
If it turns out that it is a crush thing, by our aging system, he's actually 19. I'd like it better if his expression meant he was amazed at himself or that he was still able to get guidance from his parents when he didn't think he'd be able to anymore. Actually, writing it out helped me with understanding the ending better! I don't know about the whole crush thing. So he could look at her in eyes, or thereabouts. Then I thought the butterfly might symbolize his mother (or maybe father or both parents) helping him overcome the hurdles of navigating neuro typical society, even though they're gone. So it wasn't a "checking her out" pan, but more of a "this is as close as I can get to eye contact and not seeming rude" pan. My understanding of the camera panning was that it was a POV of someone with autism, where eye contact is very difficult. I missed the purpose of the ending but I guess for different reasons. , or is it an obvious cue to get uneasy about a 20 year old getting into bed with a high schooler? So, does the last scene present us with an ending and/or a possible beginning thats mysterious, intriguing, challenging. It's been a substantial and a subtle drama with a protagonist who isn't the stereotypical ML in a kdrama.

It's an intriguing mystery right? Or is it just another situation to sexualize and reduce down to simple kdrama tropes? Everything leading up to this scene has taken us a long way from typical rom-com-drama tropes. what? It's an intriguing mystery.Īnd why is such a young girl arranging things that must happen after her own death? Is she looking after the details of her death because she's terminally ill? Is she trying to spare her family a little pain or inconvenience? Or is she suicidal? Is she 'getting her affairs in order' the way that people often do when they are planning to end their own lives? Again, it's an intriguing mystery.Īnd what will Geu Ru do about it, now and every time that it might happen in the future? Is he equipped to handle these kinds of situations in the business that he's inherited? Are any of us equipped for this? What do we think is the right thing to do and how might Geu Ru see and treat it differently?

Is the butterfly symbolic of life, death, innocence, hope, youth. So, the obvious and easy to read things in that scene are (1) that the white butterfly is somehow symbolic and (2) that a young girl has dropped by to hire Move to Heaven, to clean up after her own death.
MOVE TO HEAVEN SERIES
Sometimes camera work and music are just supposed to be eye catching and beautiful enough to engage your senses and maybe end a series on a mysterious note. and it's really hard to read cues like music and camera work to arrive at an exact understanding about what they're supposed to mean. People with Autism are, in some ways, unique in this regard. Different people approach other people and relationships in different ways. There are many aspects in any relationship.


when there are other, more subtle, possibilities as well. I think that audiences are quick to see every relationship as being romantic and/or sexual and be sickened by it if there is anything remotely improper or less than ideal about it.
