finished watching Good Boy πππππ
Personally, I prefer HanNa finishing the story to give an ending to her father's murder. They didn't even give her a proper ending, not even a single sniper shot. I guess they've forgotten her story.
The ML doesn't have a personal grudge to settle with him, the only thing driving him was his 100% sense of justice and conviction. But HanNa? It's deeply personal.
It's like:
HanNa: Oh, so it wasn't Russian guy who killed my father, it was JuYeong. Ok, case closed.
You see, I don't believe that. They built her character as someone who has an unfinished business regarding her father's murder. And just because she learned the truth, she dropped it and became a regular police officer who supports her boyfriend's pride as a policeman?
If anything, the ML should've been the one who switched as a supportive boyfriend to avenge her girlfried's father.
Yes, yes, we can assume that the ML did exactly that. However, the way the ML acted did not imply anything about that. They didn't even talk about it. He was just the usual, "I am a police officer so I must fulfill my oath". From the very beginning it was about his sense of pride as a policeman. He never once acted on behalf of HanNa's personal mission.
Don't get me wrong. It's good and all. But there's room for improvement, and that was making HanNa's personal mission the main plot. Giving a much more deeper meaning, and meat, to the ML's sense of justice and conviction, instead of simply a boxer trying to find his way again.
The ending dialogue could've been:
ML: This is for my brother. *punch*
ML: This is for my mother. *punch*
ML: And this is for HanNa! *uppercut*
ClichΓ© but it at least shows us, and establishes firmly, that he is human instead of just a punching machine.
Again, room for improvement, but sadly they missed it.