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Move to heaven review
Move to heaven review














Cho Sang-Gu is rough around the edges, to say the least, and the last thing he is initially interested in, is taking care of a nephew he doesn't give a hoot about from a brother he hated and despised.

Move to heaven review trial#

After his father suddenly dies from a heart condition, Geu-ru is put into trial custody under his uncle, Cho Sang-Gu, a man who's just gotten out of prison and is an ex-MMA fighter. Of course, Geu-ru's world is strictly ordered, and any deviation from that order brings him into hysterics.

move to heaven review

Not only is he able to remember anything with a momentary glance, he is able to piece things together in order to learn more about the person who died. Han Geu-ru-who is masterfully portrayed by Tang Joon-Sang and should win every actor award that he's nominated for-is a 20-year-old boy with Asperger's Syndrome who is gifted with unique and special insight. But the key element of the job is to collect those important and necessary items that the deceased has left behind and give them to a relative or someone who was important to the person who died. Sometimes, it is not very glamorous, especially if the body of the deceased has been there for an extended period of time. Trauma cleaners are hired to go into a deceased's dwelling and clean it. Don't know what trauma cleaners are? Neither did I until I watched the show.

move to heaven review

The show is like a yellow box that has all of the important things in it, leaving nothing out, and putting no extraneous or unnecessary plot devices into it. "Move to Heaven" is a little gem of a series that is fulfilling and uplifting in its short 10-episode story arc.














Move to heaven review