![]() Finally Ri-Jin body slams Do-Hyun to the ground and the crazy woman is captured. Do-Hyun lets the crazy woman go because he believes her (it shows flashbacks from the airport where the dialog Ri-Jin had with her brother makes it sound like she’s crazy) and restrains Ri-Jin. The crazy woman (played by Kim Seul-Gi from Surplus Princess) says that Ri-Jin is her patient while Ri-Jin says the same thing about her. It’s Ri-Jin, who sees Do-Hyun and the crazy woman and runs over to them. ![]() ![]() Do-Hyun politely declines but then the woman freaks out and says one of her insane patients just came into the club and is looking for her. She gives him a card with the implication she wants to have sex with him. Surprise, its Paradise.Īs Do-Hyun mopes around the club by himself a strange woman comes up into him and tells him that she’s a psychiatrist and can tell he has issues. Meanwhile at the hospital Ri-Jin works at once of their patients escapes and leaves clues around her room where she went. This is from Misaeng, but he looks identical in both shows. Ki-Joon also introduces him to a sexy employee of the company and it’s shown that Do-Hyun had a thing for her in the past. Do-Hyun isn’t allowed to drink alcohol since it encourages Se-Gi to emerge so he sits there sipping water. Ki-Joon has plans to to take over the company himself. Ki-Joon invites Do-Hyun to a welcome party held at a club called Paradise, where you can tell almost immediately they have an icy relationship. Later on Do-Hyun arrives at his grandmother’s who makes him a vice president of ID, a company within the main company where he’ll be working under Fany’s new love, Oh Min-Seok (who we just saw in Misaeng) who plays Cha Ki-Joon, president of ID. Ri-Jin is a young psychiatrist which is important for obvious reasons. Once they get off the plane we find out that the guy Do-Hyun talked to is the brother of the female lead, Oh Ri-Jin played by Hwang Jung-Eum. ![]() While on the plane Do-Hyun asks someone seated next to him where they’re headed when suddenly the PA on the plane says to get ready to land in Incheon. I can get behind this.ĭo-Hyun really doesn’t want to go back to Korea but as Se-Gi he informs his grandmother he’ll be returning to take over the family business. His parents were killed in a “mysterious car accident” and then his house was burnt down. The cause of Do-Hyun’s mental problem is a traumatic event that occurred when he was a child. I forgot to mention this important detail. I didn’t write this down while watching the first episode so I could be wrong with the details but I’m pretty sure that’s the gist of it. Do-Hyun’s grandmother is in charge of this huge business and she decides it’s time for him to return to Korea and learn the trade. The “Main-Character-Starts-in-a-Foreign-Country-but-Must-Return-to-Korea-to-Take-Over-the-Family-Business” trope is a tired one and unfortunately it’s used here. Because of the trouble Se-Gi gets into, Do-Hyun often wakes up and finds himself in various dangerous situations such as being dunked in a big water tank. However, later that night he returns as Se-Gi and returns the favor. Do-Hyun tries to intervene on a white guy beating the shit out of his Korean wife (you know ‘Murricans) only to get beaten up himself. We see that while Se-Gi is a violent thug he isn’t exactly evil. When Se-Gi emerges Do-Hyun suddenly wears eyeliner, gets red tattoos, and has a trademark finger tapping thing he does. However, Do-Hyun suffers from multiple personality disorder (MPD) and the primary one that emerges to this point is Se-Gi. “Please support the people who fight against the mines.” All of the various school clubs try to get his support including the Goats for Africa club, The “Minority” (Gay) Club, and the Save the Alaskan Polar Bear Club. He is a star football player and involved with the student government. The main character, Cha Do-Hyun played by Ji Sung is living in the United States where he is a popular student and generally perfect in every way. The first episode had some of the most unintentionally hilarious shit I’ve ever seen including some of the most cringey white people cameos. Of course that’s a little stupid considering the idea was already unoriginal, but I digress. In fact there’s even controversy surrounding the two dramas as the, “Jekyll, Hyde, Me” creator has accused the, “Kill Me, Heal Me” writer of stealing his idea. At Club K-Drama we strive to bring you nothing but the latest recaps of Korean dramas featuring people with fucked up mental issues, so on that note I started watching, “Kill Me, Heal me.”Īs usual I went into this knowing next to nothing except the main character has multiple personality disorder, just like another drama we’re watching.
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