Drama Taiwan Fated To Love You Sub Indo Transformer
§ as Ji Cun Xi 紀存希 - Ia putra tunggal Ji Family. Orang tuanya meninggal ketika ia masih kecil, ia keturunan ke sembilan keluarga JI, sejak kecil diasuh oleh neneknya Zhen Zhu (yang mengendalikan Ji Family), Ia tumbuh dewasa seperti seorang pangeran di keluarga kerajaan. Ketika ia tumbuh dewasa, Ji Cun Xi mengambil alih bisnis keluarga dan menjadi CEO di perusahaannya.
Fated To Love You (2014) Subtitle. Download Drama Korea Fated To Love You. Fated To Love You Nonton Online Fated To Love You (2014) Sub Indo.
Fated To Love You Korean Drama
Ia sangat tidak peka pada para bawahannya dan tidak bias bergaul dengan baik di depan public (tipe Bossy, sukanya nyuruh-nyuruh mulu), ia sangat mementingkan bisnisnya. Egois, kekanakan, angkuh. Sering membuat Xin Yi sedih dan terluka, namun akhirnya ia sadar yang ia cintai, Xin Yi, bukan Anna tunangannya. § as Anna - Gadis yang cantik, Cerdas, percaya diri, berkemauan keras. Memiliki kecantikan luar dalam, dia mempunyai luka kecil di lengan nya disebabkan latihan balet.
Dia pacar Cun Xi. Pernah ninggalin Cun Xi selama belasan kali karena lebih memilih karirnya, karena dia yakin Chun Xi tidak akan pernah meninggalkan nya. Selama di New York, Anna mengalami kecelakaan dan kembali ke negeranya tetapi ketika ia kembali semua telah berubah.
Seorang wanita sedang hamil anak Chun Xi dan telah menikah dengannya. Anna berjuang untuk mendapatkan kembali Chun Xidan melakukan apapun untuk menjauhkan Chun Xi dari sisi Xin Yi. Karena Flu Xin Yi memilih pergi ke kamarnya untuk tidur.
Nomor kamar sembilan jatuh jadi nomor enam dia malah salah masuk ke kamar Chun Xi. Xin Yi minum obat flu, tetapi obat tersebut malah membuatnya mabuk. Setelah 2 lelaki itu berhasil memasukkan obat perangsang ke dalam minuman Cun Xi, Cun Xi pun mulai merasa pening dan masuk ke kamarnya. Dibawah alam sadar mereka Cun Xi dan Xin Yi melakukan hubungan one night stand, karena suasana gelap Cun Xi mengira itu Anna, dan Xin Yi mengira itu pacarnya. Ketika mereka sadar satu sama lain, mereka langsung berteriak, tak lama setelah itu 2 laki-laki warga Jiang Mu memphoto Cun Xi, mereka spontan kaget ketika melihat perempuannya adalah Xin Yi, Xin Yi bergegas lari ke kamarnya, tetapi dikamarnya dia malah melihat pacarnya bermesraan dengan wanita lain.
Beberapa hari kemudian, setelah liburan di kapal pesiar, Xin Yi baru menyadari kalau Cun Xi adalah bosnya, dan mereka akhirnya berteman. Setelah beberapa minggu Xin Yi menyadari ada yang salah dengan tubuhnya karena tiba-tiba dia mual-mual dan sensitive sama bau-bauan, karena takut hamil, dia pergi ke gereja buat pengakuan dosa, dan saat itu yang berada diruang pendeta mendengarkan pengakuan dosa Xin Yi adalah Dylan. Dylan menyarankan Xin Yi membeli alat tes kehamilan. Xin Yi menuruti perkataan Dylan, diapun pergi ke mini market untuk beli test pack. Xin Yi yang takut ketahuan orang-orang karena membeli testpack, dia pergi ke mini market dengan mengenakan baju yang aneh dan kebetulan baju yang dia pakai sama modelnya dengan baju buronan yang sedang dicari polisi. Pemilik mini market yang curiga langsung melapor polisi. Polisi yang datang langsung mendobrak kamar mandi di saat Xin Yi sedang melakukan tes urine.
Dan sialnya saat pendobrakan tersebut langsung di on air kan oleh sebuah siaran televisi. Malangnya nasib Xin Yi, semua orang jadi tau klo dia sedang hamil. Termasuk Cun Xi yang mendengar berita itu langsung menabrak mobil orang didepannya. Xin Yi akhirnya menikah dan masuk keluarga Ji Family.
Di awal pernikahannya, Xin Yi selalu melihat sisi manis dari Cun Xi sehingga pelan-pelan jatuh cinta kepadanya. Berbeda dengan Cun Xi yang sangat dingin pada Xin Yi.
Dia malah meminta Xin Yi menandatangani surat cerai. Namun seiring berjalannya waktu Cun Xi pelan-pelan merasa bersalah pada Xin Yi dan mulai menyukai Xin Yi. Drama ini keren banget, lucu dan gak bikin bosen, kadang romantic, kadang juga dramatis. Banyak kejadian-kejadian di drama ini yang berkesan, misal: pas Cun Xi akhirnya smenyukai Xin Yi, dia rela membayar orang hanya untuk mengencangkan AC biar Xin Yi kedingingan dan ga berpakaian seksi di sebuah Klub, Cun Xi juga melakukan berbagai cara untuk mencegah Dylan melamar Xin Yi, trs ketika Cun Xi bikin kue dan dinner yang romantis buat Xin Yi,ketika dihari pelelangan, Dylan dan Cun Xi berebut kotak Xin Yi, belum lagi saat Xin Yi tertabrak mobil, pengen nangis rasanya, bener-bener bikin sedih. Saat Xin Yi diculik, saat baby Ji ilang, saat Xin Yi ngelukis sama Dylan.
Adegan-adegan seru sih pas Cun Xi memperjuangkan cintanya buat Xin Yi. KISAH NYATA DARI SAYA BUKAN REKAYASA INI BETUL2 NYATA DIKELUARGA KAMI. Assalamualaikum wr.wb,saya seorang TKI di HongKong ingin mengucapka banyak terimah kasih kepada KI JONGGOL atas bantuan KI. Kini impian saya selama ini sudah jadi kenyataan dan berkat bantuan KI JONGGOL pula yang telah memberikan angka gaib hasil ritual beliau kepada saya yaitu 4D dan alhamdulillah telah berhasil memenangkan 5x berturut turut tembus.sekali lagi makasih yaa KI JONGGOL karna waktu itu saya cuma bermodalkan uang cuma 500 ribu dan akhirnya saya menang.Berkat angka gaib hasil ritual KI JONGGOL saya sudah buka usaha matreal di jakarta dan istri saya juga buka butyk baju dimall mangga dua. Kini kehidupan keluarga saya jauh lebih baik dari sebelumnya,bagi anda yg ingin seperti saya silahkan HUB/SMS KI JONGGOL di nomor hpnya di: 0852 1654 8879 atau KI JONGGOL memang para normal yg paling terhebat KARNA RASA HATI YANG GEMBIRA MAKANYA NAMA BELIAU SAYA CANTUNKAN DI INTERNET.
Kami sekeluarga ingin mengucapkan puji syukur kepada AKY SANTORO atas nomor togel.nya yang AKY berikan 4 angkah alhamdulillah ternyata itu benar2 tembus dan alhamdulillah sekarang saya bisa melunasi semua utan2 saya yang ada sama tetangga dan bukan hanya itu AKY. Insya allah saya akan coba untuk membuka usaha sendiri demi mencukupi kebutuhan keluarga saya sehari-hari itu semua berkat bantuan AKY SANTORO sekali lagi makasih banyak ya AKY bagi saudara yang ingin di bantu melalui jalan di bawa ini TOGEL JITU PESUGIHAN UANG GAIB PESUGIHAN JIN KHODAM PESUGIHAN ASMA PESUGIHAN UANG SEPASANG PESUGIHAN TUYUL PELARIS USAHA PESUGIHAN UANG BALIK yang ingin merubah nasib seperti saya silahkan hubungi AKY SANTORO,di 0852-1320-2855, dan saya sudah membuktikan sekarang giliran saudara yg di luarsana.
. Synopsis Chen Xin Yi is an unfashionable in a law firm described as a 'sticky note girl'—a person who is helpful, but unnecessary and easy to throw away. Her co-workers frequently take advantage of her eager to please nature by dumping unwanted tasks onto her. She plans and pays for a trip on a romantic love cruise, hoping to lose her virginity and thus keep her boyfriend.
Xin Yi is devastated when she finds her boyfriend cheating on her during the cruise and he tells her that he planned to break up with her all along. On the same cruise is Ji Cun Xi , the wealthy sole heir of a soap and cleaning products company. He had planned to propose to long-time girlfriend Anna during the trip, but is unaware that she has stood him up for the 11th time and never boarded the cruise. Anna is a professional ballet dancer and chose a main role in a world tour over Cun Xi.
In a huge mix-up involving drugs, a third party blackmail plot, and carelessness, Xin Yi and Cun Xi end up spending the night together and have sex, only in the morning realizing the mistake. Although they vow to forget about the incident and continue on with their lives, Xin Yi soon finds out that she is pregnant and the news soon reaches to Cun Xi. Initially, they decide to have an abortion, but Cun Xi changes his mind at the last minute and offers to financially support Xin Yi until the birth, but her family rejects this and thinks abortion is best. Cun Xi's grandmother, Granny Ji, however, is ecstatic over having a great-grandchild and forces the two to get married. Cun Xi, upset that he has been trapped into this situation, forces Xin Yi to agree to divorce after the birth, and in exchange for her silence about the marriage, she will relinquish the baby to him. She, however, refuses to accept any money he offers her for the pregnancy, which makes him question her motive for agreeing to the marriage. Xin Yi had only agreed to the marriage in hopes of giving the baby a happy family, but she knows that it's not possible if she and Cun Xi are not in love.
She meets and begins a friendship with Dylan, a kind young man from Shanghai who sympathizes with her in her situation and seems genuinely interested in her. He later becomes her confidant and a source of support in the face of Cun Xi's mistreatment. Dylan reveals to her that his lifetime goal is to find his long-lost biological sister, Dai Xin Yi, who has the same name as Chen Xin Yi separated from him during childhood. Still in love with Anna and thinking Xin Yi became pregnant to get money from him, Cun Xi struggles between his selfishness and taking responsibility. Xin Yi feels deeply burdened with guilt for her mistake and struggles to stand up for herself and become more than just a sticky note in other people's lives, while trying to keep from falling for Cun Xi.
Xin Yi's simple and selfless nature soon endears her to Cun Xi's family and, eventually, Cun Xi. Slowly, Cun Xi begins to realize his love for Xin Yi and the child she is carrying, and starts to wonder what life would be like if they lived together as a family. He desires to protect Xin Yi from those who would mistreat her and tells her that he doesn't want her to leave him after the baby is born.
Unfortunately, these epiphanies are interrupted by the unexpected return of an injured Anna. Cun Xi conceals his marriage and impending fatherhood and requests Xin Yi return to stay with her mother until he can explain the situation to Anna and his grandmother. A series of unfortunate events lead a devastated Anna to discover the truth from Cun Xi's incensed grandmother during an ugly confrontation. Enraged, Cun Xi blames Xin Yi ruining his life and accuses her of telling his grandmother in an effort to force him to stay with her. He moves out to live with Anna.
Cun Xi later regrets his anger and worries constantly about Xin Yi and the baby. He decides to return to his original plan to care for Xin Yi until she gives birth, and requests Anna be considerate of the situation and wait for him for the remaining months until the child is born. He has new divorce papers written up which ensure Xin Yi will be generously taken care of for the rest of her life. Anna, worried that Cun Xi will leave her, delivers abortion agreement papers to Xin Yi and says they're from Cun Xi. Distraught and horrified, Xin Yi decides to take the baby and raise it alone.
During another ugly confrontation at Grandma Ji's birthday party, Cun Xi realizes his feelings at last for Xin Yi and runs to find her. She pleads with him to leave her alone and tries to run away from him when Xin Yi is hit by a car. In the emergency room, Cun Xi must sign an abortion agreement to save Xin Yi's life, while she begs him not to. Xin Yi recovers and refuses to see Cun Xi. To escape her loss, and Cun Xi, she changes her name and moves to Shanghai with Dylan, signing the divorce papers before she goes. Cun Xi vows to find her again one day.
Two years later, Xin Yi has stopped being a stick note girl to become a successful pottery teacher just starting a relationship with Dylan, while Cun Xi has become engaged to Anna but still continues his search for Xin Yi. Cun Xi eventually finds Xin Yi again and realizes that they are still married since he never dated and filed their divorce papers. Jealous of her attentions to Dylan, Cun Xi tries many tricks to force Xin Yi to interact with him, in order to make her forgive him for how he treated her and prove to her that his love for her is genuine.
Xin Yi is not able to forgive him, accusing him of being glad that she lost the baby. In the face of this rejection Cun Xi then decides to go along with marrying Anna, but when Xin Yi visits the island for the first time in two years, Cun Xi finds out that Anna was the one responsible for the misunderstanding with the abortion papers and why Xin Yi hates him. Mad by this, Cun Xi cancels the wedding with a heartbroken Anna and tries to make amends with Xin Yi by telling her that he didn't want her to get rid of the baby. Xin Yi is still reluctant to forgive him, but allows him to explain. Afterwards, with her newly awakened feelings of love, Xin Yi forgives him, they reconcile, and Dylan finds out that Anna is his sister, and the two are reunited as siblings. As punishment for the tricks he played on her, Xin Yi tricks Cun Xi to be in a barrel and hits him so he went off the hill and he lost his eyesight temporary so she decided to be with him until he get his eyesight back. The next day, he got his eyesight but he pretended that he still have lost his eyesight to make her stay by his side.
She then finds out he tricked her again and is able to acknowledge that she still has feelings for him. She goes to the doctor to see if she can give birth again but the doctor said the possibility to have children is so low due to the miscarriage she had before. On the same day, Cun Xi asked Xin Yi to marry him but she rejected the offer since she knew that Cun Xi's grandmother wanted an heir for the Ji family tenth generation.Hence,she duped Cun Xi that she wanted to start a relationship with Dylan because she finds Dylan more suitable.With the support of Cun Xi and their families, she finally agrees to marry him and they have a formal wedding. Shortly after, she becomes ill and finds out that the hospital that told her she was infertile is a fraud.
Afterwards, Xin Yi finds out she is pregnant, and later gives birth to a baby by the name of Ji Nian Ri, honouring the wonderful memories that she and Cun Xi have created between them. Number Three Pictures (N3). Page One Films Release Original network Original release July 2 ( 2014-07-02) – September 4, 2014 ( 2014-09-04) Chronology Related shows (2008) External links Fated to Love You (: 운명처럼 널 사랑해;: Unmyeongcheoreom Neol Saranghae) is a 2014 television series starring, and. It aired on from July 2 to September 4, 2014 on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:55 for 20 episodes.
It is the of starring and, which received high ratings during its run in 2008. The series also reunited Jang Hyuk and Jang Na-ra, who previously starred together twelve years before on (2002). Chung, Joo-won (June 30, 2014). Retrieved July 1, 2014. Chung, Joo-won (June 30, 2014). Retrieved July 1, 2014.
Chung, Joo-won (June 30, 2014). Retrieved July 1, 2014. Kim, Hee-eun (July 2, 2014). Retrieved July 3, 2014. Choi, Shin-ae (April 3, 2014). Retrieved May 22, 2014. Kim, Hee-eun (April 4, 2014).
Retrieved May 22, 2014. Park, Sung-hee (May 21, 2014).
Retrieved May 22, 2014. Fated to Love You About Retrieved December 29, 2015.
Lee, Jeong-bong (September 22, 2014). Retrieved October 12, 2014. Go, Soo-jin (September 28, 2014). Retrieved November 8, 2014. September 20, 2014. Retrieved September 24, 2014. TNmS Ratings (in Korean).
Archived from on November 28, 2013. Retrieved July 2, 2014. AGB Nielsen Media Research (in Korean). Archived from on December 26, 2013. Retrieved July 2, 2014.
July 4, 2014. Retrieved July 4, 2014. September 2, 2014. Archived from on September 2, 2014. Retrieved September 2, 2014.
External links. The day we dreaded since we first fell in love is finally upon us, which means that it’s time to say goodbye to the zany and whimsical side of Fated To Love You, while conveniently shelving the angsty side somewhere easily forgotten. At least this isn’t one of those endings that forgets to be an ending, because you’d be hard-pressed to think of one thread that doesn’t get tied into the neatest of bows. If anything, it’s almost too much of an ending, in that it replaced all conflict with cuteness a week ago and decided to spend its last hour as an epilogue. First world problems.
SONG OF THE DAY Yoo Seung-woo – “Love” Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser. FINAL EPISODE RECAP Just as Manager Tak is about to send everyone home now that they’re missing their bride and groom, Gun and Mi-young come through the door hand in hand. Grandma Wang is beside herself with joy. Mi-young notices Mom is missing, but still begins her walk down the aisle At least until Mom yells frantically from the doorway, “I’m here!!” She all but falls into Gun’s arms as she worries she’s too late, but everyone’s all smiles and laughter. She’s just in time.
Gun and Mi-young begin their official walk down the aisle this time, which is like night and day compared to when Gun looked like he was walking to his grave the first time around. Yong notices one of the candles is unlit during the ceremony, and uses his magical fire powers to light it. I still don’t get this bit, but I’m glad they’re committing to it through the end. Then it’s the exchange of vows.
They promise to take each other as husband and wife, and say aloud (and together) their promise to love and cherish each other for the rest of their lives, till death do they part. But then there’s the addendum they both say: “No, even if death separates us, we swear to be together forever.” Now man and wife, they kiss to seal the deal. (.sniff.) On their way to their honeymoon spot on Jeju Island, Gun complains about how short their trip has to be because of Mi-young’s work schedule. She preempts his question on whether work is more important to her than he is, which causes him to stop the car as he extols his impressive lineage, all, Pfft, like I was going to ask anyway! (He was totally going to ask.) Mi-young takes things into her own hands by literally taking the wheel, leaving Gun panicked in the passenger seat as he asks her if she even has a license. She says she does, but that she’s never driven a car before. It’s her way of getting out of Gun’s proposal that she’d have to kiss him at every stop light, but it backfires adorably when Gun realizes that he can kiss her at will now that he’s not the one driving.
Cue cuteness overload. Manager Tak and Yong, dressed like spies, undertake a mission they call “Revival Macau,” which entails them preparing the honeymoon suite (Room 2009) so that Gun and Mi-young can get down to business. Grandma Wang’s orders, of course—she wants a grandchild stat. We flash back to Grandma Wang telling Gun that she wants a grandchild to hold in ten months, only for Gun to tell her that he planned on enjoying newlywed life with his snail for at least six months. Since that didn’t sit well with her, Manager Tak and Yong are there to make sure things go according to her plan. Our newlywed couple arrives at Room 2006, and it’s funny how both of them make sure that last number is stuck on and totally unflippable.
Little do they know that the two spies are watching from the peephole in Room 2009 across the hall. After Mi-young puts the kibosh on sexy times before the sun sets, the two of them slow dance under the stars. Mi-young tells him that her father used to dance with her when she was young, calling her “Princess Mi-young” even though she admits that she never felt like much of a princess, and more like a maid. Gun takes offense to that as he says that his Mi-young is no maid, but a pretty and kind princess who found the key to this prince’s heart. She laughs at the cheesiness of calling him “Prince Lee Gun,” while Manager Tak and Yong literally watch on with snacks in hand. But they’ve still got something else planned: They’re going to drug the two of them again to really recreate that night in Macau. I’m not quite sure how to respond to that.
To make matters worse, Gun reiterates to Mi-young that this is their first real night together, considering that neither of them remember that night in Macau. So to be sure they remember tonight, they make a pact to keep themselves clearheaded, unaware that Manager Tak and Yong have already bribed the bartender to drug their drinks. But when Gun is rejected for a love shot, he brings up how she had no problem doing it with Daniel Which opens another can of worms, since Mi-young had no idea Gun was following her around back then and isn’t all that pleased about it. They both down their (drugged) drinks as a challenge before ordering another round, and Gun makes another misstep when he tells her she shouldn’t drink so much. Mi-young isn’t the snail she used to be, and isn’t a fan of being told what to do. She leaves in a huff, but Gun isn’t too worried—she’s only got one place to go, and it’s the same as him. He does notice a familiar taste in the drink a little too late, since we find Mi-young stumbling back to her room as she grumbles about having a lover’s quarrel with Gun.
Gun is next to all but crawl his way down the hall, laughing hysterically at the generic paintings on the hotel walls for whatever reason. He can’t escape that feeling of deja vu as he stubbornly tries to enter what should be Room 2006, but which has now been labeled Room 2009 by the Spy Duo.
Mi-young is already in bed when Gun crawls into it, and they find each other with their eyes closed before Gun pulls the blanket over their heads Grandma Wang asks the multiple portraits of the Lee Clan ancestors to bless Gun and Mi-young so that they return as three, instead of two. Mama Yong also joins in the prayers, even adding her hope that they’ll have twins. Dressed in traditional wedding hanbok in a cartoonishly familiar world, Gun and Mi-young act out their wild night together much like they did in Episode 2, replete with zany innuendo. Wouldn’t be the same without it. They wake up with a scream the next morning, neither of them having any recollection of what happened the night before. Gun cries as he remembers this exact situation in Macau, especially since he’s been looking forward to sleeping with her for years now and he can’t remember it. He can’t even remember if they slept slept together, though all signs point to yes.
They try to piece together the events of last night, and while both of them remember feeling strangely drunk, Gun belatedly remembers seeing Manager Tak and Yong outside his room. He was just too drugged to recognize them then. Gun finds them across the hall in Room 2009, and makes the two of them kneel with their hands over their heads like schoolchildren.
But Manager Tak and Yong spill the beans to Mi-young that it’s all because of what Gun told Grandma Wang about not wanting a child right away. Still, Gun can’t get over how the Spy Duo ruined the first night of his honeymoon—but I love how he ends up being the one to hold Mi-young back when she launches at the pair for insinuating that sacrificing one night isn’t such a huge deal when they’ll have countless more in the future. Daniel confronts Se-ra’s mother with the picture of him and his sister as children, and she doesn’t deny that the little girl is indeed Se-ra.
While the weight of this revelation settles in, Se-ra arrives in time for her mother to pull her aside and tell her the truth: She’s adopted. Se-ra’s mother, freshly lobotomized, shares a tender moment with her adopted daughter as they both agree that they’re still mother and daughter even if they’re not related by blood. After Gun gets to brag about his wife’s success as an artist, the two lie on the hotel rooftop and stare at the stars. They reminisce about when their fate actually began, and while Mi-young thinks it was when he called her his lady luck at the casino, he thinks it started when they first met, chasing after his ring.
“The thing called fate,” Gun muses, “I thought it would be special, but I don’t think it is. Right now, the person in front of me Everything will be fine as long as I’m with her. Not being able to imagine being with anyone else but her I think that’s what fate is.” “I’m okay even if we aren’t fated to love each other,” Mi-young replies. Description: Zhang Xiao, a contemporary, ethnically Han Chinese young woman from the 21st century, accidentally travels back in time to the Qing Dynasty period during the reign of Kangxi Emperor after experiencing a deadly combination of traffic collision and electrocution, resulting her somehow reliving the life of one of her previous incarnations and forcing her to assumes the identity belongs to her past avatar: Maertai Rexi, teenage daughter of a Manchu nobleman, who also had a near-fatal incident in her own time which Zhang awakes from. Being stranded in the past, in the body of a centuries earlier incarnation of herself, and believe by many of Maertai's family and friends that the sudden change of her behavior and memory loss is resulted of her head injury, Zhang Xiao awares that there will be a dangerous power struggle known to history between the scheming princes for the throne, which will results Aisin-Gioro Yinzhen to succeed as the Yongzheng Emperor after his father's death. Zhang Xiao tries to change the future outcomes for the better, hoping to prevents any casualty as written in the future without interfering a man's destiny, while trying to find a way to return to her time period. However, Zhang ultimately realizes that, not only she fails to alter the course of the approaching events, but also, under a predestination paradox, she is fated to become an instigator of the tragedy she tries to prevent resulted by her actions in the past and the princess' romantic affections towards her.
What a strange finale indeed. We get one half filled to the brim with sheer ridiculousness, while the other serves as an epilogue chronicling the bitter pill that is Doctor Stranger as it circles the drain of eternity.
Looking back now, I’m becoming more and more convinced that Myungwoo was never a hospital at all—it was clearly an asylum for crazy people. Stranger finished its run in first place at 12.7%, leaving Triangle with 9.5% while Trot Lovers brought up the rear with 7.2%. SONG OF THE DAY NU’EST – “굿 바이 바이 (Good Bye Bye)” Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip.
Download the latest version. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser. FINAL EPISODE RECAP Unsurprisingly, Prime Minister Jang isn’t keen on giving up just because his entire plan has been found out.
Now faced with a wide awake president, his men, along with Hoon and Jae-hee, Jang arrogantly claims that he’ll still get his chance to be president if the president dies Which I guess is what he’s planning, since he orders his men to drag Hoon and Jae-hee out. When none of his men move, Nightshade tells Prime Minister Jang that it’s time to stop now. The president interjects to offer Prime Minister Jang an unbelievable deal: If he stops all this lunacy now, he’ll be forgiven and allowed to keep his position.
No one besides them will ever have to know any of this happened. All Prime Minister Jang has to do is follow his orders and be his yes-man. Luckily, Hoon echoes the same sentiment as he reminds the president that Prime Minister Jang is the person who tried to, y’know, kill him.
Jae-hee also tries to remind him that if he lets Prime Minister Jang go now, he could attempt to do the same thing in the future. But this talk is too rational for the president to hear, and he shushes the two doctors for getting involved in state affairs. “Being rewarded for doing wrong and being penalized for doing right that’s politics, don’t you think?” the president asks.
IS IT THOUGH? Isn’t it kind of your job to try and affect change? What is wrong with you people?! Even though he’s being given a grand opportunity that would never exist among sane people, Prime Minister Jang still acts haughty about it even as he agrees. He just has one condition, because he actually gets to make one: He wants Hoon and Jae-hee handed over to him. The best part?
The president agrees. Even when Hoon and Jae-hee protest, the president is all, What could possibly go wrong? Yes, what COULD possibly go wrong in handing these two people over to a murderous psychopath?
“You promised to save us!” Hoon screams to the president as he’s dragged away. I’ve handled a lot of crazy finales in my life, but this? This is a ride to Crazytown on the shortest bus imaginable. After the president is driven away in an ambulance, Prime Minister Jang tells Nightshade that they’ve got some stuff to hash out. What neither of them notice is that Agent Cha is lurking near the hospital entrance disguised as a bodyguard, because you are what you wear in this world. We find Hoon and Jae-hee being held hostage in their own hospital, guarded by Secret Service agents who aren’t allowing any of the other doctors near.
Hoon tries to make sense of the nonsensical, completely stunned by the president going back on his word after he promised to save them. He flashes back to when he told the president about Prime Minister Jang’s plans, and how sane the president had seemed then. Jae-hee again blames herself for choosing to go along with Agent Cha’s plan. “If I could go back if I could just go back then it wouldn’t have come to this,” Jae-hee insists. Hoon: “It’s not over yet.” Don’t remind me. Prime Minister Jang slow claps his way into the room, and warns Jae-hee not to pull out any of her spy maneuvers lest Hoon get a bullet to the head in the middle of a functioning hospital. He goes into this diatribe about how all these coincidences must add up to Fate, since he had meant for Hoon and his father to die long ago and for Jae-hee to die too, since he was the one who had the embassy doors closed to them back in Budapest.
But now that they’re still alive, he asks them if they really had so much faith in humanity as to trust the president to keep his word. They should have begged him for mercy instead. “You still wouldn’t have spared us,” Hoon notes wryly, to which Prime Minister Jang just nods as being true. Before he has his men escort them out, he reminds them to act accordingly since they’re in a hospital that saves human lives. (Again proving that no one can resist the compulsion to negate their own threats.) Prime Minister Jang leaves them at the hospital entrance as he’s driven away—only to have his car suddenly stop.
The driver reveals himself to be a laughing Agent Cha as he aims a gun at the prime minister Pop! Watch as the car lights up from the three gunshots, and by the time the prime minister’s security detail makes it to the car, Agent Cha has magically vanished. But since bullets in Stranger are made of life-saving unicorn’s tears, Prime Minister Jang is of course Not Dead, prompting Hoon to get him prepped for surgery.
While Nightshade receives some shady orders from the president, Chang-yi goes to the hospital looking for Hoon. A sympathetic Chi-gyu agrees to help her. With no other doctors or secret service agents around, Jae-hee and Hoon are left to take Prime Minister Jang to the operating theatre alone.
She tries to stop him outside by making an impassioned argument as to why they shouldn’t save the man who caused them so much misery, who killed Hoon’s father, and who’ll try to kill them if he lives. All Hoon has to do, she says, is let go of the artificial breathing device and let the prime minister die naturally. When Hoon says no, she brings up how he killed her father to save her—why can’t he do this to save her, himself, and his mother now? But Hoon is adamant in his refusal, because it would be a slap in his father’s face if he were to do as she says. His father died so that he could pick up a scalpel only to save lives, and now Prime Minister Jang is nothing more than a sick patient he has to cure. Jae-hee tries removing the pressure from Prime Minister Jang’s gunshot wounds, only for Hoon to place her hand back over them.
“Feel it,” he urges her. “It’s still beating.” She finally and reluctantly caves when Hoon forces her to recognize that they can’t ignore a heart that’s still beating, at least until their surgery prep is interrupted by the (very late) arrival of Nightshade and the rest of the security detail. I guess no one’s concerned about sanitary conditions in the operating theatre. Since the president is a lunatic anyway and okayed the prime minister’s death, Nightshade passes on the message to Hoon that no one will hold him responsible if Prime Minister Jang were to suffer a “table death,” wink wink nudge nudge.
He gives Hoon the same choice Jae-hee did: sunshine and rainbows if Prime Minister Jang dies, and the ninth circle of hell if he lives. Hoon still doesn’t waiver because he’s a doctor, damn it. “You’ve done a lot of terrible things,” he says to the unconscious prime minister, in his classic devil may care way. “How can there be no one telling me to save you?” Regardless, he’s going to try, even if he and Jae-hee will be working solo. Even though the president gets to watch the live feed from the operating theatre as the complicated surgery begins, the rest of the hospital remains unaware that any surgery is even taking place.
While Hoon easily fishes bullets from the blood pool that is Prime Minister Jang’s chest cavity, Secretary #2 worries that this could mean that Jang might, gulp, live. But Nightshade points out that Secretary #2 is relieved when the surgery is successful as proof that he’s on Hoon’s side. Or something. After Prime Minister Jang is wheeled away, Nightshade gives Hoon and Jae-hee keys to a car he’s had prepared so they can run away from the coming backlash. He’ll make preparations for them to leave the country while they find a place to hide, and promises that he’ll send Mom somewhere safe. Soo-hyun joins the search for Hoon when Chang-yi goes to her for help, finding out the (irrelevant?) tidbit that Jae-hee didn’t come from Japan and that Hoon’s mom has gone missing.
(Aside: All the doctors have been conveniently moved to a “new building” no one’s ever heard or talked about until this point.) She finds out from Chi-gyu that Hoon was last spotted heading away from the hospital. We find him and Jae-hee in new digs as they run toward the car At least until Hoon is suddenly struck by a bullet. He tries to pass it off as nothing while urging Jae-hee to go on without him, but she’s kind of distracted by that new blood spot he wasn’t sporting before. Plus, Agent Cha reveals himself as the shooter as he stalks toward them with his gun drawn.
Hoon stands in front of Jae-hee protectively as Agent Cha’s finger tightens on the trigger. But Jae-hee, always faster than a bullet, manages to fling herself in front of Hoon before the gun goes off. Soo-hyun and Chang-yi watch the events unfold from a distance and call the police, which gives Jae-hee juuuust enough time to climb over the railing in a reenactment of the Budapest sequence.
Again, no one’s kidding you. This is real.
Now I get why we had the sudden wardrobe change, since Hoon finds himself holding Jae-hee by the hand as she dangles precariously over the requisite body of water. She tries to get Hoon to release her (again), since she’s been shot somewhere near the heart (again), and since Agent Cha is approaching him with a gun (again). Hoon tells her not to let go (again), but this time Agent Cha sidles up next to them on the balcony all, Isn’t this a familiar scene? Please, please, for the love of god don’t treat us like we need to be reminded. Agent Cha draws up the similarities to the Budapest scene before noting the one key difference: No one’s there to help them this time. He gives Hoon a chance to live if he only lets go of Jae-hee’s hand, since it’ll be vengeance enough if Hoon lives with the memory of killing her. Hoon would rather Agent Cha kill him instead, but Agent Cha claims that’s not a possibility even as he levels the gun at Hoon’s head anyway and gives them until the count of three.
Jae-hee begs him to let go to save himself, but Hoon refuses—his biggest regret was letting go of her back then. “I said I would go wherever you went.
Do you see the river? No matter where it takes you, don’t worry. Because I’ll be with you.” He smiles just as Agent Cha counts to three. Though the gun seems to have been leveled at his head, Agent Cha shoots, vaulting Hoon over the railing so that he and Jae-hee fall into the water below.
While Soo-hyun and Chang-yi watch on helplessly, Agent Cha turns the gun on himself. “Long live the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea,” he says with one last shaky breath, and dies.
Since it would make too much sense for Soo-hyun and Chang-yi to search the river bank for their friends, they instead go to the bridge they fell off of in an attempt to look for them. Of course, they don’t even see so much as a bubble from the water, even though an extremely strong ocean current running underneath has undoubtedly grabbed our two lovers to whisk them away to safety. One year later. Prime Minister Jang is just now being arrested for crimes wholly unrelated to the ones he should be jailed for, a televised event the president watches with interest. He’s apparently changed because of what Hoon said about people doing their actual jobs, and now believes that a politician should practice clean politics.
Gee golly mister, that sure is swell for you to say now. After checking in on Chang-yi and Chi-gyu as a couple, we find Soo-hyun running a tight ship in the operating theatre. Later, she remembers Hoon because she performed the same operation as he once did.
Anesthesiologist Min-se and Doctor Geum are expecting their first child, Chi-gyu has graduated from being a playboy to being a real doctor, and Doctor Moon (now chief the cardiothoracic surgery department) has grown a not-just-comic-relief-anymore goatee. He’s on his way to the ceremony celebrating his appointment as Myungwoo Hospital’s newest director. Min-se notes that their team doesn’t quite feel complete as they ride the elevator there together, but any hope at being serious dissipates when Doctor Moon lets out a loud fart. And then another. Soo-hyun finds Doctor Moon crying from happiness after the ceremony, even though his thoughts turn to whether Hoon is watching over him from the afterlife.
He leaves some of Hoon’s favorite snacks in the locker that still bears his name, and promises that he’ll live up to his own father’s will and make Myungwoo a hospital people might actually want to go to. Chang-yi joins Soo-hyun on the bridge where they lost Hoon and Jae-hee, both believing them to be dead. “Hyung’s at peace, right?” Chang-yi asks.
Soo-hyun gives a slight nod, and affirms that Hoon went with the woman he loved. When asked why Chang-yi still calls Hoon “hyung,” a term used by boys amongst other boys, she admits that it was the distance she put between them so that she wouldn’t end up liking Hoon. Then she drops a memorial flower into the water with a heavy sigh. As Nurse Min says her final goodbyes (she’s leaving the hospital to work where her husband does), Jae-joon pays an unexpected visit.
Chairman Oh is now a permanent patient at his own hospital, and Jae-joon has come to apologize to him, not to get one. Jae-joon explains to the chairman that he’s been helping a friend’s law firm in the States since he no longer has any right to be a doctor. But he happened upon a file about Korean hospitals and their malpractice suits, finding that Myungwoo’s level is only 1/10th compared to everyone else. He’s trying to give Chairman Oh a pat on the back for doing a good job regarding these cases, but Chairman Oh doesn’t seem keen on hearing what he has to say. However, he asks to hear the apology Jae-joon came to give. Jae-joon: “I wanted to apologize to Soo-hyun’s father.
Because I was foolish, I hurt Soo-hyun deeply. I don’t know if I’ll have the chance, but someday, I would like to be forgiven for what I did.” He walks out to find Soo-hyun standing outside the room. Did she hear him? However, it’s Chairman Oh who rises from his bed to tell Jae-joon that he forgives him only as his daughter’s Han Jae-joon.
Considering all those pesky dual identities running around, it’s probably good for him to be specific. Soo-hyun and Jae-joon finally get a moment, and she switches to calling him by his birth name, Lee Seung-hoon.
(Since there’s only this recap left, let’s stick with Jae-joon though.) She admits that she only ever thought about how he lied to her without considering how much pain he was going through, and says that she’s the one who needs his forgiveness. But Jae-joon claims that there’s another person they need to ask forgiveness from: Hoon. The next day, Jae-joon takes Soo-hyun on a scenic drive as he tells her he heard something unbelievable about Hoon and Jae-hee. Is he the only one who knows they’re alive? Soo-hyun seems reluctant to follow him and regretful that she ever pushed her feelings onto Hoon.
Likewise, Jae-joon claims that he never really thought much about who Hoon was deep down inside. They both had misconceptions about Hoon, hooray, let’s move on. But Jae-joon urges her to follow him, because there’s someone he wants her to meet. As if knowing her question before she even asks it, Jae-joon assures her that yes, it’s “that person.” At a rural health care center, Jae-joon leads Soo-hyun to find Hoon perfectly alive, well, and practicing medicine.
Hoon sees her and greets her like nothing happened, calling her “Quack” as usual. She storms up to him with a pained expression as she tells him how she thought he was dead this whole time—couldn’t he have just told her he was fine? Hoon just laughs off her impotent anger as she hits him a few times with her purse. After some last minute product placement, Jae-joon asks Hoon what happened after he fell into the water.
“I had some help,” Hoon explains without explaining, since we cut to his mother doing well in a hospital. Nightshade gives Mom a stethoscope Hoon gave her as a gift. She smiles before turning to look longingly at a picture of her and Hoon together. As if expecting Jae-joon’s visit, Hoon hands him a present too, and it’s another stethoscope? Man, I wouldn’t want Hoon as my secret santa.
Anyway, the gift is his way of telling Jae-joon that doctoring suits him much better than lawyering. Soo-hyun ignores it as she asks about Jae-hee, only to be told by Jae-joon (who magically knows all things) that Jae-hee applied for asylum in China. “She’s in China right now then?” Soo-hyun asks, only to be met with silence as Hoon’s face falls. Soo-hyun and Jae-joon walk to a hilltop where they see Hoon waiting on a dirt road far below. Hoon stares down the road expectantly, as Jae-joon explains to Soo-hyun that he used his connections to help Jae-hee gain status as a political refugee in China and that it all went through only months ago. However, with her refugee status, Jae-hee was able to then seek political asylum back in Korea.
(Don’t try to make sense out of this, trust me.) Then Jae-joon explains that the reason he returned to Korea was because today is the day Jae-hee is supposed to return as well. As a black car drives toward Hoon, Soo-hyun asks Jae-joon, “You said you didn’t believe in fate, right? Do you still not?” “No,” Jae-joon replies. “I believe in fate now too.” Jae-hee gets out of the car and runs toward Hoon with a smile. She grabs him in a hug as Soo-hyun lets out a sigh and slips her hand into Jae-joon’s. They share a moment while looking on as Jae-hee and Hoon hold each other close.
Hoon finally allows himself to take it all in as he nestles his face into Jae-hee’s hair and smiles. HEADSNO2’S COMMENTS It sure felt like the show had just enough story—a term I use very, very loosely—to make it through the first half of this finale only. The second half, while tying the side characters’ stories into neat little bows, mostly felt like we’d run out of gas and were just coasting to the unearned and wholly unexplainable happy ending. If we put those last three minutes aside, this finale was a perfect encapsulation of everything that made the experience of watching Doctor Stranger such a frustrating and thankless job. We have an easier time forgiving shows with severe logic fails when they manage to give us something we want in return—a tiny little thing that seems so simple in theory but not in practice, something that can be forged at will but never truly given unless it’s earned. And that something is payoff.
Yes, payoff, that most elusive of concepts which usually mandates that a writer follow through with their setups. Yet this show failed so astronomically at delivering payoffs that it’s honestly bewildering, not only because it’s lazy writing in its truest form, but because it couldn’t even attempt to fool us otherwise when every conflict was introduced in a self-negating vacuum. I can’t really even wrap my head around all the conflict the show would take pains to introduce only for whatever happened next to make whatever just happened totally meaningless, because I can’t imagine any storyteller who would willingly and knowingly do that to themselves. Oh, the president just found out his second-in-command cooked up an elaborate(-ly ridiculous) plan to kill him? Why, he should just forgive him! Better yet, he should make sure that man stays in power.
Better yet, he should give that lunatic the two people he’s made no secret about wanting to murder. What’s the worst that could happen? The rest of this finale, as it turned out. What’s more mystifying about that beginning scene is how there was no attempt to peek into the president’s rationale for his actions, which were so beyond the realm of human understanding as to be unintentionally hilarious. By now we’ve come to expect that anyone in a position of power and responsibility must also be insane in this universe, but that? That was just special. Clearly the presidential election was decided by whoever displayed the best macaroni noodle art, and Prime Minister Jang was just the idiot who forgot to use glue.
We’ll never know why the show chose to move the focus of its story away from Hoon’s emotional journey, only that it was one of its greater missteps and a crying shame. He had so much promise as a North Korean refugee with a supernatural ability to diagnose chest-related illnesses, but was wasted as a puppy dog pining away for his old flame. As said flame, Jae-hee was a huge problem the show never quite solved, especially since her potential to be compelling was erased when she spent X amount of episodes disguising her identity because she felt like it? Well, the same could be said of Jae-joon’s reasoning for waiting as long as he did to plan and execute his Coke Zero of revenge plots, and for all those extra final bonus rounds of the competition.
See also: the president’s decision, North Korea’s involvement, Soo-hyun’s meager existence, Doctor Moon’s flatulence, Prime Minister Jang’s idiocy, Nightshade’s normalcy, Agent Cha’s resilience, and Hoon’s wasted potential. It doesn’t necessarily make it any easier to think that this was just someone’s passing fancy assembled with all the forethought of a finger painting, but sometimes dramaland’s truths cut deep. Coming from someone who’s been here too many times to count and who’s as qualified to be a doctor as the characters in this show (read: not), here’s a for Fated To Love You. Take two and leave a comment in the morning. GUMMIMOCHI’S COMMENTS (1) New Voicemail for: Doctor Stranger Doctor Stranger, these past two months with you have been unforgettable—I don’t think there are enough words to describe all the things you’ve taught me, but here goes: Know that I’m doing this for myself and everyone else who made it to the other side when I say that I’ll be better off without you. The reason I want to be alone from now on is for my own sanity, and because you lost yours ages ago. Since you decided to tell me (lots of) things that happened off-screen, I decided to return the favor in kind by leaving you with this message.
You made any questionable medical and ethical judgment in other shows of your genre like Good Doctor and Medical Top Team look like child’s play (save for Dr. Jin, but I get it—it’s hard to aim to be that brand of crazy), and your baddie was nothing more than a petulant man-child. You taught us that personal revenge that spans decades could be illustrated through a Metaphor Castle that took weeks to build, but would only take hours, or sometimes even minutes for it to be cast aside, all but forgotten. You gave us glimpses of the living dead in the form of Zombie Cha and Inferius Jae-hee, and taught us that death by water is only the beginning. Or just that death is cheap. And every repeated coincidence hammers in the idea that it’s fate, you once said over and over again. For the innumerable number of hours you made me stand vigil by your dramatic bedside, I say: Dishonor!
Dishonor on your whole hospital! Dishonor on you! Dishonor on your scalpel! Ahem, I think it’s better that we part ways here, and that I let go of your outstretched hand for both our sakes. And no, I won’t come find you again after I finish this message. Take care—I hear the branch hospital has an opening. RELATED POSTS.:.
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