![]() He accidentally steps on her sunglasses and she makes a fuss about him breaking it, but then thanks him for saving her from tumbling over. When she gets close to the edge to take a better look, she almost slips but quick thinking Moo Gak grabs her in his arms safely. I’m also loving how so many important facts are being shared between all the main characters, why keep secrets when knowing the truth is so much more exciting.Ĭho Rim sees missing model Mari’s scent trail leading over the cliff into the river below. It helps that lady Detective Yeom personifies what a real lady cop looks and acts like, all no nonsense but without a gender axe to grind. The cops in this drama are not nearly as stupid as the ones in all recent dramas so for that they can investigate at their own pace and it doesn’t annoy me. It’s too easy to pin the whole shebang on creepy Doctor Chun, it can’t be a coincidence that he’s buddies with chef Jae Hee who so happens to be the latest victim’s boyfriend. The serial killer case is developing along nicely. Their chemistry continues to be delightful, with Cho Rim constantly ordering Moo Gak around and he tries his best to obey because she’s done the world’s biggest favor for him. He’s like a really earnest retriever trying to find a lost item while she’s the yappity toy dog jumping circles around him. What works is natural laughs that comes from sweet and sassy Cho Rim and her alchemy interactions with dour and dogged Moo Gak. For a drama with a dark serial killer underbelly, this story makes me laugh way more than even pure rom-coms that deal with only light subject matters. I continue to love The Girl Who Sees Smells, no ifs buts or caveats.
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