My Sexy Roommates -v1.02- -codepink- — Sweet Home -

The Architecture of Intimacy in the Apocalypse: Trauma, Proximity, and the Evolution of Romance in Sweet Home

The most emotionally charged relationship is between Hyun-soo and his gruff protector, Jae-heon. Though never explicitly labeled as romantic, their bond exceeds platonic rescue. Jae-heon’s obsession with saving Hyun-soo—carrying him, monitoring his symptoms, and ultimately sacrificing himself—mirrors a romantic devotion that transcends the group’s utilitarian survival logic. Jae-heon’s death (Episode 8) functions as a narrative climax: it is the first time Hyun-soo openly weeps, and the loss catalyzes Hyun-soo’s final resistance to monsterization. This paper posits that Sweet Home uses a “romantic grammar” (tenderness, exclusivity, self-sacrifice) without a sexual script to explore a purer form of love: one based on seeing the monster in the other and choosing them anyway. Sweet Home - My Sexy Roommates -v1.02- -CODEPINK-

Eun-yoo’s evolution from suicidal apathy to fierce protectiveness directly maps onto her developing feelings for Hyun-soo. Their romance is asynchronous: Eun-yoo’s early cruelty masks attraction; Hyun-soo’s isolation prevents recognition. The turning point occurs in the bathroom confrontation (Episode 5) where Eun-yoo forces him to confront his emerging monster eye. This is not a tender moment but an intimate violation—she touches his wound, looks directly at his horror, and declares, “Then let me see it all.” This act of witnessing becomes the foundation of their romance. By Season 2, their reunion carries the weight of a couple separated by war. We argue that Eun-yoo represents the “grounded romantic” —love as pragmatic, unsentimental, but utterly loyal. The Architecture of Intimacy in the Apocalypse: Trauma,

Not all romantic arcs redeem. The backstory of the “Protein Monster” (the security guard) reveals a man whose obsessive love for a woman who rejected him curdled into entitlement and violence. Similarly, the blind woman’s monstrous husband (Episode 4) turned because his desire for possession outweighed his care for her. These negative cases prove the rule: romantic love that remains selfish —focused on the lover’s needs rather than the beloved’s agency—leads directly to monsterization. Sweet Home thus offers a moral taxonomy: love as service to the other saves; love as demand for return destroys. Jae-heon’s death (Episode 8) functions as a narrative