Mysterious Happenings: Mouse Episode 2 Review

Mysterious Happenings: Mouse Episode 2 Review

A familiar face becomes a hardened detective with a vendetta, putting together the pieces of the puzzle to discover a serial killer in the making. The more he kills, the bolder he gets – can he be stopped before more innocent lives are lost?

 
EPISODE 2 RECAP

GO MOO-CHI (Lee Hee-joon) has grown up to be a rugged police detective who’s dissatisfied that death row inmates don’t get executed. While apprehending a murderer, he decides to take matters into his own hands but a voice in his head urges him not to pull the trigger. He chases the criminal to the ledge of a rooftop.

Taking a swig from his flask, Moo-chi tells him not to jump but follows up with commentary about how he’d never survive prison, making the culprit consider taking his own life. Moo-chi pulls out his gun to shoot, but the murderer jumps to his death. The detective groans and continues drinking on the roof, waking up to a phone call at the crack of dawn.

He arrives at a crime scene still drunk and inspects a dead body that was found in a sewer. It’s the woman who was attacked in an alleyway, and her middle finger was forcefully bent back.

Detective KANG KI-HYUK (Yoon Seo-hyun) fumes to find Moo-chi barging onto his crime scene inebriated again and orders SHIN SANG (Pyo Ji-hoon a.k.a. P.O.) to drag him away.

They belatedly realize that Moo-chi’s giving an interview on live television, announcing that the person who killed this lady also murdered the boxing gym director and is either an attention seeker or against religion. His theory may sound like nonsense, but Moo-chi’s right. Photos of the two victims are plastered all over the culprit’s walls.

Moo-chi visits Seo-joon at the Mujin Detention Center. Moo-chi’s trying to get thrown into jail so that he can decapitate him, but the convict knows he can’t do it. He wasn’t born to be a killer.

Undeterred, Moo-chi recites Leviticus 24:17-20 from the Bible: Anyone who takes the life of a human being is to be put to death. […] Fracture for fracture, eye for eye, tooth for tooth.

Although he typically criticizes God, the passage resonates with Moo-chi and inspires him to pay back what he received. The new plan is to kill Seo-joon in front of his son, so that he suffers the same pain of witnessing such a scarring moment.

JUNG BA-REUM (Lee Seung-gi) apologizes profusely for getting in the way. He had noticed an injured bird on the road and used his body to shield it from harm’s way. Although originally livid, Moo-chi just leaves and wonders, “Is he kind or stupid?”

Prison guard NA CHI-KOOK (Lee Seo-joon) escorts Seo-joon back to solitary confinement. The convict asks for some surgical thread to practice with, but Chi-kook doesn’t give in even when Seo-joon says that the other guards never went against his wishes. He musters up the courage to stand up to him and seethes, “You think you’re a king, right? Don’t flatter yourself.” Chi-kook won’t succumb to threats.

Chi-kook yields the surgical thread to his friends who forgot to bring a sewing kit for their performance later. Dong-goo remembers that Seo-joon is at this facility and asks to meet him – he’s a member of the Head Hunter fan page. Chi-kook can’t believe he’s one of those pathetic fans that stroke the egos of serial killers, not knowing that he only signed up to research for an upcoming movie that he’d like to direct.

Ba-reum and Chi-kook stop for quick break by the prison yard while carrying a heavy prop. Chi-kook shares that death row inmates laze around rather than atoning for their crimes and is ashamed of himself for being scared of someone like that today.

He confesses that the thread was meant for the infamous Head Hunter and points him out to Ba-reum who’s in awe that he looks normal. Meanwhile, a prisoner offers to teach Chi-kook a lesson and Seo-joon instructs him to search for “someone.” Whe he looks up from his book, he locks eyes with Ba-reum.

Moo-chi re-traces the sewer victim Soon-young’s steps. He finds her blood on a different sewage grate and realizes that this is where she was actually killed, taking note of the huge footprints nearby.

When he returns to the precinct, PD CHOI HONG-JOO (Kyung Su-jin) bugs him about the interview he gave earlier that day. She can’t figure out what the connection is between the boxing gym and sewer cases, but he tells her to get lost.

Detective Kang interrogates a sketchy man who admits that he followed Soon-young that night with the intention of asking her on a date. One look at his feet tells Moo-chi that he’s not the killer, but Detective Kang tells him to back off his case.

Hong-joo has been lingering around to get some leads on the boxing gym case that her show is supposed to air an episode on. She blackmails Moo-chi into cooperating with her with photographic evidence of his illegal gambling activities.

The reason she’s fixated on the boxing gym case is because the victim, Soo-ho, is the brother of the woman who was lured in by the young girl and killed by the Head Hunter years ago. She wants to catch the murderer for their mother’s sake.

Moo-chi brings Hong-joo to the spot where Soon-young was killed, which is about 100 meters from where her body was found. Her clothing indicated that she was dragged across the ground, but the question is…why?

Meanwhile, the performance is well underway back at the prison. The inmates aren’t receptive to Ba-reum’s magic show at first, but by the time Seo-joon shows up, everyone’s laughing heartily.

Ba-reum’s final act is to handcuff a volunteer and lock him in the safe. He and Dong-goo spin it around claiming that the inmate will disappear. Everybody panics when they open the door to do their big reveal.

Moo-chi and Hong-joo sit in the exact positions where Soon-young and Soo-ho’s bodies were found. Hong-joo learns that each time, the culprit meticulously sets it up so that the forcefully bent finger points at a nearby cross.

Another commonality between the two cases is that he takes a prize to remember his victims by – a ring from Soon-young and boxing gloves from Soo-ho. This behavior leads Moo-chi to believe that a dangerous psychopath is hunting humans.

Back at the prison, everyone is shocked to see Chi-kook stripped down to his underwear, bloody and unconscious inside the safe. He’s been stabbed multiple times and lost a few fingers.

A prison guard phones the doctor on site, and Seo-joon watches calmly from the back of the room. When the priest GO MOO-WON (Kim Young-jae) instructs someone to turn on the lights, Seo-joon gets up and saunters to the stage. Moo-won recognizes him and the horrific memories resurface.

Ba-reum warns Seo-joon to stay away, but Moo-won speaks up and asks him to help Chi-kook who’s bleeding from his brain. Ba-reum cries while watching Seo-joon perform the suture. Chi-kook is transferred to the ER soon after, but they must look for a missing finger before they’re able to perform surgery.

Moo-chi explains that Soo-ho was killed out of vengeance. There are fractures all over his body, meaning that he was beaten before he was burnt, specifically in areas where a person feels the most pain. Most conclusively, Soo-ho’s blood bookmarked a page from his bible, which is where Moo-chi discovered the “eye for an eye” passage.

It makes it sound like the murderer was retaliating against something Soo-ho had done. People say he was a kind guy, but Moo-chi comments that nobody knows the true inner thoughts of another person.

At the mention of Seo-joon’s son, Hong-joo asks what crime he committed to deserve the pain that Moo-chi’s planning to serve him. The detective scoffs, “Then, what crime did I commit?” To him, it’s only fair that he feels the same pain but more than anything, he’s curious to see how he turned out.

While waiting for Chi-kook’s finger, Ba-reum and Dong-goo overhear Soo-ho’s mother wailing that she didn’t want to be saved. A young doctor named SUNG YO-HAN (Kwon Hwa-woon) comes over and drily explains where she should cut next time if she wishes to die.

Angered, Dong-goo flings himself at the doctor, grabbing him by the lapels and demanding that he apologize. However, Yo-han’s cold gaze causes Dong-goo to back down. Suddenly, the prison guard is back with the missing finger and doctors rush to get Chi-kook into the operation room.

The specialist is still performing another surgery so to Ba-reum’s dismay, Yo-han is asked to assist. He requests a different doctor but is told not to worry, as Yo-han has experience with neurosurgery.

High schooler OH BONG-YI (Park Joo-hyun) calls somebody to pick her up from school, looking nervous about the incoming rain. They don’t show up so she heads home alone, anxious about crossing a bridge. She forces herself to do it anyway but her knees buckle when the rain pours and she senses someone approaching her from behind.

Her grandmother swings at the man with her umbrella but when he takes off his hood, Halmoni recognizes that it’s Ba-reum. She wraps the hyperventilating Bong-yi up in a comforting hug, telling her that everything will be okay. Bong-yi gasps about a puppy that doesn’t exist, but Halmoni just says that it ran away.

Bong-yi stomps home angrily when the storm is over and Ba-reum apologizes to Halmoni for scaring them in his bloody outfit. She makes him stay for dinner and he wears one of her outfits while waiting for his clothes to dry, hee.

He tries to grab his favorite rolled omelette, but the grouchy Bong-yi physically blocks him from picking one up. Halmoni watches giddily from the side as Ba-reum fusses over the wound on Bong-yi’s palm. Noticing this, the teenager snaps at him and hides in her room.

Halmoni says that she’s just shy in front of the man she likes and asks what he thinks about marrying her granddaughter. Things get super uncomfortable when Halmoni brags that the 19-year-old is well-endowed and curvy, so he gets up to leave.

Hong-joo does some research and gets Daniel to feature on her show, Sherlock Hong-joo. He mentions that Edmund Kemper’s killing instincts awakened after he murdered his own grandparents out of curiosity. Most psychopaths’ killer instincts remain dormant until something triggers it.

Moo-chi’s interview explains that Soo-ho was killed to enact revenge, but it sparked something within the killer, who chose Soon-young as his next victim randomly. He’s sure that this is the start of a killing spree where the murders will become bolder and more frequent now.

He’s right once again, because a homeless man’s corpse is found in an abandoned warehouse, again with the signature finger pointing at a cross. Moo-chi warns the viewers that if this is the work of a psychopath, then he could be hunting for his next prey at any given moment.

Confused that there’s no cross involved, Moo-chi removes the woman’s hand from her mouth. Sure enough, the murderer carved a cross on the roof of her mouth and her finger was pointing at it.

The detective discovers a bloody message written just for him when he looks up: Bingo! Detective Go Moo-chi’s marvelous deductive skills. Please! I hope you like the gift I prepared.

Meanwhile, Yo-han is approached by a man who says that somebody would like to see him. He visits Seo-joon in jail and the convict says, “I was curious to see how my son grew up.”

 
COMMENTS

The premiere episodes of Mouse leaves us with tons to think about, that’s for sure. I didn’t realize the first time I watched the episode, but there were only three corpses shown to Jae-hoon in the beginning. Presumably, they were Stepdad and Jae-hoon’s two siblings, so Ji-eun is likely still alive. She wasn’t present when Jae-hoon was named the prime suspect. What happened after he destroyed their family, and how did Jae-hoon spend the rest of his childhood?

The show makes a very deliberate choice in keeping Jae-hoon’s face hidden and even masking his adult voiceovers, meaning they don’t want us to know who he grew up to be. All we know is that he unleashed his dormant killer instincts by murdering the boxing gym director, Soo-ho. All signs seem to point at the young doctor Yo-han (he even has the same last name as Ji-eun). He does not care about others’ emotions, is an absolute genius, knows his stuff when it comes to human anatomy, and was even called over to meet Seo-joon. Although it seems like their meeting solidified the fact that they’re father and son, this is a 20-episode drama with 85-minute episodes (help), so it feels way too early for this to be the correct answer.

Judging from the final scene, it seems that it’s either Yo-han or Ba-reum. It’s much more believable for Ba-reum to be the son of the other lady who claimed that her late husband was an extremely kind man. That woman mourned the loss of her husband and was sure that her child would be just like him. She would’ve showered him with love and affection, and from what we’ve seen, Ba-reum is an absolute angel.

On the other hand, Ji-eun gave birth despising Jae-hoon’s father. (Who can blame her, really?) Knowing that Jae-hoon possesses the same gene and has the possibility of becoming a murderer would’ve likely caused a strain on their relationship. The stepfather didn’t seem to treat Jae-hoon with kindness either. This is not to put the blame on anyone other than Jae-hoon, but I wonder how much his upbringing and environment had to do with the path he ultimately chose? Regardless of whether Jae-hoon is Yo-han or Ba-reum, it’s a fact that he became a serial killer targeting people at random.

If only 1% of those with the psychopath gene become predators and the killing instinct stays dormant until it is triggered, then this is really just a case of nature vs. nurture. Although they keep emphasizing that killers are born that way, there are 99% of those born with the gene that manage to not go down that route. It’s interesting that Jae-hoon calls himself a monster and even prayed to God that he wouldn’t become one. The way he speaks about it seems like he always expected to become a killer, so I wonder…how much of this mindset influenced him to go through with his more questionable actions? I’m quite interested to see what direction Mouse will take to answer all of our burning questions. The acting is superb so far, and I’m eager to see what’s in store for us. I just hope that Chi-kook will be okay, and that Ba-reum isn’t evil!