31

The Kidnapping Day: Episodes 10-11

At long last, our tender-hearted kidnapper is reunited with his unconventional charge, sharing a few precious moments of calm before the storm. Two alliances form on the pretext of common goals, but both are tentative and temporary — while one hits a snag due to distrust, the other may end up being torn apart by circumstance.

 
EPISODES 10-11

This show just keeps getting better and better, and it’s no doubt firing on all cylinders now as befitting of its penultimate week. We finally get the cop-kidnapper partnership we’ve all been wishing for, and boy is it glorious. When Sang-yoon finally catches up to Myung-joon at the pier, our despairing kidnapper confesses the entire situation, and Sang-yoon decides Ro-hee’s safety is worth joining hands with Myung-joon for the time being.

Elsewhere, Ro-hee’s escape plan launches into full swing when her shrimp fried rice knocks her out with an allergic reaction, leaving Ho-young with no choice but to take her to the emergency room. While he’s dealing with the paperwork, Ro-hee steals syringes and bottles of morphine, then sneaks out via a disposal truck.

With that, both our heroes, our heroine, and our formidable villain all converge at the disposal site. Sang-yoon tackles Ho-young, while Myung-joon pulls Ro-hee into a relieved hug (earning himself a scolding from the startled Ro-hee, ha). Everyone disperses when police cars arrive at the scene, and when Sang-yoon regroups with our kidnapping duo, Myung-joon grabs him in an awkward bear hug. Except it’s not out of gratitude, it’s a diversion so Ro-hee can inject morphine into Sang-yoon’s leg.

When Sang-yoon wakes, he finds himself tied up and at the mercy of our tiny terror. Ro-hee makes him promise not to arrest Myung-joon until everything is settled for good, and he acquiesces, because really, how can you say no to Ro-hee? Hahaha, I love that Ro-hee has gained another uncle to bully in banmal and extort meals out of. That’s also how we get the hilarious scene of Sang-yoon’s teammate CHAE JUNG-MAN (Jung Soon-won, who’s great at comedy as always) delivering burgers, frantically pointing his gun at Myung-joon, and eventually sitting down at the dinner table with our bickering duo and a very weary Sang-yoon.

The next day, our newly-formed uncle trio brings Ro-hee back to the Choi residence, where Myung-joon mops up every last trace of her parents’ murders before letting her in. Ro-hee adjusts to the new hideout, like she always has, but it’s obvious the house and its memories carry too much weight.

Meanwhile, we catch up with Jaden, who’s just had a first meeting sprung on him by Hye-eun. Deliberately introducing herself with the Choi surname, Hye-eun piques his interest even further with a video filmed by Professor Choi, personally documenting his experiments on Ro-hee. Adding on a video of his wife opening the pendant on Ro-hee’s necklace with a key, Hye-eun barters a deal with Jaden — she’ll give him the key in exchange for ten million dollars.

Jaden bites the bait and lugs a suitcase of bills to the meeting point, but once Hye-eun hands him the key, he turns belligerent, manhandling Hye-eun and demanding that he has to verify the key first. Except Hye-eun’s schemed one step ahead, as usual. The fire alarm breaks out, and the ensuing chaos allows Hye-eun to escape with the cash, thanks to a quick bait-and-switch by the men she’s hired.

Remember how I described Jaden as more bark than bite? Well, he’s determined to prove me wrong, because he straight-up murders Hye-eun’s undercover hires in cold blood. As if that’s not enough, he also summons Ho-young to an abandoned swimming pool, which we all know can’t bode well. After drugging him, Jaden mocks Ho-young for his unwavering loyalty to the higher-ups — now they want him dead for losing Ro-hee. Without a single shred of mercy, Jaden shoots Ho-young, then fires several more bullets into his dead body for good measure.

Nooooo. I was hoping the show would do more with Ho-young’s character — and the brief glimpses of humanity that have slipped through — but alas. As much as I like Jaden, I can’t deny that Ho-young could have been a more intriguing antagonist — if only the show had cared to develop him further beyond his terminator physicality. I wanted to know what made him so committed to the cause, and why he values loyalty over his own agency. There was clearly a hint of internal turmoil when Myung-joon approached him with compassion, and it’s a pity that we’ll never get to explore it.

In any case, it’s time to shift focus back to our ragtag squad. Myung-joon asks Sang-yoon for one last day of freedom, which he uses to meet Hye-eun in the church they once attended as kids. He finally asks her the question that’s been weighing on him — why did she go to Professor Choi’s house that day? Hye-eun remains guarded, and when Myung-joon realizes she won’t be forthcoming with her answers, all he can do is admit that he’s hoping she isn’t the murderer. He doesn’t press her for the truth, and if Hye-eun recognizes the depth of the trust and love he still holds for her, she doesn’t let on.

Later, Jaden tracks down Hye-eun at Hee-ae’s hospital. She’s alarmed, but he’s not out for revenge. See, he’s gotten the necklace USB and key checked by a tech professional (in a cute cameo by Joo Hyun-young), and apparently the USB can only be viewed on the single specific laptop it’s programmed to. Jaden offers another deal — or rather, a threat — Hye-eun has to make good on her end of the deal by procuring Professor Choi’s laptop for him. Their goals still align for now, Jaden points out. Why not mutually benefit by working together?

Back at the Choi residence, Myung-joon attempts to show the Choi CCTV recording to Ro-hee, hoping it’ll jog her memory. Except she immediately slams the laptop shut, and we see that Ro-hee had accidentally discovered the hard drive among Myung-joon’s belongings, and watched it in secret. Still, she insists that she doesn’t remember a single thing — he promised to stay by her side until her memories return, didn’t he? Oh, Ro-hee…

Their poignant moment is interrupted by police sirens — it seems Hye-eun has reported their whereabouts. Sang-yoon returns just in time to get handcuffed, while Ro-hee frantically stuffs a backpack to run away with. When Myung-joon stops her, Ro-hee finally cracks. Bursting into tears, Ro-hee admits that she likes being with Myung-joon. She doesn’t want him to go to jail — he’s the first person who’s sincerely cared for her. Can’t he just stay with her?

Affectionately calling her a fool, Myung-joon reminds Ro-hee that he has to serve his sentence quickly in order to reunite with her properly. They can’t be on the run forever. He hugs her tight, and then the police break down the door. Myung-joon is pinned to the floor. Ro-hee is yanked away. And amidst their tears, both the kidnapper and the kidnapped are desperately, despairingly, calling out for each other.

Who’s cutting onions in here? I most certainly was bawling my eyes out alongside Ro-hee in that final scene (someone give this kid all the acting awards, stat). Ro-hee’s actions have always spoken louder than her words, and for all that she’s a little spitfire, it’s been clear as day that she’s grown attached to Myung-joon. Like she said, he’s the only person who’s been kind to her without expecting anything in return, and despite her intelligence beyond her years, Ro-hee is ultimately still a child — a young soul who craves affection, even if she turns her nose up at it.

That’s what makes the scene where Myung-joon visits Hee-ae in hospital doubly sad. He invites Ro-hee along, knowing that she’s lacked friendship all her life, while Ro-hee gives Hee-ae her stuffed bunny doll, knowing how much Myung-joon agonized over having to go empty-handed before. It’s a tearfully emotional moment for Myung-joon, who’s glad to witness Hee-ae making a new friend, while also knowing it’s likely his last visit for a while. And when Ro-hee returns to the Choi residence and immediately starts listing renovation plans for Myung-joon and Hee-ae to move in? Cue the waterworks.

Next, to dry my tears and address the (very flamboyantly dressed) elephant in the room — what is Hye-eun up to? It’s growing increasingly irrefutable that she was the main instigator behind all the Choi incidents, pulling the marionette strings of Cheol-won and Myung-joon, but it’s still not entirely clear what she craves, and what drives her. Is it envy, that Professor Choi stole what she thinks is her rightful place and the riches she deserves? Or is it resentment, that the Choi family ruined her life and left her with nothing but an incurable disease? Hye-eun’s glee over obtaining Jaden’s cash was perhaps her most euphoric moment, and she barely seems to care about Hee-ae. Yet Hye-eun is far too complex to be boiled down to mere avarice, so I suspect there’s still more to learn about her in the final episode.

As for our heroic ajusshis, I’m loving their grudging camaraderie, which will hopefully develop into a lasting bond with Ro-hee as the glue. I mean, two dads are more fun than one, right? Sang-yoon continues to impress me with his willingness to listen, compromise, and empathize; he may be tenacious and strong-willed, but he’s far from obstinate. As for Myung-joon, he may bumble his way through life with clumsy feet and a bleeding heart, but he has a sensible head on his shoulders and a clear set of values that guide his moral compass. All that’s left is for him to display the wit he supposedly had as a child — he’s going to have to pull out every trick up his sleeve to outsmart our baddies and save Ro-hee once and for all.

 
RELATED POSTS

Tags: , , , , ,

31

Required fields are marked *

Kidnapping Day ep 11.
I’m not crying. Okay, that’s a lie.
What a gem of a show.
In a year where most lying boxing vampire bad mothers are limping to the finish line, TKD seems to be finishing strong with superb acting by Yu-Na as Ro-Hee and her kidnapper Myeong-Jun. The other actors/actresses are doing their part but gawwwd-dayuumn Yu-Na is spectacular. How can a kid be this good?
I love how the cop has grown a heart. I love the cop’s partner, Jeong-Man, and his confusion watching the bickering Ro-Hee and Myeong-Jun.
Sign me up for another full season of Ro-Hee demanding bugolgi burgers from Myeong-Jun while making subtle digs at Subway sandwiches- I assume they are salty that subway didn’t pay for product placement.
Jaden or Jay-z is turning into a stereotypical bad guy with no conscience but that’s a minor gripe.
I also don’t get how Myeong-Jun was once a genius kid. He’s all heart and leeching off Ro-Hee’s brain.
1 more episode to go. It’s been great so far. Please don’t screw this up.

8
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

I could totally see that child actress playing chaebols and bosses when she's older haha

4
reply

Required fields are marked *

I’m not crying. Okay, that’s a lie.

I’ve heard ‘gajima’ in a lot of dramas, but this is the first time it hurt.

The two cops’s bemused acceptance that nothing makes sense anymore is gold. It's like they're watching themselves watching MJ and RH and they've joined the audience in waiting to see what pretzel logic the OTP (because MJ and RH are the OTP) comes up with next.

7
reply

Required fields are marked *

Your "lying boxing vampire bad mothers" gripe is spot on! 👌

2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I've said it before (I think but) I'll say it again: Myeong Jun and Ro Hee is where the magic happens. I love the way people react to them and how dumbfounded they are by their dynamic.

The sandwich scene made me chuckle haha
The scene when Ro Hee was talking about renovating the house and designating Hee Ae a room made go aww.

Honestly, I do wish that Myeong Yun & Ro Hee could stay in each other's lives (and include Hee Ae) because like Ro Hee said, he is the ONLY person who cared for and about her without wanting, needing, or demanding anything in return. Without him, she has no one (except the lawyer and I don't even know if she would have him considering he works for the firm that represents her uncle who would just try to take as much as he can from her).

It was really touching and considerate how Myeong Jun took the time to clean the house so she wouldn't have to see the remnants of the crime scene.

It's really sad how a "rescue" can make you go "NOOOOOO!!!!"
It doesn't help that those cops are opportunistic jerks who probably wouldn't even listen to any other story other than what the person with the most money and/or power says.

So, I guess Hye Eun gives half a damn about her daughter? Just enough to keep her alive?

I really don't get her plan aside from manipulating everyone out of nowhere. Now I'm wondering why she even got involved with and married Myeong Jun in the first place. Was she actually caring at some point and then things changed? I know Myeong Jun said he didn't know her now but this manipulative and self serving attitude was around since she was a child and yet he still wanted her to come back to him & the orphanage so I can't really trust him saying she was different before.

5
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

OK, I would have to say that episode 11 is the BEST episode of this drama (so far, depending on what goes next in the last episode 12 next week).

The last scene of episode 11 where Ro-hee begs Myeong-jun not to leave her, and when they are being separated by the police, is really heartbreaking. I seldom cry in front of the TV and I cried watching the scene, even after I watched it several times, OMG.

Yuna's acting performance is really amazing. And she was still 11 years old during the filming, wondering what will she become in the next 5-10 years. A new star in the making.

On another note, I also love the scene where Myeong-jun and Ro-hee visit Hee-ae. Family reunion between father and daughter with lot of hugging, despite Ro-hee watching with a bit of envy. It's really in contrast with the scene where Hye-eun visits Hee-ae, she doesn't hug her daughter at all! What kind of mother is she, seriously???

I also love the scene where Sang-yoon's colleague visits them to bring the bulgogi hamburgers and is surprised to see Myeong-jun and Ro-hee there, lol.

And I really hate Jaden for killing Ho-young.

9
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I have typed a long comment and just lost it. 😭
Let me try to recreate it

2
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

My favorite is still our lead pair, Ro Hee and Myeong Jun. They are stronger together, brains and brawn combined.
I have been waiting for a long time for their team up with our suspended cop. It was fun watching Sang Hyun make sense of the pair. It would've been better if the three of them was together longer.
That ending though broke my heart. That hug and Ro Hee's pleas were so heartfelt and desperate. I feel for them both. The police did not need to be so rough arresting him when he was not even reasisting arrest.
I can't help but want for Ro Hee and Hee Ae to be friends and possible siblings. Although the latter may be difficult if MJ is imprisoned.

I feel bad with what happened with Ho Young. Jaden was brutal but I was still hoping HY will survive and gain a redemption arc.

There is something weird about Hye Eun. It feels like she snapped long ago but still has lingering atttachment to Myeong Jun. She was so desperate to reclaim the life and material wealth she "lost" when she was sent back to the orphanage. Then add to that the result of the incident with Cheolwon and that bloodied scalpel. I think she may have snapped when her daughter got sick and found out she was positive. Since she had a long time to work through the trauma of abandonment with her foster father, the added stress of the recent personal issues couldve cause her mental health to deteriorate.

With one episode to go, I hope the remaining sforylines will be wrapped up well. Bring back Ro Hee under Myeong Jun's care please.

6
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm busy imagining Myeong-jun's trial when Ro-hee is called to testify about the kidnapping and she absolutely shreds the prosecutor. Why wait till he gets out of jail to have one big happy family if you don't have to?

11
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yessssss. Part of me just thinks, what if she denies the whole situation? “Oh yes, I was running away from the carnage and passed out and uri samchon over there rescued me and kept me safe!” Or whatever. She’s smart, she could think of something!

7
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

And then have her claim she told him to say he was a kidnapper because they were using that as a stratagem to solve the murder case.

6
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

And we thought Ro-hee was the only genius.
Our DB geniuses are more inventive and innovative than any scrip writer.
Hope the writer here did attend the Beanies script writing 101 class!

🤣 🤣 🤣

7
reply

Required fields are marked *

Actually Myeong-jun didn't kidnap her. Ro-hee just appeared in front of his car and collapsed, so he took her to save her.

Ro-hee can testify that Myeong-jun saved him from the killers, and he protected her from the killer and the investors who wanted to take her. She also can testify that she asked Myeong-jun to take her away from police pursuit because she was afraid that the police had something to do with her parents' killing.

Basically Ro-hee can testify that what Myeong-jun did was not to kidnap her, but to protect her. She was the one who asked him to keep her, because she feels only he can protect her.

1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yoon Kye-sang and Yu-na deserve ALL of the awards and I can’t wait to see what a stunning actress Yu-na turns into, gosh. That was the most gut-wrenching scene I have seen in a LONG time.

I am so glad this show is steadily getting more attention because it so deserves it.

6
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

This show proves that having the otp together is Good and makes the drama shine.
**cough - lessons for My Dearest writer**.

2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Couldn't agree more. I have a hunch that Yuna will be nominated and might win the 60th Baeksang Arts Award for Best New Actress - Television next year.

Or she might also be nominated and win the Best Actress - Television award (since she's practically the female lead in this drama), who knows?

I have become a big fan of Yuna now and looking forward to seeing her on near-future projects.

3
reply

Required fields are marked *

at the mercy of our tiny terror

he acquiesces, because really, how can you say no to Ro-hee? Hahaha, I love that Ro-hee has gained another uncle to bully in banmal and extort meals out of.

:)

This is our show in a 🔩🐚. That's "nut" + "shell".

7
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

My Lord
As in all things, your emoji game is 🔥

1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Just over here, getting casually wrecked by this show. Bursting in to laughter one minute (or every minute Myung-Ro is bickering - and yes, they are a unit) and bursting into tears the next. This show has my whole heart. Ro-hee can’t even help smiling at Myung-jun anymore, she just turns her head to try to hide it. But you could tell how much it meant to her to be invited to meet his daughter, and she tried to act so above it all when she talked about how bothersome Hee-ae would be but was still making plans for her to be over constantly. Ugh, if we don’t get a happy ending I’m not going to recover.

The team up was everything I dreamed it could be, and it was made even better with the extra detective addition. For a minute when Ho-young was only shot twice I thought, “oh, well, people survive that many gunshot wounds all the time in dramas, maybe he’ll still be okay?” And then, Beanies, he was not okay. Like, very thoroughly un-okay. I’m also a bit bummed we won’t get a little redemption arc for him, but I guess we got half of one at least when he rushed her to the hospital.

When all this is over, can someone more talented than I cut together all the bickering scenes? I would just watch it on repeat.

6
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Myung-Ro

No otp deserved a name more than this one!

1
reply

Required fields are marked *

We have all seen (and hated) the Stockholm Syndrome in too many dramas to count but the writer taking that premise and turning it on its head is just so out-of-the-box! 🤯

This odd man pairing captured ours hearts from the get-go and never loosened the grip... unlike somebody who kept on saying "Get a grip".

Best of luck to all Beanies and drama - please be good!

4
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

There is no cure for HIV but it can be controlled with treatment. So for the drama’s sake we’re going with the notion that Hye-eun’s adoptive father was a geeenius or something and suppose he did ‘cure’ her, then her alibi of getting treatment is false isn’t it? We know she’s at the house at the day of Dr Choi’s murder and all the evidence is pointing to her as the killer.

Was the long game waiting five years to get revenge and payment? She knew about the experiments, so why wait that long? Was she waiting for the experiment to succeed? So she could sell that info? There was also a scene telling us Dr Choi’s murder didn’t seem premeditated.

So I’m curious, is Hye-eun telling the truth that she left because her HIV was back? Or and this my theory she never wanted to be a mother, and I don’t think she liked living in poverty. I think she loved Myeong-jun because he unconditionally loved her and and then some but when they had a child his loyalty shifted. She left with their savings and is living in far better apartment then her daughter and Myeong-jun. I know she was sponsored by Park Cheol-won all her life, but her not caring or loving her daughter seems in line with her actions so far.

Now there have been plenty of horrible or absent fathers in kdramaland, so I’m not judging her for leaving her husband and child. But to me the only person she cared or ever felt loyalty to was Myeong-jun. The scene at the hospital where she sees him and he ignores her, seemed to make her lose it and thus report them.

I want to know Hye-eun’s initial plan, I don’t think murder was part of the equation but when things went south, she seemed plenty fine with throwing people (who cared for her) under the bus, if it meant she won’t get caught

3
6
reply

Required fields are marked *

Tho I guess with Hye-eun constantly watching the surveillance footage, she could make it seem as if the murder wasn’t premeditated as she knows layout of the house and therefore didn’t need to carry a weapon with her. But I’m a 100% certain Dr Choi killed his wife because she found a flaw in his experiment

2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Hye Eun said the doctor treated her with whatever gene therapy experiments and that "cured" her for years until the effects of the gene therapy apparently wore off and the virus became active (or whatever the phrasing is) leading to her leaving her family.

Since she was caught on the CCTV, who even knows what is to be trusted from her.

3
reply

Required fields are marked *

I agree with a lot of what you say about Hye-eun and her relationship with Myeong-joon. She seems to react extremely badly to being rejected or abandoned, or even just having to share something or someone, like you said about sharing Myeong-joon's love with their daughter. It was worse when he turned away from her at the hospital, cos it looked like even he was prioritising the genius child over her.

That said, I'm not sure Hye-eun is entirely devoid of love for Hee-ae, and that has a lot to do with Kim Shin-rok's performance. I've learnt not to trust anything Hye-eun says or does in the presence of others, but when she was alone at the hotel, her reaction to the phone call from the hospital was really hard to read. Yes she did dance around her room with her shopping bags, but that seemed like a deliberate attempt to blot out whatever she was feeling just after she'd hung up.

6
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

Kim Shin-rock’s performance does lift the intrigue and complexities of her character to another level. I was a bit surprised at the beginning of this drama that she’s cast to play an apparent simple greedy woman when she’s capable to do much more. From this perspective, the drama certainly doesn’t disappoint as she turns out to be the mastermind of all. And her character is actually the most complex too.

6
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I don't think I've ever seen a character change like Hye-eun does -- almost every time she appears. She was the irritable partner in crime, the shady bad mother, the tragic HIV patient, the bewildered but sympathetic ex-wife, the icy femme fatale etc (not to mention the pampered little girl in ep1's opening scene). And she pretty much fooled me every single time, thanks to Kim Shin-rok's mad acting skilz.

9
reply

Required fields are marked *

Agree with this. No matter how much I hate Hye-eun's character, Kim Shin-rok is doing a very good job in portraying the complex character. Kudos to her!

8
reply

Required fields are marked *

Newly minted fan of this drama as only having watched Ep 1-11 in just the last few days. To me, the most poignant moment is Ro-hee planning her future with Myung-joon and Hee-ae in mind.

Let’s wish for a satisfactory ending!!

7
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I really hope that Ro-hee (may be with help from her lawyer, Taek-kyun) will find a way to acquit Myeong-jun from the kidnapping charges, and for Myeong-jun to officially and legally adopt her.

Therefore, Myeong-jun can become a legal guardian for Ro-hee, and for them, together with Hee-ae, to live happily ever after. Ro-hee will then get the loving paternal care she deserves from Myeong-jun. Not too sure if she will get along with Hee-ae but that's another story. :D

I still do not know what's Hye-eun's intentions, and on whether she's involved in Ro-hee parents murder. In any case, I really don't want her to be near MJ or Hee-ae anymore! She's a bad wife and especially a bad mother! Hee-ae doesn't deserve to have a mother like her. Whatever the outcome, I really hope that Hye-eun will stay away from MJ, Hee-ae and Ro-hee's life forever.

Another thing I am worried is Jaden. As long as he's still alive and free, Ro-hee's life will still continue to be in danger. I really hope that he will be arrested for all that he has done (especially the killings), or being deported back out of Korea or killed by his foreign big boss (which we might not know) for not able to complete his tasks, and will no longer be a threat to Ro-hee for the rest of her life.

2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I really hope that The Kidnapping Day will have a second season. I know the chance is slim, since this drama is based on a single novel which story has completed.

I just can't get enough of Myeong-jun and Ro-hee, I will surely miss them when the season ends next week.

2
0
reply

Required fields are marked *