Kang Jin-woo (Song Chang-ee) was confessed to by Jang Deok-in (Kim Jeong-eun) on the episode of the MBC weekend drama "Let the Girl Cry".
Jang Deok-in worried about Kang Jin-woo who had gone to meet her husband. She asked if he was in a difficult spot because of her and he said, "Then I can just say that I have a girlfriend. Should we start Dating Now? Should we speed things up a little?"
Jang Deok-in hid her shyness and said, "Don't joke with me but it feels good. I felt cocky in front of my husband". Kang Jin-woo said, "I'm glad. Why do you keep thanking me? I am more grateful".
Kang Jin-hee (Han I-seo) knew her brother liked Jang Deok-in and yelled at her.
Jang Deok-in said, "I'll get out of your life, you get out of mine. You came into mine in the first place. You're so pathetic for a rich family's daughter".
Kang Jin-hee got angry and tried to slap her but Kang Jin-woo appeared and stopped her saying, "Don't you dare do anything to her. I love her".
"Let the Girl Cry" is a drama about love, conflict and forgiveness about a woman who lives her life to the fullest after losing her son and a wealthy family that surrounds her.
Naturally, he tries to antagonize Deok-in with it. Kyeong-cheol's efforts predictably fail, mainly because at this point no one in his family actually likes him anymore. Everyone else is still worried that their mother is going to relapse. Heck, Deok-in pretty much explicitly told Kyeong-cheol that this was why she's rescinding her consent to the divorce. And yet Kyeong-cheol continues to pout like a small child, as if Deok-in's only motivation has been to spite him.
It's fairly compelling stuff. Obviously "Let the Girl Cry" is cut from the family drama mold- so it's not too dramatic or anything. We're looking at a fairly transparent case of sympathetic characters putting non-sympathetic characters in their place. Kyeong-cheol and Jin-hee have consistently failed to realize that their personal life decisions don't take place in a vacuum. If that was what was going on they wouldn't need permission to marry in the first place. Their failure to negotiate this issue doesn't bode well for their overall future.
Elsewhere, Hyeon-seo gets a pretty good word in with his mother. That whole plotline, while not necessarily innovative, still does good basic work with its material. Hyeon-seo appears to be a happier, healthier person now than he was before he started hanging out with Hyeong-tae. The main wrinkle in this storyline is that everything has to pivot around Hyo-jeong- even though she's consistently been trying not to cooperate with Hyeong-tae's weird schemes.
"Let the Girl Cry" is managing a fairly good synthesis right now between its characters. There's just the right mix of sympathy and unlikability, and it definitely helps that the script isn't contriving to make anyone stupid. Writer He Cheongok has correctly appreciated that people who have know each other for a whole lifetime aren't going to change their broader personal evaluations overnight, even if the characters themselves haven't all managed to figure this out yet. The result is a reasonably compelling and sweet drama that deals fairly seriously with family conflict.
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