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Queen of Tears: Episodes 1-2

After an almost two-year period between its announcement and premiere, the drama of the year is upon us! Queen of Tears hits us with tropes, meta, humor, and wistfulness, as its lead couple begins an uncertain journey toward reigniting their burnt out romance.

 
EPISODES 1-2

I apologize in advance for the person I’m going to be throughout this drama’s run. My oppa is back in dramaland, he’s in his suit era, and his forehead appears a lot more times than it did in his last few roles. I’m living in my answered prayers, y’all! There’s no way I can be normal about this.

For a drama about what happens after happily ever after, it’s only fitting that we begin at the beginning of happily ever after: the wedding of the century between our salaryman hero, BAEK HYUN-WOO (the amazing Kim Soo-hyun), and chaebol heiress, HONG HAE-IN (Kim Ji-won). *Wipes happy tears from my seat in the audience — and then swoons and almost dies from the sweetness of their honeymoon montage.* Seriously, we had a dozen different kisses in less than six seconds! And as for the dreamy “how they met” story, we got a full rom-com plot within a few minutes.

They met back when Hae-in was an intern at her family-owned Queens department store — as in the usual chaebol rite of passage before ascending the throne. She had a problem with the copier and Hyun-woo appeared as a knight in rolled-up sleeves to fix it. A series of weaponized copier incompetence later, and Hyun-woo fell for Hae-in. Things were good between them until Hyun-woo found out that Hae-in is not just the queen of his heart — she’s the queen of Queens! Noble idiocy followed with him resigning and ghosting her, and they eventually had a last minute reunion after she went to fetch him from his hometown with a helicopter. Cue: their marriage, and the end credits of our trope reversal rom-com.

Queen of Tears: Episodes 1-2

When we meet Mr. and Mrs. Hong Hae-in three years later (our current timeline), their relationship has soured. I mean, constant digs at each other and sleeping in different rooms kinda sour. But to quell Hyun-woo’s gold-digging rumors, Hyun-woo and Hae-in keep up the happily married act with tell-all interviews — where Hae-in chops apples like she’s chopping gossipy netizens’ fingers. Our ice queen is so unnerving! Then again, oppa likes his women a little feisty.

Starting from the “how we met” story to their current soured romance, it has always been a he-said-she-said retelling when it comes to Hyun-woo and Hae-in’s relationship. From Hyun-woo’s point of view, he might have become the legal director of Queens’ Group, but his opinion does not count at work. It’s the same story at home with his in-laws. He has the thankless job of cleaning up after the Hong family’s mess, they dictate every aspect of his life — and worse, he feels that Hae-in doesn’t care about how her family treats him.

Hyun-woo has always been the expressive one in the relationship, so he’s vocal about his pain and frustration with Hae-in. You can almost see the “save me” plea written with neon lights on his forehead. Frustration leads to drinking, and drinking leads to Hyun-woo doing what Kim Soo-hyun does best: crying. He is really the funniest and most adorable drunk ever! This entire drunken sequence was funny, and the appearance of the actors who played Yoon Se-ri’s assistant and insurance agent in Crash Landing on You as Queens Group’s scandal prevention team made it all the more hilarious. (Random fun reminder: Se-ri’s father’s company was also named Queens Group.)

Hae-in’s father lives by the mantra: “Never bid farewell to those who abandon you. You should stab them in the back,” and this is the singular reason Hyun-woo hasn’t filed for a divorce. He is not ready to get stabbed in the back by his father-in-law, and I just about died of laughter when he shuffled out of Daddy Hong’s office backwards. Three suffocating years of living with three generations of the Hongs and their other extended family members eventually makes Hyun-woo seek out a psychiatrist (cameo by Oh Jung-sae for a Tae brothers’ reunion). Hyun-woo is diagnosed with extreme stress levels, and the only solution is for him to get a divorce. (I’d have recommended the Queen of Divorce team to him, but those guys are terrible at their job.)

For a breather, Hyun-woo dips out of an appointment with Hae-in to visit his hometown. The Queens may rule Seoul, but in Yongdu-ri, Hyun-woo’s family and their 35 cows are kings. In contrast to the cold and gloomy atmosphere at Queensville, there’s so much warmth and vibrancy in the Baek family house — and I’m not just talking about the difference in color palettes between both locations. Hyun-woo is in the most relaxed state we’ve seen him in, and with the way he wolfs down his lunch, you’ll think he was starving at the Hongs’.

Hyun-woo’s family scolds him for being absent at Daddy Baek’s 60th birthday — because he and the other male in-laws were on kitchen duty at Grandpa Hong’s late wife’s memorial service on that same day. But the scolding ends when Hyun-woo drops the divorce bomb on them. His mom is all for her son’s happiness, but his dad and siblings try to talk him out of it — especially his siblings because of the financial benefits they get from his marriage. And at this point, I am thoroughly exhausted on Hyun-woo’s behalf. Let this man breathe!

Queen of Tears: Episodes 1-2

Hyun-woo returns home to serve Hae-in with the divorce papers, but she beats him to the surprise punch. She’s dying! What? Apparently, Hae-in has been experiencing headaches and memory lapses for a while, and a visit to the doctor — the appointment Hyun-woo brushed off — confirmed her condition: Cloud Cytoma, a rare form of brain tumor. Progressed symptoms of the condition include hallucinations or personality disorders, and to top it all, there’s no cure. Hae-in already experiences hallucinations, and the doctor estimates that she has three months left. Just like that! Oh, Park Ji-eun writer-nim, I did not sign up for terminal illness.

We’re dipping into Hae-in’s point of view now, and things are beginning to make sense. At an earlier appointment, Hyun-woo thought Hae-in stood him up on purpose. But it turns out that she had one of her memory lapses and she forgot! When she eventually showed up, he had already left. Hae-in might put up an icy exterior, but underneath all of that is a woman who still cares about her husband. She is not as warm and as expressive as Hyun-woo is, so she may not stand up for him — in his presence — in front of her family. But she’ll go behind his back to beat up her younger brother, HONG SOO-CHEOL (Kwak Dong-yeon), for disrespecting her husband. She will stop her mom from barging into Hyun-woo’s office to scold him, and she sure as hell won’t sit back and listen to her business rival chatting shit about her man.

Hyun-woo feels isolated — and rightly so — in the midst of the Hongs, but in a way, Hae-in feels the same way. She’s just better at hiding her emotions because she grew up in the family and she’s used to them. From bits and pieces of the conversations at home, it seems like Hae-in lost a sibling, and her mom blames her for it. This incident is probably tied up in the trauma that manifests in Hae-in’s hallucinations. Hae-in is dealing with so much internally, and it’s quite depressing that she can’t confide in her family because they have a business relationship. She’s dying, but all she can think about is hiding her diagnosis from her family because she’s convinced that they will kick her out and fight over her assets while she’s still alive. Sigh. Like her husband, my good sis also has the “save me” plea written on her forehead — but with a pencil.

Queen of Tears: Episodes 1-2

Hyun-woo is shocked to hear that Hae-in is dying, but his primary emotion is joy because he just needs to hold out for three months, and then he can be free from the marriage without the hassle of a divorce. Oh no! Unfortunately, you can never make me hate this man, so I find Hyun-woo’s attempts to fake sadness and concern for Hae-in amusing — even though he’s so wrong for this. But I can most definitely give his best friend and drinking buddy, KIM YANG-GI (Moon Tae-yoo), the side eye for advising Hyun-woo to use the three months to win Hae-in over so that she can include him in her will. This is emotional manipulation at its finest! What is Hyun-woo even thinking? Shouldn’t he know better than to divulge Hae-in’s diagnosis to someone else after she specifically warned him to keep it to himself? Tsk.

It’s ironic how Hyun-woo spent his entire marriage having to prove that he is not a golddigger, but now that the end is in sight, he has decided to wear that gold-digging cloak. Hyun-woo enters his loving husband era — and while his actions amuse me, it’s also sad because he’s doing all of this for the wrong reasons. Hae-in is totally uncomfortable with her husband’s sudden attention, and she tells him to just act like he always has. By the way, elevators might just be BaekHong’s special place because that’s where Hae-in reveals the cracks in her walls and subtly conveys her hurt and resentment for Hyun-woo.

Hae-in suspects that Hyun-woo has an ulterior motive for his sudden change in attitude, but when she discovers that he has been secretly looking into how long terminal patients can live past their given date of death — for selfish reasons, of course — she’s touched by his concern. “Don’t worry. I’m not going to die that easily for your sake,” she assures him. This sounds like a threat to Hyun-woo, and it sucks because Hae-in is actually feeling hopeful for the first time since her diagnosis thanks to his faux concern.

To further complicate BaekHong’s romance — or what is left of it — hotshot investor, YOON EUN-SEONG (Park Sung-hoon), returns to Korea. Eun-seong is Hae-in’s ex, and he’s the key to launching the luxury brand that she wants to bring to Queens department store. For someone who supposedly no longer loves his wife, Hyun-woo feels totally uneasy with Eun-seong’s reappearance in Hae-in’s life. It doesn’t even help that Eun-seong is invited to the Hong family’s hunt, and he fits right in with them — in a way that Hyun-woo has never done. If jealousy is one of the tools this drama wants to use to wake Hyun-woo up to the realization that he still loves Hae-in, it seems to be working.

Everyone disperses to their assigned corner of the grounds to secure their prey, and Hyun-woo and Hae-in go their separate ways as well. Unfortunately, Hae-in gets stuck in another hallucination episode — right as a wild boar charges at her in what seems to be a premeditated incident. *Gasp!* Proving that he will never stop being Hae-in’s white knight, Hyun-woo appears at the nick of time to gun down the boar before it attacks his wife — and this marks his first ever kill on a hunting trip with the Hongs! Hae-in’s hallucination fades as she stares at her husband in shock/relief/admiration? And with this, we come to the end of our premiere week.

Wow! This was one long ass set of episodes. I will never say no to extra extra Kim Soo-hyun minutes, but it was a wise choice to not watch both episodes at a stretch. I know this production has cast half the K-drama industry to bring in the drama, but my first thought when I saw the second episode’s runtime was: I hope these guys have enough story to fill up the rest of the episodes. That said, I absolutely loved the Queen of Tears premiere! The premise is interesting, and so far, the execution has been fun — but not too fun that we forget that we’re dealing with a couple in crisis.

Queen of Tears: Episodes 1-2

I find the show’s use of the point of view storytelling fascinating, and I think it’s one of the things that’ll pull me back when I’m tempted to lean into team Hyun-woo or team Hae-in. The whole point is to not take sides, because both their feelings are valid and they seem to be jointly responsible for the breakdown of their relationship. Watching the epilogues and seeing how confident Hyun-woo and Hae-in were about their love makes me wonder at what point — and why — everything began to go wrong.

In this miscommunication sandwich that the drama has prepared for BaekHong, it feels like they are both operating under assumptions about each other, and being influenced by external forces. Hyun-woo and Hae-in are too wrapped up in their individual struggles that they fail to see that the other person is struggling, too. This is why couples are encouraged to pursue healthy communication and take each other’s feelings into consideration. But K-drama couples would rather convulse and die than do so. Speaking of which, I am a big non-fan of the terminal illness trope. There’s 1001 ways to go about mending a broken relationship without involving terminal illness or impending death. But oh well.

Hyun-woo and Hae-in have pulled me in with the subtlety of their gestures, their vulnerability and emotional turmoil, and those little moments where the feelings they still have for each other resurface. I’m heavily invested in these two, and if the title is anything to go by, we’re in for a hilarious but also emotional ride with BaekHong. Officially, I’ll be tuning in each week to see how the rediscovery of their romance pans out. But unofficially, I’m here for my weekly dose of oppa, Hae-in’s outfits, and the meta of cameos, reunions, and dramaverse crossovers.

Queen of Tears: Episodes 1-2

 
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Finished episode 1 but I don't think I can make it through the beginning of episode 2. I am unable to relate to the husband. Clearly the couple had an enormous amount of miscommunication and she has the health issues. He's a psychopath for being gleeful about his wife and lover dying. The redemption arc for the husband is too unbelievable after witnessing those scenes. Dropping this after episode 1.

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I'm contemplating on dropping it too after ep.2.
That reaction was definitely psycho and I kept thinking how she will feel when she finds out.

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It's interesting but I'm not sure how long I will be tuning in for. So in 1st ep I didn't take sides because it was clear both carries a lot of heartache and they are at fault to what's going on in their marriage. But that scene in ep. 2 where Hyun-Woo reacted to her diagnosis that way threw me off. Like I can't see past that reaction like no human being letalone a husband should react in such a heartless manner. So reading comments about how funny that was or how we should understand it's dark humour is just rubbing ke off the wrong way. I must be living I'm a different planet, I guess.

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I gasped when I saw the scene and my first thought was wow how will they be able to keep the audience connected with a character who behaves like that? Very risky scene. However, because it's a K-drama I have seen this before, it is just unusual for it to be both leads who present as terrible. See exhibit A for the usual trope - parents who are out of order; The good bad mother/Welcome to Samdalri/ Today's webtoon. See all other dramas where there is a nightmare character who is given an opt out with an illness or some other redemption card.

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@unit thanks for the weecap (aka fan girl in the house). This drama was always going to divide beanie land. I am hoping to be one of the beanies left standing when the dust settles on 28th April and we see where the writer took us.

There were parts that made me gasp in shock that the writer went there, laugh out loud, because it was hilarious, sweat because something could come back to bite a character, sit up because the story intrigued me and swoon because how good looking are these people?

I am loving it so far, looking forward to the next episode drop and wondering why is a week so long?

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There definitely are moments in both episodes when I gasped at the absolute audacity of the writer 😂

so many great takes but you just wrote the perfect summary to the premiere week 🫡

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Thank you. Audacity is the perfect word for those scenes🤣 They must have had so much fun in the writing room and the actors must have been going all out to make sure they had their parts secured as soon as they read the script.

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LOL trust PJE to have the whackiest and daring scripts. I still remember the whole Lee Seung-gi/Yoo Jae-suk “clean image club” angle she pulled in Producers. Oh and the JYP trying to get out of Suzy being roped in for 1N2D 😂 So many jaw dropping moments here, and we’ve literally just started!

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Pretending to freeze on zoom was hysterical. The club all trying to out do each other with their donations and volunteering. Both were unique elements in the drama. I am loving dipping in and out of The Producers as a palate cleanser. It is the consistency of the humour alongside the sadder elements that makes it stand out as a quality watch/rewatch.

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@reply1988 Producers is such a great drama! It holds up so well despite being almost a decade old! I haven’t rewatched it in a while but I’m really tempted to now. Some absolute gems and PJE really maximized the star cameo parade. It’s so hard to write cameos in a way that doesn’t waste someone’s presence. She did that flawlessly (even in QOT!)

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Nothing wrong with the leads' acting really... but not enough charisma to capture this picky ajumma's short attention span. Ajumma feels very sorry for herself not being able to join in the excitement.

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I'm not enamored with this show, but it's different and a little peculiar so I'm curious to see more.

Kim Ji Won is completely convincing in her ice queen role. Loved her outfits. She has a good RBF (lol like me). I'm glad we got the perspective from both Hyun Woo and Hae In. I felt for Hae In more during the second episode. Got a ways to go before I believe in their romance and that they belong together though.

I would have preferred a shorter episode length and hope the episodes aren't so bloated in the future. Lots of various characters. The boar attack was an action thriller ending I wasn't expecting. It felt out of place.

I haven't seen much of Park Sung Hoon, but he's giving villain vibes. No SLS from me.

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Yes, sometimes storytelling can benefit from short episodes. Although you may end up with more episodes, each one is easier to appreciate and digest.

If they are too long, it can feel like reading a run-on paragraph, where you are confused and can't remember what happened at the beginning.

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I'm really enjoying this drama. Not sure if I would consider it a rom-com - or else Hyun-woo's psychopathic reaction to Hae-in's diagnosis would be too terrible. Even for someone that I resented, I would still feel a pinch of pain in memory of the good times. I agree that it's more of a black comedy and Kim Soo-hyun has been great delivering on the comedy. I also love the role-reversals in this drama. It was a great way to call out the inequitable expectations and the invisible labor of women during these memorials.

I'm curious about how many women there are in this family to have so many male in-laws. The grandpa seemed to only have had 2 kids - chaebol dad with the 2 kids and childless chaebol aunt (who is an absolute scene-stealer).

Episode 2 puts me on Hae-in side. My heart bleeds for lonely heroines, even when it's their attitude that keeps people at bay. I really want her to find some genuine to talk to and find someone who welcomes her existence. Kim Ji-won has been fantastic at showing Hae-in's vulnerability

It's hilarious to see Kwak Dong-yeon as the little brother beaten by big sis Kim Ji-won when he had previously played her cheating boyfriend whom she beats up in Fight My Way.

The only thing I'm really not feeling is the matchmaker who seems to want the couple to break up so she could arrange a match that no one in the Hong family seems to be asking for.

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Yes, thanks for pointing out the two things stood out for me; the number of men in the kitchen and noticeable absence of women in the memorial service and the men all being married to minor characters, aka the cousins. Did the man standing at the gate in the rain have multiple wives and they all gave birth to girls?

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I am not sure why the female lead needed to be dumped on with so many problems in life.
Resentful mother favoring younger brother,
trauma from siblings death, internal chaebol family politics, external threat to life and now terminal illness. That's a whole lot of excuses for her to be absolved of her responsibility in souring the marriage. She keeps mentioning he never sided with her as he looks on shocked, which could mean she has been forgetting all his good gestures already, owing to her illness.

Meanwhile, male lead's suffering is rendered inconsequential, coz obviously who cares about an abused sil and cold shouldered husband when wife has so many problems in her life and now terminal illness. Not only that, he also gets thrown under the bus for the sake of some dark comedy when he sees his wife's death as the only way out of this insufferable marriage.

Not a fan of such polarized writing where one character's suffering is used for dark comedy and another's is treated seriously.

They better do a flip and present another
perspective from ml. They really did him dirty in
episode 2.

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If Hae-In's heart didn't flutter from that ending scene, I know mine was! I cannot wait for more!!

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It took me longer than it should have to complete my watch of these episodes- they really are long. But even though I had no idea that this would include a 'fatal illness' element (which I did not expect) it definitely holds my interest. The story is really fairly tight and well written- with some mysterious back stories not just implied but positively telegraphed. I am hooked in part just to find out what happened in the past.

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QOT came kind of late onto my radar and I skipped the trailers had almost no idea about the plot other than we had a ‘mixed’ marriage (F chaebol/M commoner). The reveal at the end of episode one caught me totally off guard. I am fully onboard to see where this will go.

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I'm watching QOT in netflix. KSH never disappoints. Such a great actor as always. So far, so good. 'Will wait till ep16 to rate the drama.

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I heard this was a decent show and was ready for it fairly eagerly. I did not expect for this show to be this funny. The writing is outstanding! From broader comedic strokes of the psychiatrist calling his wife to tell her he loves her (and of course questioned and hung up on) to the scene of Hyun-woo sharing the terminal news of his wife and the plan (we were in the military for 2 years - 3 months is nothing!) to embrace his materialistic side to the group of 'Queen's Boys' in the kitchen.

But the topper and my personal award to the funniest scene in Kdrama of 2024 (and looking to be made a fool of by Chicken Nugget or anything else) is the misinterpretation of Hyun-woo' google searches.

This rom-COM is just shining so far!

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I love this!
I love how Hyun Woo is just like any other kdrama FL in every sense of the word. I love how everything about him and his relationships and his ways are sooo "classic". It almost feels like a family drama. LOL
And I love that Hae In is cold, and has a very "unique" way of thinking, but isn't particularly mean. At least not on purpose.

I really like most of the characters, even the "bad guys" (Idk who's actually "good" in this show, tho). So far my favorite is the auntie, she's hilarious.

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Sorry from the start I am telling our hero he needs to run and keep running. I am not sure the wife and her family are human.

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