Strongest Chil Woo: Episode 10
by javabeans
I think this is the first episode that actually got me a little verklempt. I don’t know if I was in a funky mood or if it was the particular plot, but I thought Episode 10 stepped it up.
Part of Chil Woo‘s appeal, as discussed here, is its structure — rather than dragging out one epic storyline, every episode or two brings in new stories and new villains.
That’s also the reason I don’t mind that the bad guys are one-dimensional, cartoonish stock villains, since they’re just here to give Chil Woo and Friends something to fight and overcome. While there are a few overarching themes (like Prince So Hyun’s murder), the plot of each episode tends to be parsed into manageable, bite-size chunks. (Hong Dil Dong did this pretty well, too, until the end when they dropped the smaller storylines.)
Oh, and another warning of another rant ahead. Heh.
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EPISODE 10 RECAP
New bad guys. The ugly bald dude is a Chinese general, here to demand horses and yet more tribute brides or whatever you call them. (This time, Chil Woo & Co. chime in with the exasperated question, “Again?!?”) He swaggers in, acts pushy, and puts the king and the court at unease by suggesting that Prince So Hyun was murdered instead of dying by the “mysterious illness” as it is officially recognized.
The guy on the right is a former childhood acquaintance of Chil Woo’s who has since become a government official, acting as envoy to China. (I couldn’t quite make out his full name (Chi Seo, perhaps?) but his last name is Lee, so that’s what I’ll be calling him.) But because he’s a sniveling opportunist, he’s turned his back on his Korean heritage and aligned himself with China, eschewing Korea as a “poor, tiny” and powerless country. To convey what a jerk he is, the actor smirks a lot and talks in this funky sneering accent. It’s vaguely surfer-dude and totally hysterical.
Hearing of the general’s arrival, So Yoon requests to be transferred to the less pleasant task of tending to horses. Chil Woo worries that she’s doing this because she’s uncomfortable around him, but she hesitantly confides that it’s because of the general. He was in China when she’d attended Prince So Hyun and his wife, and she’s afraid he will recognize her. She wants to lay low while he’s in town.
Meanwhile, the Prime Minister discusses Prince So Hyun’s murder with Heuk San. But he’s not too worried about the general’s suspicions, because isn’t it such a great thing how everyone involved in that incident is dead? OH, WAIT.
Because of the demand for more young maidens, daughters of noblemen are to be rounded up — all unmarried girls between 13 and 24. The police officers grumble at this injustice, wondering if they could hurry and get married before all eligible ladies are shipped off. (Way to make this about you, guys.) To prevent such an event, the king has decreed a temporary prohibition on marriage, so as to ensure the maximum selection pool of young virgins to sell into sexual slavery.
So Yoon tells Jaja to keep a low profile while the Chinese general is in town, since he may be recognized. Jaja wants to appeal to the general about his friend’s murder (believing naively that he’ll help) since Prince So Hyun never did anything. So Yoon defends the prince as having done his duty to his country, and reminds Jaja that the prince saved her from suicide and treated his people well.
Chil Woo overhears her fervent defense, and asks if she’d loved the prince. If so, he says gloomily, he’ll concede — the guy was a prince, after all. So Yoon tells him she’s disappointed he’d give up and walks on, smiling to herself, while Chil Woo registers what she meant by that.
One of the women eligible to be sent off is Min’s very own sister, Eun Hee (btw, I mentioned this early on but “Min” is actually his last name. I chose to call him that because Chil Woo and Jaja call him by last name rather than first, which is Seung Kook). Eun Hee begs her brother to use his name to save her from a horrible fate, but Min is unwilling to bend the rules, even for his sister. He tells her, grimly, that he can’t do anything. Yeesh, talk about cold.
In desperation, Eun Hee and her lover/boyfriend seek out other options. They, along with a father-daughter pair, ask Chil Woo’s mom and grandmother for help. None of their options are very pleasant: for instance, they could run off to a remote province, but they’d have to shave their heads and become Buddhist nuns, or have a doctor cripple them. So their lives are basically ruined in any case.
Lee, who is charged with rounding up the young women, recognizes Chil Woo and his father, but looks down at them for their lowly positions. He takes offense to the familiar way he’s addressed, causing Chil Woo to interject and attempt to calm him down. But Lee continues to throw his weight around and talk of how important he is, so Chil Woo answers that of course they’re all aware of his position as a high-ranking eunuch. HA. Lee gets even angrier and orders both of them to kneel, but Chil Woo wears a smirk that practically says, “It was still worth it.” ‘Cause you know how guys don’t like being mocked about their private parts. Particularly about not having any.
Chil Woo and Dad are sent to collect the young women from their homes, but one father explains that his daughter is deathly ill. One look at her confirms that she’s sick, and they figure they can exempt her.
And then we come to the scene that had me tearing up unexpectedly. The young women who are to be sent away have decided to become Buddhist nuns to avoid their fates, and have gathered in a secret location to undergo a head-shaving ritual. The girls sob as their hair is cut off, not so much at the loss of hair but at this irrevocable step — sure, they won’t have to become concubines to a foreign court, but they’re still giving up their lives and hopes.
But the officers discover the plan and burst onto the scene, interrupting the head-shaving. They roughly grab the women, tear them apart from their fathers and lovers and brothers trying to protect them, beat down anyone in their way, and essentially go all riot police on a scene where there’s no riot.
Sickened, Chil Woo watches, unwilling to participate but unable to stop them. Min’s sister Eun Hee sobs as her lover is knocked down trying to protect her, and she and the other women are dragged off for inspection like cattle to slaughter. Moo.
I kind of love the confrontation that erupts at the A-Team Headquarters that night, because it’s all angry and frustrated and intense. And Chil Woo yells at Min, which I found satisfying because Min is a big ol’ stupid jerkface for most of this episode.
Jaja is always the hotheaded one, first to insist they rush in and save everybody. Oh, Jaja. So dumb, so sweet. I got a little riled up with him when he insisted they set all the girls free. He saw how these concubines were treated when he was in China — they were viewed as toys and died miserably. Min, ever the principled nobleman, insists that rescuing these girls won’t solve the problem, because they’ll just demand more. Jaja shouts, “Then we save them again!” Min: “And if they drag off more?!” “Then we save them AGAIN!!”
Min has a point, but he’s just so defeated and fatalistic, saying they can’t do anything because it’s a matter of international diplomacy, and an effort to save a few people could lead to the deaths of many more.
Chil Woo tries to contain his frustration, saying with barely controlled fury:
“I hate that. Lofty noblemen reducing a person’s life to numbers. Saying, ‘You hundred die to save those ten thousand.’ Everyone’s only got one life. But still they make that demand. They’re not the ones dying.”
He glares at Min, who glares right back; Min challenges Chil Woo to suggest a solution. Chil Woo growls, “There is no solution. Which is why I feel so dirty.”
Lee realizes that Chil Woo hasn’t brought in a single girl. Chil Woo explains that each situation had an extenuating circumstance, which Lee doesn’t buy. He takes Chil Woo along and heads to the home of the nobleman with the sickly daughter, beating the man until the daughter comes out sobbing and begging for mercy. But she isn’t faking, because she coughs up blood. And yet, seeing proof of her sickness doesn’t stop Lee, who orders his men to keep beating the father until the girl finally says that she’ll go.
Lee turns to Chil Woo and tells him, “This is how it’s done.”
The women are then lined up for Lee’s “inspection” (purely based on attractiveness), and he judges each girl as either acceptable or unacceptable. All the while, Min silently watches as his sister undergoes this treatment.
Meanwhile, Chil Woo hears Eun Hee’s name and does some researching, discovering that she’s Min’s sister.
Brother and sister have one last moment before she’s dragged off, and she again pleads with him to step in and say something: “If you only said one word, I wouldn’t have to go.” But no, Min’s principles are more important than his sister’s life, because he tells her no. He tells her with some distress, “Sending you away is difficult and painful for me, too.”
Uh, fuck you Min. I’m sure you can think that to yourself while you’re in your cushy, comfortable home while your sister’s off being violated to “preserve” Korea’s diplomatic duty. Let’s see if YOU can manage to sit back on your moral high horse when you’re done being raped by your country and, oh yeah, actual rapists.
I’m not saying there’s much he can do about it, but he’d really shouldn’t be arguing HIS pain when he’s not even willing to stick his neck out to push for his sister’s life (he has a moment where he’s about to ask the King a question, then changes his mind). Eun Hee can’t believe he could do this to her, accusing him of using her for his political advancement.
At A-Team Central, Min again resists Jaja’s urging to free the slave girls. China’s preparing to war with Russia, and Korea is in a precarious situation.
Chil Woo doesn’t see things as so cut and dry, though, and disagrees. He tells Min that this is his blood sister he’s talking about: “She’s your family, your younger sister! She’s someone you’re supposed to protect! What’s so complicated about protecting your family? You want to help her, you want to save her too!”
Min struggles with his own principles, and says, “But there’s no way.” Chil Woo spits out, “A way? We’ve found one. A simple one.”
Woot woot! Time for our bastardized “Under Pressure” remix anthem!
The oh-so-simple solution starts by getting Chil Woo, Dad, and Min assigned to accompany the women to the Chinese border. The group is headed by Lee, and for most of the journey, the assassins remain quiet. Near the border, the royal entourage readies to head back (the women will be sent onward with the Chinese officials), at which point Min is asked to give a few parting words.
The women are told not to run away and keep in mind that they’re doing “their work on behalf of the nation.” (Yeah, you appreciate their “work” so much that you indenture them into slavery when they return and debase them as outcasts, right?) Min speechifies: “But do not despair, for despair becomes a disease of the people. Have hope, and endure through the end.”
Korean officers return home, the Chinese set up camp, and the A-Team makes their move.
They ambush the encampment dressed as Russian soldiers, shooting guns from horseback, killing the men while the women huddle together in fear. Lee emerges from his tent (his rape attempt on Eun Hee cut short) and is chased by the three horsemen.
Lee recognizes Chil Woo and begs for mercy, reminding him of how they grew up together. He blubbers that he’ll live a quiet life and resign from his post, which Chil Woo considers for a moment. But while the three guys pause to think over the possibility of sparing his unworthy life, Lee sneakily grabs for the gun. Min reacts first, swinging the gun away from Chil Woo and striking Lee down with a slash of his sword.
The Assassin Trio identify themselves to the women as Russians intending to drag the women off with them, which makes them sob in fear. Then Chil Woo clarifies that everyone will believe that’s what happened, so they are now free to return home to their loved ones. They need not fear a repeat occurrence in the future because they’ll be believed to have been dragged off by Russians.
Eun Hee reunites with her brother, thanking him for coming to her rescue after all. Chil Woo watches the happy scene with bittersweetness, recalling the sister he wasn’t able to save.
But while the happy group spends some time relaxing and playing water games, more sinister happenings are underfoot back at home.
The general is looking at horses when he recognized So Yoon from back when she served Prince So Hyun. He has her brought to him for questioning, and So Yoon attempts to deny it, nervously telling him that he has the wrong person. The general, however, is convinced he’s right.
Elsewhere, Heuk San hears with alarm that So Yoon was summoned to face the general, and gears up as Orroz to do something about it.
COMMENTS
Stories like this really piss me off — not pissed off at the series, but at seeing women treated as subhuman in a way that, unfortunately, still exists today. Not everywhere, of course, and a lot of the sexism and crimes against women these days come in more insidious form. Actually, sexism I can deal with, but sexual crimes are a lot harder to stomach. The kind where women are treated as nothing but receptacles for sex. You know, that crass joke that reduces a woman to “two hands and three holes.” Nameless, faceless, and identityless, all they’re good for is fulfilling a sexual impulse.
You wanna know why I fly off into a rant when I see little girls treading down that slippery slope of objectification? You can say, “Oh just let it go,” or “It’s not that bad,” but where do you think this stuff starts? Sure, Hyori and Chae Yeon and Britney and whomever all peddle their sex appeal willingly, but they’re adults. When you stop feeling creeped out by a toddler gyrating suggestively in imitation of grownup sexy dancing, does that mean she’s fair game for objectification too? Is it that much better when the girl doing those moves — still underage, still trading on an “innocent” image — is fifteen years old, instead of five?
One thing this drama has done, on multiple occasions, is highlight the hypocrisy of the system whereby women who were victims of sexual crimes were then further abused — by the very ones who are supposed to protect them — for “allowing” themselves to be violated. There was the mother in the first episode who was raped by her father-in-law, then hung for being a pregnant slut. There were the women like So Yoon who returned home after “serving their national duty” as concubines and then condemned to slavery for it. Punished by the people who perpetrated the crime, for the crime that was done TO them. And in yesterday’s episode, the woman raped by the impostor assassins was thrown out of her home by her husband, then sunk into despair and killed herself.
I might not get worked up over these storylines if I could console myself that they are a thing of the past, mere history. But they’re not, and that’s what’s so fucking depressing. Like the little girls who are sold off into abusive marriages at ages of six, or eight. Or the women in the Muslim world who are raped, and then killed BY HER OWN FAMILY in so-called “honor killings.” God, it’s horrific on an epic scale that there even EXISTS a term such as honor killing.
Phew. Like I said, these abuse-of-women storylines get my blood boiling — I hope in a good way — and I appreciate how it provokes thought, although I’m starting to worry that by the end of Chil Woo I may have become an embittered and cynical man-hater. Geez, just keep it in your pants, fellas! I mean, unless it’s consensual and appropriate and all that groovy stuff.
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Tags: Eric, Gu Hye-sun, Strongest Chil Woo
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1 eevee
July 15, 2008 at 11:36 PM
awwwwww i feel ya dramabeans!!!
they should totally keep it in! for petes sake. and to think the television these days just openly show things like that, making it alright. hopefully ur comments will cause some epiphany in many ppl and we will all starts to think another way.
but great summary again!!!
dont kill me for saying this but i wish orroz can save me over and over!!!!!!! hahah i dont mind being "weak" for a few times so he can come to my rescue. im hopelessly drooling over him each episode. i gotta get myself some of that hot sexy dude. lol
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2 choram
July 16, 2008 at 12:20 AM
lol don't hate all men. women need men just as much as men need women ;D
(but i know what you're getting at.) :)
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3
July 16, 2008 at 12:20 AM
"Or the women in the Muslim world who are raped, and then killed BY HER OWN FAMILY in so-called “honor killings"
I just want to clarify that the practice of honour killings cannot be generalized to all muslim world. It happened only in certain muslim communities as the majority of / mainstream muslim world prohibits honor killings. The practice of honor killings is mostly related to cultural background rather than religious one, though some perpetrators pervertly use religion to justify their atrocities. Muslim teaching itself explicitly prohibits honor killings.
For example, a country like Indonesia with a significant number of muslim population (2nd largest muslim populated country in the world if i'm not mistaken) has never had a practice of honor killings. And muslim women in Indonesia is not as repressed as muslim women in middle east which is probably influenced by different cultural background (For those who want to understand the status of women in muslim world, you could try: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_islam).
Cases of honor killings have happened in Albania, Bangladesh, Brazil, Canada, Denmark, Ecuador, Germany, India, Iraq, Israel (within the Arab, Druze and Bedouin communities), Italy, Pakistan, Punjab, the Palestinian territories, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, Uganda, United Kingdom and the United States (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honor_killings).
But I agree, that the practice of honor killings is disgusting and outrageous. Hopefully this practice will cease to exist (soon!). Sorry for my long rant! LOL
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4 hjkomo
July 16, 2008 at 12:50 AM
Thanks, Sarah. I thought this episode had more depth than previous episodes and less goofiness...except for the surfer-dude eunich...and, of course, the MAN-LOVE frolicking (replete with slow-mo splashing) in the stream at the end of the episode. :D
Chil Woo's "There is no solution. Which is why I feel so dirty.” lines were the first glimpse of real emotion (that I've seen) from Eric in this series. And the continuing theme of the mistreatment of women was stepped up a notch.
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5 Orangehaji
July 16, 2008 at 1:18 AM
#3 anonymuos--> thats what i want to say too. I'm a muslim woman and live in a muslim world..^_^
Very sad episode..i cried .. T_T..THANKS dramabeans!!
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6 Javabeans
July 16, 2008 at 3:34 AM
I didn't mean ALL Muslims participate in honor killings. More that they exist in the Muslim world. Didn't mean to offend.
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7
July 16, 2008 at 4:39 AM
"I didn’t mean ALL Muslims participate in honor killings. More that they exist in the Muslim world. Didn’t mean to offend."
No worries javabeans. I know you didn't mean that. Just want to avoid any miss-interpretation for what you wrote (which is sadly happen a lot in religious interpretation which result in the rise of fundamentalism).
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8 phiphi
July 16, 2008 at 7:06 AM
Eric shows a lot of emotion this episode, specially the shouting match with Min at the A-team hide-out.
Wonder where did they get those Russian warrior outfits, guns and extra man power for the rescue. It seems to come out from no where.
They make the Chinese general character looks ridiculously cartoonish (the bald spot with a bang and braid complete with an over exaggerated eye browns)
Any one notice Orroz's shadow has a very tiny, tiny waist?
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9 Miki
July 16, 2008 at 8:21 AM
I can't stand sexual crimes, people's views and hypocrisy towards it, but what I can't stand the most is the women's personal view like she deserves to stay there and take the crime.
I really appreciate goofy Chil-Woo for giving light messages like this that makes me like the drama even more, whether the message is intentional or not. I think I like the fact that I can't really tell whether its message is intentional or not, because it doesn't beat you over the head with it and makes it lighter to take. Show, not tell, is the best mantra for dramas who want to say something.
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10 kirara43
July 16, 2008 at 8:44 AM
Javabeans, yes I agree, I feel bad for these women. I would be scared if something like that happened to me as well. Its also sad that this is still going in some parts of the world today.
So Orroz is coming to So Yoon again? Seems like he really does like her a lot. There's going to be more tension between the Chil Woo and Orroz. :P
Thank you for the recaps.
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11 jamieguo
July 16, 2008 at 2:49 PM
As another Muslim woman, I just wanted to back up what Anonymous (thank you) said above. I must again point out that honor killings have nothing to do with Islam, they are based on the cultures of the countries where they occur, which may have large Muslim populations. In fact, honor killings are just plain murder to most Muslims who follow Islam. There is NO justification for such killings based on Islam.
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12 Rachael
July 16, 2008 at 5:34 PM
....I claim part of the Chil Woo line of feeling dirty after watching that toddler dance. I think I got the over-overload after reading about the new potential prostitot group you had in your other article of "Oh No They Din't." *twitch* Reminds of of various things I have to get after the kiddos (about the age of 4 to 6) for when I help teach over the summer and my breaks (kissing, flashing, etc.) sometimes. It was a bad time when the "Milkshake" song was popular...
Just wanted to toss in my twitch over that particular section of the rant, though I certainly get pissed off overall about this. I've had many TV sets screamed at over this and books tossed (not out - just against doors, walls, open areas, etc.), by the subject of this for part of a storyline. Women viewed as chattle...grrrrrr. The head shaving scene just...oh deity. I probably would be shedding a few tears while I watched that part, even with the recaps.
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13
July 16, 2008 at 6:17 PM
"I must again point out that honor killings have nothing to do with Islam, they are based on the cultures of the countries where they occur, which may have large Muslim populations."
Sadly, the practice of honor killings is not exclusive only to muslim world. It has happened also in what u may call non-muslim world such as in Brazil: "according to human rights lawyer Julie Mertus "in Brazil, until 1991 wife killings were considered to be noncriminal 'honor killings'; in just one year, nearly eight hundred husbands killed their wives." (Wikipedia). Ah, we live in a sad sad world.
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14 bajing
July 16, 2008 at 6:17 PM
"I must again point out that honor killings have nothing to do with Islam, they are based on the cultures of the countries where they occur, which may have large Muslim populations."
Sadly, the practice of honor killings is not exclusive only to muslim world. It has happened also in what u may call non-muslim world such as in Brazil: "according to human rights lawyer Julie Mertus "in Brazil, until 1991 wife killings were considered to be noncriminal 'honor killings'; in just one year, nearly eight hundred husbands killed their wives." (Wikipedia). Ah, we live in a sad sad world.
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15 haj
July 20, 2008 at 12:25 PM
LMAO min's balloon pants when he falls in the water!!
im surprised/leased at orroz's reaction to soyoon's interrogation- he shows some real concern! he was always so cold.
she is way too damsel in distress though.
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16 B
July 3, 2013 at 10:58 PM
Just started watching this drama. I know I'm late. Thank you for these recaps. It helps reading other people's reactions to these ... rather intense moments where I want to tear my pillow apart, to smash all electronics and male faces.
First though a random comment on the Qing general. I want a lot of Chinese period dramas and I have yet to see a Qing citizen with hair like that. I'm slightly offended not by the portrayal of all Qing citizens as a-holes but by the bad hair style...
Second, I love the commentary on confuciousism by this drama and how people used it as an excuse to oppress and degrade others.
Third, GAHD THE HYPOCRISY AND DEGRADATION OF WOMAN!!! And quite honestly I loved the comment by the Qing general of how the woman had less value than horses.
Finally, I feel Eric finally brought his A game in that rant scene with the a listers. I love him for giving us a real emotion in that scene. Jaja and Min were loud and angry but it just didn't really make me connect other than yes we are all angry. (oh lee eun, it still hurts)
P.s. I love the "under pressure" remix. When I first heard it, I laughed so hard someone thought I was sneezing.
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17 B
July 3, 2013 at 11:00 PM
*watch*
Not want sorry. Don't want a lot of Chinese period dramas. There are a lot as it is.
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18 B
July 3, 2013 at 11:06 PM
Eep sorry don't mean to make so many comments. It's hard typing on my itouch while reading subs.
But I'm super anti confuciousism. I love that this drama brings out all the bad things that went with it. Personally I wrote my college thesis on how confucious was a giant hypocrite who distrusted woman and used hierarchal system to appease the aristocrats by giving them an excuse to oppress not only woman but those who they deemed below them.
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