I don't think he's a chef, but I do think he owns some kind of restaurant. As the novel comes to an end, the couple are reunited and happy together. WHY WOULD YOU KILL HIM!? It was like a bad fairy tale that had a happy ending tacked on to please the audience. It's alright if you're uncomfortable watching others be intimate at the moment, buuut "porn" is not the correct label for such a film. Thomas saves her. That is permanent and altered the scope of her life, but yet even at the end they are asking her to come back into Young's life. I would've found them to be highly problematic in any case, but the fact that that this was a Noh Hee Kyung drama deepened my disappointment exponentially. If she stays, she may alter history. Soo lies(?) Also, it's not completely out of the blue, but I still don't buy how all a sudden the show just turned Soo into a chef at the end?! This is exactly what I said. Lizzy (Caitlin Gerard) and Isaac Macklin (Ashley Zukerman) live in isolation on a tract of land in New Mexico in the 1800s. The End Of The Wind Explained - Looper.com Everything was so carefully built to that ending (except for the stabbing scene) that it felt planned to me. Then, again I don't believe Young would make up such an elaborate story for herself (even in a dream) to "blind" herself from his death. Find more reviews and book recommendations on my blog. With no good outcome in sight, the films surreal climax leaves Lizzy suspended in haunted uncertainty. because she had not truly forgiven Sung's betrayal. Sans a passing mention of the attempt in a confusing conversation where she simultaneously told Soo that she couldnt forgive him yet she still loved him and wanted to be with him, I failed to see the step between I want to die and I want to try living because now Im extra sure you love me. His love couldnt cure her desire to die just one night earlier, but then by the morning after, his love cures all? She comments that if it weren't for the destruction of the tall rock . Everything made its own logical point UNTIL the last episode. What Happened With Jiro and Naoko Relationship in The Wind Rises Ending --Ryo. I'm with you-- this would have been a wonderful drama if the writers hadn't given up on the characters towards the end: I felt that we were just coasting, or worse, slipping and sliding, as the show labored its way into the finale, and there wasn't even a good "save" in the closing moments. To me it appeared a cop out or a compromise how ever you want to go. 2 eps later, all's forgiven! Just discovered him, and while I do agree he did well in A frozen flower, his movie that I loved him the most is A dirty carnival. Thomas's worst fear is that Anne will return to her own time. The book is very cleverly written without the political basis. Later that night, Soo affixes the bell string to her wrist again. To me it looks like the last 3 episodes were written by a different person. It's almost like the story is saying that sometimes people really, really hurt the ones they love but we forgive them? it took 6 months for chemo and recovery. I am confused about a number of things in this episode (trust me on that one) and I am still writing (what looks like it will be my somewhat long) response. At first, it seems pleasant to have others around. Stabbingthis seems to be used a lot. But, on the other hand, how many times did we complain that some dramas never need extension and they just dragged toooooooooo damn long?