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The Impossible Heir: Episodes 9-10

This week our illegitimate heir enters his sociopath era, showing us he’s capable of the unthinkable. Meanwhile, our incarcerated hero is saved from imminent doom only to re-spiral back into the web of his own making. As usual, the drama pulls all the stops while somehow making it “impossible” to get invested in any of it.

 
EPISODES 9-10

The Impossible Heir: Episodes 9-10

So, last week Tae-oh was lured out of his cell to meet an untimely demise, but when we meet him again he’s been rescue-napped. Where is he? Who saved him? Who is harboring a fugitive? It’s Chairman Kang! He has Tae-oh safe in his hidden lair, and this is hands-down the most fun the drama has ever been. *Applause*

When Tae-oh gets his color back the two come clean — Tae-oh that his plan was to give In-ha Kangoh with his takeover scheme, and Chairman Kang that he knew all along that that was why Tae-oh brought In-ha in. What’s curious is that the chairman has no problem syncing with Tae-oh again after this betrayal. And he goes along with all of Tae-oh’s maneuvers, which is basically Tae-oh trying to one-up his own master plan.

This plot point would track better if Tae-oh hadn’t just been ferociously out-played by In-ha, but oh well. Tae-oh x Chairman Kang is definitely the best part of this drama, and I’m happy to have them working together again with that inexplicable bond of theirs…

The power shift that started last week is in full formation now, and now it’s Tae-oh, Chairman Kang, and Hye-won versus In-ha and his pawns. Oh, he tries to make Hye-won into one of those pawns by locking her up in a mental institution.

After scaring her for a few days, she promises to do his bidding and he spares her life. Again, not great execution here, since the high stakes the drama tries to imbue fall flat when in one scene Hye-won’s petrified into becoming In-ha’s dog, and in the next she’s running off to Team Tae-oh and leaving her wedding ring behind. (Speaking of which, for a loveline that’s supposedly at the core of this drama and is our hero’s Achilles heel, our drama pays it exactly zero attention this week. In other words, we don’t get any insight at all on the lovers reuniting after near-death on both their parts. Did these scenes get sacrificed on the cutting room floor? Or do they just not exist at all?)

The takeover plan, as it turns out, is actually a tear-apart plan, and In-ha is going full steam ahead with it. Tae-oh realizes that the only way the chairman can win this play is to split up Kangoh before In-ha can get to it. And he’s willing to do it. Except — on one fateful evening — Chairman Kang is doing his usual wine and jacuzzi when In-ha bursts in. The charged encounter quickly turns violent, the chairman’s fake heart disease makes a resurgence (and seems real?), and then he falls into his jacuzzi. In-ha is happy to help him drown. And thus, In-ha enters his villain era.

The Impossible Heir: Episodes 9-10

But wait, is there prior villainy we weren’t privy to? Tae-oh’s been able to jog his memories of Murder Night and remembers a few important things. The real murderer with shoe chains, walking around the murder scene. In-ha smiling his evil smile. The escort’s phone coincidentally recording the entire thing.

This recording is just the proof that Tae-oh needs, so he rounds up the prosecutor who got burned by his case, and eventually convinces him to find the video evidence on the escort’s phone. He does this, and I’m wondering if they even investigated this case at all?

The video recording shows explicitly (and how many times must we rewatch it?) Mo Ki-joon killing In-joo and the escort and drugging Tae-oh. But now we see another person on the scene — and yep, it’s In-ha, surveying the scene. Well, there’s no way around that evidence, and a retrial quickly leads to an innocent verdict for Tae-oh. Woo! But wait, does this mean we don’t get Tae-oh in a hoodie and sweatpants anymore?

The Impossible Heir: Episodes 9-10

Now that Tae-oh’s a free man, it’s game on, and he sets the final portion of his plan in motion. Apparently, he’s set up a paper company which will be the final key to the Kangoh takeover, and by this point he’s assembled enough of a team to pull it off: hacker boy, Hye-won, his prison friend, etc. The paper company — Gold H Investments — makes quite a scene and we see our Kangoh people getting rather upset. Especially In-ha, who knows that something is fishy and it smells like Tae-oh.

In-ha is pushed to the sociopathic brink yet more, and he goes to visit Chairman Kang in the hospital. No, Chairman Kang did not die. Thankfully sorely underused character Hee-joo found her father half-drowned in time and he’s currently in ICU in a coma. Maybe for real this time? We actually don’t know. But what we do know is that the second he wakes up, he’s going to kick In-ha out of Kangoh once and for all. It would have happened already, you know, if his own son hadn’t tried to murder him. But no time like the present. In-ha decides to have another go at patricide, and as he reaches down to take off the chairman’s oxygen, someone grabs his hand. It’s a very truly horrified Tae-oh.

And that’s where we’re left with two episodes to go. The ~drama~, as ever, is cranked up to the max, but the bulk of the plot is still as unemotional as ever. A personal pet peeve of mine has been the script’s penchant for 30-second reaction scenes where we visit multiple POVs and get a single line of dialogue. It makes the drama feel even more choppy and disconnected. We also get a lot of Tae-oh staring moodily out the window, and In-ha glaring from the corner of his eyes. These guys are trying, but there’s not enough meat in this drama to hold up against any of it.

The Impossible Heir has a lot of work to do next week — well, if it wants to tie up all the loose ends, that is. All along we’ve been hinted that there is more than the primary conflict of taking over Kangoh. Case in point: Tae-oh’s monk mom and his origin story. Am I hoping for too much if I want the drama to bring that full circle? Dealing with In-ha’s character will be the bulk of things, but we also have Sung-joo’s greed, Hee-joo’s crush, Hye-won’s I-don’t-know-what, and a million other half-developments that were never fleshed out. Regardless, the finish line approaches, and since the drama gave me my favorite “hero on the run in a hoodie” trope this week, I’ll give it a pass till we wrap up.

The Impossible Heir: Episodes 9-10

 
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It's just so bad. It started with those 5 year time jumps, a love affair with no emotion, a duo of young masterminds with one becoming full psycho, etc. There's no heart in this.

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This drama has a major problem with pacing. It doesn't flesh out the scenes, characters and relationships that are pivotal to story. Instead there are a lot of scenes that don't lead anywhere and fall flat; like what was the entire point of Hyewon being betrayed by her mom, getting abducted and forced into a mental institution, if the whole thing is resolved with 20 minutes? I got whiplash.
Also it's really a bad choice to not introduce your main character's back story until the final few episodes, if everything he does is motivated by that back story. If I don't know why Taeoh is wasting his life on this mission to make Inha the head of Kangoh, I'm really not going to be invested.
Also Taeoh and Hyewon are very boring together, Taeoh and Heejoo have a better click.

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It's crazy how this drama is so badly written... After 10 episodes, we still don't know why Tae-Ho started everything, what he wanted to gain... Being the dog of In-Ha seems very low when he was so smart and get the same things alone...

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I can't really be surprised by anything in this drama, but in the end I still wondered why Tae-oh looks so surprised and horrified when he sees that In-ha wants to switch off the oxygen. By now, even Tae-oh should have realised what In-ha is capable of.

Surprisingly, these two episodes were quite entertaining - once you've come to terms with the fact that you can't have any expectations.

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Surprisingly, these two episodes were quite entertaining - once you've come to terms with the fact that you can't have any expectations.

Same. I've surrendered to the inanity and passively enjoyed watching this fall apart even more, which I would not previously have thought possible. I have also come to appreciate how astoundingly terrible Hong Su-zu is. She's the Meryl Streep of bad acting, or of simply not acting. She’s like one of those jointed artist’s mannequins stuck in an endless series of unlifelike poses. When she 'emotes' by standing stock-still, perfectly upright with her arms clamped to her sides and chin tucked in, I just have to admire the self-restraint involved in so totally failing to resemble a human. The only thing that breaks the spell is that I keep expecting either LJW or LJY to tuck her under his arm and carry her like a cardboard cut-out from one scene to another, so it comes as a shock that she can walk on her own.

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I hope you are writing these recaps in a hoodie because then you too would be a HOTRIAH (Hero On The Run In A Hoodie) for making it through this show and finding a moment of joy in it. I applaud your efforts @missvictrix!

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Perhaps i should for the finale!

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Lol. Great recap!!!
“Hye-won’s I-don’t-know-what” - tsk tsk. Sipping tea and staring outside the window planning something which we as audience have no idea about.

I strangely cheered that a magic recording appeared in a phone. Funny that they cleaned up the evidence but these videos were saved in the secret folder which Tae Oh knows exactly how to find 😂😂
I wanted Tae Oh to be free and free he is.
Next up, us audience. We shall all be free next week.

I can’t tell if chairman’s heart disease is real or fake anymore. It will be hilarious if they reused the same technique twice and someone fell for it the second time around. I hope he stays alive, his fashion is the only entertainment for me. So for that I hope he lives.

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Something about this drama feels like a try hard. I feel like it's trying so hard to be like one of those makjangs but is failing so hard in the storytelling and acting department 😅😩 it's just so bad.

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I have never been able to watch dramas with thriller elements but I have been able to continue watching this because it is so toned down. While it is ridiculous in many ways, I have still enjoyed watching it.

When the drama started with the blood splattered Taeoh scene I thought it was how he had framed his step dad and freed his mum and was put in at that point to show that he was capable of using his brain to manipulate situations in his favour from a young age. However, once I realised it couldn’t have been about his mum and we saw the context of the actual scene mid way through the story, I don’t understand why this scene was shown at the start of the story rather than the actual trap Taeoh set up for the step dad.

We have been fed information throughout the drama that both boys had horrific experiences from an early age that led to them being emotionally detached. Violence was always Inha’s approach to people who got in his way and using intellect to cause damage to enemies was Taeoh’s approach, but we have never seen either of them genuinely happy when their actions have been successful. I don’t know if they both thought the end game would be the point when life would start to be fun for them.

The unanswered questions for me are:
What happened to Inha’s mum?
How many wives did the chairman have? Inha is the only illegitimate child yet the chairman’s oldest son clearly had no mother on the scene either.
What happened to Taeoh’s birth dad? Did his step dad die/stop chasing after him? Taeoh’s face was all over the news so it would have been easy for the step dad to get him killed in prison as he seemed to be a gang leader of some sort.
Why did Taeoh want to work with Inha and why would Inha want to be used for anyone’s benefit? Inha would always see Taeoh as a risk as he has the brains to steal power from Inha at a later date.
Why didn’t the chairman divorce the second wife and disown her son when they showed their true colours the last time he was hospitalised? Why is the chairman’s wife acting as the grieving wife when everyone knows why she was banished?

I am looking forward to seeing how this all ends and hope enough loose ends are tied up for it to be a satisfying end to the drama they made despite it not being the one we all think it could have been.

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I have only been reading the increasingly more frustrated and disdainful comments on this drama but have been wondering how does this kind of casting happen when an actor’s (a Q mark over the actor part) looks seem to ostensibly determine the casting in a drama which seemed prestigious before the word got out. How? Or was it that someone owed someone a favour and she was the beneficiary? Or this project was doomed because of the terrible script and it didn’t matter who they cast but then how did LJW and LJY ended up in it? Did they choose to do this or got forced into it? I wish the Korean actors were able to dish about such goings on and could at least throw some light on the situation even years down the line. As it is, no one will ever know unless they are part of that community.

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hong suzu's casting is something bcs I think you could consider her a rookie actress - and usually in these scenarios, you would get the "she beat the competition through audition" storylines. I dont if that was the story the production told but if it was.... I would question their audition. she's not exactly a young actress either (not trying to be ageist here at all.. its just that we are used to seeing this type of ""not experienced"" casting for younger actors and she's older than both leading men). this drama is a mess now, but it was planned to be some high-profile project - the rest of the cast shows it. I can only imagine she has a lot of strong connections to land this role

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Dropped the drama, but these recups are a blast.
"In-ha decides to have another go at patricide" just about killed me (and luckily, not the chairman)

Good pn Tae Oh for summuning the business drama avengers, I guess.

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‘ the business drama avengers’ that’s the phrase we need for the crew who should be coming to our screens soon in Queen of Tears. Aunt and her detective agency ex loan shark boss, Hyunwoo and his lawyer buddy, and Haein and her secretary. Nice even split of genders and across the board skillset should be a fun watch executing their plan and watching all the evil ones falling like dominoes.

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oh my god, thats a whole business cinematic universe 🤣

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