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Grid: Episode 3 Open Thread

It just keeps getting better! Through a glimpse at our troubled protagonist’s past, we learn a little more about our central mystery. Still, the investigation into the mysterious phantom only unearths more questions than answers.

 

EPISODE 3 WEECAP

Following up from last week, Sae-ha manages to extricate himself from the situation by claiming he was just helping to wash Sun-wool’s tumbler. Ooh, Sae-ha swapped it out with an identical one! Smart.

He hands the original to Sae-byuk, asking her to lift the fingerprints so that he can enter the restricted-access 13th floor. She’s wary of his true intentions that he won’t reveal, but she ends up agreeing to help on the condition that he shares whatever information he obtains with her. Else, she’s reporting this to Sun-wool.

Sae-byuk creates a replica of Sun-wool’s palm, then applies it onto Sae-ha’s. Returning to the office, Sae-ha uses the replica to access the 13th floor, heading into the data storage room that he’d previously seen Sun-wool enter.

He finds the box of evidence, then transfers the data from one of the floppy disks to his phone. Hightailing it out of there, he hacks into the CCTV system to superimpose Sun-wool’s image over the footage of himself.

In another drama, I’d probably be skeptical of how many skills Sae-ha possesses, and how adept he is at them. Here, however, I’m convinced that it’s very much plausible, given his single-minded pursuit of the Ghost. He’s been working towards this for ages, biding his time and slowly setting up the chess pieces for the day he can finally call checkmate.

Later that night, Sae-ha watches the footage he’d downloaded from the floppy disk. It’s CCTV footage of a Ghost appearance in 1997, and we see her materialize in a research institute to accost a man. She presses one of her glowing discs to the man’s chest, causing him to disintegrate right in front of his young child, and then she disappears.

A video of the man’s autopsy reveals that his body was grotesquely burnt, with pieces flaking off. There are also witness interviews from the incident, and one of the witnesses was Sun-wool, who had personally taken the child to the hospital herself. It’s clear the child was Sae-ha; in the present, he’s tormented by the video clips.

Sae-ha shows Sae-byuk the footage of the Ghost’s appearances in various countries, and she’s perplexed. How did the Ghost appear in so many countries, all within a ten-minute time frame? And why did she travel to those places?

To that last question, Sae-ha answers that the Ghost was the one who set up the Grid, saving mankind. Yet she also killed a man in cold blood, and aided a murderer in the present day.

Sae-byuk watches the video of the man’s murder, and she recognizes the glowing disc from her fight with the Ghost. She shows Sae-ha the scar on her forearm, but neither knows why she didn’t die like the man had.

Sae-byuk wonders why the man, a janitor at the research institute, was killed. Did he perhaps try to stop the Ghost from building the Grid? In that case, then for the sake of humanity…

Interrupting, Sae-ha demands to know if that justifies killing a person. It’s the dilemma of whether sacrificing one for the greater good is acceptable — two-thirds of mankind, or one child’s father?

I find it heartbreaking that Sae-ha can’t even resent the Ghost fully, because he might not be alive today if not for the Grid. Despite his steely determination, he’s just a lost child looking for an explanation as to his father’s death, because he doesn’t understand why he had to lose him.

Astutely, Sae-byuk realizes that if the Ghost can travel through time and space, then she could have facilitated Ma-nok’s escape without ever having to show up. So why did she? It would have been easier had Sae-byuk never learnt of her identity, so why did the Ghost attack her?

I’m wondering the same too. Is it a limitation — that the Ghost can’t overexert herself by time-traveling too often — or is it an intentional choice? The Ghost is obviously working towards a larger goal, though it’s not clear what that is yet. Perhaps her motives don’t run counter to our protagonists, even though it may seem that way on the surface; maybe she’s maneuvering them into a situation she’s setting up.

At the noodle restaurant, undercover Bureau agents stake out the building for Ma-nok. As expected, he returns to his hideout to grab money and supplies. It sparks a chase, but Ma-nok manages to lose his pursuers by getting onto a train — or so he thinks, because the agents soon infiltrate his surroundings, keeping an eye out for the Ghost.

A hooded woman enters the train carriage and stands next to Ma-nok, drawing the agents’ attention. Ma-nok makes a run for it at the next stop, and the agents give chase, barely managing to catch up to him and grab him by the collar…

And then everything rewinds back to the moment Ma-nok entered the train. This time, though, the Ghost is behind him. She yanks his bag from him and pulls his jacket off him, revealing the tracking devices that the agents had planted.

The pair manage to lose their trails, walking through an underground train tunnel. It seems like she’s leading him somewhere, until a metal grate suddenly drops down behind Ma-nok — and then suddenly the Ghost is on the other side of the grate. Realizing he’s trapped, Ma-nok angrily batters against the grate and shouts for help, all while the Ghost calmly enjoys a bar of chocolate and a bottle of soda.

Whoa, the Ghost played Ma-nok like a fiddle! I wonder why she set her sights on him, and what she wants from him. If she has power so immense that it was capable of saving mankind, and yet she lay low for the next fifteen years, there has to be something important about Ma-nok to make her reappear after all that time.

The thing I find most compelling about the Ghost is that it’s still unclear whether she’s friend or foe. She seems to be exacting vigilante justice, yet it could be for the world’s safety just as much as it could be for her own self-interest. While she’s displayed the capacity for the reprehensible act of murder, I wonder if she views it as an inevitability or if it eats away at her conscience.

I really feel for Sae-ha, and I’m glad that he’s teamed up with Sae-byuk so he no longer has to fight this arduous battle alone. It’s one thing to witness your parent being killed, and another thing entirely to have the world revere your parent’s murderer as mankind’s saviour.

The Ghost must have had a reason for killing Sae-ha’s father, but can that reason justify murder? For that matter, can anything justify murder? And yet, if the Ghost had chosen not to set up the Grid on the back of a person’s sacrifice, countless people would have died due to that inaction. It’s clear our characters take different stances on this issue, and I hope the drama continues to explore this conflict further.

 
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I always thought that the utmost secrecy placed over "the ghost" incident is a tad overdramatic. Yes, it was evidence that time and space bending is possible in the near future, which brings on the question about privacy and safety, but must the government temporarily answer it with tight-locked secrecy? And then this eps happened, and suddenly I understood that this was a case of whitewashing history.

We still didn't know much about the ghost beyond her seemingly random savior-like acts and burst of violent spree, so I'm not sure where the writer would go with this character. But this eps felt like an unusual exploration of "what makes a hero hero". It was interesting how she has single-handedly saving the humankind with her abrupt appearance in 1997. But then she also committed the most horrifying of murder: violent, heartless, and seemingly senseless. I'm pretty sure she has her own reason, however obscure, but it only reinforced the question of "how far can a savior chose to act for the greater good?"

If that was really the direction the writer choose to explore, it would place her in a very interesting place. Because while Sae-byuk and Sae-ha were the rightful hero and heroine of this tale, they were practically very ordinary people with equally ordinary abilities in comparison to the ghost. They were just perfectly normal, good people who stood for the right cause and almost always chose the high moral ground. They might skirt the law sometimes, but with the government using their power unchecked in some cases, it's very easy to forgive these two their law breaking enterprises. And so, they made for a very sharp and interesting contrast with our ghost, the god-like savior of this world who sometimes behave like the ultimate real villain of this tale.

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Sae-ha managing to get a full set of prints, retrieve the right evidence, and erase all traces all at one go really stretched the bounds of credibility even for a sci-fi show. But I guess we need rapid plot progress in a 10-episode show.

I am really curious about why she killed Sae-ha's father. It can't have been about erasing evidence of her existence. There were clearly lots of videos of her from that year. Then did he prevent her from completing her Grid mission? Why would a janitor do so? And even if he did, she could have just injured him or made him pass out (like Sae-byeok or the agent), so why go so far as to kill?

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Sae-ha managing to get a full set of prints, retrieve the right evidence, and erase all traces all at one go really stretched the bounds of credibility even for a sci-fi show. But I guess we need rapid plot progress in a 10-episode show.

Of all the bigger problems that you listed, the only thing that is bugging me is the switching of the flasks. Where did he keep the identical flask? Where he hid the original flask? With security camera all around how did he manage it? Plot convenience!!

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I assumed he managed to hide the replacement flask in the pantry/ bathroom or wherever it was he went to wash the flask. But in such a heavily surveilled building that is also quite an achievement!

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If the ghost is from the future, is she trying to protect one of her own rather than being guardian of the society or secret organization? Alice?? 😂😂

I'm enjoying the drama, but one episode per week is taking away most of the ethusiasm.

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So we now know the ghost killed his dad. She helped in the creation of the grid, and everyone has secrets. Sae Ha is also a brilliant hacker who has time to type type away while caring for his sick mother. He is a magician. The key seems to be the disc the ghost is carrying and the sugar. She looks sickly, so use of the disc is draining. Hmmm the plot thickens.

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For the number of Coca-cola gulps you take, I'll scream to the top of the surface🤣🤣. Who the hell does that to whom they just rescued. His throat salivated, with his eyes longing for the Coke he'd never get to drink.

That said, I'm finding this more interesting as it runs. As usual, I don't know what I'm watching, but it tight enough to keep me engaged, without any distraction. And yes, at this point I don't know if she's a friend or foe, but money is on she's a friend.

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In all honesty, I'm hooked but I'm tired.
It feels like we're not even done building the setup yet. This is exhausting. One episode a week isn't helping either. Rather than what she has done I'm more curious to know why she's doing what she's doing rn.

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The one eps a week format is really not helping this drama maintain its pace. It always ended just when the story finally found its rhythm, and then they need to build all that up again the next week. It's also disheartening that not many people choose to watch this live (beside the fact that it isn't available in many countries). Disney+ is killing its own buzz.

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I like it. But I would like answers not more questions!

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