
Drama Digest
A serial killer with Kang Kwon Joo’s increased hearing ability comes and begins murdering people with it. Kang Kwon Joo is forced into a corner as a result, and she decides to work with Detective Derek Cho to apprehend the serial killer.
The Feel-Good Part
It’s fascinating how the writers used the concept of family as a recurring motif throughout the series. In one way or another, family members are involved in every emergency case that the GTT resolves. After half of the season has passed, this underlying theme is brought to the fore and elegantly incorporated into the cases to make them more noticeable, assisting them in laying the groundwork for the final confrontation. A community and cult as gloomy as the programme itself, and vaguely suggestive of Save Me, are stitched into this delicate fabric. It’s beautifully done, and in terms of the core plot of Judgement Hour, it’s flawless.
The Disappointing Factor
Essentially, the relationship between the two major characters begins in the same way that it did in the previous three seasons. Unlike Team Leader Do and Moo Jin Hyeok, Director Kang’s companion this time is not the same. Taking into account the plot. The show has its own set of issues. Director Kang continues to meet hostility from her superiors wherever she goes, and her relationship with her ML partner begins unpleasant and nasty. Perhaps there are other, more effective methods to depict the internal issues that arise when a new member joins an existing team? Then there’s the cyber man, who embodies all of the tech nerd cliches and fills in for the team’s second resident vacancy. He’s been given his quirks, to be sure. Only, they’re too similar to what we’ve seen in people who have occupied the same position in prior seasons. Let’s pretend that these are unavoidable ills, and that changing the fundamental structure would be too difficult for both the writers and the audience.
In-Depth Analysis
A serial killer with improved hearing abilities, who looks and acts exactly like Kang Kwon Joo, comes and begins murdering people with it. Kang Kwon Joo finds herself in a bind as a result of this, and she decides to work with Detective Derek Cho to apprehend the serial killer. Derek Cho is a team leader with the LAPD (Los Angeles Police Department) who worked with criminal gangs. He is a person of principle who does not tolerate mistakes. Since the death of Do Kang Woo, Kwon Joo has been suffering from PTSD, yet she continues to oversee the emergency 112 contact centre.
Star Power
The setting cleverly moves to Vimo Island this time, with the head of the Vimo PD stating in her initial conversation with Director Kang that the island has its own set of rules. It sets the tone for the entire series, as Director Kang and her merry men of the GTT must now play by those new, strange, and at times nonsensical conventions in order to find a way to win despite the overwhelming odds stacked against them. That is, if they are able to survive. If they can overcome both internal and external demons, they will be successful.
Overall Opinion
The show is interesting enough to keep you watching till the end. It was well-balanced in terms of all emotions. The importance of the family and its role in forming or breaking a society is the season’s topic. You’ll appreciate how they underlined the need of both young and old people taking responsibility in our dealings and relationships. It also touched on the subject of our mental health.