So this is what going mad feels like. Watching Soo-a’s mother, Soo-hee, on the attack is akin to having a root canal done then pay the bill. Talk about excruciating. I can’t say I’m eager to ever rewatch Episode 9 especially the first half which features the over-the-top machinations of All-Care Mothers to destroy Choi Chi-yeol’s reputation just because he committed the sin of tutoring a bright girl that they had unfairly kicked out of the programme. What’s more galling is watching them patting themselves on the back for being so very clever. Soo-hee did at least one illegal thing in the process and it could backfire on her badly. It reminds me of those insane makjang love triangles where the persistent second female lead spurned by the male lead goes on a warpath to kill him and his chosen lady. Literally and/or metaphorically. It’s usually accompanied by some ridiculous declaration like, “If I can’t have him, nobody can.”
Crash Course in Romance (2023) Episodes 9 and 10
Crash Course in Romance (2023) Episodes 9 and…
Crash Course in Romance (2023) Episodes 9 and 10
So this is what going mad feels like. Watching Soo-a’s mother, Soo-hee, on the attack is akin to having a root canal done then pay the bill. Talk about excruciating. I can’t say I’m eager to ever rewatch Episode 9 especially the first half which features the over-the-top machinations of All-Care Mothers to destroy Choi Chi-yeol’s reputation just because he committed the sin of tutoring a bright girl that they had unfairly kicked out of the programme. What’s more galling is watching them patting themselves on the back for being so very clever. Soo-hee did at least one illegal thing in the process and it could backfire on her badly. It reminds me of those insane makjang love triangles where the persistent second female lead spurned by the male lead goes on a warpath to kill him and his chosen lady. Literally and/or metaphorically. It’s usually accompanied by some ridiculous declaration like, “If I can’t have him, nobody can.”