Brian commands Mr. Jenkins to hit him, insisting, 'I owe this to Gina.' It's a twisted form of atonement. Why must love require pain? In (Dubbed) Bye Mr. Ice, Brian's guilt manifests as physical torment. His glasses fog with unshed tears as he kneels, broken.
Gina tells Brian she has a husband and a home—no need for his gifts. But Brian can't let go. He shows her surveillance footage of himself suffering, as if to say, 'See what you did?' In (Dubbed) Bye Mr. Ice, broken promises freeze the soul. His command to 'Hit me' is a cry for redemption.
Brian believes enduring cold and pain proves his devotion to Gina. He says, 'Compared to everything Gina has suffered, this is nothing.' But is self-torture really love? In (Dubbed) Bye Mr. Ice, he confuses punishment with penance. His trembling body mirrors his shattered heart.
Brian offers Gina a seaside villa, recalling her dream to live by the ocean. She refuses, saying she's already happy. His gesture feels less like generosity and more like desperation. In (Dubbed) Bye Mr. Ice, material gifts can't thaw a frozen relationship. The key he holds opens nothing.
Brian's obsession with Gina is chilling. He keeps a room ready for her, buys a villa by the sea, yet she rejects him coldly. The scene where he lies shirtless on the floor, shivering, shows his emotional pain. In (Dubbed) Bye Mr. Ice, love isn't warm—it's freezing. His self-punishment reveals how deeply he's hurt.