Kim Hye-ja and Lee Byung-hun’s hats of love and hate in the drama ‘Our Blues’ united for the first time with one heart.
According to Nielsen Korea, a ratings research institute on the 12th, tvN’s Saturday-Sunday drama ‘Our Blues’ (played by Noh Hee-kyung/directed by Kim Gyu-tae), which aired the day before, recorded 12.1% of nationwide pay-per-view ratings.
On this day’s broadcast, Kang Ok-dong (Kim Hye-ja) and Lee Dong-seok (Lee Byung-hun), who went to Mokpo, had a time-limited trip that might be the last. Lee Dong-seok was determined to do everything he wanted to do before Kang Ok-dong died. And I was planning to ask him why he hurt me and if he was sorry. In response, he asked Kang Ok-dong what else he would like to do in addition to going to the Mokpo adoptive father’s funeral. Kang Ok-dong said he wanted to go to ‘Madang-ri at the end of Mokpo’, the place Lee Dong-seok heard for the first time, making him wonder.
After many twists and turns, Lee Dong-seok, who attended the ceremony, was angry that his adoptive father’s son Jong-woo (Choi Byung-mo) treated his hat as an uninvited guest. Previously, Kang Ok-dong memorized Jong-woo’s home address sweetly despite his dark eyes, but he failed because he did not announce that Jong-woo had moved a year ago. In the boiling rage, Lee Dong-seok eventually had a fight with Jong-woo. Jong-woo Lee Dong-seok stole gold pieces and bundles of money and ran away, treating his father as a thief, saying, “How dare you go here. I was pitiful for living like beggars, so I gave them away.”
At those words, Kang Ok-dong, who had stopped the fight, rolled his eyes. He shouted to Jong-woo, “Why is that because of Dong-seok?” and “Give me the money that I served as a slave while changing diapers for your poop for 15 years and 10 years for your aunt who can’t move.” Jong-woo treated the hat as a thief, saying, “Actually, you stole more money?” Kang Ok-dong said, “He was beaten innocently by your brother, and Eo-mong is a slave to his wife, so I’m grateful for just being patient. You call me a thief? It was the first time he had ever seen Kang Ok-dong, who was always calm, a look full of rage and rage.
Lee Dong-seok was also the first to hear Kang Ok-dong’s sincerity. Lee Dong-seok asked Kang Ok-dong, “Why don’t you ever say you’re sorry to me?” However, Kang Ok-dong said bluntly, “I’m sorry.”
Lee Dong-seok learned regarding the life and appearance of Kang Ok-dong that he did not know. The village of ‘Madang-ri at the end of Mokpo’ is the hometown of Gangok-dong. Lee Dong-seok, who only knew that Kang Ok-dong’s hometown was Jeju, was surprised. Meanwhile, Kang Ok-dong turned over Lee Dong-seok’s stomach by asking him to eat “the soybean paste you like.” Lee Dong-seok replied bluntly, “I stopped doing soybean paste,” and Kang Ok-dong insisted that he wanted to eat ‘jajang’. In addition, Lee Dong-seok looked at Kang Ok-dong, who smiled kindly at the street dog, and looked unfamiliar with him.
In the end, Lee Dong-seok decided to grant Kang Ok-dong’s request, who insisted on going even though his hometown Madangri was submerged in a reservoir. Being able to spend more time with Kang Ok-dong. Lee Dong-seok said, “When I saw a dog on the street, I laughed well and was cold to my child. I didn’t do anything sorry to others, but I was stumbling around. Is there anything you’re sorry regarding for me?”
Kim Hye-ja and Lee Byung-hun’s acting in the story of a mother and father that is rising ahead of the final episode raised the level of immersion in the play. Kim Hye-ja portrayed Kang Ok-dong, who bursts into tears for her son on the side of her son, with acting supported by her evil. She is also her talkative and modest mother, but looking at her son Lee Dong-seok, expressing her desire to be with her through stubborn actions, she conveyed Kang Ok-dong’s sincerity to off-screen viewers. Even if she hates her mother, even if she doesn’t understand, Lee Dong-seok listens to what Kang Ok-dong wants. Lee Byung-hun made viewers immerse himself in the story of the hat by becoming Lee Dong-seok himself with warmth in the midst of roughness.