![]() ![]() His part is mysterious so far and what’s his deal?! (obviously there’s the typical “they all share a trauma from childhood” thing being hinted at. Park Seo Joon - I love him and it’s awesome to see his face in this.Can they please have more kissing moments? Asking for a friend. The idea that she loves multiple people including an alter adds that tension and I’m living for that. ![]() I really like the chemistry between the leads which is obviously the drama’s strength.There are things about it that are interesting, but it definitely has some cringe-y moments too. Shockingly enough, I don’t hate it like I thought I would so far. I’m on episode 6 of Kill Me Heal Me Everyone! If it had been, my overall feelings about it would be more pleasant. The show should have been 16 episodes period. I ended up fast forwarding a TON by episode 10. ![]() I mean it was a bonkers amount of filler. I mean, the childhood ones were the most annoying but there would be a romantic moment and one minute later they would flashback to it. I watched Goblin, and Kill Me Heal Me had twice the amount of flashbacks, no three times the amount and that says a lot. Oh the flashbacks: In line with that, because they dragged the secret out, they show the child flashbacks over and over and over and over again. Let’s focus on the healing and mental health! Giving them amnesia is the lazy way of saying “our secret is so easy to guess so we simply removed your memories.” And even when they slowly (and I mean SLOWLY) reveal the secrets they are bungled up and there are false reveals and everyone is freaking out for no reason…I dunno, really it could have all been resolved in the first 10 episodes. They have a childhood secret and everyone knows bits and pieces and yet, no one wants to tell anyone anything and instead the show relies on repetitive flashbacks that aren’t entirely interesting. That’s really what in the end, made me give up on the show at episode 17. My main issue is the chaebol family secret being dragged out for 20 episodes. ![]() She lived for him and serving him which I didn’t enjoy. I was ok with her moving in to help him (I know, that’s not like me at all but I love forced co-habitation), but as time moved on it seemed like all she was doing was following him around and kinda lost herself. I wish they had focused on the nuance acting he is so good at. He was SUPER GOOD at playing a female high schooler, but for comedic moments they rely on “isn’t it funny how girly this man is being (code for gay)” jokes especially when she tries to kiss the brother. I did not like the female alter and the way she was portrayed. Ji Rin’s family is everything I want in a k-drama family: supportive, loving and fun. Park Seo Joon was the best part of the show for me, but what can I say? Dude can act and he’s a total cutie. I was totally here for him having to heal through therapy sessions (though even though he promised one hour sessions a day with Ri Jin he didn’t really do them which is a bummer.) I wish they had spent way more time on his mental illness and healing, than they spent on the family drama. But it seemed to honor the illness in a way that didn’t poke fun at it. In fact, I think for k-drama purposes they did a good job. I was surprised that I was not bothered by the way the mental illness was portrayed. Like I was super into that ship over the main one if I’m honest even if he was a bit troubled. The leads had great chemistry and I liked watching Oh Ri-Jin and Se Gi together the most. I really liked the first 5 or 6 episodes actually a lot because they were establishing his mental situation. He almost even dated her.Originally posted by paper-box What I liked about Kill Me Heal Me: She is a psychiatrist but quite transparent in her intentions. What caused him to have multiple personalities? Why did his mind have to create seven personalities to suppress his past? What terrible things happened that he can’t remember now?Īn annoying woman appears in the life of this man who is torn apart. He quietly seeks medical help and is diagnosed with Dissociative Identity Disorder. But the split personality turns out to have splintered into a third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seven personalities. But the problem is that he will have no recollection of what happened while he was in a rage. His alter ego’s uncontrollable anger will explode after being suppressed in his subconscious. It was difficult for him to deal with his childhood trauma so he created another personality to cope with his pain! Here is one man living in a Dystopian world. ![]()
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