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Reviews4
roz-oz's rating
Like many of the reviews here, I did find the monologues very long and I would had preferred more action to balance all the monologues out. I did think the monologues were meaningful and made you think, however I got a bit tired of it and I was ready to give up until I reached ep4 where things suddenly turned very interesting with a huge genre twist(don't wanna spoil it)! So if you, like myself are feeling a bit tired by the show, watch until ep4 and see if the show starts getting interesting...I certainly thought so!
I have watched countless true crime documentaries, and in a lot of them, it's clear that the crimes could had been resolved much earlier than when they did if the police was competent. Recent examples of true crimes I ve watched that demonstrate police incompetence in different countries are "Dig Deeper: The disappearance of Brigit Meier" (Germany), "The Women and the Murderer" (France). However, the police incompetence in this documentary is beyond anything I ve ever seen before. I won't list examples as I don't want to spoil it for the prospective viewer, but I must say that I sincerely hope that drastic changes have been implemented in the Korean police force, and overall system as in this case the police was more dangerous than the actual criminal. Incompetence, corruption, laziness and so much more nouns to describe the korean police. Literally speechless...
The writers should be sued. Vomit. I have nothing further to say.