The husband-guessing in 1997 was a bit ick - as Tae-woong was not only a good bit older than Shi-won and a teacher, but also the former fiancee of Shi-won's deceased sister; also did not care for the whole fangirl thing in 1997 - was a bit too much.
1994 did a better job w/ Yoon-jin's Seo Taiji's fandom, but inexplicably dropped Na-jung's BB/Lee Sang-min obsession w/o a better explanation.
And while one could surmise that NJ had a life-long crush on her deceased brother's bestie, it just seemed a bit weird that NJ had such an antagonistic relationship w/ Trash if that were the case (physically and verbally abusing him; Trash saw her as a younger sister as they were basically brought up as siblings, so he had a further mental leap w/ regard to their changed relationship).
So, 1988 - had the most realistic/natural duo as to DS's prospective husband, both being childhood friends/neighbors w/ the issue being both fellas not exactly the types to show their feelings easily (further hampered by each finding out about the other's interest in DS and hence, backing down due to their friendship) and DS seemingly more interested in finding a BF or a guy who likes her than really figuring out who, if anyone, SHE really likes (as astutely figured out by Dong-ryong).
Overall, 1988 was very well written, but had a few minor issues.
At this juncture in the AM series - having a major or significant supporting character undergo an accident/get sick or possibly have died has started to lose its effectiveness w/ regard to affecting the viewer's emotions - as it has been done numerous times prior and at this juncture one gets a pretty good sense that the injured/sick character gets better and/or is not dead (such fates left to minor characters such as DS's Halmoni in the beginning) - speaking of which, what a waste of the use of Kim Young-ok (who will always be to me Han-kyul's feisty granny); wish the writer/PD had halmoni appear in several eps before killing her off - would have been more emotionally effective as the viewer would have gotten more attached to the character).
Had Bo-ra getting hurt from the student protests, Il-hwa's cancer scare, Jung-bong's heart issue, Jin-joo getting hurt, Taek's father's stroke, Taek's constant pill...
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 2:11 AM
ah yes, but life is so full of such scares cause we are all h8uman,m we are vulnerable, we can get sick at any time, get hurt at any time, I think they meant to show you need to be good to those around you all the time, cause you never know what might happen.
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bd5
January 20, 2016 at 3:09 AM
That's true, but at some point, it was becoming too much of a plot point.
But like I had stated, the hurt/injury wasn't so much the centerpiece, but the feelings and emotions of the surrounding people.
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105 Widyarahi
January 16, 2016 at 11:48 PM
For me it doesnt matter doek-sun's husband is.. because I like JH and Taek both.
This drama is felt so real because in the end the one who win heroine heart is not the one who holding his love for so many years and never even said a single word about it..I'm a bit dissapointed about JH never told doeksun about his his heart. In other side we knew Taek already did some great things to show his feelinh to doek-sun without any hesitation..so he won her heart for sure!!
that's why to me this drama feel so real and unpredictable.. excellent writter-nim!!
I can say.. Reply 1988..One of the best drama I ever watched and not wasted 4 hours of my time every week.. I'm glad I watched it.. I love all of it the cast, story line and the setting they made us travel back to year of 1988 (even I had not born yet.lol).
This drama taugh me a lot about family, friendship and love.. thank you..
Thank you girlfriday for all recaps.. keep the good work.. you help me alot with this drama..
Gonna miss the gang and the street for sure!! Cant wait for their other personal project soon!!
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106 chandler bing
January 16, 2016 at 11:53 PM
was it just me who wanted the whole gang to show up in 2016, as in the grown up version?! like a lot of people, i really would've wished to have seen what happened with the rest of the gang and to assure myself that they're still great friends... that was the only way my heart could heal with JH not getting the girl.
anyways, it was still a good drama. kept me guessing, and even though my ship sunk, i am happy that Taek was able to fulfill his first love.
gotta move on to another drama, say, Cheese in the Trap anyone?
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 2:12 AM
maybe they will make a special episode to show what happened? but I think they didnt show cause they wanted to keep them young ion both our and Deok-Suns´ memory
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107 Julia Fitri
January 16, 2016 at 11:53 PM
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.
YES. That.
But I'm okay with the ending though, because like you said, the series wasn't about TaekxDeoksun's love life, it was about their life.
And I did wish so much for more Deoksun though. I really think the writers can stop with husband=hunting on the next series, because it's already so wonderful without it.
I cried a lot in so many ways in this episode, but what destroyed me was when I saw our neighborhood neglected and abandoned. I couldn't take seeing the houses that. And when Deoksun saw the boys in Taek's room, I bawled my eyes out. I was so,so sad.
But great series, great characters, I love it and will rewatch this series probably until I die.
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bubu
January 17, 2016 at 1:47 PM
me too. I bawled my eyes when she open Taek's room and find everyone in there. then she is young again n JH said we never gone. also, SW remarks if she got beaten by her sister again really frails me. it's like nothing ever change.
(damn. i got teary again now)
Goodbye Ssangmundong. You will be missed.
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108 bil
January 16, 2016 at 11:57 PM
I'm not teamtaek or teamjunghwan, I'm happy duksoen with taek, but sad that junghwan didn't get a proper ending. I hope he can meet a woman who can make him forget his first love *like in Reply 1997* but nooo, even I don't know where were adult junghwan and dongryong now? what did they do? I wish at least give us 1 more episode to tell the epilogue pleaasee?
but beside that concern, this drama is the most heartwarming drama I've ever watch.
it's too realistic. so many moments that I can relate to myself.
I don't care if many people said this ending is suck, or too many plot holes, but this is my favorite drama in 2015.
I know this drama is too good to be true when I'm crying only by reading the recap *thank you girlfriday*
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109 madelyn
January 17, 2016 at 12:00 AM
Posting the same comment that I did in soompi...
Just because JH's character is written wonderfully and portrayed just as wonderfully by RJY doesn't make JH's character the male lead. SW has just about as much screen time as he had.
If you follow the casting news from way back, PBG was one of the first approached by the production to be cast as MALE LEAD and he was one of the first to be confirmed as the lead, if not one of the leads. Several new outlets carried this news. In fact it was widely reported that PBG, along with Han Groo were the first to be approached, except Han Groo didn't work out and in came Hyeri.
Just because Taek's story and POV is not written in typical male lead style does not make him a second lead. If anything, I think the writer has given SW, JH and Taek story arcs that made them shine in their own way. But only 1 gets the girl and it is Taek RIGHT FROM BEGINNING, the clues and the storyline aside, PBG was approached by PD directly to play Taek and they had him in mind from the start as the male lead.
There is no doubt that Taek is the male lead.
JH can arguably be co-male lead but Taek is definitely not second lead.
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Lft
January 17, 2016 at 12:25 PM
Concur.
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110 Emblom
January 17, 2016 at 12:05 AM
??What a beautiful show. Reply 1988 had so much heart(and nostalgia) and it was conveyed so subtlety that I didn't even know I had fallen for it and the characters that brought it to life. The threads within it were simple yet complicated, their world felt lived-in, worn, and small and I came away being strangely attached to their story. This episode felt like a good-bye (to me) in ways no other drama has done to this day. I'll genuinely miss these characters because they felt SO real. While watching the gang, I was brought back to MY past, MY childhood, My teenage years of being carefree and annoying and naive, of keeping a secret crush and watching parents fight---I essentially saw myself in them and I guess I felt that I too was saying goodbye to the me of yester years. ----This last hour made me want to keep moving forward. The gang has and so will I.
?? Now on to the more of my opinions??✏️?
I absolutely connected with Jung Hwan's character[he's the feelings keeper while quietly helping others with no recognition] and I've accepted that he wouldn't end up with Deok Sun, but I feel maybe we(fans) would have a LITTLE more closure with him in the finale episode, although I'm happy there was no girl he'd bump into and fall in love with because that really wouldn't be consistent with his character. But still, I'm left having full faith that Jun Hwan is okay and he's having his happily every after right now --- this is set in our present after all right.
?? Wow. I came away from this drama becoming fans of the cast especially Ryu Joon Yeol and Park Bo Gum. They both embodied their roles whole heartedly and I loved all scenes of theirs with little to no dialogue because there was just always so much emotion and feeling. Ugh! So great!
????Congrats to the cast and crew. Thank you girlfriday for putting out awesome recaps every week and I'm glad I got through this show with the many beanies in the comment section!! We're the best fans in the world right lol drama fans whoop whoop??
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111 Bongsookie?
January 17, 2016 at 12:05 AM
For those interested in seeing, this is Park Bo Gum's emotional speech at his fan meeting. This puppy keeps crying and thanking hsi fans for loving him ❤
https://youtu.be/p0fl5z7hxBg
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Bongsookie?
January 17, 2016 at 12:06 AM
@bogummyministry translated/summarised his speech here in English :)
https://www.instagram.com/p/BAn8yD5vcQh/
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Appelsin
January 17, 2016 at 1:34 AM
Awwww....I can't, Park Bo Gum is just too precious ?
I can't wait to see more of him. When is he starting his next project??
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Bongsookie?
January 17, 2016 at 4:11 AM
Ikr, he's just too precious and humble! There's a whole bunch of other fan cams in this blog http://fyparkbogum.tumblr.com
Sunwoo even visited at one stage :)
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Bongsookie?
January 17, 2016 at 12:12 AM
He literally spent the first 2 minutes crying while fans sing to encourage him :')
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 2:38 AM
that precious baby, aww. Bogummy-ya, if you are happy, you should smile! Take a break and come back as yet another character we cannot help but love.
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112 Habanero
January 17, 2016 at 12:05 AM
I’m a silent reader in this recap but after episode 20 I think I have to write something to pay off all my hours of watching this drama and then I can move on.
To me, Answer Me 1988 is so great portraying families and friendships, but so bad in romance. I may be biased but I think I’ve been tricked by the writer. Yes they said it’s a family drama but they went for husband hunting till the end.
And I do think the pacing in this drama is kinda inconsistent. It was okay till episode 10 and turned so slow after that. I was like “What the heck that I watched for almost 2hours?” because of the slow progression and unnecessary scenes. Then after the New Year break ‘PANG!’ the time jumped 6 years in one episode, we got confirmation and the ending without enough closure to all the characters. Where were Junghwan and Dongryong? Weren’t they part of the families and friends too? It saddens me to see the characters we really attached to were treated like this. That’s why many think that the ending kinda messed up. If only they do the time jump in episode 16, JH’s confession and husband confirmation earlier, then we can get enough of BR and SW’s wedding, families and friendship etc and the closures to all the characters.
And for the husband hunting game, I didn’t fall for the clues because this writer can change them anytime and fit them in any scenes later. I trusted the gestures and the way the husband talks, because I thought they’ve already set their mind about who is the husband but I was wrong. The way the husband sits and talks were sooo different in the later episodes. I even read in Netizen Buzz that some said the script had been changed. I’m not sure about that but if it’s true, I am truly sorry to myself.
And for the character Junghwan, I can’t help to fall for him because he did all the swoony moony things first. If ever Taek does first, I may fall to him instead. But I don’t recall seeing Taek as potential DS’s love interest till the beach scene. It would be more balanced if Taek enter the love line earlier. Instead, the writer took us into every JH’s journey of love to DS, his hesitation because of friendship, his sadness; and after the confession he was just an extra. What a waste of character. Hey he may be terrible in romance, but he is so awesome as a son, brother and friend; then why can’t you give him proper send-off dear Writer-nim? “My concern was all about you, Junghwan ah~”
I still can’t get what’s the point of the interview. If all of this was to reminiscing the past, shouldn’t they show us the present DR and JH? It would make more sense to me considering we watched the series from many point of view.
Still, I cried a river every time there were scenes between parents and the child, especially where Sung Dong Il in it. He is just amazing. The family love is the best! I’m gonna miss the times the gang hanging around in Taek’s room and I’ll never forget how Dongryong, Mama and Papa Kim made me laugh so hard. Now I...
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Habanero
January 17, 2016 at 12:07 AM
[cont].. Now I remember how I wish DS to be Papa Kim’s DIL. How merrier the family would be, but now I can just imagine he got better DIL because you know, the writer just sent the family off to somewhere else *still bitter about it*.
My conclusion is Answer Me 1997 remains the best for me.
If ever they are making another Answer Me series, please remind me to watch after it ends. Knock me down if I don’t listen.
Ah~~~ I need some healing. Should I re-watch Twenty Again? Or Cheese in the Trap because it sure looks yummy.
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Lola
January 17, 2016 at 12:38 AM
There's really no way anything was changed. A big thing this writer has to be given props for is her guts. The end-game was very clearly planned in advance to EVERYTHING that happened. None of the clues (why would JH be being interviewed in the first place? How could he possibly be a smoker in the present when he devoted his entire future to living out the life of his sickly brother? etc). Sun-Woo and Jung-Hwan serve very similar purposes in DS's life and are approached by her very similarly, it's only because the viewer knows of the depth of JH's feelings that it becomes something different from the meaningless crush on SW to the audience (but not to Deoksun herself). The writer told the story from JH's (or, the 'Chilbong/second lead's) perspective, and that was the way to keep the story fresh and keep it from being too similar to either previous series. If we had seen it through DS's eyes, it'd very likely be a Najung-esque struggle.
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 2:54 AM
you need to accept some people are not mature enough to understand a complicated plot, they need it spelled out and with illustrations. all who feel betrayed, did it to themselves - they had expectations that the writer was never OBLIGED to meet. but they are like kids who dont understand that they are not the center of this universe. I wish people would have more respect and gratitude to the writer for a job well done and lessons we can take along from this series.
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eunchans
January 17, 2016 at 5:05 AM
Please don't insult people's intelligence and maturity because you do not agree with them.
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Den
January 17, 2016 at 5:34 AM
Not even an apology. At least lemondoodle had the gumption to apologize for her rude comments.
redfox
January 17, 2016 at 5:41 AM
there is nothing to apologize about it. it is the impression I got. let them show with their actions that I am wrong then. right now I dont see a reason to change my statement.
Den
January 17, 2016 at 5:52 AM
So it's okay to be rude then and not apologize? Got it.
I've always seen your posts and prefer not to engage because I thought rudeness was not worth replying to but aren't you being too much already? Haven't anyone else called you out on your aggressiveness that comes off as bullying and rude? You say that you're born in '81? What about that maturity you were talking about? I like strong, opinionated posters, but I've got to hand it to you. You take the cake.
girlfriday
January 17, 2016 at 6:00 AM
If you can't respect other people's opinions, please refrain from commenting. The end.
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atz
January 17, 2016 at 8:32 AM
Simply put, I agree with you on this one. This drama demands careful reading between their conversation and the actors' expression. I think that many viewers might miss out some indicators : not only because the guessing is hard but also they first fell for JH( Taek appeared later with some interesting plot line with D.S.therefore they were biased and hoped for the best for their love. In a way, Their love for JH blinded their guessing skills while the plot indicated otherwise,,. In a way the writer is quite sneaky and crafty to confuse the viewers but this bitter sweet experience can provide us a good life lesson, 'express our feeling verbally and physically so that our loved one can surely get our messages'
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nomad
January 17, 2016 at 9:52 AM
@den
It's alright, Den...it's alright...the sad thing is, it turns out for some people telling the truth also means that you can just blatantly use hurtful words. Do you remember when the awesome huggable ahjusshi told Jin Joo that she should apologize first to Sun Woo because it makes her the bigger person? That kind of teaching apparently is lost on a lot of people. It's alright, Den...
bubu
January 17, 2016 at 2:08 PM
lol. i kinda agree to you.
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lemondoodle
January 17, 2016 at 7:48 AM
I agree. This ending was planned from the beginning. One thing fit JH as the husband and that was the future husband's personality. But we didn't know anything about Taek then at all. So, people were tricked. Just admit it and try not to fall for the same thing next time.
And seriously when you stuff like this in the drama :
>The 13 hour baduk match in episode 20
>Remember how TK came out as a husband contender in ?>Episode 6 and finally got together with DS in Episode 19? >Shin Won Ho PD is one crazy bastard...
TK doesn't lose to anyone, especially not when DS is concerned.
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113 wishywashy
January 17, 2016 at 12:09 AM
LOVE LOVE LOVED this drama and I'm not sure why people are so upset about JH. The writer never said that JH would end up with the girl and we are all aware of how the Reply franchise works... It splits the opinions of viewers down the middle and there's really no saying how things will end up.
Though JH didn't get a solid knot to tie up his story at the end, I think the writer left it this way purposefully. For me, it's a bit easier to accept that JH's conclusion is up in the air rather than have the writer hastily try to wrap it up by shuffling a girl next to him and making him look "happy." I think that would be more sloppy.
I'm happy for everyone. I think the writer made a lot of good choices about how to go about the ending. So happy for Taek because both Taek and JH deserved DS.
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thelady
January 17, 2016 at 8:50 PM
Maybe those that are upset about the ship are new to this franchise, anyone who has seen 1994 knows better than to fall for one guy and expect him to be the husband
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114 ic3chubb3
January 17, 2016 at 12:13 AM
I admit to watching ep20 with a heavy heart yesterday. And I'm glad to write here that my love for the story remains the same.
I've always been a firm JH supporter right from ep 1. When they showed the scene of JH's smirking smile at DS on TV. I'll be honest and say that it has been difficult for me to let the story development sink in since ep 19 and it's largely because of attachment to the wonderfully written (and acted) character Kim Jung Hwan.
Despite the ending couple not being the couple I wish for, despite JH not getting the closure we all wanted so much for, despite many loopholes we did not get answers for in the last ep, I'm writing this because I still want to thank the writer and the team for giving us a memorable Answer Me 1988.
After rewatching ep 19 and 20, and reading many comments on Naver, TVN board, DC Gall and the recent recap here, I finally came to an end about this overwhelming sense of bittersweet sadness I've been feeling after watching the ending epilogue.
If we go back to the family theme of this series, I believe the writer has fulfilled what she promised.
She has created a neighborhood full of loving characters whom we love. Families we all feel like our own. Mums who never fail to stop worrying over their kids just like our own. Dads who made us cry over their silent suffering like our own. Siblings who fight and love just as strongly as our own. Husbands and wives who prove screaming and nagging are just another form of love like ours in marriages. First loves who's heartbreak aches just as much as our past loves. Characters whom we felt like old friends. Friendship forming and fading, so we know how precious relationships are. And the youth we know we can never go back again.
In the ending scene when DS was asking the gang why are they here, and JH simply answered "What do you mean why are we here? Where would we have gone?”, i really teared up at the meaning of this simple conversation. That our youth, those days we remember fondly. Those times that felt so faraway and those things that we can no longer find in reality, are simply more beautiful because they are remembered as part of our memory, that we have lived and loved once.
Looking at the current landscape of Korean dramas, when would we ever have such a poignant story written again? A story about times when things were simpler. A story that talks deeply about the love and ties of family, friends, siblings, husbands and wives. When i wonder that, I begin to believe that Answer Me 1988 is and will always be a gem in Kdrama history. A story that dares to move the central love to the backseat and spend time telling stories honoring our fabulous mums and dads.
That's not to say this drama is without its flaws. Plenty it has, but I think the flaws do not take away the meaningful messages this series has tried hard to relay. Like many frustrations I've seen, the husband hunt story and choosing not to focus on DS's inner...
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ic3chubb3
January 17, 2016 at 12:14 AM
[Cont...] DS's inner thoughts was what I felt a key barrier from keeping the story flowing. Nearing the end, I was contented to see DS happy and enjoying a cute romance with Taek but at the same time sad that I stopped feeling invested enough to feel the happiness her character was feeling.
Of course we could say the writer could have done much more in the last 2 eps. They could have given us a perfect happy ending with the whole gang turning up and hanging out like old times in 2016. They could have given us a proper closure for JH and clear up the disjointed hints scattered in the past eps. But in my opinion, it was probably an intentional buildup the writer wanted.
Like the broken, abandoned Ssangmun-dong we see, things don't stay the same forever no matter how much we wish for forever. Like the friendship we yearn to protect forever, things often don't work out the same way and relationships fade.
So i finally figured out the why behind my bittersweet sadness. Maybe the ending was just a little too true to reality that my heart was refusing to accept the sad truth. That I was not ready to answer their call for my 1988, my days of youth.
This series will stay on the list as one of my favs. Because no matter its flaws, it has given me a good nostalgic dose of heartwarming happiness, bad sobbing, heartbreaks, frustrations and many more ups and downs in emotions through Ssangmun-dong and its 5 families. And just for that, I really thank the writer, PD and the whole cast and production team for coming together to make 1988 memorable for us.
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115 goldeng
January 17, 2016 at 12:14 AM
Thanks for the recap!!
i agree with what u commented!!i cried and cried both happy tears and sad sad tears... I kept watching but felt something was missing... we only got to hear Jung Bong is a chef, we knew nothing Dong Ryong or Jugnhwan from post- 1995 wedding day to 2016, only saw a glimpse of 2016-No Eul, saw Deok sun's parents went to the countryside?... and what about the other families? do they still keep in touch? it was kinda weird and I cant get over how they threw junghwan under the bus.. like, really? couldnt they find like 10 mins to show us his post-1995 wedding-of-the-year story, tell us he fell in love again, has been married for X years, has X children and that he is alive and well?! No, show... I wont forgive you for that :( Adding to that, we had no doubt Deoksun and Taek loved each other but it felt like something was missing with the "whos the husband" secrecy... i thought Deok sun would fins in the blanks when she opened her 1988 diary but NOPE! that was a Golden moment to give us her point of view! As we grow up, we all change but it made me doubt how future husband looked like Junghwan but then in the last 2 eps. sounded like Taek... like a last minute switch.. really weird!
After taking all THAAAT out of the way, the drama did a great job showing us an era that you can relate to -or envy in my case lol- and couldnt probably find that easily nowadays no matter where you live. I literally wanted to go back with Deoksun to 1988 and freeze the time when they were in that room, in that Street! Im looking forward to their new Project but if they do a poor character what they did to Junghwan, I'll not be happy!
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116 Angela Teng
January 17, 2016 at 12:15 AM
Did they ever tell us what Taek and Jung Hwan talked about when Taek visited JH at his base????
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117 sadness_
January 17, 2016 at 12:23 AM
1. I love this drama so much, the production crews was so great. applause for them, don't blame them because they don't give Junghwan as the husband.
2. apparently, this show said that they are not focus on husband hunting but IMO that's make this show heavy story that can't end by 20 episode, almost 2 hours per episode. that topic was good but we can't deny the husband hunting thing is the most interesting part.
3. I fall in love with Taek so much! please don't blame the story, just accept that it was Junghwan for not made Deoksun felt his sincere love. leave the story like that and for me, there are so many boys out there who always hesitate to confess. what he can do when another GOOD man get his crush? let her go, be a man. so team Junghwan, please, let the story about his one side love (that was sweet tho) as a lesson for us to fight for what we want and we need (like Taek did)
4. if out there they said they regret watched 18 episodes just to see Junghwan ripped off. remember, that 18 episodes was not only about Junghwan and Deoksun. understand that Taek gave what Deoksun wanted. being loved. from 1st episode they gave us condition that Deoksun always 'lost' her parent's love to her siblings.love remember her convo with Dongryong. will you give your heart to someone that sweet today and say "you wanna die?" in the next day? no, I'm not. in her age of 18 I'm understand her choice. Taek. they understand each other tho. what's the problem?
5. yeah it's quite fine to see imperfect show. this show too. I don't know the plot holes because the deadline episode or what. it seems too rush to end the show. it would be nice if the gank reunite in present time. so we don't need to ask where is Dongryong or Junghwan.
???
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118 Aigoooo
January 17, 2016 at 12:25 AM
I am a bit disappointed at the misuse of the 1 hour and 53 minutes of this episode. I wish they had spent most of the time giving us a 2016 update on all the characters we've grown to care for. I just needed that extra reassurance that everyone was okay and living happily.
This is probably one of the best (if not the best) slice of life drama I have seen. Just ordinary people living their ordinary lives. That's where it's at. No Chaebols or evil second leads. lol The writers should really think about dropping the whole husband hunting gimmick. It almost spoiled the drama for me this time around because it was not really needed. Just seeing DS and Taek develop from buddies to lovers would have been enough. I do commend the writers for giving us a more balanced love triangle though. The first two Reply series, it was hardly a mystery since both heroines clearly showed more feeling for one than the other.
All in all, it was a great drama worthy of being a part of the Reply franchise.
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119 Lea
January 17, 2016 at 12:29 AM
So, so beautiful. Everything about it was beautiful. I'm not quite a shipper, never have felt too invested in any Reply-couple post-Yoonjae/Shiwon, but Taek being it this time around just made the whole thing....fit. Not even as Deoksun's fated, but as this particular story's all around. Every puerile clue makes sense, every fundamental development becomes significant, and, in retrospect, understood. I felt a bit of an emotional disconnect with the Junghwan/Deoksun ship, and I finally got why -- he just wasn't the intended. His story, and love, was his own; it was HIS growth and his angst; and besides her being the object of his affection, she's almost entirely separate from it. The familial bonds and relationships in this one....just beautifully moving stuff. The sadness of nostalgia isn't sugar-coated this time around, and, while Reply 1997's perfect fairytale will likely always be my favourite installment, I truly commend the brilliant writer and cast for giving us 30+ hours of every emotion under the sun honestly portrayed. I'm grateful and look forward to our next time meeting again.
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120 Koalabear98
January 17, 2016 at 12:30 AM
I agree that the ending still felt a bit incomplete (somehow at 1.5 hours) but I definitely understand (maybe) the writers reasoning. At the end of the day the show is realistic and heartbreaking in the smallest ways. I remember bawling when Deok-sun didn't get to celebrate her birthday separately and whenever Taek and his father had a tender moment. It was so simple, but mostly the show demonstrated how unpredictable life is. It goes on, even if you hate it or lose the girl or the camera stops rolling. It's not ideal, but I'd like to think all the characters are living somewhere, happy in their own world. People drift apart and come together as time goes on, so it makes sense that the two sisters are still close being family and all. It isn't realistic for a large ensemble to be close to each other forever, but that doesn't make it any less happy or perfect. Imagine your own ending, I'm sure everyone has a family of their own, and they're satisfied with where they are now.
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121 Dorotka
January 17, 2016 at 12:34 AM
Now you broke my heart Show. I didn't care much for the husband mystery and was happy by episode 19... But now... did you really have to break the families appart AND show us the awfully desolate street?? The last minutes were just cruel... (And if you really had to break everyone appart, couldn't you at least give us last shots of the characters living happily and creating new neighborhood, new friends ...and new ahjumma trios?).
This is where I prefer the other series...they end up with reunions and all charcters are sent off well...here I have a feeling of a terrible loss...and dissatisfaction...
Otherwise I loved this drama and its focus on families... and it is still the best show of 2015 for me.
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nomad
January 17, 2016 at 9:54 AM
Hug Dorotka because I feel your pain completely!!!
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122 Jayhee
January 17, 2016 at 12:40 AM
im dying here ...T T ...
im not crying..something got in my eye...^ ^
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123 t13ndoank
January 17, 2016 at 12:55 AM
Boy had indeed put what he had learnt into actions. Those kissing skills.. can kill the lady softly.
Too bad the Show didn't allow Taekkie's to show his "fencing" skills.
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124 ebay
January 17, 2016 at 12:59 AM
Another great season of Answer Me! Thanks GF for the recapping as soon as possible. Waiting is so hard!
At the end i'm waiting for...
- more of JungHwan.
- and Dong-Ryong
- DS liking Taek (as in for real!). How? When?
- Neul?
- Jin-joo....
And last comment...
"Taekki, how come you kiss so good!"
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sunnyl
January 17, 2016 at 5:59 AM
Yes I was disappointed not having any of those you listed, especially lack of JH. :(
However, at least Ryu Joon-yeol got explosive love elsewhere. They did V apps on 17th having RJY talking about behind story and had fan answering time. (300,000 people connected to the apps)
Among other things-
-He called Byun Yo-han as his closest friend (yay)
-RJY said he was shocked on the scene Taek confessed he liked Heri in front of all of his friends. He was very nervous and sad.
-On ep 18 where RJY did the confession, he said he didn't like it and filming atmosphere was gloomy, and Heri cried a lot filming that scene.
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lemondoodle
January 17, 2016 at 7:53 AM
DS has always liked Taek. More than any of her friends. She's the one she loved the most. They just grew into something romantic. This started when she went to China with him and saw him as a man..and probably reached its peak when he carried her (thanks DR).
Taek watches too many dirty movies. :D
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lemondoodle
January 17, 2016 at 7:54 AM
*he's the one
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125 Kaka
January 17, 2016 at 1:04 AM
I am commenting here just for thanking Girlfriday for a great and fast recap. I don't even realize back then i was too invested to this drama and a certain character. LOL. How can i not when (as Girlfriday said) i was there for every heartbreaking, angsty, agonizing detail of Jung-hwan’s journey.
But then i am not willing to comment about the drama, though. Enough said. I could write a book about my feeling regarding the whole drama.
Once again, thank you so much Girlfriday. I wonder how you manage to put your words well, especially in your comment section. I love reading your recap. And (like what @Jolie asked above) i am also curious about one thing: Girlfriday, would you still give this show the same number of beans you have it at year end? :)
Goodbye R88..
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126 redfox
January 17, 2016 at 1:12 AM
what I love about this series, is that it has none of the negativity, none of the usual plots that we see in most dramas. No revenge schemes, no manic villains, no slapping (well, there was some, but followed by hugs), no pulling the girl around by wrists, no vicious love rivals, no suffering poor an cynical people, no long-held grudges, no perfect princes (even the genius was flawed) etc. Instead we got a community, where
*everyone supported each other
* nobody consumed by envy about the others´ life
* closeness between people, no matter their wealth or status
* families where the parents don´t try to run everything about their childrens´ lives and children, who love their parents
* boys, who can actually be just friends with a girl
* people, whop had actual lives beyond their loveline
* friendships, that don´t shake from mutual crushes
* brother cuddles
* parents, who had their own dreams and social life
* doing things for others without being asked for favors
* all characters were nuanced and endearing (my special love towards Ra Mi Ran & Jung Bong)
There are SO many things to learn from in this community and in each of the characters, they all had their own message and a life lesson for us. I hope we won´t throw it on the ground and are able to be grateful, and try and be a little more like those people.
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 1:12 AM
To end, I think this song by Ewert & The Two Dragons says it all: "In the end (there´s only love}".
shake me up from the dreams
life is only worth
when yoou gave it away
and when you're done you've learned
there is nothing that's greater
and there is nothing that weighs
more
cos you grow and you grow
and with years you'll know
there is only one thing
in the end to show
you do it wrong again and again
til it's too late to stop and then
oo-oo
you look into their eyes
oo-oo
but you can't stop your lies
oo-oo
and then you're all alone at nights
all you wanted from me
was a gift of love
but for reasons unknown
you said i wastoo far
i felt i cannot come closer
then you said it was over
i really tried when isaid
i did my best
– i guess i thought
you'll do the rest
we will meet in the corner
cos together is warmer
oo-oo
then the feelig starts
oo-oo
and it fills you heart
oo-oo
and in the end there's only love
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FGsFPjZG1ew
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 1:14 AM
isn´t this song exactly about the Reply story? You look into their eyes, but you can´t stop your lies? I guess I thought you´d do the rest? We will meet in the corner?
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 1:47 AM
and omg the tears for Bora and Dad you are so right, and I agree about Ra Mi Ran as well, she is a stellar actress, and seems like a really bubbling and sweet person in real life from BTS footage.
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127 Chimmedimmy
January 17, 2016 at 1:18 AM
Thanks for the recap, for me it was so so from 1st episode to 3rd episode, then it become great and greater again from 4th eps onwards, overall plot was good with family as a background, but the end for jung hwan is so lack, i mean that he's been the center of the romance from the begining though we still have no idea who'll be the husband exactly till 18 eps, but is so terrible when we can't see any happy end for jung hwan, i thought that at least the writer will give new love for junghwan when we all knew that duksoen end up with taek. Its unfortunate, the biggest flaw of this drama is junghwan story ?
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128 whimsicalnet
January 17, 2016 at 1:30 AM
Thank you so much for the recaps.
I feel that this is truly an ensemble piece and wish also that we got a little more on JH and DR at the end, plus the TK-DS wedding n how they got passed the double in-laws difficulty but I think we have more story than time for so it was tough squeezing everything in. Can we have a special or two to cover these grounds? I realise that at 2 hours per episode, this was like a 40 episode show (compared to other hr-long shows) and still I'm left wanting more of everyone. But I love how true to life it was and how it dealt with everyday things hardly seen on other shows, eg menopause so am deeply appreciative of the show and its writing. Makes me laugh and cry every episode like Mi-ran at her (second) wedding. I identified very much with Bora (though obviously I'm not as awesome or violent as her) particularly in the way she relates to her parents. Loved all the song and show references cos I grew up with some of those too. I had the exact same Aiwa Walkman! (Totally giving away my age here, hahaha).
Definitely a show to recommend to my kids. ??
Kudos to all.
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 1:38 AM
music plus using Pink Panther tune in ep 19 when everyone was plotting secret wedding for Ra Mi Ran. Pink Panther ruled the eighties (not in Estonia, I watched it from finnish TV. )
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129 Wildchild
January 17, 2016 at 2:08 AM
It ended. This show was really the best of the three reply series. I was seriously invested in all three installments but I think I love reply 1988 the most. The neighborhood, the families and their interactions was just precious and I adore the writer for it. Even though the episodes were long it never felt that long for me while watching it. I just got absorbed in this wonderful world the production team created. I feel empty now that it's over.
But can someone tell me why the characters were interviewed? I didn't get that part. We're they picked up randomly to reminisce about their past? Was it because Deok sun was a picket girl for the Olympics or because it was because of Taekie the genius baduk player? Deok Sun said she did it for Bora but why? Was it because bora and Sunwoo were one of the first couples that got married with the same name legally and to top that with making Deok sun and Taek their in-laws? I'm curious about that. Was it mentioned for what the interviews were for???? Sorry for the bad English as it is not my first language?
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 2:14 AM
I am not sure, but for some reason it feels like Taek ended the baduk career thats why he is at home now? correct me if I am wrong
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atz
January 17, 2016 at 8:46 AM
I am not sure if baduk players do retire so young,, many players, professional or u unprofessional, keep playing till end of their lives,,, the game keep their mental state very sharp even they grow older. Maybe Taek decided to reduce his time spent on the tour but I doubt he is completely quite the game.
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 9:08 AM
well, I cannot think of any other reason for such a long interview series. but I am satisfied with no asnwer to that cause I can imagine different reasons.
or maybe it is some sort of important date like... x years since his first tournament win or something?
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earlgrey
January 17, 2016 at 10:00 PM
I think because Taek is STILL baduk player that's why he stay at home. Baduk player is not like office worker that have to stay in office 8 to 5 or worst in South Korea 8 to 12 with all the office dinner. Taek only need to sometimes go to training center and only out of country for tournament. Maybe the interview is for Baduk Magazine? I don't know how this related to Bora though.
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130 Naa
January 17, 2016 at 2:09 AM
I may be a bit hearbroken because i'm rooting for JH since ep.1 but of course CT deserve the finale. I mean the girl.
I am thankful for the nostalgic feeling this show gave me. The bittersweet moment, the tug at heartstring, the laughter, the beautiful friendship, the unbeatable family ties.
Never did i know that AM88 surpass my love for AM97. Sung Shi Won still my most favorite AM girl but DS also have special place in my heart. And of course all the characters and the actors that bring this series to life.
Going to miss this show very much. Missing it already.
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131 THAIS
January 17, 2016 at 2:11 AM
I wish Korean Tourist officials will make that street and the houses as a designated tourist spot someday. Just like what they did with Coffee Prince and Winter Sonata. Wouldn't it be nice to visit Seoul and then go to Ssangmundong, entering the houses one by one and see how they live? And then see pictures of Jung Hwan, Dong Ryong and the rest of the cast with their lives after the drama was over. Or newspaper clipping of Taek and DukSeon married and then children, JungHwan's medal and his marriage picture... And then we can watched up all of the behind the scene footages in Taek's room....
I will surely visit Seoul then..
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thelady
January 17, 2016 at 9:20 PM
great idea
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earlgrey
January 17, 2016 at 10:05 PM
If they make the street as tourist spot I will go to South Korea again, and I'm sure I will bawling when I go there, my eyes tearing as I write this comment remembering the bittersweet ending of this drama
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132 Izie
January 17, 2016 at 2:23 AM
I want to see their friends' reaction when they break the news. UWaaaaa. the double in laws. Writernim.. why....
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133 maymay
January 17, 2016 at 2:25 AM
I love the series a lot but still agree with most that they could have spared some screen times for some other characters. I thought by revealing the husband at ep19 we could get more story from DS's view..I mean we even got Taek's perspective a lil. I got meself excited when DS brought out her diaries but only to the Sunwoo part...which explained one point but I would like to know how she felt during JH's confession-non-confession when she kept looking at the door...and in many other situations.
The shipwars are amusing because for the first half Teamteam were all braced to be chilbonged, so to speak, but for the latter half, Junghwan was the one more chilbonged than ever. I was honestly rooting for Taek (secretly) but was okay if she ended up with Junghwan so its really a pleasant surprised to get my ship right for once. I guess its worse for TeamJungHwan because they weren't mentally prepared for this ending. A lot of hurt feelings floating around so mass hugs are in demand for broken hearts in db.
Hugs for all. The writer is in?(genius) for creating so many lovable characters. In a drama with no terminal illnesses or bad villains, we still get a heartwarming drama which was engrossing from beginning till end. It's amazing that I never feel bored even though the episodes were so long..time just flew. We basically get 3hrs of goodness every week its like watching 3 episodes per week. I was scared off from watching reply 1994 by the supposed fanwars but now that i know what to expect I can watch in peace and not worry.
Thank you girlfriday for your recaps. Reading them completes my drama watching experience.
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134 kororo
January 17, 2016 at 2:37 AM
I surprisingly liked this ending, and I was not even team Taek. DS and TK were so adorable when they said that they loved each other *cries*. About JW (assuming that the plot didn't change because journalist were leaking info) I think the story revolved around him (and DS) because it was the story of his first love, and first love don't always work out *cries again*.
I'm forever bitter that I did not get more Dong-Ryong in this drama especially at the end.
Thanks to the reply team !!! Now, when is the next one starting ^^!!!
girlfriday thankU for the recap !!
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 2:39 AM
and why not show Jung Bong as a celebrity chef?
that part made me crave fried rice
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135 Liz
January 17, 2016 at 2:44 AM
What's good about Reply 1988?
1.) The actors and actresses of this drama did a awesome job in fulfilling their respective roles. They were believable and endearing. The three standouts are Lee Hyeri, Park Bo gum and Ryu Jun Yeol.
What are the flaws of this drama?
1.) Reply 1988 story is a "drag". The director has decided to focus more on the secondary personalities in the drama like Bora and Sun Woo. The viewers were able to see their love story developed from basic friendship to married life. Surprisingly, the story of Taek and Duk Seon was left in the gutters. And if the director has decided to screw Jung Hwan then the least he could have done is to convince the viewers that Taek-Duk Seon's love is greater therefore more deserving.
I was actually waiting to see the sweet moments of Taek and Duk Seon in the last episode. It was a big letdown because there was limited exposure for the two characters in the last episode. The said lead actors in this drama acted as supporting actors to the supporting characters/actors namely Sun Woo and Bora. Bummer.
2. The most interesting part in this drama is Jung Hwan's confession. They should have at least created some fascinating story for JH after the confession.
3. I did not see any progress on Taek and Duk Seon's story. Everything about their story was done in a narrative way which is irritating bec the preview for the last episode was full of their sweet moments. I felt cheated bec they are the lead actors in this drama therefore they should get the proper ending for their story. Bora and Sun Woo got the proper send off instead. What a bummer.
4. The writers of this drama must be menopausal. The ending of this drama is to bleak, cold and miserable for a family drama. The 3 families separated after living together for so long...what could be more colder and bleaker than that?
I must admit that this drama held my interest for so long. Unfortunately it's not the kind of drama that I would watch over and over again. It showed promise after episode 18 and 19. However, the last episode is a big let down. The ending is too abrupt.
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Liz
January 17, 2016 at 2:49 AM
**an awesome
**too bleak
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136 AM
January 17, 2016 at 3:29 AM
It was a wonderful journey! I'll miss the ahjummas a lot! :D Thank you show!! :D
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137 Norie Eda
January 17, 2016 at 3:30 AM
Answer Me 1988 - 5 stars for a family drama, 1 or 2 stars for the love line ( I personally would only give it 1 star) .
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 3:35 AM
the love line is a perfect 10, if you are objective. if you prefer to act as though the Jung Hwans fans wishes were supposed to dictate the love line, you are of course disappointed.
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Sleepy
January 17, 2016 at 7:40 AM
And how is yours the objective opinion? Views towards the love lines in this drama and what romantic love should be are always going to be subjective because many couples experience different relationship dynamics that worked for them.
So it's not perfect in her eyes, and it is in yours.
She probably hated both JH and Taek and didn't liked the husband mystery at all. Let's give her the benefit of the doubt before assuming everyone who thinks the love story here is shit must be Jung Hwan fans.
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138 mame
January 17, 2016 at 3:35 AM
The last 10 minutes destroyed me. In a good way. But, god, they made me bawl like a baby.
The writer stayed true to the slice-of-life narrative from beginning until the end. I can see why some people (especially Junghwan and Dongryong fans) are upset but slice-of-life is supposed to be realistic and in real life not everything is sparkly and 100% happy. I also would have liked to see future Deoksun and Taek at least mention Junghwan and Dongryong in a short sentence like they did with Jungbong but, hey, I'm not going to let that cloud over my entire experience with this drama.
I'm pretty sure Reply 1988 has become my favourite K-drama of all time.
For once the outgoing and quirky female lead gets together with a more reserved and low-key male character. We see that kind of pairing way too little in dramas. Also, the female lead *gasp* crushed on and dated other men before ending up with her true love.I love the female cast of Reply 1988. Deoksun, Bora and the moms were amazing characters. The Reply writers really know how to flesh out their female characters, bless them for that.
I love the realistic aspects and lessons of Reply 1988 and I appreaciate the writer for not backing down and pulling through her narrative until the end.
Now onto my favourite part of this drama.... The familes. THE FAMILIES. Nothing made me more emotional than the scenes of the parents and their kids together. So many misunderstandings, so many tears, so much laughter, so much love and so much growth. The dynamics in the respective families as well as the dynamics between the families together just worked perfectly and the cast for each character couldn't have been more perfect. How does the Reply staff just totally nail the casting each and every time? The actors don't only act as their characters, to me they literally become their character.
Every single character of Reply 1988 holds a special place in my heart and that's something no drama before has made me feel. Thank you for this bitter-sweet but beautiful experience Reply 1988.
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earlgrey
January 17, 2016 at 10:11 PM
give me like button for comment please... if there is like button I will make thousands account just to like your comment.
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139 libes
January 17, 2016 at 3:56 AM
After not be able to sleep last night, due to heartache for Jung Hwan, i finally able to let go of this series with light heart...
I still feel sad for JH, but i except the ending, for frendhip and family sake.
Thank you for sounding my heart :
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.
Somehow, I think the writers try to speed up the ending coz the series need to stop at ep.20. Don't u think so?
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140 A girl
January 17, 2016 at 4:05 AM
I'm really dissappointed about junghwan's ending. Seriously. I think its okay that he is not the husband and taek is, but, to think that taek get to marry deok sun by neglecting jung hwan's feeling just don't feel right. Given the fact that jung hwan sacrifice his love for friendship. I think that there may be a better way to make it not look like taek is selfish. Like reply 1997, its perfect. I dont know. In the final episode, it feels like jung hwan is not an important character and is thwee just for the love triangle.
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thelady
January 17, 2016 at 9:26 PM
Taek also sacrificed for Junghwan, remember once he realized Junghwan liked Deokson he cancled their movie date in 1989. Taek is not selfish, he waited years before he approached Deokson in 1994.
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lemondoodle
January 20, 2016 at 4:35 PM
Deok-Sun had no feelings for Junghwan by 1994. Taek isn't selfish. He cleared it with Junghwan before he made a move, and Deok-Sun is actually the one who went after Taek first.
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141 A girl
January 17, 2016 at 4:12 AM
And also, they have 20 episodes, each episode is 1 and a half hour long!. Yet the writer make an ending that seems to be rushed. Like very rushed. I mean the husband thingy is supposed to be the main attraction of this drama but then, i think it is the least developed story compared to the rest. Very slow development and literally nothing happend for 18 episodes. NOTHING. sorry i really need to relieve my emotion somewhere. Of course other storyline is excellent, i would have given it 10 star.
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142 annflln
January 17, 2016 at 4:13 AM
Thank you GF for all the hard work. I do feel this finale should be give the updates on JH and other character. I'm happy for DS and Taekie but they should give some story for JH after they use him as a bait for earlier episodes. I know JH wouldn't get the girl after his speech on fate.
Aside from the husband hunting plot, I love this AM's franchise. But for me, it's AM1997 that hold my dear the most.
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143 Butterbeer
January 17, 2016 at 4:19 AM
Writer-nim was obviously trying hard to sell Deok Sun - Taek couple in this episode (Jung Pal fell for Deok Sun in high school? Psh, for Taek it’s been since they’re fetus!). Which……….. honestly, works for me.
Hey, I love Taek. Park Bo Gum’s charm knows no limit (from gorgeous cellist/conductor to psycho dongsaeng to genius yet babyish baduk player—noona is so proud).
But again, writer-nim… really, what did Ryu Jeong Yeol do to you that you hate him so much? Jung Pal brings a massive portion of viewers to your drama yet you shoved him at waaaay bottom at Dong Ryeong’s level?
All I ask *cue Adele* is for him to have a beautiful closure! He even risked himself to be late for arrival report at his base only to console Sun Woo until the very end!!! I attended semi military high school so I knew how nasty would it be if he’s really late :(
Next time, if you’re going to be so cruel to a character, please, please do not make him/her as fabulous as Kim Jung Hwan. Even worse, throw in some uniform as accessories. My heart can only take so much.
Oh well, good bye, Ssamundong clans. It’s been a beautiful journey with all of you. Now lemme go crying in the corner.
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Aigoooo
January 17, 2016 at 6:15 AM
Yoo Yeon Seok must be breathing a big sigh of relief since someone else has taken over that forever one-sided love monkey off his back. lol No more being Chilbongied, now it's being Junghwaned. Jung Hwan really got shafted. He never even got a token consolation love-line like Chilbongie.
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bubu
January 17, 2016 at 2:32 PM
or maybe Jungpaled
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earlgrey
January 17, 2016 at 10:18 PM
I think RJY will thanks the writer A LOT, for giving him such a good character, yes he did not get his first love (as JH), but doesn't he get TONS of fans (as RJY). which one you think better? the character JH has his own good and bad, he is a good son and friend but we have to admit he is very bad in romance (it's okay he still a high school student back then) and I hope the lesson learned and JH could step up in his game of love for another lady (but please do not compare with DS) privately this time (or better in spin off)
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144 missowlhead
January 17, 2016 at 4:21 AM
Thank you, Girlfriday, for the wonderful recaps.
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145 Vej_Ita
January 17, 2016 at 4:28 AM
Thank you for the wonderful recaps. I just can't stop crying with this show! I thought I've had my fill of tears finally settled my heart. But reading your comments released the floodgates again. Chincha, when will it stop? I swear it just goes on and on and I'm really so tired. Evenso, I can't wait for the subs for the last two episodes to be released. I'll probably die then from all the tears. My take home about this drama is that as much as I'd like to fantasize about romance, the best and most memorable story of all is that of common people in everyday life.
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146 missowlhead
January 17, 2016 at 4:28 AM
Oops, let me finish here! Thank you for the recaps and the wonderful analysis. I think you really expressed how well this show delivered rich characters and moving relationships.
This show! Aargh this show! I laughed, I cried. I'm wrung out.
At the end, my only real quibble is that I wanted a glimpse of grown up and happy Jung Hwan. I know he'll be fine, but I wanted to see it.
Other than that it was all moving: Taek and Duk Seon, Jung Hwan and his mom and his hyung, Bo Ra with her dad, sister, and Sun Woo, Taek's dad with everyone... how could you not adore these five friends and their families. I'll watch this one again, the way I reread a favorite novel.
Thank you cast and crew and writer nim!
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147 Den
January 17, 2016 at 4:45 AM
Wow, bully in the house. Time to leave now. What's worse than JH fans raining on the DS-TK joyful parade (in the previous recap) are the PBG fans raining on the Jung-hwan sadness train. We like PBG too and would like it if you don't do him a disservice by stepping all over other people's disappointed opinions and broken expectations.
See you in the CITT recap threads #TeamJunghwan. Thank you for your hope, optimism, and expectations that made me feel not alone. Ryu Joon-yeol, fighting!
On to #TeamJungSeol..
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 5:00 AM
it would be fine, if it was just sadness that JH fans are expressing, but oftentimes it is pure hatred. what I am displeased about is not that they complain about the love ship, but disrespecting the writer, who gave us a wonderfully intricate community. it was never just about the husband hunt. only a few select people have thanked the writer. most just say she "betrayed" them. how can that be if she doesnt know them or has any obligation towards them?
My fish is only: let´s be a bit more grateful.
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 5:01 AM
* my WISH.
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Den
January 17, 2016 at 5:19 AM
You only have to ignore those who express hatred. At the same time, you seem like you express hatred too to those you don't agree with. I respect everyone's opinions that disagree with mine but I draw the line at being condescended to and being made to feel that my opinion is not important and is wrong.
DB is also a community and comments like yours are not helpful in making DB a good place to vent out about shows we like or dislike. So what if people felt betrayed? Is that a bad thing? We're grateful that there's a forum like this for international fans where we can share what we like or dislike about something. And where do you get that people are not grateful to the writer? It's just one aspect of what she has written that we disagree with. That doesn't deserve replies that you have made.
If you don't agree with someone's opinions or want to make "suggestions", please do so in manner where we could listen to your point of view and reply, "Thank you," and not in a sarcastic way. Let's be more nice like Taek or PBG, huh?
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redfox
January 17, 2016 at 5:47 AM
please don´t confuse hatred and expressing the impression I got from their actions. they have the right to prove me wrong. so far, I don´t see that happening.
what I am trying to express is that betrayal would be an active, deliberate action from someone. but the fans were not betrayed by the writer. they were betrayed by their OWN expectations. so disrespecting hatred towards the writer (someone even said "I´ll grab a SWORD and go ninja on her!") is just disgraceful.
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Den
January 17, 2016 at 5:58 AM
See, the impression I got from YOUR actions is hatred. Wow, so we can't feel betrayed by our favorite authors, screenwriters, directors, politicians?
So what if they were betrayed by their own expectations? It's their expectations, not yours. They have a right to express whatever it is they are feeling. That 'sword' reply was just an expression. She feels a little violent. Let her vent out. No hard feelings. Why are you so affected by it anyway? Disrespecting replies like yours are way more disgraceful.
thelady
January 17, 2016 at 9:31 PM
I understand JH fans sadness because I felt the same about Chilbongie but I don't understand the ones that attack Deokson or Taek. Some of them seem like they didn't even watch scenes that didn't involve Junghwan.
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148 heartily
January 17, 2016 at 4:58 AM
Thank you GirlFriday for your fast speedy recap, just make me feel in-love with the drama even more. The ending episode especially sad because of three things. First, the show completely done...it leaves me gaping hole on weekends waiting anxiously for GirlFriday recap then watching the drawa raw. Second, toward the end, the drama showed how youth and time flies and changes...so true. Gosh, i need to rewatch from the beginning to avoid withdrawals. Third, Jung Hwan, why u breaking my heart so. I was convinced drama would show Jung Hwan would have a girlfriend, a great freaking girlfriend, to band-aid my broken heart for him. Drama why so mean....
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149 Sittie Isniharah
January 17, 2016 at 5:13 AM
I mever thought I would feel so related to a drama until this one. As I read your recap, especially the last part which Duk Seon narrated, I also remembered my childhood. It was so fun and our family, along with our cousins, had a monthly meeting. Our family is so big, especially the ones born on '90s. We would play hide-and-seek in our village... all sorts of game. But now we all grew up and it's hard to be meet everyone in a single room. It's so sad now that sometimes it makes it hard for me to move on and face that we're grown ups now. Congrats to Reply Series. :))
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150 saranga
January 17, 2016 at 5:13 AM
i teared up, choked up, and cussed.
this is my favorite show out of the 3 reply series. oh i might revise my stance when i re-watch 1997 and 1994 in the upcoming days, but honestly this show had a huge warmth and magic and nostalgia that the other two didn't have quite so much of. which is saying something. it was just a beautiful show in so many ways.
but the way the romance was handled absolutely INFURIATES me. not to mention the fact that there was practically no jung-hwan in the final episode. after spending the entire show focused so much on him, there was no proper resolution for his character. i don't buy the deok-sun/taek romance, as cute and adorable as they are. i can't stop help feeling that the writer did intend for jung-pal to be husband, but changed her mind for some reason and shoehorned everything to fit taek somehow.
seriously, i feel like i felt after god's gift ended—deflated. but, what saves this show is the grown ups and everything else besides the romancing. everything else but how the romance was handled was pure gold, and i LOVED every minute of all of it.
but god, will they ever get it right. i do hope for another reply series—at least two more. one set in the 70s and one in the early oughties or so. but again, they need to figure out how not to rile up viewers with the romance.
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