The show begins with his appropriately tragic origin story and a haunting opening sequence: An unseen perp murders multiple women in an oddly ritual way, and then sets fire to the apartment complex which ends up killing many more. Although he has a bright, affectionate personality, there’s also a side of him that’s so wounded, hungry and love-starved that it hurts my heart, and I’m so impressed with Jinyoung’s rendition of An’s emotions at all these different junctures. An has the most adorkable, beta-hero charm: an overgrown lovable puppy of a boy, with an utter lack of ego and an endearing dimness that I honestly think is my new favorite kind of hero. Our first introduction to LEE AN ( Got7’s Park Jinyoung) certainly lives up to everything I wanted and more. I know I’m not the only who sat up when I heard the premise-a kid who can read memories by touch? You mean like I Hear Your Voice, but tactile? Yes, please! With the conclusion of tvN’s Monday-Tuesday supernatural mystery drama, That Psychometric Guy last week, I figured it was worth taking a moment to look back on the show, and whether it lived up to my initial excitement. 76 That Psychometric Guy: Series review by Saya
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