City Hunter: Episode 3
by javabeans
Ahh, my initial liking for City Hunter just bloomed into love. It’s slickly packaged, yet manages to keep a sense of heart. That’s not easy to accomplish — and to make that feel so effortless on top of it all is impressive.
On top of that, I’m in love with the tone of this drama. Somehow, its dramatic moments manage to be dramatic without going too far, and that’s key. When a drama overdoes the grand, stately moments, it can often seem bombastic or, worse, cheesy. City Hunter manages to walk that line skillfully.
SONG OF THE DAY
Mate – “Run” [ Download ]
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EPISODE 3 RECAP
At the welfare building, Yoon-sung sees the nervous employee, Shim Jae-dong, shredding documents and makes note of the building’s layout and security. He sets a fire in a trash can in the bathroom, positioned near a vent to send its smoke through the cubicle farm, and hits the fire alarm.
Chaos reigns as people rush out of the building. Nana looks around for Yoon-sung, but she can’t find him since he’s busy being Spiderman, sidling along the railing several floors above ground level.
I kind of love this about Yoon-sung — admittedly, some of his methods are simplistic for what we’d expect of a trained hit man (a magic whistle to calm attack dogs? o…kay), but the low-techiness has a simple, functional beauty to it. For instance, here he’s at the right angle to avoid being seen on security cameras, allowing him to slip inside the appropriate cubicle to find the register for the food assistance program. A few snapshots and a trip to the shredder bin later, he’s done, and finds Nana outside.
She takes Yoon-sung to task for ditching her, only thinking to save himself. He scoffs that he had enough dignity not to barge into the ladies’ restroom (what a comforting thought, in your hour of hypothetical life-or-death urgency), and carries a plastic bag containing the paper shreds, which he says he grabbed to block the smoke. Shim Jae-dong spots Yoon-sung carrying it away, though he can’t do anything about it.
At home, Yoon-sung painstakingly goes through the strips, taping the documents back together. Like I said, it’s low-tech — but effective, for all that. (Mind you, I’m hoping we get some cool action/intrigue sequences in this drama, but I don’t think you need fancy hypothetical gadgetry to magically all solve problems, either.)
It takes him all night, and when he’s completed the task, he notes that the two abandoned kids, Mi-jin and Do-jin, are in one roster but not the ledger. Simple deduction: The kids starve, and someone else takes the money.
Yoon-sung listens in on a wiretapped call between Shim Jae-dong and Target No. 1, Senator Lee Kyung-wan. Shim reports that the 200 million won siphoned away from welfare funds for children and the elderly have been distributed to five accounts in false names, and is sending over the bank cards and PINs.
Yoon-sung arrives as Shim Jae-dong is leaving for the hand-off, oh-so-casually saunters up from behind, and grabs the pouch containing the documents. He doesn’t even make a break for it, but swiftly takes out his attackers with cool efficiency.
In the DA’s office, prosecutor Young-ju is frustrated that none of Senator Lee’s ledgers match his actual receipts. Clearly these are forged books drawn up hastily to thwart the investigation. Problem is, even if Young-ju’s right, it’s a delicate matter to accuse someone so powerful and his boss shuts him down, warning him not to do anything crazy. I say, define crazy.
Young-ju receives an anonymous delivery, containing the taped-up ledger pages, photos of Lee Kyung-wan meeting with Shim Jae-dong, bank books…and the wiretapped phone conversation.
Ooh, I LOVE this partnership. It’s so Batman-and-Commissioner-Gordon. Working on the same side anonymously by night, fighting over a girl by day. What’s not to love?
Young-ju and his fellow prosecutors must obtain agreement of the National Assembly in order to arrest a sitting parliamentarian (given that the accused wasn’t caught red-handed). Lee Kyung-wan delivers a speech to his fellow assemblymen about being unfairly targeted, vehemently insisting that in his two-plus decades of faithful service, he has not received one penny of dirty money.
Young-ju listens anxiously in a separate room, while Yoon-sung sits in the press box, muttering, “Not one penny? And how much is your one penny?”
Then the vote, which turns out to be a landslide: only 11 vote to arrest, 267 against.
Lee Kyung-wan exults in his victory, while Young-ju positively seethes in fury at the injustice of it all. Equally furious is Jin-pyo, watching the vote from his lair at home, shattering the glass in his hand. Yoon-sung clenches his fist thinking of the two hungry kids.
Senator Lee basks in his moment in front of the press, and turns to tell Young-ju patronizingly to earn his salary catching real criminals. He insinuates that Young-ju will soon be out of a job for using illegally obtained evidence. That’s the rub: because of the dubious sources of the evidence, the prosecution can’t release it to the public, so for now Lee walks away clean.
Senator Lee hears Shim Jae-dong’s accounting of the Tall Dark ‘N Handsome who stole the bank docs. Shim racks his brains — a relatively quick process — and recalls the stranger at the welfare office asking about the children and his tax dollars.
It’s the senator’s face, superimposed over the hungry children’s, that Yoon-sung thinks of as he nails shot after shot on the firing range — so accurately that there’s only one hole in his target. The other Blue Housers brag about how many holes puncture their targets — the more, the better — so it’s with misplaced pride that geeky Ki-joon exults over beating their American PhD. He wonders smugly if he needs to give him pointers.
Nana calls Yoon-sung over for dinner with the kids, and he adorably eats the fish from the sushi before giving the kids the rice. Nana yells at him for eating all the good stuff, until Mi-jin assures her that it’s because they don’t eat raw fish.
There’s an abrupt change in atmosphere when Yoon-sung compliments her jjigae, and she asks proudly, “Isn’t it just like your mom’s cooking?” That’s something he wouldn’t know.
As they enjoy coffee on the rooftop, Nana sighs contentedly, saying that people like Lee Kyung-wan won’t understand this kind of satisfaction. Yoon-sung feigns ignorance at her mention of the embezzling scandal, playing up his image as a careless playboy.
Time to introduce another potential love interest, though it’s just a tease: After his dispiriting day, a weary Young-ju arrives at the office of a vet who greets him like an old friend, though with some coolness. This is JIN SAE-HEE (Hwang Sun-hee), who works in the vicinity of the Blue House and whom Young-ju says he came to see because she’d understand how he feels today.
Interestingly, they both know Nana, and seemingly not just from their nightclub encounter, since he works with her aunt.
Later that night, Yoon-sung eats in his dining room alone, the humbleness of his ramen in discord with the lavish room. It’s cute and a little sad when he calls out a random “Ahhh” just to hear the echo in the room. His conversation with Nana has put him in a homesick mood, and he calls ajusshi Shik-joong in Thailand to say hi. When he reports on Nana’s financially strapped situation, Shik-joong asks him earnestly to help her out.
Yoon-sung asks if Shik-joong’s ever been hungry, like a curious child who’s familiar with words but not the experience of them. Shik-joong says being hungry is the saddest thing in the world, and makes you despair of life. Yoon-sung says that he wishes he could eat Shik-joong’s food, because “To me, that’s what mom’s cooking tastes like.”
Jin-pyo decides that it’s time to send Shik-joong to Korea, and instructs him to join Yoon-sung. Hesitantly, Shik-joong asks if it’s possible to quit the revenge plan, having watched from the sidelines for years, but lets it drop when he sees that Jin-pyo’s not about to entertain that idea. He also recognizes a photo on the desk as Yoon-sung’s mother — he’s keeping tabs on her — but doesn’t press the issue.
The Council of Five convenes in the president’s office, and the divide that existed 28 years ago becomes more apparent: President Choi on the side of the idealists, and the Corrupted Four out to protect Number 1. (Naturally, in a group of shrewd opportunists like this, there are four Number 1’s.)
Smug now, Lee Kyung-wan chuckles about the hot-blooded prosecutor’s “mistake,” but President Choi muses that perhaps there was something backing his charges. He accepts Lee’s declaration of innocence, but tells the council that he believes that any corruption among them deserves justice.
The statement doesn’t go over well with the others, and one of the four (name: Chun Jae-man) notes that those who don’t bend will break. Lee Kyung-wan vows to forge ahead and destroy those who oppose them. To that end, he intends to draw out the mystery avenger using the two children, whom he will summon to present a token gift at his upcoming book launch event.
Da-hae finds the president in his woodshop (a sign that he’s troubled), and cajoles Dad for a new tutor. She’s got just the guy in mind! He happens to be employed at the Blue House, so it’s convenient, and he’s smart. Also really, really hot. Though I suppose the last part is just in her head. (Okay, also mine.)
As Nana runs to work that morning, Yoon-sung pulls over and she bounds up to the car for a ride. I love that she’s already treating him as her buddy, although he locks his door and tells her he isn’t about to drive to work together and feed the rumor mill. Telling her to keep running, he drives off, the cheeky bastard.
By the time she gets to work, Da-hae is pouting by Yoon-sung’s car, demanding he tutor her. He gets out (knocking her down without apology) and tells her no, but she keeps nagging, promising that if he does, her father may even give him…*thinking*…an award! Ha. Yeah, that’s just what the hottie PhD with truckloads of cash wants: a token award, an extra job, and a brat to babysit.
Ki-joon overhears and offers his own services, which go roundly ignored. Yoon-sung calls Da-hae a child, despite her protests that she becomes an adult in two days (i.e., turns 20), and laughs when she offers, “I’ll date you!” Like she’s some prize. (Ki-joon offers himself again, and goes ignored again.)
Yoon-sung tells her she’s not his type, and Nana suggests Da-hae find a different tutor: “That guy’s dangerous.” Suuure, that’s gonna make him less appealing to the teenage princess. Perchance it would be more effective to shoo Da-hae away with warnings that he’s criminally boring. Or geeky. Or gay. (Oh right, that one doesn’t work.)
At lunchtime, Nana finds Yoon-sung to deliver the message the that First Lady wants to see him. Too bad he’s already got a lunch date, with “someone I just have to see every day, or else I go crazy.”
Nana scoffs at his playboyish ways, but if only she knew the truth: It’s Shik-joong he’s so eager to see. She’s totally not jealous (totally in denial, more like) that night as she sends Yoon-sung an oh-so-casual text about how he’s not making much use of his designated driver/errand girl.
His dismissive reply raises her hackles, so she writes back testily that she, Mi-jin, and Do-jin are making decorations for Lee Kyung-wan’s book launch, and that he’d better not to come looking for them. Lol at her inept jealousy management. (“I SO don’t want to see you!…Here’s my address.”)
Mention of the kids being involved in Senator Lee’s book launch piques Yoon-sung’s curiosity, and gives him the idea for the next phase of his plan.
At the event, fellow council member Chun Jae-man warns Senator Lee that there’s still a lot of talk about him in the general public opinion. He’s much warier than the overconfident Lee, concerned because he’s on the hook too, for falsifying the ledgers. Furthermore, the more Lee’s scandal draws media attention, the more people ask for Chun’s opinion, and that makes him uneasy. He orders his henchman to watch Lee and keep him in line.
Also here is Young-ju, who greets Chun politely but with an undertone of Don’t-fuck-with-me, saying that he will root out the truth. A fellow Council of Five-r is also present, Kim Jong-shik, who appears to be Young-ju’s father. (Not positive, but I’m thinking yes.) Ooh, that’ll be a juicy revelation further down the line — righteous prosecutor son destroys corrupt politician father unknowingly. Innnteresting.
Young-ju runs into Nana outside, who has accompanied Mi-jin and Do-jin here to deliver their token gift and meet the senator. (The gift gets tossed into the trash immediately, which is particularly dickish of the aide since he does it in front of the kids, in full view of anybody.)
Nana tells Young-ju that she saw him on the news and encourages him to fight for the people, not caring that such a statement runs counter to the general sentiment here, amongst Senator Lee’s faction.
From outside the building, Yoon-sung monitors the scene via a planted camera, while Shik-joong gains entrée dressed as a maintenance man.
Mi-jin and Do-jin are brought to Senator Lee, who asks about the tall ajusshi they’ve seen around. The older Mi-jin is rightfully wary, though Do-jin lets slip “How do you know hyung—?” before his sister cuts him off.
But no matter, because Lee’s next call comes from Yoon-sung himself, who says, “You must be looking for me.” He offers to show himself once the children are dismissed, and Lee takes the deal. Yoon-sung is swiftly apprehended by bodyguards and taken to the back kitchen, where he faces the indignant senator with a shrug and a smile, identifying himself merely as an unemployed guy who hates seeing kids go hungry. Unlike Lee, whom he calls a thief.
Lee Kyung-wan: “Thief? Is the country an orphanage? Why does the country have to take responsibility for children whose parents neglect them? The citizens’ taxes? So what if I help myself to a bit of it? If not me, some other guy’s going to take his cut. In that case, isn’t it a hundred times better if I take it, since I work hard for the people? I’m a champion for the people, through and through.”
Dude, maybe you wanna think twice before spewing all that honesty at a stranger. Have you never seen Scooby Doo? But I suppose this is in keeping with the megalomaniac power trip that he confuses for invincibility. What Lee doesn’t realize is that Yoon-sung’s glasses are more than mere fashion statement, and are recording his declaration. With Shik-joong nearby manning his own tech gadgetry, he’s able to upload this transmission immediately.
Lee leaves Yoon-sung in the care of his thugs while he takes his place at the podium and addresses his partygoers…only to have his own face cut in on the screen. Not only does this play at the book launch, the video — routed through the Blue House — transmits over the internet, overriding any attempts to shut it off…to the entire fucking country. Ahhh, this is great.
Now everyone gets to hear his incriminating speech to Yoon-sung, and I freaking love this effect, because the speech is directed at Yoon-sung, but because of the perspective of the camera, it’s like the senator is talking to the people directly as he says, “The law makes allowances for me, because I have power you don’t. That’s what power is, and that’s why everyone wants it. I eat up guys like you.”
Lee tries to order the video to be cut, while his Council cohorts, Chun and Kim, look on in dismay. Chun orders his minion to escort Lee away, while Young-ju gets on the phone to request an arrest warrant, now that Lee has confessed.
Yoon-sung easily fights off his captors, but the burly chef is another story; he throws Yoon-sung to the ground like a rag doll and reaches for his butcher knife. Thinking fast, Yoon-sung grabs a spoon, digs it into the guy’s shoe, then twirls it around and wields it like a lethal weapon. How resourceful — give the guy an inch, and he’ll scoop up the opportunity. (Ba-dum-ching! Couldn’t resist.)
Spotting Lee about to escape via boat, Yoon-sung uses his backpack to zipline himself down to the dock — gah, why so cool? — which just tickles my fancy, given that his line is a string of national flags. Like he’s a crusader riding the line of public sentiment on his way to mete justice. I bet it’s not even intentional, but I love it anyway.
He leaps off the dock to land quietly on the yacht as it pulls away, just in time to stop the aide from strangling the senator, on Chun’s orders. Yoon-sung tosses the aide overboard, then whips out a gun and levels it coldly at Lee. And shoots —
— a tranq dart.
Disguised as delivery men, Yoon-sung and Shik-joong drop off a package on the steps of the DA’s office, addressed to prosecutor Kim Young-ju. Reporters crowd round, having received an anonymous tip that a trip to the DA’s office would yield “something interesting.”
And inside the slightly moving box? A bound and gagged Lee Kyung-wan, wearing a sash that reads — sarcastically now — “In Korea I trust.”
Lee blusters about being wrongfully accused, but Young-ju points out that he confessed. Curiously, the senator is wearing a bunch of dog tags around his neck, which he knows nothing about. He bursts out, “I didn’t even go to the army—!” before catching himself. Hee! Not the thing to say to restore you to public favor.
Young-ju answers a call from an unknown source — Yoon-sung — who tells him, “I’m leaving that trash Lee Kyung-wan to you.” Then Yoon-sung tosses his phone into the river, mindful of erasing his tracks.
Shik-joong wonders if he got permission from “the boss” to act like this, since he knows Jin-pyo wouldn’t like it. Yoon-sung tells him, “Killing isn’t my way. I go for total destruction.”
As though seeking comfort after his own brush with corruption, Yoon-sung calls Nana for an “errand” — to bring him coffee. In an earlier scene, he’d grimaced at the taste of Shik-joong’s coffee, once his favorite, saying he’s grown used to someone else’s. Now he decline’s Shik-joong’s suggestion to go celebrate, saying, “I’m in the mood for someone else’s coffee.”
He meets Nana and the children at a courtyard and splashes in the fountains like a free-spirited boy. I do love these flashes of the youthful spirit in him, because it shows that his father hasn’t stamped out his real self. These glimpses at that side of him set the stage for what will clearly become a conflict later on — his sense of justice and capacity to love, warring with his revenge mission.
Yoon-sung invites the children to join him, but Mi-jin is particularly bitter with today’s events, telling him that she doesn’t want to live in Korea when she grows up, which is full of fake, untrustworthy adults. Yoon-sung playfully ushers them into the water anyway and, spurred by his energy, the gloom lifts as they play in the water together. Aw, there’s something so sweet about all these people without a family, forming a surrogate one. *tear*
Afterward, Nana brings him coffee and sits back in satisfaction, saying she feels good now that the kids are feeling better.
Young-ju questions Senator Lee, asking him why he was given the dog tags, which currently turn up no information when investigated. Lee blusters that Young-ju ought to catch the guy who did this to him, and Young-ju replies that he will — but for now, he’s more curious to know why the mystery man delivered Lee to his doorstep.
Lee warns, “Do you know that this could happen to your father, too?” Young-ju’s response (“Don’t insult my father”) forebodes that his discovery of the truth is sure to be a doozy.
Yoon-sung drops off the sleepy kids at home, and then declares himself cold and hurries into Nana’s apartment, ignoring her protests. He helps himself to some food, making himself quite at home and even wearing a judo uniform, which I find hilarious since I suppose it’s the only dry clothing Nana would have to offer him.
Jin-pyo sees news of Senator Lee’s arrest and angrily wonders what the hell Yoon-sung is up to. He calls, only to have Yoon-sung ignore the phone.
Nana figures it’s another of his many women, but Yoon-sung just busies himself with dinner, picking all those pesky vegetables out from his food. He whines for some meat, saying he needs it after all the hard work he did today, which makes her scoff. She spots Young-ju on the news and says admiringly that there’s a guy who did good work today — not like somebody who just complains about his food.
The news broadcasts people’s angry, disillusioned reactions to Senator Lee’s corruption scandal. One salaryman declares the need for a person who will hunt down all those corrupt officials — like a modern-day City Hunter. Nana likes this idea, and wonders who could have delivered Lee to the prosecutor, while Yoon-sung keeps up his ignorant front. Ooh, I think I’m gonna love these Clark Kent moments, once Nana starts gushing about the awesome City Hunter…
When Dad calls again, he steels himself and answers. Jin-pyo rails at him for his weak move, saying that they can’t trust the police to punish the criminals, not when Korea’s police kowtow to those in power. Yoon-sung says he’d like to trust them anyway, which Jin-pyo calls foolish trust, saying he should have killed him. Yoon-sung counters that this is the only way to have turned Lee into someone unable to receive forgiveness.
When Yoon-sung comes home, he finds a mountain of kitchenware in his living room, presided over by an excitable Shik-joong, who declares Korea heaven: “Just one phone call, and they deliver!” Haha, looks like somebody caught the home shopping bug.
The mood takes a turn when Shik-joong asks if Yoon-sung’s looked for his mother yet, and gets back the cavalier reply, “Why bother? She’s the woman who ditched me to live happily on her own.” Oooh, interesting. So Daddy Vengeance wasn’t entirely honest about his origins, which goes a long ways toward explaining Yoon-sung’s participation in the revenge plan.
Despite those words, Yoon-sung still has that taped-together photo of his mother (notably missing the face of President Choi — Jin-pyo’s playing that one close to the vest for now). Shik-joong understands that soft-hearted Yoon-sung still cares, and takes it upon himself to start looking, particularly since he thinks he recognizes the building in the background.
The communications team reports to the president that they’ve been unable to source the hacker behind the hijacked internet broadcast, as the trail points back to the Blue House. (I love that they assume that means the transmission must’ve been routed there to confuse people, rather than thinking it originated from within.) The president is more worried about the tax embezzlement, and tells his advisor that he wants to use this opportunity to set an example and punish Lee Kyung-wan justly, to jolt all officials out of complacency.
The president is told of the dog tags, which have been traced back to special agents who went MIA on the same day in 1983. Though the true story is only known by our Council of Five, the advisor has nevertheless made sure that information on the men is blocked.
Shik-joong takes the photo of Yoon-sung’s parents and manages to track down the restaurant where it was taken, which leads him to a woman who recognizes her as Kyung-hee.
He rushes home to share the exciting news with Yoon-sung, who doesn’t take it as expected. Yoon-sung asks in a hard voice, “Whose mother is that? I don’t have a mother. Don’t go around doing these things. I’m not free enough with my time to go looking for someone who threw me away.”
Shik-joong leaves her address anyway, suspecting that Yoon-sung doesn’t mean that, which goes to show how well he knows him. Yoon-sung can’t ignore this chance to see his mother, and finds her working at a snack shop.
He watches from a distance, struggling to keep his emotions in check. Kyung-hee is approached by a man in a suit who says that there’s somebody who wants to speak with her, and leads her to a car parked nearby.
She starts at the sight of President Choi sitting there waiting for her — clearly not pleased — but joins him in the car nonetheless.
Yoon-sung hasn’t noted anything particularly odd about this scene and turns to leave…only to see Jin-pyo standing there. Ohhh, shit.
COMMENTS
I know some commenters have had trouble buying Yoon-sung’s motivation in the revenge, which is a point that never bothered me. I thought it made sense, actually, that he’d want to avenge his father’s death once he learned of it. Yes, we can accuse Jin-pyo of stealing his life from him in the name of his vendetta — he sees Yoon-sung as a tool, a means to his end — but you can argue that Yoon-sung would put the blame on the Council of Five more than on Jin-pyo.
And that’s before we take into account what we learn in this episode, which is that he was told his mother didn’t want him. Ahh, now that makes sense. If Jin-pyo positioned himself as the loving best friend who cared for his friend’s child as his own, it follows that Yoon-sung would feel allegiance to his surrogate father, not his supposedly unloving mother.
I love the conflict that’s brewing between father and son, which I had no clue would emerge so soon. I’m always excited when things happen faster than expected because that keeps us on our toes, and why drag out the point when you can get there right away? We’ve seen that Yoon-sung knows how to manage his father — sort of, as much as Jin-pyo can be managed (which isn’t much). I don’t think he’s ever seen himself as capable of being a cold-blooded assassin, no matter his upbringing. Instead, he’s been shrewdly laying groundwork for this philosophical defection, asking his father for permission in advance to carry out the mission using his own methods. And he’s plain about his stance to Shik-joong, saying he opts for total destruction rather than death.
That fits, because Jin-pyo’s out for a personal revenge — death to those who wronged me and mine. But Yoon-sung is out to set right bigger injustices, and for that he needs the destruction to stick. He can’t just wipe out the lives and be satisfied — I’d argue that what he wants is a more complete revenge than Jin-pyo’s bloodlust. So I see Yoon-sung harboring and cultivating an entirely different set of motives than his father, but he’s going along with the plan for now, since both their goals involve the same baddies.
I love the Batman/Clark Kent/Secret Superhero dichotomy Yoon-sung is playing out, because that duality is reflected in multiple levels. There’s the day/night metaphor with his cover job and his City Hunter exploits, and his status as double agent who infiltrates the presidential residence in order to kill the president. We also have the light/dark aspects of his personality, and it’s nice to see that his lighter side is still intact when he’s “off the clock,” usually with Nana. If his father’s the one driving him to the dark side, it’s Nana who’ll pull him back from the brink. (One hopes. Considering the melancholy, moody tone this drama has established, I’m hopeful, but not certain, of a happy ending.)
There’s also the playboy/assassin duality, which is a clever way to twist the original Ryo character, the obvious perv who also fights crime. Here, Yoon-sung adopts the false persona of a playboy to cover his crime-fighting secret identity, like Bruce Wayne — if we must update the premise, it’s nice that it works on a symbolic level.
Then there’s the alliance of our two leading men, which is another thing I love. Young-ju is the lawful one, who’s upright and uncorrupted, but finds that that very sense of justice ties his hands. On the other hand, Yoon-sung has no such qualms about bending the law to obtain his justice by whatever means necessary, like a dark avenger. That makes them the perfect partners…or eventual foes.
What I want to see from here on out, though, is Young-ju stepping up to put in his contribution. It’s satisfying to watch our Batman do all the dirty work and disappearing into the shadows like a cool cipher, but I’d love to see more of a two-sided dynamic emerge between the men — with all its attendant conflicts if/when they start to clash.
So while City Hunter has got the style of Bad Guy (cool, lush, moody), I’m actually getting some Story of a Man vibes with its plotting structure, which excites me. This is a case where the arc/mini-arc structure really works to build and keep momentum going within each hour, and also from episode to episode. Every hour has a mini-mission, keeping the goals tangible and delivering payoffs on a regular basis, but they’re built into the Bigger Bad.
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Tags: City Hunter, featured, Lee Min-ho, Park Min-young
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51 kukkoo
June 3, 2011 at 9:49 PM
what i love about this drama is, damn they have really pretty shots, beautiful pictures and the camera is so damn HD. this is like the first time I'm fascinated by the camera shots. add the pretty leads on top of that. its perfect.
i just didn't like how they slow-mo the action scene, why slow-motion? i don't think there's a need to do that.
and i like our city hunter/prosecutor rivalry over Nana, so cute especially the wallet scene.
it's interesting to see that Shik-joong's outfit (shirt?) is always bright colour.
City Hunter totally owned A Man Called God! no matter how much i like SIG, AMCG did not capture my liking (although i still watched it for the love of SIG)
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jomo143
June 4, 2011 at 5:52 PM
I am guessing that the slo-mo is to hide the level of skill that LMH actually has in martial arts and hand to hand combat.
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52 supeng
June 3, 2011 at 9:50 PM
There's certainly things in this drama that makes you go.."what? can they just do THAAT?" (esp talking about the video transmitting to every fricken single computer in the country)
BUT. I do think that why the positive reviews are > the negative ones because it goes the same for the storyline. I see City Hunter as a building that is being constructed and its story is the one thats supporting it (foundation and pillars, walls) with carefully chosen materials (cast).
IMO, the unrealistic flaws are like chipping of the wall paint; making some scenes imperfect. Though not distracting enough and even more certainly, it wont crumble down the whole construction.
These aside, I would like to give a well-deserved pat on the back to LMH for his acting in CH. I was thinking he might be growing more on the avenge-aggressive side but his soft subtlety with a hinge of childishness wins my vote. I wish he would show this side more than the serious broody one but i know its a little too much to ask for. His transition from one mood to another blends perfectly as well, as shown in the scene where Shik Joong went to his room and LMH teasingly asked if he needs to get more things, but when the topic turns out to be his mum, the whole mood went down. A+ acting(in terms of grasping the emotions well) from such a young actor!
Looking forward to ep4!
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mars
June 4, 2011 at 4:35 PM
AGREED. And eerily this comment was pulled out of my head!
I nitpick with the best of 'em but I don't really feel that the imperfections detract too much. But then again I pretty much willing to believe anything the show threw at me when YS took down a dude with a spoon. WITH. A. SPOON. And, aside from how hilariously badass that was, it shows that YS will always choose the non-lethal method to take down his opponent.
I also think that LMH is doing a great job. I see YS as trying to play this really "cool" guy, but his facade breaks and the softer, playful, REAL YS breaks through. The fountain scene was so cute. I think he pulls it off very well!
But, anyway, thank you for articulating my thoughts! :DD
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supeng
June 5, 2011 at 8:36 AM
aww thank you for the kind comment. im glad to see another viewer having the same thoughts!
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53 Shia
June 3, 2011 at 9:59 PM
I love this drama to bits! Lee min ho oppa has made a total fan out of me-I didn't get the whole BOF love-but this had completely converted me to being his fan.
I love the drama with all the storylines with him and his dad's methods of revenge and the growing romance and the action kicking butt/taking names!
And finally, I love Shik-joong and the mother/friend/father relationship they have going on as well.
THIS IS THE DRAMA OF THE SUMMER!
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54 Stephanie
June 3, 2011 at 9:59 PM
Oh and I love how the symbolism is totally not on purpose. Like the flags and the playboy/actual hero thing // batman.
His playboy image was not created on purpose. It just so happens that Nana first met him that way, and so he decided to stick to it and use it to his advantage.
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55 kaye
June 3, 2011 at 10:13 PM
I’m actually getting some Story of a Man vibes with its plotting structure, which excites me. This is a case where the arc/mini-arc structure really works to build and keep momentum going within each hour, and also from episode to episode. Every hour has a mini-mission, keeping the goals tangible and delivering payoffs on a regular basis, but they’re built into the Bigger Bad.
THIS SO MUCH. Yay for its likeness to Story of a Man.
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Emeldy
June 3, 2011 at 11:37 PM
To me it feels more like a lighter version of Time Between Dog and Wolf, which is really a good thing in my book. One of the best drama i have ever watched. And the best Final Episode. (Many may not like it but i did, unpredictable ending)
And Yah, i get the Story of the Man vibe. We can add Mawang-The Devil vibe as well. That is such a huge compliment. Hope we will not be disappointed in the long run.
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Arhazivory
June 4, 2011 at 2:03 AM
I agree there's something 'Time of Dog and Wolf' - esque about this one which really makes me love it.
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56 L
June 3, 2011 at 10:17 PM
I really shouldn't be doing facials right now because I just can't keep a straight face while reading the recaps XD
I'm loving this drama so much right now. Wednesday please come faster.
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divyrus
June 4, 2011 at 7:00 AM
Ha ha.. You know you really should have known it before.
JB and GF recaps always makes one giggle like little girls!!!
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57 ladida
June 3, 2011 at 10:21 PM
So, yeah. I love this show. Wasn't expecting to, but I totally do. I love how Nana is bubbly, but not too bubbly, and how she doesn't take much shit from him, and how she kicks ass. I hope she stays that way and doesn't go the Gil Ra-im route of starting out awesome and then dissolving into tears. And I, too, love the little bursts of mischievousness in Yoon Sung, especially when it concerns his ajusshi or Kim Nana. Anyway, ep 4 was even more satisfying than this one, just like episode 2 was to episode 1 (at least for me it was). I wouldn't mind if that were the pattern for the rest of the series.
Thanks for the awesome recap!
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mim
June 4, 2011 at 7:37 AM
I agree with all that you said. I too liked episode 2 n episode 4 better. Ep. 3 was great, but the romantic track wasn't developed as much as the revenge track. Episode 4 had a perfect blend of both. And I am loving PMY's portrayal of Nana till now and like you, hope she stays someone knows when to talk back to YS and when to give comfort. YS is trying hard not to get involved with her, but he is fighting a losing battle. As far as LMH is concerned, this is a dream role for him and he is doing a fine job bringing out all the many sides of Yoon Sung. He 'is' City Hunter.
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58 anais
June 3, 2011 at 10:28 PM
I have one wish - can we have a different music director? Enough with the heavyhanded music.
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Emeldy
June 3, 2011 at 11:31 PM
I really like the OST's.
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wanne
June 4, 2011 at 8:32 AM
i love the osts!
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59 Asa
June 3, 2011 at 11:12 PM
They're so obviously lifting off some inspiration from the Dark Knight. It's not bad mind you, but pretty obvious.
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60 dls
June 3, 2011 at 11:27 PM
woooh .... off to watch city hunter now....
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61 Emeldy
June 3, 2011 at 11:29 PM
I am so in Love with this drama. From wed-thurs line up this wins hands down for me. It may not be intriguing as Mawang the Devil or engaging as Time Between Dog and Wolf. But City Hunter is so well made in terms of visual. Amazing cinematography and OST's.
I am not a fan of LMH or PSH. I am a City Haller (Yah i will watch anything Cha Sung Won does) and a big fan girl of Gong Hyo Jin and Yoon Kye Sang. But i can believe, City Hunter won over Best Love for me. This is THE drama for me. I am a big fan of korean thriller drama. Fugitive was such a big let down. I am so glad City Hunter has prove me wrong, i was so adamant that i am going to hate this drama before it aired.
And now......... i am totally hooked and addicted.
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tomato
June 3, 2011 at 11:53 PM
Ditto,
Looking forward to see more because of the genre (nice -variety- in addition to the more mainstream-ly watched rom-com, or melo).
The lead actors do not deliver (want to say sucks in their acting, but afraid to be showered by hail of stones), but so far the plots and developments do. Anticipating how the story will be progressing in the this drama's own alternate City Hunter world.
It is also very interesting to see, each stuff from the original manga work brought into drama like how the senator shipped with mouth-tape. Although I am sure, City Hunter trademark erection that's 'buff' enough to lift a furniture, in the original, will not be on drama :). Can't wait if I can identify more tidbits in the upcoming ones.
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62 crazedlu
June 3, 2011 at 11:33 PM
i dig this show a lot, but park min young isn't delivering for me. i get her character, but i don't see her as the sweet badarse her character is supposed to be. she's okay at best. i still wish they would've casted differently. anyways, liking it!
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crazedlu
June 3, 2011 at 11:36 PM
and seriously, lee min ho is sizzling.
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divyrus
June 4, 2011 at 7:02 AM
Well thats one word I haven't heard before to describe LMH's hotness!
And sizzling does sound kinda right!
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Birdie
June 4, 2011 at 7:20 AM
I agree with you.No way PMY is conveying that she is tough and is a bodyguard,or that she is very poor and had gone through many hardships. I found her acting 2 dimensional. The vibe I get is cute and sweet high schooler. Unfortunately LSY and KNN interaction is kind of juvenile and lack the sizzling chemistry between leads.
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63 jennyannyen
June 3, 2011 at 11:56 PM
I wonder if it is just me. I really see a resemblance in story structure with Return of Iljimae and City Hunter? It's crazy because the tone is so different and everything but if you look at it, it has some similar arch stories: national history, system of injustice, a dark knight, individualized stories, and a hero that beyond anything else desires normalcy.
Of course, City hunter is a lot more dramatic and slicker, but I think that it runs a long a similar storyline in terms of idealism and principal. It becomes more apparent in the next episode with matters of life/death centering around "killing" as a justify mean to justice.
Anyways, I really love city hunter. It just have such complex relationships. And I am digging the relationship between Jin-pyo and Yoo Sung. I can't wait for the rest of the story to delve into that. What is it like to grown up loving, hating, respecting, and fearing someone that is a parent to you? Someone that is both a role model and a competitor? I love it because both sides are so justifiable. It makes sense that Jin pyo believes that Korean justice system is whacked. He was betrayed by a country that he was willing to die for. He once also believed in such ideals until he was stabbed in the back. His 28 years thirst for vengeance is legit. Yoo Sung, on the other hand, didn't experience such betrayal. His connection comes from the abandonment from his mother and his love for Jin Pyo. Like he said in episode one, when this vengeance is done, he wants to live normally with Jin pyo.
Jin pyo is looking for vengeance, but I think Yoo Sung is looking for justice. While Jin pyo wants to eliminate the wrongs, I think Yoo sung wants right them. Then again, they maybe just different people with different personalities.
I am glad I never seen the original city hunter before. I think it would have ruined my experience with this drama. But from what I hear and read of wikipedia, I think we should just look at this as a completely different story.
P.S. I know the actor who play Jin Pyo is old. But GOD DAMN is he not one hot grandpa. I want me some of that. 25 years ain't nothing babe.
P.S.S. I know it is Yoon Sung. I am to lazy to go over and correct everything.
PEACE
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tomato
June 4, 2011 at 12:31 AM
Yoon Sung negative reaction toward death stems from his relationship with his surrogate mother, the Vietnamese woman whom he finds shelter in his distance land as mother figure.
It was when she was sentenced to death because of his husband running away with the pack's goods. Harsh, but a necessity in their not-forgiving society: error means death by the enemy/competing drug cartel. Yoon Sung wanted her to live, hence his first friction with his father giving birth to his differentiating views that killing is(not) the ultimate punishment.
It is questionable if not unclear if Yoon Sung is looking for "justice". As his "destruction" of his victims forces the victims to savor every moment of defeat and punishment... for live, in contrary to Jin Pyo's version of killing, in which, the pain ends as the victim dies.
Jin Pyo's vengeance (often relate to negative connotation) is not necessarily more evil than Yoon Sung's "justice", if not the other way around.
And if we look carefully, Jin Pyo's drive of the vengeance may be attributed to his (brotherly) love or obligation to his benefactor (Yoon Sung's deceased father who shielded him from the bullet he kept in his body for years). Jin Pyo's motive is perhaps not as "sadistic" nor "selfish" as it seems. Moreso, if we look at the vengeance from different angle: having the offspring of the wronged dealing the blow.
Actually, there is very little if NO relation whatsoever between the drama and the original City Hunter, plot and storywise.
The (small) similarity up to ep3 only goes as far as (some of) the character builds, environment settings, and the "jokes" (like the shipping of senator mouth taped in a box).
Out of context....
You can probably understand why the role played by Go Hara existed, had you read the original City Hunter before (not yet disclosed in the story so far).
In the original, City Hunter character is lecherous (versus, not lecherous, only APPEAR or misunderstood to be lecherous in drama). He will refuse taking cases from men, ugly women, young female (he sees them as kids he can't make advances).... but of course, his partner, Na Na, counterpart will try to only take cases from men and kids/teens without his knowing, take the payment, and thus forcing City Hunter to do the job (unwillingly). Sometimes, it does not work as "Na Na" intended as the young males in disguise or the young "kids" are actually beautiful women.
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tomato
June 4, 2011 at 1:38 AM
Out of context and
-SPOILER ALERT-
In the original, City Hunter never kills his target. He disables them (skilled enough to do so) and humiliate them, but never kill.
... well actually he does one or two total (not even by stander/accidental) for the whole 24-34 volume books, which part of the main plot (I forget the exact # of volumes, as it has been too long ago).
That may explains the character Yoon Sung distaste toward killing which is adapted from the original book. The drama may have some changes as to the reasons City Hunter chooses his way of "total destruction" over "killing". However, from the look of it, as far as the episodes progression, killing abstinence trait has great likelihood to be part of City Hunter traits in future episodes.
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Jennyannyen
June 4, 2011 at 6:04 PM
I agree with you that killing is not necessarily more evil than ruining someone's life. But I think that it stems from a fundamental moral conflict between the Jin pyo and Yoon Sung.
I do use the word justice loosely. The council of five committed a "crime". Jin Pyo see it as a personal betrayal because he was personally betrayed and experience the event. Thus, when Jin Pyo desires justice it comes out as vengeance. I just don't think Yoon Sung desires that sort of vengeance. Jin pyo feels betrayed, while I think Yoon Sung feels wronged. Furthermore, it is not about whether killing is the ultimate punishment. But I think Yoon SUng just don't believe in killing period. I would argue that his distaste for killing is something inherent in his nature. His affection for his surrogate mother is an expression of that. ANd when she died, that is when he find a reason to kill. He is triggered emotionally.
So the conflict between Jin Pyo and Yoon sung goes deeper than just a distaste for killing. I think at the end, both Jin Pyo and Yoon SUng is just trying to find peace because they both fee; wronged, abandon and betray. But their method of finding peace is different. Jin Pyo can't rest until he sees those responsible for the death of his comrade dies. Yoon SUng can't rest if he kill someone's close one because he knows what it is like to lose someone you love ( his surrogate mother). So to me, it is never a question which is more evil. It is the fact that their desires of this vengeance is coming into a clash because of a fundamental moral wall between the two.
I don't know if I make sense.
P.S. I just don't understand Gu Hara's character's purpose. Maybe she'll serve as some plot device for him to get close to the president.
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wanne
June 4, 2011 at 7:40 PM
and add conflict to the love relationship between YS and Nana
wanne
June 4, 2011 at 7:43 PM
and maybe at some point YS will become close with her or at least understand/feel for her that he wont have the heart to bring down her father later.
64 b
June 4, 2011 at 12:18 AM
Some thoughts:
- I want to see Jin-pyo's artificial leg. Call me weird.
- I have the same kind of shredder that Shim Jae-dong used. It cuts sheets into neat, vertical, equally-shaped strips. Now I'm thinking of investing in one of those cross-cut or diamond-cut shredders. It might be worth it.
- At first, I thought the first lady might be Yoon-sung's mom. But it turns out in the end that wasn't the case. Or maybe she is. It's just her hobby to make dukboki.
- javabeans, I like your spoon pun. It made me chuckle like a clever spoonerism (har).
- Best Love has Iron Man and Spiderman. Now City Hunter has Batman. I love superheroes!
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wanne
June 4, 2011 at 8:58 AM
now that you mention it, i wanted to ask about the 'first lady' too. Who is she? the one that Nana mentioned to YS that she wants to see him.
by the way, our City Hunter is a REAL hero mind you! LOL
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65 Miyoung
June 4, 2011 at 12:22 AM
I am seriously, seriously, SERIOUSLY in love with the editing team. Everything about this drama is so beautiful. It helps that the cinematography itself is well done, but the editing! Seriously, eyegasms all over the place (plus there's the fact that Lee Minho is prancing around the screen for an hour, love).
Okay and the product placement? So ridiculous... but totally working because now I want an iPad 2. Like, badly. DAMNIT CONSUMERIST TENDENCIES.
This drama is seriously growing on me.
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wanne
June 4, 2011 at 9:10 AM
this drama is really beautiful to look at!
the lighting, the color, the location combine with eye-candy casts, its like coming out straight from a magazine. and i agree with Girlfriday in her EP2 recap, it has that sexy & comic look going. it also gives the melancholy feel.
love it!
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66 crzycpl
June 4, 2011 at 1:35 AM
I am totally hooked on City Hunter - translate = I watch it before Best Love! OMO! OMO!
This was a great episode and proves that LMH can do comedy and drama. LOVE IT!
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67 etic
June 4, 2011 at 1:36 AM
Should it be Batman/Bruce Wayne dichotomy instead of Batman/Clark Kent?
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anais
June 4, 2011 at 1:54 AM
Batman/Bruce Wayne is much more appropriate a comparison than Clark Kent. The Clark Kent comparison only works insofar as Yoonsung is supposed to be a PhD in computing, a field more Clark Kent than Bruce Wayne. But Yoonsung is womanizer first and foremost. The computing wizardry is much more akin to Bruce Wayne's cave of high tech batman gadgets.
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68 Ally
June 4, 2011 at 1:39 AM
I love this show too! I was afraid there was going to be too much action sequences, but there's just the right amount and a really good plot!
I've never seen Athena or Iris, but would you guys say City Hunter is better?
And I love all the gadgets and awesome fighting moves Lee Min Ho does :D
Where in the episode does it show the Prosecutor works with the Nana's aunt again?
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tomato
June 4, 2011 at 2:12 AM
"I’ve never seen Athena or Iris, but would you guys say City Hunter is better? "
Well, better in terms of what?
I do not think City Hunter and Iris quite in the same category to make apple-apple comparison.
If you are talking about the action scenes.... Iris wins hands down by huuuuuge margin in terms of many (important things): details, acting, believability, artwork, etc.
Action scenes acting in City Hunter is mediocre (polite term: average) so far. Very apparent if you are familiar or have good exposure to action dramas/movie.
But then again it is only up to ep.3 of City Hunter so far, so it may change as the we get to later episodes.
Both are charming in its own ways.
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missjb
June 4, 2011 at 2:35 AM
in terms of action scene yes, iris is better. But in terms of plot? i don't think so.....
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tomato
June 4, 2011 at 2:58 AM
Iris has more serious tone, and appeal to different target audience and not quite in the same genre (and sub genre) City Hunter is in.
Of course it will be/get reflected in the plot of both dramas.
I suspect Ally to be more into the type who usually enjoys the more lighthearted action drama such as what City Hunter provides.
Hence, it cannot be made to have apple-apple comparison.
You can get into more details when talking/dissecting the plots and make comparison plot facet vs plot facet, but that is a different matter.
It is like trying to compare...
rom-com highschool theme vs the more serious one like queen of housewive (sort of... you ask a teen to watch work-place drama comedy or not... it just won't click with the person; the age/knowledge of the person does not lend to understanding what's being shown), or j-drama vs k-drama, action rpg vs turn-base console rpg, rap vs classical. Too broad to make meaningful/somewhat objective measure of which is better than which... plot-wise.
UNLESS you are comparing something that is universally more obvious mediocre vs something universally accepted good plot.
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missjb
June 4, 2011 at 3:30 AM
we have different opinion after all.... Iris were too focus on action scene that sometimes they didn't even know where they were going with the plot and create some big plot holes. some of character action didn't make sense and so many useless flashback with useless romantic scene.
in city hunter, the plot so far move forward and explain why character act that way. Even when some scene didn't make sense, but character action so far still believable. The tone might not as serious as some action thriller, but i think i like it. It's not suppose to be as dark as iris.
binzer
June 4, 2011 at 2:43 PM
I think on a technical level Iris is probably better in pretty much every way. They definitely had some heavy-duty consultation done for that show. Even the choice of ammo was carefully thought out, and my detail-obsessed hubby was shocked at the accuracy of such things (it's better than almost anything Hollywood produces).
I have to say that the acting in Iris is better too. No offense to LMH, but Lee Byung Hung pulled at my heartstrings a LOT more, as did the other leads.
All that being said, I am usually a trendy-rom-com kind of gal, and despite City Hunter's MANY flaws I still enjoy it as much as Iris (and I'm sure I'll like the ending a whole lot more).
Hands down my favorite show in this type of genre is the Time Between Dog and Wolf. It's the least flashy, but the acting, romance, and plot are all pretty much perfect. Even with its small budget the action scenes are excellent because the lead is awesome at martial arts IRL and the production team actually paid attention to detail. Go watch it if you haven't yet :)
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69 Karolyn
June 4, 2011 at 2:01 AM
Lol. It's not a magic whistle. High frequency dog whistle. Dogs' ears can pick up a wider range of frequency of sound. Thus the "silent" whistle can b used to stop dogs barking...
City hunter is so cool... I hope he wont get killed in e end... He is like e modern iljaemae..
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70 koreandramalover/kay
June 4, 2011 at 3:13 AM
Thank you so much Javabeans for recapping this drama. ;)
Your deeply cerebral and highly insightful and entertaining comments makes this drama all the more worth watching.
I cannot thank you enough! ;)
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71 Hana
June 4, 2011 at 4:43 AM
Is it a thing in korea when you tie someone up you use green tape? lol it was in romance town as well~
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jomo143
June 4, 2011 at 5:56 PM
That is so funny! I was thinking the EXACT same thing.
How come we always have ugly grey duck tape over here on the tv?
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72 wanne
June 4, 2011 at 5:41 AM
woot! have been waiting for this
THANK YOU JAVABEANS!!
*off to read*
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73 Dara
June 4, 2011 at 5:51 AM
Thanks JB, I'm in luuuuuuuurve with City Hunter and Kim Nana! Seriously, he kept looking at her like he wanted to KISS her all the time, Jeezzzzz keep me on my toe, and when it really happens.....*nosebleed*
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divyrus
June 4, 2011 at 7:05 AM
Yeah! He adores her too too much and THAT JUST MAKES ME ADORE HIM LIKE HELL!!!
Ah... Lee Min Ho..Why are you So HOT??!?! And ADORABLE???
Thats a dangerous combination enough to make anyone lose their mind!!!
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Cheinay
June 6, 2011 at 2:55 AM
Jealous when MIn Hot looks at Nana like that! Oh...those gorgeous, gorgeous eyes and lips. Lee Min Ho is so freaking hot!!! Okay...let me die now!
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74 grizette
June 4, 2011 at 5:57 AM
I'm inlove with this drama!!! And with Lee Min Ho, too! He's so sexy, hot, and AWESUUUUMMMM. The scenes are great and there's no episode yet that I my jaw didn't fall out of schock or amazement. I will continue to watch this.
I love Park Min Young as well! I wonder what will happen to the love triangle in the future. /excited
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75 rae
June 4, 2011 at 7:07 AM
Ohh maaahhhy GOOOOOOOSSSHHH!
Lee Min Ho is cool, hot, awesome, and very Handsome.. hahaha...
I just noticed, he looks like Yoon Eun Hye, and I think they'll have a good chemistry together... even if Eun Hye is older than him.., I think they will make a good pair...or maybe an EXCELLENT one??? whattaya think?? haha... I just so so so so love love love LOVE him! haha....
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divyrus
June 4, 2011 at 7:18 AM
Woah.. LMH + Eun Hye??!??! Both AMAZING FANTASTIC KISSERS!!!!
Well thats enough reason for me! :P
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76 KDrama Fan
June 4, 2011 at 7:17 AM
I liked this episode on the whole. Mostly because I like looking Lee Min Ho.
I dislike the writers/producers for being so blatant with the 'cute'-the hair and soft toy of Nana. It turned me off.
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KDrama Fan
June 4, 2011 at 7:36 AM
No offence to LMH but does anyone else think he runs funny?
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Linda165
June 4, 2011 at 7:42 AM
Yes... I've always thought that. Ever since the first time I saw Gu Jun Pyo running on that beach.
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Birdie
June 4, 2011 at 8:04 AM
Yes I noticed that from BOF,too. I wonder if it is because of the serious leg injury he sustained from the accident he had. Do you know which one of his dramas is before the accident? Perhaps we can compare then.
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Cynthia
June 4, 2011 at 8:50 AM
It's definitely from the car accident - he was in the hospital for months and still has issues with his damaged leg.
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Linda165
June 4, 2011 at 9:14 AM
Oh... now that I remember his car accident, I feel bad for making fun of him :(
I think Mackerel Run was before the accident.
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wanne
June 4, 2011 at 7:57 PM
the boy has steel in his leg
lets applaud him for his passion and dedication in acting and a job well done as City Hunter so far!
his leg still feels hurt especially when its cold. what more doing all the fighting scenes.
Lee Min Ho, you are doing great! thumbs up!!
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scarlet
June 4, 2011 at 10:09 PM
metal rod was removed in 2009, 2 weeks before his birthday. But he did confess he still feels the pain and ache whenever there's weather change. poor boy.
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scarlet
June 4, 2011 at 10:19 PM
And i heard from some fans, he sorta developed driving phobia, after that fatal car accident he and Jung Il woo were involved in (their friend was killed and LMH was bedbound for more than 6 months). Must have taken him a lot of courage to overcome all his emotional and physical distresses.
wanne
June 5, 2011 at 3:48 AM
oh, i didnt know that! thanks for the clarification.
77 Linda165
June 4, 2011 at 7:40 AM
Yes, yes, yes, YES! Shitty Hunter is GREAT!
Lee Min Hot is GREAT!
I found my very first ahjussi crush. Psycho Daddy is HOT, he looks GREAT on those white shirts. Forgive me for saying this, but I'd totally do him!
Or don't forgive, don't care :)
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jomo143
June 4, 2011 at 5:59 PM
Yes, me, too, but I would not pick him over Park Sang Min, who played YS's dad.
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78 fan_or_not
June 4, 2011 at 8:35 AM
Although I really enjoy this show, at the back of my head is the thought that this guy's money comes from manufacturing and selling drugs....
There was one particularly nauseating moment, when the adopted dad says that the drugs they sell cannot be sold in south korea. It thought that was sick. Is that supposed to make him heroic?
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79 grace, the one from Jersey, USA
June 4, 2011 at 9:25 AM
I love this show.
Did I mention that I LOVE THIS SHOW?
AS IN............I REALLY LOVE THIS SHOW!!!! :) :) :)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
One question though, and I hope that someone
from here can explain it to me: LMH saves a fellow
Korean from a bunch of bad guys. (Snappy escape
running across the boats in the Thailand floating
market, huh?)
Anyway, the guy has a photograph of "his daughter."
LMH falls in love with the girl in the photo.
Back in Korea, he meets her, yet "her father" is in
a 10-year coma at the hospital. Eventually, the
Korean guy returns to Korea, holding an ash-filled
urn, one supposes it to be of the lady who he
was nursing in a previous scene. (This is NOT
the surrogate mom who raised baby LMH, since
she was already shot dead in a previous scene.)
SO.......WHAT'S GOING ON??????
*
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tiaradiamond
June 4, 2011 at 10:16 AM
That lady was his wife. He marriend with Thailand woman
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grace, the one from Jersey, USA
June 4, 2011 at 10:45 AM
Thanks ~ tiaradiamond ~ for clearing up
the "nursing the ill lady---cremation urn"
part, of my confusion. Obviously, I must
have somehow missed the part of the
storyline that the Korean guy in Thailand
was married.
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scarlet
June 4, 2011 at 10:50 AM
The guy LMH saved never gave an answer when the latter asked if she's his daughter, so their relationship remains a mystery, even up to ep 4 when LMH asked again on how he's related to her. The ashes belong to the lady he was nursing, not LMH's surrogate mom, not sure if they got married though.
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grace, the one from Jersey, USA
June 4, 2011 at 11:34 AM
Thanks ~ scarlet ~ for your help, too. :)
I watched the available CH episodes on You Tube,
so I think that part of the problem was the English
translation. (Not that I'm complaining, mind you.) :)
I appreciate it whenever somebody takes the time
and trouble to do all of that work, but SOMETIMES
the words don't make an awful lot of sense in English.
That's where my confusion came from, and why I
thought that the Korean guy had a photograph of
"his daughter," instead of LMH just asking him if
the photo WAS of his daughter.
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wanne
June 4, 2011 at 8:05 PM
when LMH asked him if she's his daughter, he also added, 'but she has different surname from yours'
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wanne
June 4, 2011 at 8:07 PM
and the conversation just stop at that. it has never been cleared out until now. we still dont know whats the relationship between Nana and that ahjusshi
80 ar
June 4, 2011 at 9:36 AM
Thanks javabeans!
This drama has become even more engaging now that the set up episodes with their need for the audience to suspend believe a little bit are over. I'm still a bit iffy on the Yoon-sung and Nana characters, but the story is very interesting and the directing pretty awesome. I wish that this drama's made a few years later so that we'll get a more seasoned Lee MinHo and Park Min Young for the leads.
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81 Lilly
June 4, 2011 at 10:02 AM
Loving story also and hoping no sad ending to it.
Sad ending makes it seem evil wins anyway in stories like this.
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82 T
June 4, 2011 at 10:16 AM
ITA!! Thanks for the recap. Do you mean Batman/Bruce Wayne or Superman/Clark Kent?
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83 more
June 4, 2011 at 11:04 AM
IM SORRY BUT KOREAN DRAMAS NEVER DO THE REVENGE PART RIGHT. I DONT EXPECT HIM TO GO THROUGH WITH ANYTHING
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84 SeRa
June 4, 2011 at 11:04 AM
JB, thanks for the recap, even though I only visit this site to read your comment at the end of it. :D
After watching Episode 3 & 4, I have to say that "City Hunter" and "Best Love" are truthfully the best dramas this season. The reason? Well, the episodes are very satisfying, the OST's are very good, the plot is moving just in time, not to mention that the actors do their jobs quite well (and are eyecandy).
I've watched Lie to me, Romance Town and Baby-faced Beauty and I must say there wasn't a single Episode that satisfied me 100% and even get me excited to watch the next one. All the factors I mentioned above what make "City Hunter" and "Best Love" the best dramas of this season, are missing in LTM, RT and BFB. Lately, I'm thinking of dropping them.
It's too early to judge Miss Ripley but the OST is a failure!
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85 houstontwin
June 4, 2011 at 1:18 PM
City Hunter is much more like playboy Bruce Wayne than goody-goody nerd Clark Kent.
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86 Felix
June 4, 2011 at 4:22 PM
Fantastic. So human drama action. I love how they write the story for this drama. Keep up the good work. Really glad I want watch City Hunter. Well maybe I like watch Japan anime version and Jackie Chan City Hunter. Thanks production team for making this drama. It worth my time.
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87 mars
June 4, 2011 at 4:44 PM
Hmm. I'm wondering what exactly PMY has to bring to the table to make Nana seem "tougher" or to show that shes "gone through hardships". I do agree that the writing has failed the character in some parts and there are some wardrobe blunders (but point out a drama that doesn't dress its poorer characters in fashionable clothing). I think she's pulling off Nana very well. She's tough, she's determined, she doesn't let much get her down. I want to root for this girl to achieve her dream of guarding the President. So what if she's sporting some fashionable clothes? So what if she's girly? There is absolutely nothing wrong with that. All action heroines don't have to be the same.
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88 cont'd
June 4, 2011 at 5:16 PM
He's so cheeky i'm gonna die!
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89 jomo143
June 4, 2011 at 6:34 PM
Thanks for the recap, and thanks for giving us time to watch the show!
I had a wonderful catch up watching day today for Shitty Hunter, CYHMH, Twinkle, and Romance Town (getting really good now in Ep 8)
I have one word nobody has mentioned:
--------- > DIMPLES!!
We only saw them twice, and both times were premeditated face adjusting dimple arousing events.
After he taped the shredded docs back together, he pressed his lips together around 3:35.
Screen shot:
http://lemmesee.shutterfly.com/pictures/11
There was another one later, too.
I feel I have done my civic duty pointing this out to you, fellow viewers.
I like the cinematic, comic-book reality of the show. This is not real SK, or real Seoul. It is Gotham City or Metropolis. The BAD guys are really bad, and the good guys win.
I LOVE THE FACT that he shot all the bullets through one hole, but they thought he hit it once. The shooting range made me remember SKKS when they shot all the arrows in the same spot. Which reminds me, I see flashes of PYM's SKKS face in this show, especially her indignant face. That is OK, she's cute n all.
LipsMH continues to be the main draw for me, because I really want him to do well in this show, and continue develop his acting chops. After his Army stint, when we get to see his abs, he will have more physical and emotional weight to draw on. Right now, I am liking the earnestness and the pretty.
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wanne
June 4, 2011 at 8:24 PM
LOL i didnt notice the dimples!
when you mention dimples my mind just thought about Seunggi. no one can beat his cuteness gah! but Minho is Lee Min-Hot!
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90 Farah
June 4, 2011 at 8:30 PM
So I've been reading everyone's comments and all I can think us: Wow y'all must be theatre majors or professional trained actors cuz some of yall are going in on these actors. Take it from someone who actually goes to school for acting, they are going a better job than you ever could. Geez guys relax a little, enjoy the show for what it is and give the actors a little break. SMH SIDENOTE: thank you so much Dramabeans & Girl Friday for the recaps, as I do not speak any Asian languages it truly helps to get and understand the little detail. Ladies y'all are AWESOME!!!!!
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91 wanne
June 4, 2011 at 9:10 PM
i really really really love this drama!
it has the right amount of everything!
- its intense but let me breath after that
- love the mini arc. each episode has its goal and provides satisfaction after that. and it moves in such fast pace that no scene feels like filler.
- i love the low-tech! i always cringe when some dramas for the purpose of being dramatic make the hero photostat the evidences when really, you could just use your handphone to snap it which is much faster! and when one person meets the bad people to confront it and gets nothing from it aside from trouble. this drama is quick to use the recording glasses, so satisfying. i honestly love the tech-cool moves in this drama. its fitting with our generation now. the pen when sidling the railing, the hijack. of course it has been used in many of the hollywood movies but i think this is the first time i see in a korean drama, so thumbs up to City Hunter!
- the character development and complexities. love the duality in YS's character. and the right amount of each of his personality. makes him very likable from the get go. he's not too rough, he has enough of sensitivity, he can be playful, can be playboy, can be moody just the right amount of it. making the transition each time believable as well. and the complexities in the president character. his betrayal is bad, the justice he wants regarding the corruption is good. him searching for Jinpyo is intriguing because i'm wondering what will he do when he finds out.
- it has its moment of comedy and heart. what i love most about this drama is, its not all style and intense like what most of action kdramas have been right now. they dont need dramatic when they want to give sad. YS shouting in his empty dining room and the sight of him, Nana, and the children playing together in the fountain already makes me tear up. its such a simple scene yet affect me enough to cry. and they were not done randomly too, there were enough build up to make me able to feel for the character.
- love the interaction between the characters. the buddy-romance between YS and Nana, the anonymous partnership and rivalry between YS and the Prosecutor. the father against son relationship with JP, and the sometimes funny sometimes sweet relationship with the ahjusshi.
so much to say about this so far awesome City Hunter, but i'll stop now with....
I'M CRAZILY IN LOVE WITH CITY HUNTER
this is the best drama of this season for me
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wanne
June 4, 2011 at 9:31 PM
also! there's enough mystery to keep me anticipating every episode!
i hope City Hunter will just continue to do well or even, better, like what it has been doing so far now.
it has high potential to be a really great drama,
so please dont waste and ruin it!
City Hunter, fighting!!
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jomo143
June 4, 2011 at 9:48 PM
You're right about the low tech. I liked how they showed the grueling work of taping that shredded paper back together. No fancy scanning and matching devices for our hero!
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wanne
June 4, 2011 at 10:08 PM
yeah, its relatable too. like i could really do that if i was in his situation. minus the martial art skill of course haha.
it has been satisfying because YS always did before i even asked him to do something. like before i think 'he should record a conversation with LKW' to prove his wrongdoing, he did it.
some people said its ridiculous YS was able to tape together the shredded papers in one night. but i must say, if someone like Seunggi who is known as the master of puzzle asked to solve it, he can really do it in one night! lol
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Lilian
June 10, 2011 at 8:50 AM
the shouting part and him eating alone at the long table in the dining room SO SO SO reminded me of Gu Jun Pyo in Boys over flowers =)
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92 fm
June 4, 2011 at 10:31 PM
Actually I don't think Jin Pyo took YS from his mother just as a tool for revenge.I think in his mind,he think as a son,he must take revenge on those who has killed his father.Looking at how he sacrifice himself in order to save YS from the bom explosion in ep 1 already show us how much he cared for YS as a son.It just that he didn't want to show much that he really did care for him.I think what make a conflict between father and son lattr on is the way/method to paid back to all person that responsible for the death of the love one.
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93 itsme
June 4, 2011 at 10:36 PM
I see some philippine action stunts I've seen in old filipino action movies. Neat. Maybe ill watch this
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94 Abbie
June 5, 2011 at 12:19 AM
Thanks for the recap, Javabeans! I totally agree with you on everything. I'm nervous and excited about how Yoon-sung's story will play out with Jin-pyo. And how his mother knows the President! OMG! I can't wait for episode 4!
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95 lover
June 5, 2011 at 6:41 PM
actually before i watch this i thought it would be another high budget n lame story drama.. but after episode 2 i'm impress~~
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96 sangey
June 5, 2011 at 8:54 PM
i am biggest fan of lee min hjo and i have lots of collection of his photo. in this film i fan will dont mind if he wear lipglosscoz he is always no. 1 hero. i really like you. and give up too easily . we you fan are always with you.sarangey and chuyahyo
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97 Cheinay
June 6, 2011 at 2:45 AM
The reason why I love k-drama! LEE MIN HO tops that reason. Thank you Dramabeans for the recaps!
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98 im_eve
June 6, 2011 at 6:19 AM
jin-pyo...jun-pyo! :p
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99 Lilian
June 10, 2011 at 8:45 AM
Ooh...thanks for the details. I was wondering what the words were on the paper wrapped around the cheating loser when he was parcel-sent to the prosecutors' office =)
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100 jdkk09
June 10, 2011 at 12:47 PM
Do we know why JinPyo kidnapped Yoon Sung at infancy if he was just going to end up gathering his own team to revenge the 20 men? Why kidnap, bully and train his friend's son?
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