He verifies if the doctor is dead and rings the hospital. Sang-gu and Na-mu drag Geu-ru away - Ian Park goes into his dressing room, and he’s in shock. Geu-ru tells Ian Park that the doctor passed away, and suddenly the musician has a confused and sad look on his face. Geu-ru approaches Ian Park and asks him if he knows the doctor, but he denies any knowledge - Geu-ru presses him about it, and Ian Park states he used to know him, but he’s a stranger to him now. In the bathroom, Geu-ru bumps into a male musician - he tells the others that Jung Soo-hyun was in love with Ian Park and points to the man on the poster. As Geu-ru goes to the bathroom, Sang-gu and Na-mu talk to random musicians and ask if they know the doctor. They head to the theatre and ask the organizers if they can talk to the musicians while they rehearse. Sang-gu then finds an endpin stopper - it’s what cello players use to keep their instruments in place he finds a concert ticket for classical music and believes the person the doctor loved will be there. Sang-gu believes the lover is a musician based on the flyers the doctor had in his house. It’s now a story about a doctor and his secret lover, and Geu-ru and the group want to figure out who it is. He takes home remnants of the burned letter. One of the family members throws it in the fire, and a panicked Geu-ru puts his hand in the fire and hurts himself. Geu-ru gives the family a letter he found and wondered if they know who it is from - he states the deceased left a letter for someone, and it must be delivered. It’s a very clean assignment as he didn’t die there - Ge-ru does his usual praying for the deceased –Jung Soo-hyun. Geu-ru and the group head to the doctor’s house. What a hectic way to start the chapter, but a new “Move to Heaven” case is in our laps! Trauma cleaning for the doctor The woman screams, which causes a commotion, and the doctor is stabbed in the neck by the man - there’s panic, but it’s too late - the doctor has bled out, and he dies. Adults who enjoy a mystery will appreciate watching the characters discover their strengths as they come closer to their true natures in the face of death.Episode 5 opens with a man putting a woman under hostage at the hospital, and he asks for morphine a doctor tries to give him advice on his wounds, but the man wants the drugs only. But there is plenty of tenderness, devotion, and moral exploration in this series that's great for teens, especially those who already love K-dramas. The male characters clearly enjoy a freedom of expression that their female counterparts aren't privvy to women are narrowly portrayed as loudly opinionated, shrewish, obedient, or compassionate. But this difference gives the other characters a jumping point to explore their own challenges. Because he has neurological differences, Geu-Ru processes the traumatic scenes differently than his peers and his family. Every traumatic death holds a story, which Geu-Ru puts together like a puzzle, packing the momentos of a person's life into a single yellow, cardboard box. Each Move to Heaven episode shows Geu-Ru, a young man on the autism spectrum, approaching a new assignment. This poetic and haunting series from Korea asks moral questions about being valued it flows at the pace of clouds drifting across a spring sky, until the storm gathers and sudden change arises.
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