Like Father, Like Daughter
Behind the walls of the Noh household, where a celebrated author's legacy rests on a shelf of awards, the silence is a weapon honed over decades. Noh Soh-ra has spent her entire life under that crushing quiet — a 19-year-old trapped in a gilded cage, forbidden to step outside, forbidden to touch a phone, forbidden to speak anything but the praise her father demands. The outside world calls him a genius. Inside these walls, he is a tyrant who sees his daughter as a manuscript to be edited, a mistake to be corrected, an extension of his own brilliance rather than a separate human being. And then Soh-ra takes the car keys one night, and the cage's door cracks open for the first time.
Her desperate escape ends in tragedy — an accident, an arrest, and a spotlight that burns brighter than any lamp inside her room. But the trial becomes a crucible that forges something new. Soh-ra learns her father's truth: he isn't just the monster she knows. He is a predator who has stalked the same hunting grounds since before she was born, and the trail of victims stretches back to his own childhood. When she finally takes the witness stand, it's not to speak as his victim. It's to speak as the one person who understands the architecture of his mind well enough to dismantle it. But exposing him means exposing herself — every secret, every scar, every moment she stayed silent while she should have screamed. In a world that prefers its geniuses comfortable, can a broken daughter's testimony shatter her father's masterpiece before it swallows her whole?
Also known as: 똑 닮은 딸, Ttok Talmeun Ttal, Spitting Image.