
Yeon-ui Pyeonji
Oshimeter
Synopsis
Sori is the kind of kid who can't look away when someone's being hurt. When bullying destroys her friend Kim Julie, Sori fights back — and immediately becomes the new target. She transfers to a school in her old city hoping for a clean slate, but trauma doesn't care about geography. She walls herself off, keeps her head down, and drifts through her days like a ghost. Then she finds a letter taped under her desk. Not a threat, not a cruel joke — just a mysterious note that leads to another, and another, pulling her into a quiet scavenger hunt she didn't ask for. The movie unfolds from there, peeling back who's behind the letters and why, while Sori slowly, carefully lets herself exist around other people again. The mystery isn't some grand conspiracy — it's intimate, grounded in the question of whether one small gesture can reach someone who's convinced nobody cares. The emotional weight here is real. It sits with the loneliness and doesn't rush past it. If you connected with A Silent Voice's exploration of guilt and isolation, or if March Comes in Like a Lion's quiet depiction of healing meant something to you, this hits a similar nerve. Orange fans will also find familiar ground in the idea of reaching someone before it's too late. It's a single movie, so the commitment is low, but the story lingers. Bring tissues, probably.
Episode Guide
MANGA BRIDGE
This season covers Chapters 1-12 of the manga. Continue reading from Chapter 13.

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