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City Hunter: Episode 1

Ooh, I like.

Despite my frequent ribbing of this show, to be honest I was hoping it would be good — the enjoyment of a good show always outweighs the fun of making fun of a bad one. Always. So I was hoping that City Hunter’s pre-show identity crisis was really a case of bad promotional planning than anything else, and I think that’s what it is — because the show itself (so far, anyway) is assured, well-directed, strongly acted, and gripping in the right places.

Regarding the promos: You know what would’ve cleared up a lot of my confusion about the show before it aired? (Well, aside from using the moniker City Hunter, which I still contend is really weirdly applied, since it’s like no City Hunter I know.) If they’d explained, very simply, that the setup is revenge thriller. A straight-up, you-killed-my-father-now-prepare-to-die action-vengeance series. Don’t bother with that extraneous clutter about MIT doctorates and heroines working random part-time-jobs and fashion featurettes and veterinarian side love interests. We’ll get to those when we get to those: The point at hand shoulda been the story, which was ignored in favor of hyping nightclub shoots and idol starlets.

Because you know what? Revenge thrillers are boss, yo. I’m ALL ABOUT them. And when they’re done well, with fantastic charismatic lead actors and an affecting backstory, why muddle up the pre-show buzz with the other stuff?

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EPISODE 1 RECAP

We open in October 9, 1983, in Burma, at the Martyr’s Mausoleum in Yangon (Rangoon). The drama incorporates the real 1983 visit of South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan and his cabinet, who arrive just as a bomb goes off, killing sixteen people and completely destroying the venue.

Two agents survive the blast, LEE JIN-PYO (left) and PARK MU-YEOL, best friends and spies in an anti-North Korean unit. In horror, they take in the carnage of their compatriots in the wake of the blast.

Back home, a secret council of five high-ranking government officials receives reports that point to North Korean involvement, and try to decide what to do. The most decisive among them is CHOI EUNG-CHAN (below right, the future president), who leads the group in deciding that this is an act of war and a counterattack is in order.

However, for political reasons that involve South Korean relations with foreign nations, their plans to assassinate North Korean officials in Pyongyang must remain between the five of them. Not even the president will be made aware of this black ops mission.

Choi Eung-chan turns to two of his remaining special agents, Jin-pyo and Mu-yeol, and puts them in charge of this secret task.

Bachelor Jin-pyo tells his friend that he’ll do the mission without him, because Mu-yeol has returned to Seoul a new father: His wife Kyung-hee has just given birth to their son, and they’re thrilled. However, Mu-yeol disregards that, unwilling to leave his friend to this dangerous mission alone, and tells his wife that he’ll return after this job is finished.

The two agents round up a team of men and begin tactical planning on the Pyongyang raid. Choi Eung-chan drops by toward the end of the training period to express his pride in their exemplary work, and promises to put his own life on the line to ensure their safe return: “This is my promise as man to man, as your countryman, as your sunbae.”

The black ops team successfully infiltrates Pyongyang dressed as North Korean soldiers and assassinates their targets efficiently. Mission complete, they make their way offshore to await pickup, which arrives in the form of a submarine.

And yet, at the same time in Seoul, the council of five is informed that the president has taken the official stance that South Korea will not retaliate against the Burma attack. That means they must disavow knowledge of any state-sponsored act of war, but worse yet, in order to tie up loose ends, they must forsake their own. Choi Eung-chan is horrified, because he has sent those men out on an honorable mission and strongly opposes the idea of turning their backs on them. He accuses his colleagues of only caring to protect their own positions of power.

However, it’s not like he has an alternative. To preserve national security and keep from setting off a political powder keg, he has to concede, agreeing to sacrifice those twenty men for the bigger picture.

So when the first of the team climbs up to the submarine deck, hidden snipers open fire. Mu-yeol and Jin-pyo’s teammates are sitting ducks with nowhere to hide, and wiping out the team is a matter of almost literally shooting fish in a barrel.

The sniper turns his rifle to each man in turn, and Mu-yeol sees that he and Jin-pyo are in his sights. He dives to cover his friend with his own body, and shoves Jin-pyo underwater while he’s shot through the back. He finally lets Jin-pyo surface after the sniper is satisfied that there’s no more sign of life in the water and re-enters the sub, which then dives away.

Dying, Mu-yeol tells Jin-pyo to survive and return home to take care of his family. With one last breath — “I loved you, my friend” — he dies.

Jin-pyo cries in grief, and sends his friend into the depths of the water with one heartbreaking salute. He washes ashore, the sole survivor — and now sole witness to the council’s actions.

Choi Eung-chan is the only council member who’s greatly conflicted about this turn of events, and he’s baleful upon receipt of the news that all twenty agents were killed. Perhaps for that reason — because he knew better, but didn’t stand his ground — he’s the one whose betrayal stings the most. He’d vowed so sincerely to bring them back alive, promising on his honor as a man and fellow patriot.

Jin-pyo manages to sneak into his office and corners him with a knife, reminding him of that promise. Choi Eung-chan knows he deserves this reaction, and tells Jin-pyo regretfully to go ahead and kill him. But he’s spared by a knock at the door, and that gives Jin-pyo the chance to slip out the window.

He leaves a note stabbed into Choi’s desk with his knife, which reads: “I vow to repay the cost of the twenty lives betrayed by their own country.”

Next, Jin-pyo seeks out Mu-yeol’s widow Kyung-hee — and when she steps aside, he steals her son. All he leaves her is a note that reads: “Mu-yeol is dead. I’m taking the baby to raise. This child must go away in order for you to be happy. Start anew. You must become happy.”

Kyung-hee sobs and runs out into the neighborhood, but she’s unable to find him or her baby. Jin-pyo flees the country on a boat, where a kindly woman comforts the crying baby while he swears to come back with “the cruelest revenge in the world,” which will become his reason for living.

Ten years later, we find Jin-pyo living in the Golden Triangle in Southeast Asia, which is prime drug-producing territory. Jin-pyo has become a hardened drug boss, ruler of this particular domain with a militia of men under his authority. He’s harsh and unforgiving, and doles out punishment — like a bullet through the heart for stealing drugs — without batting an eye.

He’s also a demanding father to young YOON-SUNG, making sure the boy is taught to shoot and fight. He’s unrelenting in his demands for perfection, drilling it into the boy’s head that the moment he misses a shot through a vital organ, he’s dead.

Yoon-sung bears this grueling regimen without complaint, but the one question that continually presses on his mind is his missing mother. He finds an old photo in Jin-pyo’s desk — one of Jin-pyo with his biological parents — and asks his father if this is his mother, sensing that she is.

Jin-pyo refuses to indulge the boy’s pleas for information, telling him only that his mother is dead. He rips up the photograph pointedly, and Yoon-sung runs out heartbroken.

He looks longingly at a village woman who watches over her son, who sleeps in her lap (the same woman who’d comforted him as an infant on the boat ride over). When she beckons him over, he runs over eagerly and joins her, head resting in her lap.

Despite his upbringing, Yoon-sung grows up to be a playful, mischievous, impetuous youth, as we see when we next meet up with him seven years later.

As a rash teenager, he’s slipped away from the compound — upsetting his father, who worries about land mines — to cruise the village with his buddies. It’s here that he overhears a voice speaking Korean, and looks on curiously at the scene unfolding in a nearby gambling den, where a local gang boss is threatening to kill the Korean gambler.

He sizes up what’s about to happen and interrupts the impending amputation (the Korean man’s hand) by hurling his apple through the window with sniper precision, knocking down one of the minions. The men look out the window to see Yoon-sung boldly smiling up at them, who then hurls another apple, this time into the boss’s face.

Like I said, he’s impetuous, full of that youthful confidence in his own invincibility. He’s motivated partially by sympathy for a soul in trouble, and partially at his curiosity over the Korean — he speaks the language with his father, but he marvels, “You’re the first Korean I’ve ever met.”

He grabs the man and runs through the village streets, managing to escape capture by hijacking a boat. He takes the man — BAE SHIK-JOONG — home with him, which earns him a slap from Dad, who’d warned him never to bring outsiders in. Yoon-sung protests that the guy was about to be killed, and Jin-pyo relents a little, asking if there’s anything Shik-joong’s good at. Thankfully, the man can sputter a response: “Cooking!”

Proving his facility with Korean cooking earns Shik-joong the right to stay, which comes with Jin-pyo’s warning that “If you try to run away, you die.”

Yoon-sung looks curiously at the photo of a pretty girl Shik-joong carries with him, KIM NANA, who he initially presumes is the man’s daughter. But they share different surnames, meaning that for now, her relation to him remains unclear.

Yoon-sung acts as guide to Shik-joong: He acquaints him with things like Jin-pyo’s fearsome sleeping habits (always sitting up, with a gun at the ready) and shows him his now-improved skills at target practice. That’s interrupted by the arrival of his father’s men, who drag along that village woman with them — the woman who’s become like Yoon-sung’s surrogate mother — and tie her to the target for her execution. Her crime: Her husband ran off with some drugs.

Worse yet, Jin-pyo orders Yoon-sung to be the one to shoot her, insisting that his rules be followed to the letter. When Yoon-sung balks, Jin-pyo takes out his gun, ready to do it himself.

Yoon-sung knows he’ll have to bargain his way through this, so he hurriedly proposes a deal — that he’ll do the shooting. But if he manages to accurately shoot all the targets, Dad will relent and try exercising forgiveness, just this once.

Dad agrees, and Yoon-sung prepares himself mentally, then fires. He shoots a few hanging fruit and the wooden target, then throws the gun away angrily, having proven his point.

Lying in his bed, he looks over at the photo of Nana, which he’s apparently taken to talking to. He asks incredulously how he could be expected to shoot somebody he cares about, and muses, “You’re probably off in that place called Seoul, living happily, aren’t you?”

At the same time, a team of gangsters infiltrates the compound, taking out a few guards and making their way to the inner rooms, where the leader spies Yoon-sung lying in bed. This is the gangster he’d saved Shik-joong from, and they’re here for some payback.

Thanks to Yoon-sung’s finely honed battle skills, however, he hears the telltale click of a gun and rolls out of bed smoothly, ducking in time to get Shik-joong under cover before the attackers open fire.

Jin-pyo hears the commotion from a distance — he and his armed men are outside — and races for the house, where the gangsters find Yoon-sung crumpled on the floor. Playing dead.

Yoon-sung waits for his moment, then leaps up and fights back, nimbly evading their attacks and finding safety behind a pillar.

But it’s that woman, his surrogate mother, who fears for his safety and runs toward him to shout a warning. That gets her shot, and his shock is so tremendous that Yoon-sung doesn’t even care about being exposed as he rushes to her crumpled body, sobbing at her to wake up.

He’s about to get shot through the back, not that he cares, when his father arrives and shoots his would-be attackers. Yoon-sung’s grief quickly turns to fury, and he grabs a gun and leaps outside to get his revenge, vowing to kill them all.

He chases the three remaining gangsters through the fields, trying to fire and run at the same time. But when a telltale click goes off under his foot, he immediately stills, recognizing the ominous sound of a land mine being activated by his weight.

Yoon-sung freezes, all the while keeping his targets in his sights, ready to shoot… if only he weren’t out of ammo. His attackers realize their good fortune and raise their guns to shoot him — only to be picked off by Jin-pyo, who’s arrived to save his son.

Jin-pyo quickly gets to work on the land mine under Yoon-sung’s foot, not betraying any fear while Yoon-sung sweats bullets.

Dad gives him a reassuring look — right before he launches himself at him and knocks him out of the way as the land mine explodes.

The blast takes off one of Jin-pyo’s legs, and Yoon-sung carries him home on his back, crying frantically all the while, begging the doctor to help him. Jin-pyo bears the pain stoically and tells Yoon-sung to listen up: If he’s about to die, he has something more important to address, and starts to explain the story of Yoon-sung’s true father.

Yoon-sung listens in shock as Jin-pyo tells him of the man who’d saved his life with his own, who’d been betrayed by his country, whom he’d vowed to avenge, who’d been Yoon-sung’s father. He says in a half-request, half-command: “Put a bullet through the heart of your father’s and my enemy.”

He fades into unconsciousness but survives, and throughout his pain-fueled recovery, Jin-pyo is assailed with flashbacks of his life, begging his friend not to die while also apologizing to his wife.

Yoon-sung finally understands why Jin-pyo had raised him the way he had, and why he’d trained him so fiercely. He contemplates the old photo of his mother that he’d taped back up at some point, now understanding that the other man is his father.

And then he goes to Jin-pyo for more information before committing to this plan of vengeance, and is told that there are five men who must be killed.

Yoon-sung: “And if I kill those five men, will you and I be able to live well again, in a place where nobody knows us?”
(Jin-pyo nods.)
Yoon-sung: “I’ll ask one last thing. Is my mother… s-still alive?”
Jin-pyo: “She’s alive.”

That seals the deal. Grimly, he comes out of that meeting and tells Shik-joong: “I’m going to change now. That’s my fate.”

And the next time we see him, it’s seven years later…

He arrives at the airport in Seoul, having come from the States, no longer the playful, laughing youngster but now a serious, determined man on a mission. The first thing he does is take a call from Jin-pyo confirming his arrival, in which his first target from the council of five is named: Lee Kyung-wan. One last reminder: “Forget your life in the States, but never forget your father’s death.”

Yoon-sung asks his driver to pull over for a moment, and gets out of the car to look around a plaza in the midst of the city, which is marked by the famed statue of Admiral Yi Soon-shin.

He takes in the sights of ordinary life, closing his eyes contemplatively as Jin-pyo’s words echo in his ears: “Don’t love anybody. If your identity is uncovered, you and those around you will be stained blood-red.”

And then, a face comes into view — ours, not his — smiling and handing out cards to passersby, oblivious to Yoon-sung standing so close by, unaware of her presence.

 
COMMENTS

A strong first episode. I’ll admit it, my first thought upon finishing (other than Lee Min-ho so hot) was, “Aw, dammit! NOW WHAT?” Because of the whole limited-time-in-which-to-eat-sleep-and-recap-dramas thing, that is. Something’s gotta give, and I’m in a state of paralysis trying to decide what.

I’m not 100% on the City Hunter train yet, because I want to wait and see how the Seoul storyline unfolds. The tone and nature of that is a major concern, because if we’re going on previews, there’s a lot of random tones thrown together — some comedy, some screwball, some slapstick, and oh yeah, some life-and-death terror stuff. Seeing how well the story was woven together in Episode 1 gives me hope that perhaps they just had a crappy preview, which was edited together in a schizophrenic way. That’s better than a schizophrenic series.

There appear to be a lot of side stories going on, and I’m not sure I care about the hotshot DA or the lady vet or (to be honest) even the bodyguard heroine. I’m so into the betrayal storyline of this episode that I want Yoon-sung to get his revenge, and I’m totally there with the big plot to infiltrate the Blue House and bring down the Big Five — one of whom includes a sitting president. Exciting stuff! It actually reminds me of the original Daemul story — the manhwa, not the drama — and that’s a case where I thought the drama really veered into a different direction, and went a lot of different places with tone — one moment stately, another broadly comedic. City Hunter does a good job of being what I wanted Daemul to be — dark and atmospheric, with a solid, strong motivation at the core. I’m glad the intro episode was all about Jin-pyo and Yoon-sung, rather than trying to tease everything at once and resulting in a disjointed premiere. What we get is cohesive and tight, rather than potentially getting too all over the place with too many character introductions.

I’m even getting some Bad Guy vibes, which can be both a good and a bad thing. On the upside, it has a similar smoothness and assuredness of cinematography, pacing, and music — and I loved the look and feel of Bad Guy. (On the downside, I hated the way the story got messy in its latter half, as though in trying to go against the expected storyline, it over-convoluted its twists and fizzled on the revenge front.)

I’m still confused on the City Hunter part of City Hunter, because as I understand the original term, it’s all about a guy sweeping out crime from the seedy metropolitan underground. Will Yoon-sung take on a similar role here, or is his “hunter” description merely a reference to his mission to clean out the Big Five? Now that the drama has started, from this point on I’m letting go of the whole City Hunter correlation, because I want to enjoy this drama for what it is. However, I don’t think it’s an unfair issue to raise when we’re talking about famous adaptations of famous original properties. It’s just that at a point, there’s no longer a point worrying about what it shoulda been, especially if you’re enjoying what it’s turned into.

Example: Yoon-sung is nothing like Ryo Saeba, which may be a good thing since I thought Lee Min-ho was miscast for that character. But for the young man born and bred to mete out vengeance? Lee is perfect — emotive, vulnerable, fierce, and totally immersed in that character. Oh, right, he’s also insanely hot. But really, that’s icing on the cake for me — wonderfully delicious stuff, but made better by his insane charisma onscreen and emotional connection with the camera. Swoon.

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Ooh, looks pretty interesting. Maybe I will give this one a try too? Such a busy Wed-Thurs :P

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I definitely was surprised at the tone of the drama when I started watching bc the previews were so freaking stupid and irrelevant to the actual plot point, which just made the drama look bad to begin with. I've only watched like half of this episode so far, so haven't even gotten to Lee Min-ho. But I'll surely be watching this one if it stays good. I think I've given up on Lie To Me, and I've only watched the first episode. No matter how much I like the actors, the story's gotta pull me in more!!! Thank you for the recap!! So many dramas, so little time!

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OMG, i've been refreshing your blog since this morning, thank you soooo much JB for this recap. i'm sorry for you, but its not often we can have LMH in something good right? for once, the music is not off and i'm really happy watching this episode for LMH.

its fast while still manage to be moving (i nearly teared up during the scene when his father took the bullets for his friend and then died, and when his mom lost him, when he ran away crying and resting on her surrogate mother's lap).

i really like that they showed the young YS. LMH's character is greatly developed and explained that i totally feel for him. its heartbreaking to see such a young child having to train like that without understanding the purpose of it. looking back at the shower scene stills now make me a little sad. with the scars he got from the training. and i like the scene when he seems to envy Nana possibly having a happy live in seoul too.

also, i hope we can still see that playful, youthful side to him. love it. i think he will, judging from the latest trailer before this 1st episode aired. he got that mischievous smile on him when he recognize Nana at the Blue House.

i also like that our hero despite being so skillful, is shown having flaw during his fighting scene too. he's confident but also impulsive. the fear was clear on his face when he step on the land mine. love that scene.

regarding the city hunter being not a city hunter. i havent read the manga so i'm pleasantly enjoying this drama so far based on its own story. but if the real city hunter is supposed to solve crime around the city. i see that trait in YS when he saved SJ. maybe while doing his mission, he will also help other people around him. and YS seems to love women as well from the scene on the boat.

anyway, i really really like this 1st episode. and i hope this drama will just continue to get better and continue to surprise me.

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You know why I loved this recap? Because it totally validates my take on this drama and the comment I left on the site yesterday.

Once again - SUPERLATIVE.

If this first episode is anything to go by, the director has a razor-sharp grasp on the direction of his story-telling,
(as a side note, those shots in Thailand and the ensuing chase through the marketplace really reminded me of the last MI3 with Tom Cruise racing to save his wife - the editing of LMH's chase had the same sharp flavor. No missteps. It was like watching the steel ball racketing through a pin-ball maze. Terrific editing!)

As for Lee Min Ho - he was made for this role. Period.
I truly believe that this drama will push his career to the very top where he deserves to be. This is one kid who I can EASILY see coming to Hollywood (depending on his grasp/pronunciation of English) - he'll succeed where Rain(Bi) couldn't.

:)

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i like the chase scene too! its funny and mischievous YS is so cute and his fighting scene looks cool as well!

seriously YS feels like a tarzan coming to the city to hunt his enemy lol. i lol when SJ was scared with the snake but YS was totally cool with it saying 'its ok its ok' keke. and when YS asked SJ to jump from the tree and he was scared. YS then push him off haha

LMH totally fits this character perfectly. and the moment he appeared on screen, a smile instantly formed on my face. he's insanely charming :D

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also what i like about this drama is (well, this episode that is. so far), they can have LMH appear earlier but they didnt and the story really flowed nicely because of that. we get to follow YS's growth and feel for him.

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I agree. This is one of the few dramas that I've watched where the initial set-up didn't bore me or leave me just twitching to see the "main guy" appear. The storytelling is totally solid in this episode without any extraneous fluff to distract from the action.

Particularly impressive to me was the use of the water scenes when the military unit was slaughtered. That scene of the underwater salute to his dead friend was riveting and touching.

I've just watched ep. 2 (no subs yet at Viiki - they're working like crazy to sub this one) - no spoilers here in this comment to ruin any one's fun, other than LMH's HOTNESS quotient soars when he's WET.......... :)

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good comment there!
i cried when the dad died TT_TT

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damn.. I wont learn Hangul soon enough to become his private english tutor.

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*woot she recapped the first episode* i hope it's not too much on you, javabeans, to get on best love & city hunter recaps so promptly.

i watched this last night & liked it to my surprise by the second half. i didn't fully understand the political bits with chinese subs, but i was hooked later on. definitely loved the cinematography and the action, as well as the emotions.

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A well-produced and well acted first episode. The veteran actors were very good and Lee Min Ho just lights up the screen. My only gripe is the plot is kind of predictable,and leaves little mystery. Can they keep up with the pace and tone of this first episode throughout the series?

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You bring up a two great points and concerns that I have as well. How Yoon-sung's story be stretched to last the entire series? I'm sure there will be bumps and twists and turns but it seems like he just needs to kill 'em and cross 'em off the list a la Kill Bill. I'm not even sure that the elimination of the Council of Five will be as satisfying as the Bride's journey, but I sure hope it is.

And the pace! They covered A LOT in this episode and gave us a pretty good set-up, yes, but it would be easy to burn through all that way before the final episode airs.

Concerns aside I'm very happy with this first episode!

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First episode was soo good.It even exceed my expectation and hopefully it will be even better for next episode

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I watched this on 450p and eh, was not attached to the story at first, so then I got curious to rewatch this at 720p, and boy does it gasp fresh air and became enjoyable to view. Just a thought of how my involvement develops for this show. ^ , ^

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LTM isnt worth it.
1 epi of "sh***y hunter" >>>>>> 6 epis of LTM
but i guess Wed/Thurs is taken by Best Love
>.<

How about guest recappers?

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I'd really like it if JB/GF continues to recap this. I really prefer their recaps over anyone else's (no insults intended). ;) It's fine with me if it comes a little late as long as they do it.

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i dont really mind guest rappers.
i really loved the pair who teamed up for SKKS
and ockoala nad kaedejun ofcourse.
i'm glad LMH isnt wasted on a bad project
things are looking up in kdrama land

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oh dear recappers=rappers
typo

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I do agree. I prefer JB/GF's own recaps, just because i really enjoy their humor and analysis. And because they are Korean, there are things that can't be picked up when ppl watch/recap it from another language in which JB/GF can explain to us.

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Please jb and gf continue to recap city hunter. I really like your style of writing.

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I like guest recappers but they're slower and sometimes they don't finish. (I remember Pasta dropped off and so did Chuno.) I appreciate all the work they do but I prefer non-guest recaps on the really good dramas.

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or if there's no choice at all, can the guest recapper be half-Korean too or at least an expert on Korean language, culture, etiquette, and who gets what isn't being said between the lines? someone who understands the jargons, puns, pop culture references, the meta?

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i don't think that was a taxi he got into...
it wasn't marked
and even the special expensive ones are marked...
i think it was his personal chaufeur...
>.> i don't think i spelled that right...
but you get what i'm saying

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Surrogate daddy is a drug lord... so he is also rich!

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niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiice epi........liked it ......can't wait for the 2nd

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"Yoon-sung is nothing like Ryo Saeba"

Thank you for your information.

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I kinda lol-ed at how some of those five high-ranking government officials were once the Daddies of other dramas.

Daddy in Paradise Ranch
Daddy in 49 Days
Another Daddy from a certain drama I cannot remember.

Lol =)

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The daddy in Paradise Ranch also known as Lawyer Choi in Midas, loved him there.

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He goes from Attorney Choi in Midas to Director Choi here. The man is busy...good for him.

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he was the dad for prosecutor princess i believe

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Don't forget Dream High, Cinderella's Sister, Coffee Prince ... XD

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Thank you for JB and GF's hard work! That's a lot of dramas to recap! I shall wait patiently here.

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not big enough lee min ho fan to watch it, the greatest love has my attention but the hong sisters tend to ruin dramas with their separation usage in every drama's storyline. also is city hunter in English the official title of the show, because i would imagine during the press conference or interviews the stars saying city/shitty hunter would be funny. i was hoping city hunter would be shitty hunter, because the cast and story/genre doesn't catch my interest as the other 2 competing dramas. but romance town is very slow and has too many characters.

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How long will korean duds keep taking famous japanese mangas' storylines, using the name to make cheesy with overexxagerated slow-motions and "lost mummies" live actions which have absolutely nothing to do with the original work ? Just ride on the name of the famous previous version. Why do one claims it as a live action of city hunter ? Welcome to you Ryo Saeba and Kaori to the club of screwed characters in kdramaland. Who will be the next victim ? Zatoichi, Ogami Ito, Kwaidan...?

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Wow tonally it reminds me a bit of the time between dog and wolf?

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Yes, tone is bit similar which is a good thing bec i loved that drama.

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Yes.. I'm gad it's not a funny show.. Cause when I saw just first minutes I liked it cause it was serious and stuff.. also guy who played in Giant acted well.. (Giants was really a GIANT drama, loved it a lot).. So I Hope it becomes more and more action then lovey doves as in ATHENA.. or funny

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Oh god...it's good?

Oh lordy...now what to do?My family is already wondering why I am glued to the computer.I couldn't really say.

Thanks for the recap.

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Ok, Singapore's Mediacorp produces some of the shittest dramas I ever watched but I can't ignore the similarity of the first episode to this other revenge flick, Breakout. Breakout is a Chinese drama made in Singapore and telecast last year and has a whole segment of training under brutal conditions in the Golden Triangle. Seems like that's a common theme. If you want a battle-hardened cool fighter, train him from young in South East Asia. I travelled to Thailand several times, including near the border and I'm born in South East Asia. Seriously, my homeland is NOT like that......
For more details of the terrible drama, Breakout, see here:
http://www4.mediacorp.sg/contentdistribution/programme/detail.php?prog_id=776

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Well damn...I hear that its a revenge thriller and I'm sold. I'm a sucker for those kinds (Time of Dog and Wolf, Resurrection...) and so I'll be downloading this one.

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I still want to know who the white guy in the boat is....

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Subs up at MySoju. I watched it there last night and am so grateful for JB's recap because some scenes were a little iffy in the dialogue.

http://www.mysoju.com/korean-drama/city-hunter/

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ooh.. soo it is a revenge thriller.. with LMH?? I'm in.

Even though i made fun of all the silly poster shoots.. never saw any of the promos.. the genre itself is something to look out for. Yay! One more drama to watch in summer!!!

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Omg! I'm loving this drama. It's definitely a must-see!

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how come to make a woman ( that just heard that her husband is dead ) happy is by steal her son ......errrrrrrrr....

weird logic from secret agent ...

and raise his friend son to become assasins

more weird logic ...

the rest is fine, just this 2 small detail that i think reallllllllyyyyy realllllllyyyyyy weiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirrrrrrrddddddd

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1. think about how much hatred he has
2. he might not have "loved" before, judging from how he isn't married (we really don't know)
3. he doesn't want the wife to be reminded by about dead dad
4. he never said she is going to be happy, he just "thinks" that it will make her happy

i wouldn't say it's weird logic, but just probably actions that you or me wouldn't take.

if anything is to be criticized, it would be why the dad never thought of ways to dissemble the landmines upon which they might accidentally step on them (like what happened in episode 1)

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you are so freaking RIGHT!..i was like why the h*** would he steal her baby! and what gives him the right to decide on what is good for her and what isn't..seriously that Sergent is a total retard . H makes her situation worse because she ends up with neither a husband or a baby

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OMG I know, right? Stealing her song was so stupid.

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Despite, like you, finding the logic totally stupid..I think he meant she can live freely without the burden of raising a child? She can even get remarried or something? But we all know how that goes...

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Mochi came up with some good reasons! I look at a little differently.

I think that the note was just a formality for the mother, perhaps the last smidgen of heart we'll see from Jin-pyo? He didn't just take him after all! I also think that he planned from the beginning to use YS to exact revenge. The reasons being: 1. Jin-pyo can't walk the streets of Korea freely 2. He'd be able to mold YS into an assassin 3. YS can be anonymous so he'd be able to navigate Seoul under-the-radar (of course until the law catches wind).

So, kidnapping YS was a dick move but I can see the logic behind it.

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yup there's logic behind it but to use his friend only son to do that is just sick .... he can use just any random mercenaries to do the job

his friend fight for his country so his family can life in peace, if he can't see that then jin-pyo is not a real friend

if jin-pyo is a real friend, he could raise YS in peace environment and keep a secret about his father, and go on with revenge plan in secret

then something happen and YS finally know about everything and in his own will, to continue with the revenge plan

if that what happen i have nothing to complaint hehehe

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The first half of the drama is set in the 80s, which is a more conservative time and possibly it was harder for a woman to raise a child without a spouse/job. Although the actor/esses are on the old side I think they are supposed to be in their late 20s or early 30s or even younger than that. So it's not totally strange that a Korean guy in the 80s thinks a young widow would be better off without a child.

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Wow... I didnt have high expectations may be that's why I totally loved the recap.... Just by looking at the pics I'm in love ... With shitty hunter ;). ... He is HOT...(drooling ... Mouth hanging open... Tongue not the floor ..hot)...

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It was a great 1st episode, i hope it will continue to surprise me.

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Swoon indeed!! Dang. That's one of the best first episodes I've seen! They did good! I was so sketchy about it too...but this is taking it away some. Great job!

Aww, get some sleep JB! But I'd like some recaps too! Hehe. Why can't we always have both? I wish we could have both...Life is so unfair like that. But thanks so much for everything you do! <3

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the tone really reminds me of time of dog and wolf! I forgot how hot Lee Minho is! DAMNIT!

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The first episode got 12% ratings. thats pretty good for premiere episode. and considering the negative vibes before premiere.

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looks promising :) am definitely going to keep an eye on this one. ofcourse LMH is just the icing on the cake ^_^

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PARK SANG MIN !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! our lovely seong-mo is back :D (i can still hear kang-mo calling his older brother "hyung !" :D )

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review's pretty good for the 1st ep. hope the storyline continues to be engaging. and yes Lee Min Ho you are so hot!

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I'm watching the scene where Yoon-sung eats the chef's Korean food. I hope he learned some table manners in his 7 years in the US. :)

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LMAO!!.. i hope so!..when he was eating i was like WTF!

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Yay! Please keep recapping this!

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Meh... It might just be me, but I'm not really loving the first ep of City Hunter. I just don't understand why Jin-Pyo (btw is it wrong that every time I heard his name in the drama I thought of Gu Jun-Pyo?) didn't just carry out the revenge himself. But then again I've never been a huge revenge thriller fan so maybe my thirst for vengeance is just not strong enough. Thanks for doing the recap though, I figure I'll give the drama a few more episodes before deciding... I seriously don't know how you've been doing so much though, make sure to get some sleep JB!!!

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"Revenge is a dish best served cold."

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because people know who he is. people doesnt know who YS is so he was even able to enter the Blue House

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Jin-pyo and Jun-pyo, no, you're not the only one. XD

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wow
pretty stunning episode 1
the storyline was well built from the beginning....now hopefully the seoul story won't disappoint

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at first i was only watching it because LEE MIN HO was in it but after watching episode 1, i am watching the drama because it is just awesome..episode 1 was really GOOD!

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OMGOMOGMOGMOGOMG. BURMA. <3
i was born there, soo excited they referenced it. :DDD

love this drama so far, can't wait for the next episode ~
thank for subbing. [:

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Thank you for the recap :)
The episode was okay (I never decided based on the 1st ep only anyway xD) I hopethe second one is even better!

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Dun dun dun... is Nana's father one of those men that he must kill? LOL That would be reasonable since it is a revenge kdrama afterall. I don't think Shik-joong is her father.

Only in kdramaland do you get to meet the girl in the picture that you found accidentally.

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I was definitely pleasantly surprised by this premiere, and think that this is a show I'll keep up with, but I hope it becomes a bit more logical emotionally.

A guy who seems to be quite nice is saved by his friend, whose dying wish is for him to care for his wife and child. The thing to do? Kidnap said child, and train him to be a killer (FOR 24 YEARS) while living as an excessively harsh drug-lord. Really? Is that the easiest path to revenge? If your emotions are passionate enough to make you kidnap a child from someone you care about (and basically ruin his life) are you really ok with waiting for a quarter of a century? If becoming a successful druglord is so easy, couldn't you have already had those people killed or followed some other path to revenge?

I'm also having a hard time empathizing with Lee Min Ho's stand-point. He's fine with transforming himself to kill five people he's never heard of to avenge a father he never knew about, but isn't even angry at the adoptive father who lied to him for his entire life? His goal seems to be to live a normal life afterward, and he calls it fate, but I feel like there should be more to it.

In Time Between Dog and Wolf we got to see Lee JunKi watch his mother be murdered right in front of him, so it was easy to get emotionally invested and support his revenge, particularly because he struggled with the issue.

Right now I really like City Hunter, but emotional investment is what I'm missing. We're only one episode in of course, so I'm hoping they develop the motivations of the characters (which to me is one of the most important parts of a revenge drama).

I'd really like to see LMH struggle with the issue of becoming an assassin (not to mention his daddy issues) BEFORE he falls in love, since their burgeoning romance is such an obvious cause of emotional conflict.

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I'll pass on this one... :(

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Eps 2 was pretty shitty compared to eps 1. So yea passing on this one.

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i think i'm more in the mood for city hunter than best love. best love is cute but i'm not in the mood for cute right now. and lee minho is hawtt.

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I won't be able to watch this until some
friendly computer site makes it available,
but.....I AM SO GLAD.....that javabeans
gave CH's Episode #1 a good review. :)

So all of those dis-jointed bits and pieces
from the previews finally makes sense, huh?
The storyline sounds fantastic, and I hope
that "City Hunter" rocks our socks off.

And I would like to apoligize to Lee Min Ho.
It seems that he really did read the script
before signing on, because he recognized
a well-written, taut, action-packed adventure/
drama. Can't wait to see this ~

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after 49 days with Jung Il Woo, now its time for Lee Min Ho~~

oh my gosh,, i cant breathe no more..

<3

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I loved this drama. The first episode surpassed my expectations and the second, omg, it's even better. And , to be honest, I didn't expect this drama to be so good, I wasn't event thinking of watching it. Now I'm totally addicted to it.

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To be honest, the first thirty minutes without Lee Minho were a little slow and I felt sorta disconnected with the drama but as soon as he was on screen I couldn't peel my eyes away. Lee Minho's chemistry is magnetic. Also, it helps that he is so damn hoooooooooootttttttttt.

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I wasn't going to watch this but those screenshots of Lee Min Ho...

Yeah I will watch anything for that face.

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