Snowdrop – DS : EP07 Scene 81
This deleted scene appears in EP07 of the script and would have come right before Gyeok-chan drags Cheong-ya off to the lounge.. only to learn their newest ‘hostage’ is none other than Moran-bong 1.
An Outsiders' Inside Guide
This deleted scene appears in EP07 of the script and would have come right before Gyeok-chan drags Cheong-ya off to the lounge.. only to learn their newest ‘hostage’ is none other than Moran-bong 1.
Originally, in the scene where Soo-ho confirms with Ms Pi that Young-ro is the ANSP director’s daughter, there was a FB scene intercut with Ms Pi’s dialogue in which Young-ro was offered one final chance..
The FB that appears in the version of this scene that aired is actually the continuation of the train chase sequence that appears in EP01. Originally, the FB inserted here is one of Soo-ho and Gang-mu in Poland, the longer version of which became the EP14 bonus scene.
This isn’t so much a deleted scene as a pared down scene. The first part of it is exactly as-aired, but there’s a bit more to the end.
In the EP01 script, there’s a short scene following the scene of Young-ro and Seol-hee worrying for Jeong-min at the protest in which Young-ro pens another letter to her brother.
This scene appears in the episode but the dialogue was pared down considerably. Originally, the main POI in this scene was Professor Choi Seong-mook of Humboldt University in Germany.
We’re back with another deep-dive into a new series: Snowdrop. As dramas go, it’s about as different as you can get from TotNT in terms of genre, setting, premise, etc. but requires just as much cultural contextualisation, if for entirely different reasons. Consider this your guide to all the easter eggs, historical context, and cultural/linguistic subtext you may have missed in Snowdrop EP01.
Everything there is to know about the Snowdrop controversy, why it’s a ‘controversy for the sake of controversy,’ and why you should really watch the show and judge it for yourself.
A look at the concept of ‘yeon’ / ‘en’ (縁) and the notion of ‘fateful connections.’