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The Auditors: Episodes 11-12 (Final)

Murders, betrayals, and twists dominate this finale as our heroes tackle their biggest case yet. As they investigate the top two people at their company, our auditors put their lives on the line to uncover the truth. Though others might not understand why they risk so much for their jobs, their work could mean life or death to some, which is why they won’t give up until every single rat is caught. It’s time to audit!

 
EPISODES 11-12

The last week of The Auditors kicks off with the death of the ex-president (aka, the eldest Hwang brother), but his supposed health crisis smells of foul play. Cha-il believes he was murdered, and the culprit is the one who is currently in control of the previous president’s slush funds. While the auditing team discovers how the money was siphoned — through a paper company in Florida — they don’t know if the owner is Se-woong or Dae-woong.

The entire auditing team works together in secret to catch the rat, including Seo-jin who puts aside her personal feelings in order to remain objective, and all their individual skills come together to solve the case in four days. (Even the gossiping auditor plays his part!) They learn that the new director of the outsourcing department is connected to the slush funds, and though on the surface Director Chae appears to work for Dae-woong, he actually got the position through Se-woong. Thus, the suspects list narrows down to one.

After getting confronted by Cha-il about the paper company, Director Chae leaves to meet his boss — just as our heroes planned. However, Cha-il underestimated his enemy since his trap turns into his grave. As our team leader follows the director into a construction site, both are knocked out by Se-woong who then sets the place on fire. It seems the president has fully embraced his villain-era.

Tied to a pillar and losing consciousness, Cha-il chokes on the smoke as the flames threaten to engulf him, but right then, Dae-woong appears to save the day. He takes Cha-il and Director Chae to the hospital, and though the doctor warns Cha-il to stay for treatment, our hero has no time for rest. He needs to stop the funeral!

Our auditors arrive in time to block the procession, and Cha-il declares that the ex-president was murdered. He asks for an autopsy, which Se-woong objects for obvious reasons, but Cha-il’s target is not him — it’s the wife. Knowing exactly how to manipulate her, he accuses Dae-woong of killing the ex-president, and the wife falls for the bait. Having agreed to Cha-il’s plan beforehand, Dae-woong doesn’t bat an eye, and instead, he approaches the real murderer and goads him to lighten up.

Dae-woong returns to check on his boyfriend Cha-il and takes his frenemy to the hospital. Despite the others urging him to rest for a while longer, Cha-il gets back to work since their foe won’t wait, and unfortunately, our lead auditor is correct. Without missing a beat, Se-woong strikes the team first by stealing all of Director Chae’s documents and transferring Cha-il to the “support” department (i.e., an abandoned office in the basement). Now the only course of action left for our heroes is to wait for the director to wake up, but even that option disappears when Director Chae passes away.

All goes according to Se-woong’s plan, and while the police detain Dae-woong for questioning, our villainous president holds an emergency board meeting to dismiss the vice president for embezzlement, bribery, and murder. Just as the motion passes with a majority vote, Dae-woong barges into the room and announces his own agenda: the dismissal of the president. On what grounds? The exact ones Se-woong accused him of committing.

Enter Cha-il and his crew — not as auditors, but as witnesses — and the same presentation plays over again, except this time, Dae-woong’s photos are replaced by the president. Se-woong demands Cha-il to prove his claims with evidence, so our team leader brandishes the records Director Chae left behind of all their dealings. Even cornered, Se-woong refuses to bend and tells the board that he used those secret funds for company projects. Since he never spent any of it personally, it does not count as malpractice before the law.

Cha-il agrees… if that were truly the case, and then switches the screen to a news outlet. The government official on Se-woong’s payroll holds a press conference blaming JU Construction’s president of bribing him, which means Se-woong did, in fact, use company money for personal gains. Accepting his loss, Se-woong turns to leave, but Cha-il stops him since he has one more point to discuss: the president is also a murderer.

Se-woong’s murder count is not one but two, and Cha-il plays a video of the president administering drugs into a comatose Director Chae. As the board clamors for an explanation, the supposedly dead director makes his grand appearance. He testifies against the president and tells everyone that he and Cha-il were attacked by Se-woong so they joined forces to trap him by faking his death.

Continuing this momentum, Cha-il then reveals that Se-woong also killed his older brother using the same method he tried on Director Chae. With this, the board completely turns their back on the president and leaves the room. Alone with Se-woong, Cha-il asks why he hired him in the first place, and Se-woong tells him that he wanted to develop the company fairly and justly. However, he realized that the corruption was too deep-rooted, so he decided to fight evil with evil. He believes they operate under the same principle, but Cha-il calls him out on his excuses and labels him a rat.

After Se-woong is locked behind bars, Dae-woong visits him to ask about the eldest: was the incident a year ago really just an accident? Se-woong asserts that it was, but as the show flashes back to that fateful night, we learn the truth. The two brothers argued about how to manage the company, and when the eldest called Se-woong a snake even their father tossed aside, it broke their relationship. As a result, when the eldest collapsed and asked for help, Se-woong suffocated him, instead.

With the big bad taken down, things start to change around the company, starting with the new president Dae-woong. However, this also signifies Cha-il’s end, and though Dae-woong orders him to stay for another year, our auditor leaves with a bow. He then notifies his team of his resignation at his first and last afterwork party, and before he departs, Cha-il finally shares a bit about himself to Han-soo.

He tells the younger auditor that he risks his life for every case because once in his youth, he chose to believe his superior’s lie rather than trust his own judgement. That decision led to a construction site collapse where his father died, and from that day, Cha-il realized that audits meant dealing with people’s lives. He hopes for a future where trust prevails like Han-soo envisions, but until then, Cha-il advises him to view things without clouded eyes.

Though our hero may no longer exist inside JU Construction, Han-soo takes up his mantle as “mini Cha-il” and remains in the auditing department with a new goal in mind. Meanwhile, Seo-jin transfers to a different department to achieve her own dreams and continues having family dinners with Uncle Dae-woong. As for Cha-il, the world won’t leave him alone, and he takes his talents to a wider ocean to catch even bigger rats.

The Auditors was truly Shin Cha-il’s show, and while this may not have been his most memorable performance, Shin Ha-kyun was excellent as usual. The show never got too deep into any character or case, but in exchange, its brevity allowed for a quick and tightly-paced story. It was fun despite its many flaws, and overall, I enjoyed the highlights and found nothing too glaring or egregious. This definitely isn’t the drama to watch if you’re looking for believability or nuance, but as a breezy show to spend a few hours on, it had enough escapism and ridiculousness to capture my attention.

Granted, do I wish it could have been better? Of course, but I’ve already ranted about Han-soo enough and expressed my wishes to see Cha-il and Dae-woong’s relationship blossom sooner (the wasted potential). I knew from the first week that this show wasn’t going to be sweeping awards or earning accolades for its quality, but it had two strong leads in the form of its older cast and a bunch of fun special appearances throughout its run that were a delight. In the end, despite the title, the show really wasn’t about auditing or even company politics. It was an episodic investigative drama that was borderline police procedural without any of the legal consequences, and once you understood the tone, it played to expectations and delivered a lighthearted, albeit forgettable, watch.

 
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This was fine, lol. It was a Shin Ha Kyun study in shallow plot and characterizing with superb acting. Also Jin Gu's hair. It is too bad because this show is a could have been, but wasted potential with dramatics and gotchas. Numbers was better, ha.

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Well, for me Numbers was better only in the sense that there was a slight suspicion that the show wanted to be taken seriously, which made it a lot easier to ridicule. Of course, that was before I realized there were accountant libraries all over the world, in which young accountants met, flirted, and daily saved the global economy.

For this show, at least we know that wherever there is corporate corruption, wherever there is organizational injustice, wherever there is an embattled vice president with Samson's flowing locks, Shin Cha-il will be there!

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Morose, cynical, and ready to take down murderers, embezzlers, and the occasional nepo for hire.

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There were so many great hero walks in these episodes! Dae-ung charging into the burning building, Cha-il and Dae-ung with Director Chae on his back striding out of the fire, Cha-il with his two fav team members flanking him coming to reveal the murderer/slush fund owner! I love a hero walk so to have this many was perfect.

I am a little bummed the murderer was so predictable. I was hoping it was secretly the wife who was going to use her image as a mourning widow to get support and make a move for power. That’s okay, you can’t have everything and Se-ung is a perfectly acceptable villain. Interesting that they showed us the “accident” with his brother at the very end - it would have been cool to have a hint at that interaction ahead of time so we could stew over it a little more.

And speaking of things we found out at the very end - we finally got Cha-il’s backstory! That’s another thing it would have been nice to get a liiiiittle bit earlier so that we could understand his whole persona better. Other unrealized hopes: That Cha-il and Han-soo would meet somewhere in the middle of their two philosophies, alternatively that the message would be that it takes all kinds of people on a team to make it work and that they are stronger together, that Cha-il would stay at the company and be a bromantic thorn in Dae-ung’s side keeping him on the up and up.

Still though, I had a ton of fun watching this police procedural of an auditing drama, and I hope Jin Gu keeps the long hair for his next project too.

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Pretty formulatic in episode 11 with the standard fiery cliffhanger of danger. The device of a countdown clock to the funeral only accelerated the crumbs of information falling faster into the assumption machinery of Shin’s head. Of course (not) you can find immigration records with a single phone call. Of course (not) you can prove a trip to New York means you set up a slush fund with a student. Yes, the crime busting hijinx went into overdrive in the finale with a hospital trap (and a hospital faking a high profile death with no police questions) and continuing total lack of cooperation with the police in solving actual crimes. The board room shareholder meeting was procedurally butchered but when Shin arrived to the strains of an Old Western gunslinger music, everyone knew what would happen, real evidence or not. Throughout the series, suspending all rational belief was required just like in any other pure action Marvel film.

The Auditors was not a show about accountants, CPAs or even normal office workers. It may have been the wet dream fantasy of a burnt-out bookkeeper with super hero aspirations. All the characters were terribly one note and stayed in their lane which was a shame since a few of the actors could have pushed their roles. The mysteries were telegraphed and resolutions were deus ex machina. Cannot really recommend unless you like the super hero genre but I will not watch the teased Season 2.

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The Auditors had a good finish. The last two episodes were compelling. I was pretty sure Dae Woong was innocent especially when it came to the death of his brother. I held out on suspecting Se Woong though and had thought maybe someone else could have been the culprit behind the slush fund and the murder. The full reveal of Se Woong's villainy was absolutely chilling!

Dae Woong saving Cha Il was such a highlight!! Actually asking each other if they were okay. *cries* XD All of their scenes were magnetic. I liked it when they were on the same side and helping each other. I wish we had gotten more of that, but I also understand those scenes couldn't been too early or too much in the show to keep up with Dae Woong's ambiguity.

Manager Yeom and Director Yang were two pesky guys throughout the show, but I'm glad they didn't become evil and they were useful in the end.

Cracked me up seeing Han Soo with his hair up. Y'all know that means a character transformation.

Overall, this was a fine, easy drama. Got to watch some actors I haven't seen in a while. ^^

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All is well that ends well. This was a breezy and fun watch. I check my brain at the door before I start an episode. It is what it is and just enjoy it as breezy drama. Shin Ha Kyun and Jin Goo are my faves. The veteran cast carried the show for me.

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I thought the actors did a wonderful job with the plots they had to work with each and every episode. Even the minions and rude employees made this an enjoyable series.

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It ended just fine. Not nearly enough action scenes in the back half, but Beanies of the future, feel free to give it a try! It'll neither knock your socks off or disappoint terribly. It'll even make you laugh (intentionally or unintentionally) each and every episode.

The real standout comic star of this show for me was Baek Hyun-jin who played Yang Jae-seung, the VP's lackey. He was given the most simplistic lines, but he (especially with his always-unsure face and simpering hands) always played them to the greatest comic effect possible...ending with his ridiculous cheer-chant of joy when the VP was made President, "I'm happier than when my son got into university," he opines,"because this promotion means something about meeeee!"

Other highlights include the writer of the MUSIC for this show who knows exactly what an electric guitar is for and deserves all the money in the world for that skill. I just hope it's doesn't come from a secret slush fund...or else, 감사합니다!

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Agreed, Baek Hyun-jin was so funny in this, especially his mannerisms and delivery. I'm also assuming most of his jokes were ad-libs like the elevator scene.

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Baek Hyun-Jin was so funny! His ton of voice, his body comedy... he's really good in this kind of role.

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Yes! Baek Hyun-jin was a hoot. He is a great comic actor. I’d be interested to know about his background. He looked as if he had trained in clowning or traditional theatre.

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In the final shareholders’ meeting there is a shot of VP Lackey exaggeratedly turning his head in shock and I rewound it four times before I could stop laughing! I loved how he trailed off on almost every line he had in this show.

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You are spot on vis a vis Baek Hyun-jin’s performance. He played his role to all his strengths (shady, sleezy etc) with enough shtick to ultimately make him likable. An amazing feat.

What follows is for US folks of a certain age:
At time watching Baek Hyun-jin and Jin Goo together it was like watching an Abbot and Costello bit with Jin Goo being Bud Abbot (straight man) to Baek Hyun-jin’s Lou Costello.

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This show was quite disapointing and didn't give anything to Shin Ha-Kyun and Jin Gu to do except looking good in suit and the hair!

There was nothing surprising in the final, we understood who was the villain brother. But Dae-Woong as a president was really a bad idea too, he wasn't great using fear and violence, not respecting simple manners...

Lee Jung-Ha wasn't good in this role and his character was too immature.

For this theme, Numbers was way better!

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I can’t remember who said it but someone commented that the show was like the fever dream of a bored auditor written at work. Thanks whoever said that. As I watched I had that in the corner of my mind. It made me more forgiving thinking I was just watching someone’s wish fulfilment.

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Dae-woong looked so bereft when Cha-il said he wasn’t staying.

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Not to mention Han-soo's face in that restaurant when "dad" said he was leaving, and it was for the best that way.

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Who says Jin Goo's hair will not be memorable? LOL. I liked it. The actors sold it. As long as you remember its not really about auditing it is quite fun to watch Shin Ha Kyun go after the baddies and sniff out who was the REAL baddie!

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Well that was an interesting final two episodes.

I'm glad there's a happy ending for most of the characters.

But that was not a show about forensic accounting/accountants at all LOL!

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