19

Lies Hidden in My Garden: Episodes 3-4

With all our players established, we dive deeper into the mystery element this week. There’s no shortage of secrets and suspicious behavior, making everyone seem guilty of something. But our recent widow and hospital director in particular are involved in some shady business that could have dire consequences for themselves and those around them.

 
EPISODES 3-4

Lies Hidden in My Garden: Episodes 3-4

After the first two weeks (half!) of the drama, it’s clear that this isn’t your typical mystery/thriller. It feels more like a suspenseful character study with a murder mystery as the catalyst, which works for me but could be disappointing for those anticipating something more action-oriented and, well, thrilling. It’s more intellectually than emotionally engaging, so it probably won’t be to everyone’s taste. But if you’re like me and love a good slower-paced, thematic, atmospheric drama, then it’s a good time.

This week, we jump right back into Yoon-beom’s funeral. It may be almost empty, but a lot goes down at this tense affair. Sang-eun shows emotion for the first time to the point of having a full-blown, public meltdown. First off, she has it out with Yoon-beom’s brother who is actually his biological cousin. Yoon-beom was raised by his aunt and uncle who never really accepted him as a son, instead abusing him as a child and using him as an ATM as an adult. His aunt and uncle don’t even show up to his funeral. And while Sang-eun may hate Yoon-beom for the abuse, she also pitied him for his difficult upbringing and awful family.

Not only is Sang-eun processing her complicated feelings over his death, but she learns from Yoon-beom’s brother that he got into massive debt, along with his brother and father, due to a scam investment (hence the blackmail scheme). So when a cop calls her at the funeral saying he can’t get ahold of Yoon-beom who missed his blackmail report hearing, Sang-eun loses it.

Lies Hidden in My Garden: Episodes 3-4

Once Jae-ho and Joo-ran arrive at the funeral, Sang-eun pulls him aside for a little blackmail chat. While they’re making veiled threats and assessing what each other knows, Joo-ran is inside being accosted by Sang-eun’s unwell mother who takes a liking to her. She grabs Joo-ran and won’t let go, so Joo-ran pushes her away. Sang-eun returns just in time to see her mother fall to the ground. She roughly grabs Joo-ran, the rich and sheltered wife, with clear disdain. She then almost vindictively tells her that Jae-ho killed Yoon-beom, leaving Joo-ran stunned.

Now Joo-ran has yet another reason to mistrust Jae-ho and recalls his weird phone calls and suspect behavior. She sneaks out that night to check the car’s dashcam footage, but there’s nothing saved. Jae-ho catches her in the car, so Joo-ran lies that she’s looking for her earring. When he later sees that very earring pair in her jewelry box and knows she was lying, he takes one of the earrings without saying anything.

Jae-ho’s true, manipulative colors come to light more this week when he’s backed into a corner. He holds onto that earring until Joo-ran accuses him of lying about where he was the night of Yoon-beom’s death. Then, he whips it out to say he found it, forcing her to confess to her own lie. He uses that to discredit and invalidate her, orchestrating a fight where he reminds her of her past paranoid behavior and guilts her over how hard she makes things on him and Seung-jae. It’s gaslighting at its finest, making her question her own grip on reality and feel awful about herself, giving him control of the situation. It comes across as practiced behavior, making you wonder how often he’s done this to her and why. Does he merely like control, or is there a different goal?

He brings up Seung-jae’s teacher, and we get the full story of “the incident” that led them to move. When Joo-ran found her sister’s body, she fixated on a male neighbor she saw a couple of times that night. He turned out to be a teacher who got assigned to Seung-jae’s homeroom. Joo-ran became terrified he was going to hurt Seung-jae, so she attacked him at a school event.

Lies Hidden in My Garden: Episodes 3-4

Jae-ho turns himself into the victim of her paranoia for thinking he might have something to do with Yoon-beom’s death, leaving her shaking and crying by the end of their fight. Later that night, Joo-ran tosses her meds. Not that I’m advocating her stopping her prescribed mental health meds, but I wouldn’t put it past Jae-ho to prescribe her meds (he is a doctor) to keep her sedated or malleable. One of his colleagues told Joo-ran that Jae-ho had been getting sleeping pills – which is news to her – so now I’m side-eyeing the tea he’s given her at night.

Joo-ran, despite doubting her husband, makes the decision to prioritize her family. She goes to Hae-soo and asks her not to show anyone the footage of Jae-ho leaving that night. She also visits Sang-eun, looking for answers. Sang-eun freely admits she sent Jae-ho that text and shows Joo-ran the photos and a video of a terrified man bound and being questioned by another man while the girl (a teenager named Lee Soo-min) watches.

With perfect timing, Jae-ho calls the phone. Sang-eun puts it on speaker, so Joo-ran hears when he asks Sang-eun to meet. Joo-ran says she’ll help Sang-eun find the truth and will give her whatever she wants to keep quiet – no matter what her husband has done, she’s going to protect her family.

Meanwhile, the police continue investigating Yoon-beom’s death with a focus on Jae-ho and Sang-eun. They question Jae-ho about the large sum he wired to Yoon-beom, which Jae-ho says was a loan related to some hospital business. (Yoon-beom worked in pharmaceuticals.) But they confirmed his alibi – Jae-ho claimed he was at his parents’ that night – so he’s not a murder suspect. Sang-eun, however, is of interest to them, especially when they learn that she was being abused.

It also doesn’t help her case that Yoon-beom took out multiple life insurance policies with Sang-eun as the beneficiary. In total, they pay the equivalent of about half a million dollars, but she gets nothing if his death is deemed a suicide. So now Sang-eun is in the precarious position of needing to prove he was murdered without incriminating herself, which could be a problem.

In a flashback to that night, a shaken Sang-eun moves an unresponsive Yoon-beom to the passenger side and then drives away. We also see a flashback to a conversation between her and Yoon-beom where he’d claimed he was blackmailing the rich as punishment for oppressing everyone else. “But why would you punish them?” she asked. “Because they deserve it,” Yoon-beom responded. And with that, he might have unwittingly provided the justification for his own murder.

Elsewhere, another possible murderer is having a rough go of it. Hae-soo is ostracized in her neighborhood by the rumors of what went down six years ago. The story goes that a foul smell was emanating from a house in the neighborhood (sound familiar?) and a man’s body was found inside. Also inside was Hae-soo who claimed to be his wife. The kicker is that no one in the neighborhood had ever seen her.

She does make an unexpected friend, though, in Seung-jae. Recently, Hae-soo helped when Joo-ran fainted, so Seung-jae is friendly with her. When he asks why she returned to the neighborhood, she says she wanted to return to her true home, “the place where the secrets only you know are buried.” She laughs it off as a joke, but given the track record of this neighborhood, it could be literal.

Seung-jae is more relaxed than we’ve ever seen him and asks if he can talk with her about stuff in the future. While it’s hard to say if she’s the best choice of adult, he is in desperate need of a stable adult figure in his life. He’s so miserable and stressed at home, he’s secretly looking into apartments in Seoul. (Can’t blame him.)

Elsewhere, Joo-ran and Sang-eun go on a little adventure to visit Soo-min. Sang-eun pretends to be her homeroom teacher, so Soo-min’s father lets her in. He shares that Soo-min hasn’t been home in three months, and he can’t get in touch with her. Then he remembers that his daughter’s homeroom teacher is a man. When he shows signs of anger, Sang-eun has a PTSD flashback of her abuse and panics.

Joo-ran hears a commotion from inside and comes literally busting in (she breaks a window). Sang-eun is waving a broken bottle at the confused and scared man. Joo-ran takes it from her and leads her out. Afterward, Joo-ran merely asks if she’s okay. Sang-eun finally cares enough to ask Joo-ran her name, and they properly introduce themselves.

Lies Hidden in My Garden: Episodes 3-4 Lies Hidden in My Garden: Episodes 3-4

Next, Sang-eun meets with Jae-ho as planned. Sang-eun calls Joo-ran to let her listen in, so she hears the way Jae-ho loses his bluster and goes silent when Soo-min is mentioned. “300 million won,” he offers. When Sang-eun counters with 500 million, he makes his own play, asking how she managed to move Yoon-beom’s body. He suggests handing Soo-min’s phone over to the cops, but Sang-eun is determined to discover his “messy story,” as he puts it, involving Soo-min.

We end the week’s episodes on a flashback suggesting that “messy story” may be murder. Jae-ho drags a woman’s body and stashes it in a closet. Later, in the middle of a stormy night, he buries it in the garden.

So maybe Jae-ho isn’t Yoon-beom’s murderer, but he does appear to be a murderer. I didn’t trust him from the start, but he’s looking worse by the episode. He acts the part of the loving husband, and maybe he’s even convinced himself he’s merely doing what’s best for his family, but he’s so coolly manipulative and deceitful. While I hope she doesn’t insist on protecting him in the end, I am glad that Joo-ran is being proactive and going after the truth. Maybe she’ll find she’s more capable than her husband has led her to believe.

Lies Hidden in My Garden: Episodes 3-4

 
RELATED POSTS

Tags: , , , ,

19

Required fields are marked *

Episode 3 was very Sang-Eun centric as the widow starts to realize the depths of her sleazy husband, Yoon-Beom. He kept many things hidden from her, from bad investments to blackmailing people. Suddenly, she learns that she can collect 520M won if his death is not ruled a suicide. She knows it was not because we get a glimpse of her being the new prime suspect in his murder. However, what we can see cannot always be trusted as Sang-Eun has delusions of her own which may run in her family.

Jae-Ho turns up the gaslighting to max with Joo-Ran on the lost earring. But his stories do not seem to match. He told Joon-Ran he was at home while he told the police he was at his parents house. He also was aware of Yoon-Beom’s blackmailing investigation, but told the police officer he loaned him $100k but it was really to cover up bribes to a hospital official to get business. Admitting a financial cover-up is better than admitting a murder or blackmail, right?

But Episode 4 sets up of a case of Sang-Eun setting up Jae-Ho for murder rap in order to collect the insurance money. She will have to use Joo-Ran as a witness to throw suspicion on her husband. But that is thrown into doubt when Jae-Ho accuses her of murdering her husband (she had the motive and the rainy night car scene). Or is he gaslighting her? But then again, we apparently see Jae-Ho kill Soo-Min, an underaged prostitute which he had pimped out to businessmen. But if he is covering up a murder, why bury the victim in his own backyard? To put the crime on Joo-Ran to put her away for life?

The elephant in the room is the “Seoul incident” that blames Joo-Ran for the family’s move away. Joo-Ran’s traumatic paranoia in hitting the teacher at a retreat probably left the family in social ruins. It also sets up a possibility that Joo-Ran is capable of severe violence. In rebellious fashion, Seung-Jae seeks out outcast neighbor Hae-Soo to help him cope. Or to get attention. That is a dangerous plot direction.

The pre-launch PR hinted that the story would be Hitchcook-style (Alfred Hitchcock was the master deception storyteller). We shall see now that Joo-Ran is off the meds whether her husband, Sang-Eun, or even herself is the real culprit or if all of them are guilty of something else.

2
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Kim Sung-oh is terrifying in this role. Jae Ho is such a calm manipulator and he is doing a great job playing this role.

I did find some pacing issues. I do love it when we dwell on moments to get the impact (eg. the two of them sitting outside after visiting the father of the dead girl) but some scenes just feel slow.

I did not see the Sang-eun being a murderer coming. I knew it was someone else but didn't think it was her. She is now really stuck in a place of proving that it was murder but making sure someone else is framed for it.

I think we are in for more surprises. Also, not sure how the friendly neighbor will fit into all this. Joo-ran needs an ally, but not sure if she can be trusted.

Qn: Can a school kid rent an apartment by himself?

5
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

it's all about the Saimdongs baby...
🤑

1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I agree, Kim Sung-oh's acting is great in this.

4
reply

Required fields are marked *

Korean movie thrillers enjoy giving you a twist-on-a-twist-on-a-twist (on-a-twist). I have an *intuition* about where this series will eventually end up, but maybe I'm thinking one twist too many, or perhaps one twist too few.

2
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm watching this show at 1.5x speed now. It looks like the normal speed even then 😄

I think the thing that irritates me the most about this show is that Joo-Ran has such a dead personality. Even if she is constantly drugged, her interactions with everyone around her are too hesitant, her reflexes too slow. I get that it could be a deliberate ploy to surprise us with something later on, but even then the show keeps losing its energy when she is on the screen. Sang Eun is keeping me watching though.

4
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

quirkycase, thanks for the recap !

Our story picked up this week. Yes, both husbands are/were bad bastards. Next week, Grasshopper ! Is Soo-Min still alive ? Who is the girl stuffed in the closet !?! Is that the same person out in the garden ? half way through show already !

Lim Ji-Yeon has come a long way from The Royal Gambler , the 1st drama I saw her in. Is Sang-eun actually pregnant ?

I think the three ladies will join forces. Would you loan your fancy sports car out ? HS student rents an apt in Seoul ? I would think a game room /study room would be more likely. I would think the cops would check phone, bank and internet records.
Looking forward to next week.

3
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I first saw Lim Ji-Won in her debut movie OBSESSED. She took a huge risk playing a mistress with nude scenes (just as her co-star Jo Yeo Jeong did 4 years earlier.) However, Lim won two best new actress awards for her performance.

2
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

oh! I didn't realize it was her in Obsessed! Thanks.

1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I have to commend Kim Sung-oh for his acting in this role. I can't recall a recent drama where manipulation by someone has been so nerve-wracking and scary.

Speaking of Jae-ho, in that flashback scene, we do see him dragging a woman's body (presumably Lee Soo-min). But that doesn't prove he's her murderer. Who knows if he was trying to cover up someone else's actions ..... perhaps something done by his wife or son. Everyone is a suspect in this show!

And that scene with Jae-ho and Sang-eun! I have a feeling he knew she was either recording their conversation and/or someone was listening on the other end.

Looking forward to the next set of episodes!

6
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

We don't fully see her dragging his body, do we? So I felt that scene was cut such to confuse us. So I won't be surprised if there is another twist here.

That phone call - yes. The way the camera zoomed in on the phone more than once. I dont think he knows his wife is involved. He really doesn't think she is capable of doing such things - she has been avoiding meeting people for awhile.

3
reply

Required fields are marked *

Last week, I was sure that Sang-Eun killed her husband. She clearly hated and feared him because of his abuse, so she had motive. There was a scene where she hands him an energy drink, so she had opportunity to poison him or at least drug him then. (It was when they stopped to buy food on the way to her mother's house.)

This week, the scene in which she switches place with him in the car seemed like it was too obvious a clue. Was this a red herring to trick the audience? She's so angry with his family at the funeral. Also there is the scene where she looks down from the roof at the courtyard, and sees herself with her husband and baby. Did she love him also? Or was all this her seeing who he could have been, had he not also been raised with violence? I couldn't decide whether she killed him or not.

Was Joo-Ran wrong about that neighbor? I don't think she was. I have a lot of predictions about this show, which is a sign that I'm into it.

One thing that confuses me: last week, we saw Seung-jae looking for apartments where he could live as a minor. In the interaction this week with the realtor, he seems to have the money lined up to move. Is that right? He also said that two people would be living in the apartment. Is he running away with a friend, or is he trying to get his mother away from his father? There's no way he's not aware of what his father is doing to his mother. But he could just be trying to get away from both of them--his dad because he's an abusive gas lighter, his mom because her seeming mental fragility makes her a loose canon.

She might not really be so fragile. I loved the way she ripped her skirt to jump down in her high heeled dress shoes to save Sang-eun.

5
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

Sang-Eun - seems to be a case of trauma bonding.

1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I really doubt either of Seung-jae's parents would have wired him the apartment deposit. His father is obsessed with money and his mother is too protective. What if the money was sent my the neighbor, Han-soo? That would be cringe.

2
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yikes. That would be weird. But did the scene of him looking for the apartment came after he had the chat with the neighbor in the car?
I am really curious how she is linked to all this.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This drama is different and in a good way and I am there for the ride. The camera angles and the switch from black and white to colour is interesting and adds to the atmosphere.

Kim Sung-oh and Lim Ji-Yeon are great, their negotiation scene was excellent as was the 'I found your lost earing' scene.

I don't think that Jae-ho is a murderer, but was called by the real culprit as a doctor for Lee Soo-min. When faced with her dead body, he took it upon himself to 'clean up' which means that he has a close relationship with the real killer - his father maybe (why else show a phone call from him). Jae-ho also looks pretty exhausted in the bar, no surprise if he feels that he always has to take care of the mess others are creating such as his wife with the teacher. But I agree, the drama will have a lot more surprising twists in store.

4
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Once again @quirkycase thanks for the recap. It really helps me in a mystery drama like this. Obviously the production is quite ‘artsy’ but one thing could do with less of is the blurred background stuff.
I knew that meet up between Sang-eun and Soo-min’s father was going to end badly. Sang-eun is learning on the fly how to play a dangerous game of blackmail. I don’t think she is ready for prime time. When Sang-eun and Joo-ran were driving over for the meeting I thought this is amateur hour.
Detective Do-kyung (nice performance from character actor Jung Hee-tee) seems to me an old school plodder a little like Lt. Columbo (of happy memory). Eventually he will put things together. I am not sure about his hoobae’s investigative skill’s yet.

5
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I also grew up watching Columbo and I had the exact same thought. So not exactly an original portrayal, but still a very welcome interesting one. I hope he has a bigger role in the second half of the drama. It made me wonder if there had ever been another Columbo-like detective in a Korean drama or movie.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

While of course I am curious about the real "facts" of the murders, what I find most interesting about this is the portrait of the two women, (maybe 3 now that the neighbor is being included) and their response to psychological stress. I think all 3 roles are excellently acted so far. The cinematography is interesting, but as @marcusnyc20 says, it occasionally is distracting rather than constructive. For example, one scene where Sang-eun was on the rooftop started from her shoes, showing the grid pattern on the soles, then moved up to focus in on her eating an apple, which she did so messily, juice trickling out of her mouth. What was that trying to say? That she was greedy for a more pleasurable life? I'm not sure. And a scene like that does slow down the pace of the storytelling quite a bit. I know that the aesthetic of the show is not that of an action thriller, but still the tempo, rather than building suspense, occasionally causes me to zone out a bit, and I have to ask my wife what just happened. But that could just be my inability to focus while thinking about burying bodies.

3
0
reply

Required fields are marked *