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Kokdu: Season of Deity: Episode 16 (Final)

The finale we’ve all been anticipating (for all the wrong reasons) has arrived! And while the road to get here required an all terrain vehicle, the ending has a surprisingly smooth landing. Most story arcs are resolved cleanly and wrapped up in a nice little bow, and everyone gets their happy ending.

 
EPISODE 16

You know how a recent trend for K-dramas has been for the leading couple to break up mid-way through the final episode and then reunite fifteen minutes before the ending, thus giving us a rushed reunion and happy ending? Well, because Kokdu: Season of Deity has had so much time on its hands, the separation arc started at the end of Episode 15 and carried over into the finale. While I can’t enthusiastically applaud this decision, I will begrudgingly admit it was better than the aforementioned alternative because it gave our characters time to properly mourn and adjust to Kokdu’s absence. And, let’s be real, Gye-jeol could use the — albeit last-minute — character development.

Before we enter Gye-jeol’s rather extensive mourning period, though, we flash back a little bit and witness Kokdu’s farewell to Ok Shin and Gak Shin. It’s appropriately tearful, and we see the extent of Kokdu’s suffering that he’d been trying to hide from Gye-jeol. The poor god is as sick as a cancer patient going through chemotherapy, but he smiles through the pain as he says goodbye to his demi-god family and tells Gak Shin to continue being mean to Ok Shin. Dawww… (He also says farewell to Yi-deun, but he’s still in a coma so it’s not nearly as moving.)

Kokdu: Season of Deity: Episode 16 (Final)

After an abbreviated version of Kokdu’s final goodbye with Gye-jeol, we get to watch her go through all five stages of grief. At first we see her placing labels with his name all over his desk, hoping she can summon him back (denial), and then there is an extended period of depression until a flower delivery boy shows up unexpectedly on her doorstep with a solitary potted tulip in hand.

The flower (and the many others to follow) was arranged by Kokdu prior to his departure, and Gye-jeol gets angry upon seeing it. How dare he give her a flower when he knows she can’t keep a cactus alive and destroys every electronic device to fall into her hands. In perhaps her angstiest moment to date, Gye-jeol mopes that she’s “so good at killing things” that she “killed a god” — which is definitely not something I’d want to hear my doctor say. Perhaps a career change is in order?

Nope, Gye-jeol realizes that the “flower” Kokdu wanted her to raise was the delivery boy (and others in need), and so she moves onto the bargaining stage of her grief. She uses the money Kokdu left her to fund and open her own mobile practice and charity for the elderly and poor. In exchange for her kind deeds, she asks her patients to pray to Kokdu. I know, it totally sounds like she’s starting her own cult, but really she’s just hoping that her positive deeds done in Kokdu’s name will put the both of them on the Creator’s good side. Maybe, just maybe, he will pardon Kokdu?

Meanwhile, the saga involving Chairman Kim wraps up anticlimactically with a brief courtroom scene. Joong-shik admits he followed Chairman Kim’s orders and killed all the participants of the drug trial, and the prosecution calls for the death penalty. Cue: Chairman Kim’s shock and outrage. I guess I should be thankful that there wasn’t a lot of time dedicated to this particular story arc in our final episode, but it just reminded me of how ridiculously unnecessary this particular god-versus-mortal conflict was in the first place. Chairman Kim never stood a chance, and when the audience knows that from the very beginning, it doesn’t make for good television.

After Chairman Kim’s arrest and the trial, Cheol came out looking like the hero, but he hasn’t been so lucky in love. Jung-won has been avoiding him ever since she learned that her father was the one that kidnapped Cheol and tried to kill Gye-jeol. Once the trial is over, though, she contacts him and comes clean about her father’s identity. Of course, none of that matters to Cheol, but Jung-won explains to him that she can’t ever marry him and tie their families together when her father harmed him and his sister.

And so, five years pass with both Cheol and Gye-jeol being woefully single — not for Gye-jeol’s lack of trying, though. Apparently, her singleness is not due to lingering feelings for Kokdu. Now that she’s a rich, successful, and beautiful doctor, she’s had plenty of men ask her out, but when the time arrives for their scheduled dates, none of them have shown up for various different reasons. Gye-jeol suspects that their lack of follow-through lies with the cohabitation clause she signed with Kokdu — specifically the second clause, which stipulates that she’s not allowed to meet with another man without him present.

Gak Shin, who tried to set Gye-jeol up on a double blind date, scoffs at Gye-jeol’s theory until Gye-jeol whips out the contract and tries to mark through the clause. The red ink magically disappears, and when the dates Gak Shin booked for them never show up, she becomes a believer, too. Outside the coffee shop, though, we see that Ok Shin was the divine intervention keeping Gye-jeol single (this time around). He bribed the men to go away because he didn’t want Gak Shin falling for one of them.

Cheol’s singleness, however, is entirely self-imposed. He has not gotten over Jung-won, and when they reunite unexpectedly as consultants on a drama production, he asks her out. Sadly he’s rejected — again — but Cheol’s puppy-like loyalty wins Jung-won over once she realizes he’s been supplying her favorite rolled omelets to the store where she always shops for the last five years. Either the omelets are amazing or his dedication proved his love was strong enough for him to overlook her father’s identity, because one way or another she showed up on his doorstep and agreed to — skipping ahead — marry him.

Kokdu: Season of Deity: Episode 16 (Final)

In the bridal room, Gye-jeol and Jung-won exchange some playful bickering that demonstrates they have set aside their previous grievances and now consider each other family, and it’s rather sweet to see that, while they are on better terms, their dynamic hasn’t completely changed. The wedding ceremony is simple and sweet. Gye-jeol sits in the front pew as Cheol’s only family member, and on Jung-won’s side of the aisle is her nurse friend.

One person is noticeably absent from the wedding: Kokdu. Not that Gye-jeol needed anyone to point it out, but Yi-deun — who is (presumably) cancer free and resuming his successful golfing career — asks Gye-jeo why Kokdu isn’t present. (Apparently, the story for his absence is that he’s studying abroad in the US.) And if that wasn’t enough of a pang to Gye-jeol’s heart, surely the fact that Cheol and Jung-wo got married in the same exact church where Gye-jeol said goodbye to Kokdu didn’t help matters? Talk about rude.

Kokdu: Season of Deity: Episode 16 (Final)

But this is a K-drama, and in order for things to come full circle, Gye-jeol must return to the site of their painful goodbye in order to reunite Kokdu. So after the ceremony, while Gye-jeol privately prays for Kokdu’s return, the candles dramatically blow out and the doors to the church open. There, standing in the sunlit archway is the one and only Kokdu. (The crowd — meaning me — cheers!)

So how did Kokdu make his miraculous return? Well, it all goes back to that cohabitation contract again — specifically, the third clause, which stipulates that Gye-jeol must introduce Kokdu to all her family members. Since Gye-jeol just gained a new sister-in-law, the power of the contract magically made Kokdu’s return happen. Although it seems unlikely Kokdu could have predicted this turn of events, a later conversation between Cheol and Kokdu seems to indicate that Kokdu had been waiting on Cheol to get married all this time, and Jung-won’s reluctance was terribly inconvenient.

And where was Kokdu for the last five years? Supposedly, he was the wind, drifting peacefully everywhere and hearing Gye-jeol’s, er, non-cult followers call out his name held him back and prevented him from going to the afterlife completely. Honestly, it sounds like the last five years were cleansing and helped Kokdu rid himself of the trauma of hearing people call out for the god of death. And now that he’s returned, he can live a peaceful life and grow old with Gye-jeol.

Wait! Scratch that. Although he initially tells Gye-jeol that he’s human, Kokdu was actually lying. He’s still totally a god, and he’s been using his powers to secretly help Cheol locate persons of interest in crimes. And when Gye-jeol finds out, she is soooooo… unexpectedly cool about it.

Yeah, in the last five years Gye-jeol has had a lot of time to think, and her opinion of Kokdu’s godly status has done a 180. She finally realized that having a god for a boyfriend is pretty dang cool. Why get hung up on the fact that he doesn’t age and that he kills bad guys when he can magically transport her anywhere in the world — thus saving her money and avoiding a pat-down by a TSA agent?

It still doesn’t seem very sustainable for a relationship in the long-run, but Kokdu claims the Creator had trouble finding a replacement for him. So, they worked out a deal of sorts. Kokdu no longer hears the angry voices, but he will keep being the god of death. In exchange for his service, Kokdu will take a mini vacation to earth whenever Gye-jeol is reborn, and he will live out her life with her. Rinse and repeat for the rest of eternity. Definitely one of those happy endings that gets more depressing the more you think about it, but things rarely work out well for K-drama heroines who fall for magical beings.

Kokdu: Season of Deity: Episode 16 (Final)

As the credits roll, I breathe a massive sigh of relief because Kokdu: Season of Deity is finally over. (*pops confetti cannon*) Now, with the full scope of the story behind me, I’m trying to make sense of where it all went wrong. Obviously, I have no idea what happened behind the scenes, but the end result feels like someone in power decided that this drama should be longer than originally intended. As a result, the writing team started throwing anything and everything at the plot to fill in the gaps.

Interestingly, if I had to cherry pick the parts to keep, my version of this drama would be a completely different story than the one they originally thought up (e.g. a cursed romance between a god and doctor). Instead, I’d eliminate the whole romance between Gye-jeol and Kokdu entirely because, in hindsight, it was the weakest thread of the drama.

Their past lives backstory was undeveloped, and the fact that the curse actually stemmed from Kokdu’s previous life — before he met Seol-hee — makes Gye-jeol’s involvement in the plot superfluous. Sure, there is plenty of room to rework the romance and flesh it out, but honestly, the more the drama went on, the more I disliked the Gye-jeol character and the less I liked Im Soo-hyang as a romantic interest for Kim Jung-hyun.

I know I’ve said it multiple times, but Kim Jung-hyun really carried this show, which makes me wish the focus had been on him all along. Without the romance plot, the Kokdu character could have struggled with the (im)morality of his godly role, and as Kokdu tries to navigate the ethical gray area of his murders, Cheol could be the cop trying to track him down — all the while questioning whether or not he wants to arrest the serial killer behind the murders of various scummy people. If there was to be a romance plot in this drama, I would keep the romance between Cheol and Jung-won, who could still be introduced to the plot as Jin-woon’s ex-girlfriend, who is super confused by his personality change once Kokdu takes over.

Overall, this drama was a flop for various different reasons that we can all agree on, but I would be remiss to not point out the positive. For me, one of the few things that kept this experience from being completely unbearable was the comedic scenes between Kim Jung-hyun, Cha Chung-hwa, and Kim In-kwon. All three of them are amazing at physical comedy, and the little fanservice romance between Ok Shin and Gak Shin was still a better romance than Kokdu and Gye-jeol. Can the three of them reunite again for a third time and in a superior drama? Pretty please?

Kokdu: Season of Deity: Episode 16 (Final) Kokdu: Season of Deity: Episode 16 (Final)

 
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@daebakgrits thank you. 🏆congratulations on making it to the end and having the headspace to be objective after all that the show put you through. It’s been a joy to read these weecaps, the absolute highlight of my week and I am not even watching the show🤣 so glad your humour survived this endurance exercise.

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Congratulations on finishing this @daebakgrits and thank you for your service 💐🎊🏆! I have always maintained that Kokdu and Cheol would be far more interesting pair to watch so I'll definitely endorse your alternative drama idea. May more drama writers learn from you and may your next drama be a good one 🙏.

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Congratulations, @daebakgrits, you're finally free! Along with us - it's been a while since I was THIS joyful over drama's ending...

Surprisingly I wasn't as mad at the conclusion as I thought I will be - while 3K didn't get a peaceful retirement and ordinary mortal life I wished for him, he still got an extended vacation, contract rewriting for better work conditions, annoying voices changed their tune and - the best - his ladylove actually developed some braincells when he wasn't around. Who'd thought, right? It's still awkward that he's apparently not going to age (or is he?) and can they even have kids he was dreaming about? I assume that Dr Do's body fully expired and was disintegrated in Ep15, so 3K got the brand new one upon his return... Let's not think about it too hard, I guess. This was the show's main motto anyway.

Dr Bitch remained Dr Bitch until the very end - not only ignored poor Cheol for 5 years (dude, what's wrong with you? she's so not worth it! does he have some huge karmic debts he owes her too?), but also unknowingly delayed leads reunion. And is Yi Deun really this naive to believe that his hyung was abroad for 5 years and yet never gave him a call while at it? They should've just told him the truth, it's not like he's 100% unaware with all that past life memories and such... But nope, typical kdrama parallel universe "abroad" with no phones or emails existing wins once again!

I liked the reunion kiss - tho why, why did you have to go full heavy makeout in church of all places? At some point I legit got worried they may commit something truly sinful right there with such level of immersion in the moment))) Oh well, it just made me mourn the wasted chemistry of KJH and ISH, who, I am sure now, could've been much better together had the script wasn't so moronic. When Gye Jeol apologized for not loving 3K enough before his departure, I was darkly cheering. If only writer did the public apology to everyone involved too... Or - even better - announced the change of profession. A girl can dream, right? We all - actors, crew and viewers - deserved better than that! Thanks for being over, show! You WON'T be missed.

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Wooo you did it @daebakgrits! 🎉 Once again I'm reminded how not an easy job recapping is - especially if it's a drama you're feeling about a certain way but can't let that fully bleed into what you're writing. Thank you for keeping us entertained and updated through the hot mess that this show seems to be, in particular for those like me who were purely following the recaps only!

Now that it's over and it seems like they stuck the landing somehow, I'm going to put this show on the 'to binge/fast forward through out of sheer curiosity and boredom one day' pile 😂

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Thanks, @daebakgrits, for making it all the way through with such humor and coherence. I really loved the recaps and - HOLY KOKDU, Gye-jeol is wearing the same huge puffy blue spotted coat as Haeng-sun (the FL) wore at the end of Crash Course in Romance!!! What does it mean? It means something, right? What is the significance of the spotty oversize coat? Are both dramas set in the same alternate universe? Was there a divine plotline mixup that explains why neither one could quite figure out what it was trying to be? This changes everything I thought I knew about these shows! 😵‍💫

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now i KNEW that coat seemed familiar!!

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Hahahah! I had the exact same reaction - was that meant to be a cameo from a coat...? Still hideous, mind...

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SO glad this is over, @daebakgrits please go ahead and take a long vacation for the sake of your mental wellbeing, you totally deserved it :')

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If he can't hear the voices anymore, how does he know who to kill? Does he no longer kill bad people?

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Kokdu does not suffer as in hearing the voices to kill bad guys but he had the power as a deity to assist the police to catch bad people.

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But the reason he was killing them is because the police couldn't get them for one reason or another.

I guess they changed that for moral/ethical reasons

Does it make more sense in the show?

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Ah… I get what you mean. The show just avoid talking about it. That is a good point you had made. 👍

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@daebakgrits, you have grit in spades. Thanks for doing some analysis too - I think you have it absolutely right that the romance wasn't needed. If they wanted to have it, they had to make it more epic and believable. Week by week, Gye-jeol became a bigger brat until we were left with the assumption that Kkokdu could only see past this because he could see Seol-hee behind it all. But since we were never given much backstory about Seol-hee (other than her destiny to keep killing Kkokdu's murderer and then kill herself), I really couldn't buy into this relationship.

I would have given more time to Kkokdu and Gaksin - she had an interesting line that she was like a mother and a daughter to him (something like that - the idea that she had been all sorts of family to him) and that would have been interesting to explore. The farewell between Kkokdu and Gaksin was moving - the only time this drama made me feel anything rather than blandness or irritation.

Didn't like the ending - too much not explained for me (how does Kkokdu continue his day job as deity of the underworld without hearing voices?) but happy it was, so I'll let it go. But KJH needs to have better luck next time...

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"And so, five years pass..." 🤣 🤣 🤣

I don't know what's better. Her starting a cult or him remaining an immortal serial killer so that she can be reincarnated into this dysfunctional relationship for eternity.

I'm so so glad I dropped this show because "watching" the weecaps in lieu of this ten car pileup was the better choice.
Well done on getting through it @daebakgrits and I hope your liver survived.

Kim Jung-hyun deserves so much better than this and I hope he finally gets a project worthy of his skills - at least if this constitutes his "comeback".

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They will be different each incarnation.

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Yes, Kokdu said their lives would be getting better each time around

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The positive part of the drama:
1) Kim Jung Hyun
2) Kokdu and his two minions
3) Cheol
4) Comedies

The negative part of the drama:
1) The lead actresses and their characters
2) The predictable and uninteresting plot development
3) The romance

While I finally finish watching this drama, my view for the drama still did not change. Yes, they did give us a smooth ending wrap in a nice bow. However, the flow of the story did not engage the audience in keeping their interest going. It’s like an open book for the viewers to see. No “wow” factor, pleasant twist plot or some character development from the female lead. It was a total letdown for me as an international viewer. However, in my opinion this drama still does not deserve such a low viewership in Korea. I had seen worse drama. To me Kokdu have some fun moments. Anyway, I hope the production team learn something from this drama, such as how to improve their storytelling. In conclusion, I agree with @daebakgrits on how this drama can be executed with much a much better narrative. This drama have the potential to excel with a concrete storyline and some creativity. Lol 😂

Thank you for the weecaps! Cheers 🥂 🍻

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I think Korea is ignoring series not on Netflix adored by those abroad. Pity. If you notice a lot of English language new Facebook is often posting Netflix show news and not ones you might be able to watch KBS cable or Viki. I would think the Korean Korean news is also freely publicizing the Netflix. I saw missing the other side and irritated the second season is Netflix. I think the Netflix stuff is too Americanized however for those American’s who love Kdrama’s like myself some of the evil conglomerate stuff and sadistic MIL stuff like Beautiful Love Wonderful Life is just too much and won’t be followed as happily. That was not wonderful. The entire reason people outside Korea like Kdrama’s is they are not American. We want to get away from our politics and indoctrination of issues of the day. The formula is great why messing with it. Japan okay but sometimes the story goes disturbing. Your House is My Business Season 1 Great Season 2 did they hire an American they got preachy and issuey. Time Taxi great. China great when they go historical or multiple realms in the afterlife. Love and Destiny. Ruyi’s Love.. The other thing Kdrama doing driving me nuts is product placement. That pink moisturizing stick, vacuums, the massage chair, subway, coffee brands and machines, ginseng, chicken restaurant and coffee franchises… it’s excessive and completely stops the story. It’s supposed to be off to the side so you get the audience to recognize the brand. Not mini infomercials.

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🥳🎊
Wishing you (and Kim Junghyun) a better drama next time!

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All my respect for @daebakgrits for sticking with this one. It’s a nuissance of a job but someone had to do it.
What stuck with me after FFing the finale:
What were the writers thinking when they decided on FIVE years !? I’m not a fan of the usual forced separations which tend to take away all the drama from the drama, but fove years really is too much.
Also, being reborn and having the same partner over and over again… that’s the stuff of nightmares. I mean, I love my partner and we’ll grow old together, but no way I’d do it again in a next life. I’d absolutely want to try something else, vive la différence.

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‘ Also, being reborn and having the same partner over and over again… that’s the stuff of nightmares. I mean, I love my partner and we’ll grow old together, but no way I’d do it again in a next life. I’d absolutely want to try something else, vive la différence.’ 👈😆 Brilliant, the first thing that came to mind reading this is your partner is not a beanie so will never see this post, right?! Love it.

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That is correct. That being said, I’m 100% certain the feeling’s mutual 🤷🏻‍♂️😁

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It's been a long time since I watched Avengers: Endgame but I think the time jump in that was 5 years. The reason 5 years was chosen was because it was long enough that people, as a whole, would be changing and moving on but short enough that people would be still missing & remembering the past. They probably explained it better than me haha.

Plus 5 is a good midpoint number.

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Also leaves time to put into play other people’s solo stories. They will just make a movie off an individual or two’s story in that in between time. Star Wars does the same.

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I don't know; if you're into soulmates, I could see the appeal of wanting to meet to same person, in different ways, over numerous lifetimes. Plus just because the end point is the same doesn't mean the journey is so that could involve dating lots of different people, even marrying some of them. Maybe a time with polyamorous relationships.

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Very common in Kdrama’s to declare love than leave for years to focus on work or study, sometimes the country and sometimes the military and sometimes go to a place of nothing. Flower Boy Next Door, I’m Not a Robot, Goblin… The reason for the low birth rate. People settle down in their mid 30’s. Take Five Enough. Tae Min and Jin Joo could not marry until she set up a business and was successful. Why? He was teaching, she worked and was a well off daughter with ‘new money’. But no all must succeed with work. 28 get married already.

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The middle was goofy. I admit. But overall I liked it. I think the point was the couple selfishness caused the deaths of thousands and upheaval in the country. There is a saying that a person must have save the country in a past life if they have good things happen. I suppose this shows when you don’t save the country. The doctor did more evil in killing the guy and herself in her past life. On one hand the CEO could be seen as a victim of her. How on earth does the media not notice so many participants in a drug trial die? If Kokdu is a god why do laws about murder apply to him as they do humans? Isn’t that his purpose? While I hated SIL I loved the couple of her with the brother cop. And the coffee shop couple. I think the actor playing different people did a great job. I think it would have made more sense to see them both reborn and happy in future. Loved seeing all the Five Enough cast in this. So I would have rather had a Hotel Del Luna ending than a Goblin ending that happened. Though I loved Goblin. At least not a Black Knight ending. I wish the god helpers had a more enjoyable time for longer. If he isn’t dead how could she be left money? The scene in the office when Kokdu was stabbed with the hairpin she went off on the CEO in a way I did not completely understand. I was expecting her past life to have more explanation. Was it just that she moved on the path and Kokdu didn’t? Did she spend time in heck and then get reborn? Why were the godhelpers for Kokdu chosen. I was expecting to see their pasts as well, especially with the kiss. Why was the CEO born into such good life after his past? Cause he was a murder victim? Is teleporting a crime in Korea?

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Yes, I think Kokdu stubbornly refuse to go into the afterlife and insist to wait for his lover. However, SIL had moved on to the afterlife and forgotten about him. The creator was furious that kokdu refuse to submit and obey to rule. In order to punish the rebellious kokdu and to make him pay for a sin that his past life committed. He send the two minion to help kokdu. Both of them have sin (greedy and gossip) they were tasked to help Kokdu in the underworld. Whereas the villain become a CEO is supposedly to “repeat” their past life. The villain also didn’t remember what he did in the other life but fate make it that they will sort of encounter the same circle but they can change that fate if they choose differently. That is what I understand from the drama. It’s kind of complicated. :)

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I don’t think either were headed to heaven. Five children Grandma kept talking about how they sinned cause thousands to die.

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I figured they were trying to showcase Kim Jung-hyun's superb ability to act in any drama genre, role, and relationships that they threw at him! (That's how I framed it for myself so I could tolerate the junk he had to play off of)
As for Gye-Jeol, if we'd had the person she was in the last ep for the whole show, it would have been so much better and more poignant throughout. Or if not that, it would have been helpful to actually see some of her growth during the course of the show; it seems the writers didn't have the concept of an *arc* of character development. Although they didn't explicitly tie it in, perhaps her self-centeredness was a reflection of her original selfishness in destroying the drum and her entire nation for her own self-centered love the first time around. But the show would have benefited from exploring that instead of giving her hours of self-centered crying bouts and pouts - tedious!

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