Sword and Flower: Episode 13
by HeadsNo2
Our princess forges some unlikely alliances in her quest for revenge while our hero is forced to do some soul-searching when it comes to his residual feelings for her, which unsurprisingly spring to the surface when he’s faced with her cross-dressing doppelgänger. Yes, we’re still exploring that plot to the fullest, but I think Sword and I might differ over our definitions of “explore” and “fullest.”
And also “disguise.”
EPISODE 13 RECAP
Oh, those pesky cliffhangers. It seemed like Choong and Jang had discovered Mu-young’s true identity at the same time, but it turns out that while Choong’s spy found out that Mu-young wasn’t the son of a constable, she’s soon to be adopted as his son, which means her story isn’t a total lie.
Somehow Geumhwadan was able to make it so that the constable would lie on their behalf and mislead anyone digging into Mu-young’s fabricated past. Choong is obviously troubled that this confirms she’s a dude.
However, there’s no fooling Jang as he tells Mu-young that no matter her disguise, he could recognize her easily considering the fact that they grew up together. (Finally!) Then he asks, “Did you come here to kill me?”
Jang’s one guard holds a sword to Mu-young’s neck as Jang ascends the throne, causing her to dryly remark, “The throne really suits you. You betrayed my father, my brother, and me to become a puppet king?”
Jang replies that General Yeon would’ve deposed her father if he hadn’t, which… isn’t really a great argument, but okay. Mu-young notes that he must be feeling guilty if he’s making excuses, to which he lies that he feels no such thing.
So then she does the smart thing by threatening to kill him with a sword at her throat, mostly because she knows he won’t kill her: “If you kill me, you will lost your opportunity to defeat General Yeon.” Ah, so she’s offering a partnership.
And speak of the devil, General Yeon arrives. Mu-young merely bows her head to avoid notice, and her attempt to sneak out unnoticed is foiled by Jang who commands that she stay to hear the night password.
He’s meaning to toy with Mu-young and put her on edge as he tells General Yeon that he had a dream that the princess wanted to take revenge on him and General Yeon.
He gives Mu-young a vengeance-y password and sends her on her way, while General Yeon scoffs at the thought that the dead princess would take revenge on them. “It was very vivid,” Jang tells him. “I thought the princess had come back to life.”
General Yeon almost laughs—even if she were alive, what could a mere girl do? This incites Mu-young’s anger as she thinks to herself that she’ll make them pay for the crimes they’ve committed against Goguryeo.
She runs into Choong outside the throne room. He’s got a few guards and a bound Leader So in tow, and the look Choong gives her is almost like he’s checking for a reaction on her part. (Unsurprisingly, there is none.)
He kicks Leader So down in front of her and cuts his bindings, telling him that if he makes it through the palace gate, he’ll be free. Of course, he’s also given Mu-young a bow and arrows in order to shoot Leader So down before he can get there.
When Mu-young utters a word of complaint, Choong draws a sword against her—he knows she’s not the constable’s son, so why did she lie to him? She uses her bullshit story that she was adopted as his son, so it’s not a total lie…
Choong commands Leader So to run for his life, and orders Mu-young to shoot him down. Eek, he’s so angry. I think he knows her cover is a lie, and he’s going to prove it one way or the other.
Leader So sends a reassuring smile Mu-young’s way before he does as told and makes a run for freedom. Mu-young keeps her emotions in check as she draws an arrow to fire, and Choong looks more confused than anything—he expected her to disobey. He so set up this trap to see if she’s the princess.
As Mu-young’s arrow flies, something else comes out of nowhere to hit Leader So in his back. He crumples as Mu-young’s arrow flies past, clearly intending to miss its target.
They pull out all the stops for his running scene, including Sad Violin and slow-motion shots, which would make you think this is his death scene—so it’s a little funny that Leader So sits up, completely fine. (Though I don’t think it was intended to be funny.)
Our two lovebirds look around for the source of the flying object, and a training instructor appears out of the shadows (teddy bear ajusshi Lee Won-jong! Yay!) to claim responsibility for the non-lethal blow, explaining that traitors shouldn’t die while running—they should be beheaded.
Choong and Mu-young seem to know him well as their teacher, even if this is our first time seeing him. When Bear Teacher orders Mu-young to follow him, she bows to Choong and formally says that she won’t disappoint him.
Only after she’s gone does he grit through clenched teeth, “Disappoint me? Do you even know why I’m disappointed?” Apparently not, Choong. You should maybe just tell her.
Mu-young gripes about Choong’s temper with Bear Teacher, and this is the first time I’ve heard her even try to lower her voice to sound manlier. Bear Teacher puts a stop to her insubordination before he mentions that while she joined the intelligence agency out of ambition, Choong joined to become powerful.
She’s a bit confused by this, since she knows Choong is one of the best swordsmen around. At least she seems curious when she asks why Choong wanted power, and the camera cuts to him as Bear Teacher says, “So he wouldn’t lose his loved ones ever again.”
Choong broods alone with Mu-young’s hairpin, remembering when she gave it to him as well as the moment it was returned to him after her “death.” He thinks to himself that she can’t be the princess if she shot the arrow at Leader So (which means it was a test), and that he’s disappointed in himself for even thinking she was alive.
“The princess is dead,” he reminds himself. “I killed her.”
Then he tosses her hairpin away as if he’s finally letting go.
Mu-young gets one second alone with Leader So before he’s dragged off by guards, and uses it to tell him that she’ll get him out somehow. He’d rather she didn’t because of the danger she’s in, and after he’s gone she explains why she’s so determined—she won’t lose people close to her again. (Another commonality with Choong.)
Nam-saeng is left to watch over the new recruits while his brother is off on his father’s ten day mission to find useful people out of the list of traitors, and he can’t help but watch Mu-young as she trains.
The member who saw her try to save the child of a traitor tells Nam-saeng that she won’t make a good agent, and Nam-saeng agrees—she’s meant to become more. Specifically, he wants her as his right-hand man and forces the member to take Mu-young with him for their upcoming mission.
Mu-young’s roomie—who must be shown shirtless at least once per scene—tells her about their upcoming mission to catch weapon smugglers in the city while she ducks behind the bed to change while his back is turned, such a master of disguise is she.
She and two other members head to a gibang for their covert meeting, but the gisaeng serving them takes a special interest in the pretty Mu-young. Mu-young’s expression changes when the gisaeng squeezes her shoulder, and she abruptly announces that she needs to go to the bathroom. The men find this a bit curious since neither of them have seen her bottom half.
The cooks and servants are on Mu-young’s side, and they help to cover her tracks as she sneaks into a nearby shed where the umbrella maker and Boo-chi are waiting. His daughter is there too, and it’s cute that she calls Mu-young “Princess Unni.”
It’s her only chance to rendezvous with them, but they don’t share any new information. Boo-chi just worries over the fact that Jang recognized her, and the umbrella maker explains that the constable of Daeja (her “adoptive dad”) lied to Choong because his allegiance is with Geumhwadan.
Mu-young has time to crack one lame joke when she gets back to her group before they see the smuggler they’ve been after. He flees when he spots them, causing Mu-young and the gang to chase him through the market, and she’s the one to eventually catch him.
The smuggler is taken to Nam-saeng, who’s so casual about love-tapping the smuggler (sorry, is he supposed to be hitting him?) that he asks Mu-young to go drinking with him later. Between blows.
He keeps going until he somehow cuts his hand, causing him to blame it on the smuggler and start beating him in earnest. Everyone else just watches until Choong arrives, and for the moment stops Nam-saeng’s beating as he looks the smuggler in the eyes and asks him if he has a family or a lover.
It seems like Choong is going to be the good cop to Nam-saeng’s psycho cop, but he proves to be the baddest of them all when he tells the smuggler that he won’t kill him for not talking—he’ll find his parents, his children, and anyone else he holds dear and kill them in front of him.
And if he can’t find them, he’ll post a likeness of the smuggler and kill anyone who even seems to recognize him. “They will die just for knowing you.” Well then.
Later, Mu-young reports to Choong that the smuggler confessed everything under torture except who he sold the weapons to. Choong is ready to torture him until he reveals it until Mu-young tells him that the smuggler died of unknown causes.
Choong is frustrated by this new turn, and orders Mu-young to perform the interrogations from now on. “Shall I capture his family and kill them in front of him?” she throws Choong’s earlier threats back at him, wondering if he would have gone through with his promise.
“I would have if it was necessary,” he replies, though he doesn’t look so sure. He then claims that anything he does is for the people (whatever helps him sleep at night), and when Mu-young calls him out on the irony of killing people for the people, Choong gives her the old omelette/breaking eggs excuse.
A doctor is called in to ascertain how the smuggler died, and he seems overly-nervous as he tells Mo-seol that he died of an illness he already had. She finds this a little odd but doesn’t press further, all while Leader So listens from his prison cell.
The smuggler was apparently working for Geumhwadan, as Boo-chi and the umbrella maker mourn his passing even though they know it was his decision to end his life. It’s sad, but it’s all for the good of Goguryeo.
Mu-young’s roomie is under Choong’s orders to spy on her, but he has nothing unusual to report other than the fact that Nam-saeng has taken a liking to her. Choong just orders him to keep at it.
Choong challenges Bear Teacher to a friendly sparring contest, and the two seem evenly matched. Nam-saeng watches the tail end of it unhappily, and then the scene ends. (That’s really it.)
Meanwhile, Mo-seol teaches the new recruits how female spies in their neighboring countries send messages with their makeup (i.e. a rounded eyebrow means things are going smoothly, red lips mean things are going badly), and uses Mu-young’s face as a canvas.
She has a brief moment after she applies Mu-young’s lipstick where she seems to realize that Mu-young looks too good, and everyone else notices how much Mu-young looks like a girl as well, causing her to self-consciously rub it off her face.
Choong watches the demonstration with a pained expression, clearly conflicted as to whether the princess’ doppelgänger is the princess when he/she looks just like her in drag.
He heads out to brood and finds the hairpin he threw out as images of Mu-young in makeup flash through his mind. He keeps the hairpin now that his hope has been restored.
Jang decides to team up with Mu-young to get rid of their common enemy, General Yeon, before they address the problems between them.
Her plan is to cause strife among Yeon’s supporters in order to divide them, with their opportunity in front of them now that the chief minister Yeon put in place has been removed. She also plans to use Nam-saeng’s greed in their favor.
The Yeon family (plus Mo-seol) plays a game of baduk, where Nam-saeng uses the opportunity to ask his father about the chief minister position. When asked what he thinks, he suggests Mo-seol’s father.
It must be game night, since we cut to her father idling away the time gambling with his fellow councilmen. We hear Mo-seol describe how her father is unfit for the position in voiceover, his personality traits represented in how he loses the game.
Nam-saeng then asks about General Yang, the buzzkill who’d rather read than gamble, but he’s too hard to read or control. It comes down to Sun Do-hae, Jang’s favorite, or the last of Yeon’s three stooges.
I wonder if General Yeon wants Choong to become chief minister, since he cuts into the conversation to ask if his son is using his ten days well. Choong claims he found no one from the list, since he doesn’t want to use Leader So—if he held out for three years in prison, he can’t trust or use him.
Nam-saeng brings up the fact that Choong was able to change his mind after defying their father (huh, he almost speaks as though he was there), so Leader So could feasibly do the same.
But Choong points out that his father doesn’t trust him for that very reason, and that’s why he can’t get rid of him either. While the boys talk, their father schools them in baduk and adds, “I don’t trust anyone. If you want to follow in my footsteps, don’t try to gain my trust. Overcome me instead.” Oh, General Yeon. This show needs more of you.
Nam-saeng pays a visit to Mo-seol’s father, who offers him a modest tribute/bribe, which Nam-saeng knows is disproportionate to the wealth he’s amassed secretly trading weapons with their enemies.
General Do-soo starts quaking in his boots when Nam-saeng leans in menacingly to threaten to go to his father with news of his underhanded dealings. In that way he’s able to blackmail the general into helping his cause at the next council meeting.
Meanwhile, Jang finds his favorite councilman, Sun Do-hae, and offers him the position of chief minister. Even as a puppet king, he claims he has enough power to appoint him—and if he doesn’t, he’ll get help from someone who does.
When the subject of chief minister is brought up at the council meeting, General Do-soo does as Nam-saeng asked and nominates him for the position. (Hahaha. C’mon.) A majority of the other ministers follow suit and second the motion.
This actually takes General Yeon by surprise, and not in the good way. He suggests that they take more time to think about it, and in an effort to gain his favor, Yeon’s other stooge suggests that they tear down an existing monument to the late king and erect a monument commemorating Yeon’s achievements.
Now it’s Jang’s turn to be surprised, since it makes sense that they’d erect a monument to Yeon instead of him even though it still stings. But he goes along with it in his usual enthusiastically sarcastic way, and even suggests that they throw a big feast the day the monument is completed.
News of the monument and feast reaches Geumhwadan, which is sporting two new members who are introduced like every other new character in this show, in that they aren’t. Why so many new characters when you’re not even using the old ones?
So, one is the gisaeng who gave Mu-young the secret shoulder squeeze—she’s DAL-KI (AOA’s Hyeonjeong). The other go-getter is CHI-WOON (Kwak Jung-wook). Turns out that it’s hard to give a proper introduction when a character gets one line of generic dialogue and their name spelled in a chyron.
Dal-ki, Chi-woon, and Boo-chi watch from the distance as Yeon’s monument is erected, and as Yeon’s supporter kills men whom he deems aren’t working hard enough. Understandably, this makes them angry.
And later that night, Dal-ki gains a more personal audience with Yeon’s supporter as a gisaeng.
It’s Monument Ceremony Day, and Nam-saeng undermines Choong’s position as chief of security by taking over his spot so that he’ll control the intelligence agency members for the day.
He sends Choong off on a fool’s errand while appointing Mu-young and another member to General Yeon’s personal security detail. I doubt she was expecting that.
We get a view of the covered monument, and a flashback to the previous night (or nights) reveals a tunnel leading straight to it. Then it’s back to the ceremony.
Choong notices a suspiciously enormous pile of dirt and inspects it, while a flashback shows us that the pile was created when Geumhwadan dug the tunnel leading to the monument.
The tunnel entrance has since been disguised, but Choong knows something’s strange and returns to direct the agency members accordingly. Nam-saeng throws a hissy fit over Choong’s disobedience, but is unable to stop his brother from assuming command in the end.
Jang & Co. are seated on the viewing platform, and Jang sees an opportunity to wheedle Mu-young by asking General Yeon if he feels better now that he’s replaced the late king’s monument with one of his own.
General Yeon seemingly chooses Mu-young at random to ask why she thinks the late king was deposed, because that’s so very in-character of him to pay attention to nobodies and their opinions.
She obstructs his view of her face with her spear before she answers that she doesn’t know, so Yeon answers for her: “It was because he lacked decisiveness.”
Jang: “Had he been decisive, you wouldn’t be Dae Mangniji right now.” Ha! Nice burn.
Choong wanders among the crowd gathered at the monument site to search for anyone acting suspicious. He knows that pile of dirt wasn’t just for decoration.
When it’s time for the ceremony to start, the supporter behind it all is nowhere to be found, so it’s the former chief minister who reads the official speech singing General Yeon’s praises.
The covering is pulled from the monument… only to reveal the corpse of the supporter who had it built tied to it along with a painting of the bamboo flower that’s become Geumhwadan’s symbol.
Everyone reels in shock while Mu-young hides a tiny, satisfied smile. Jang reads the message on the corpse: “Yeon Gaesomun murdered the king.”
While this is going on, the Geumhwadan members pull a hidden rope to topple the monument. Panic ensues.
COMMENTS
I was really hoping that we were over the cross-dressing hurdle, because it’s just as ridiculous now as it was when it was introduced and so much of nothing has come out of it. All we get from Choong are his pancake moments of “It’s her!” “Boo, it’s not her.” “It IS her!” “Aww, it’s not.” “But it IS!” And then he does what about it? Right, nothing. He does nothing about it.
To be fair, it’s not like he’s the only one doing nothing, since he can at least take credit for trying even if he’s the easiest person to dissuade. But Mu-young is just moving from scene to scene without purpose—things happen around her, but little is happening either to her or because of her. Meanwhile, we drop in on her life seemingly at random, and in the interim we miss whole chunks of time where she’s met, interacted with, and gotten to know half the people she’s suddenly acquainted with.
I can see bypassing a few new character introductions in a fast-paced plot, but considering the current pace and how a side character’s appearance must be dependent on whether their name was drawn from a hat that week, I’m keeping any newly-introduced characters at arm’s length until the show proves otherwise.
The problem isn’t even so much that there are new side characters filling airtime, but more so because I can’t figure out a timeline with everyone’s non-introductions (we think we see Mu-young from day to day, but wait! She has friends we never knew and a life we haven’t seen!), and because of that same reason we’re being put at arm’s length by the show. Following Mu-young’s story now feels more like a privilege we aren’t always granted when accessibility should be the goal.
I can’t, in any world, buy that anyone believes her disguise. But it’s not like the show didn’t have a chance to reel me in some other way—there would have been ways to connect if Mu-young had to actually struggle to keep her secret, so we could know why that means something to her. Maybe we could see her struggling to gain the vital information she needs to pass onto Geumhwadan—you know, the whole reason she went there in the first place.
Now that she doesn’t seem to notice Choong exists, we’re even sapped of the conflict she could have faced by being in such close proximity with him, whether she considered him a lover or an enemy. Instead we get two characters constantly in each other’s orbits and fleeting interactions that don’t resonate the way they should, like Choong’s morbid test. There should’ve been a lot at stake, like Mu-young’s secret identity and Leader So’s life, but the only person who seemed emotionally invested in the outcome was Choong. (And then it didn’t really matter anyway. Where’s the dramatic tension, Sword? Cough it up!)
Even if his internal conflict is stuck on repeat, at least he’s able to communicate what’s driving him and why it matters, so I don’t feel as cut off from him as I do with Mu-young. There are more than enough episodes to set things straight—and if that’s not a silver lining, it’s at least a healthy shade of gray, right?
RELATED POSTS
- Sword and Flower: Episode 12
- Sword and Flower: Episode 11
- Sword and Flower: Episode 10
- Sword and Flower: Episode 9
- Sword and Flower: Episode 8
- Sword and Flower: Episode 7
- Sword and Flower: Episode 6
- Sword and Flower: Episode 5
- Sword and Flower: Episode 4
- Sword and Flower: Episode 3
- Sword and Flower: Episode 2
- Sword and Flower: Episode 1
Tags: featured, Kim Ok-bin, Sword and Flower, Uhm Tae-woong
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1 aramint
August 17, 2013 at 4:46 AM
the cross-dressing needs to end, like seriously. He knows, or might know, but didn't do anything about it? And it's true, it feels like Mu-young now is just like the audience, watching things happen around her instead of being a part of the story.
Plus, the addition of new characters here and there while I'm still mourning over the "death" of Shi-woo. Oh, why am I still watching this show? *sigh*
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Kiara
August 17, 2013 at 5:16 AM
Sigh*** yes yes yes this cross-dressing has been long enough and this is not 50eps drama.
Shi-woo died? Unless I fell asleep and missed it, I don't think he is dead.
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aramint
August 17, 2013 at 5:32 AM
ah, actually I was talking about his disappearance from the show, hence the use of inverted commas (is that what that thing is called?) around the word "death"..huhuhu..
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darcyM
August 17, 2013 at 5:40 AM
And also, General Yeon's minion. What was he called? Ho-tae, or something? He just disappeared as well. Unless he died and I just kinda missed it. A possibility considering all the distracting continuity crazy that's been going on lately...
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aramint
August 17, 2013 at 6:14 AM
wait, is he gone as well? aigooo..dear show, can't you at least give a closure to an existing character before you introduce a new one?
Kiara
August 17, 2013 at 5:49 AM
Oh I see :).
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Timbone
August 18, 2013 at 12:20 AM
Hahahaha.
I was a little interested in the show but it seems similar to Princess Man if they had focused on the revenge plot from the beginning. I wasnt too interested in that show so I am even less interested in this, after seeing two or 3 recaps I m totally uninterested lol
Melinda
August 30, 2013 at 8:46 PM
Ugh, I miss Shi-woo... He was one of the factors that pushed me to finally read the recaps of this show (and maybe watch it too)... :(
But on the other hand...
SQUEEEEEEE!! Kwak Jung-wook is BACKKKKKK!! I loved him in School 2013 and now I get to watch him again...eeeeee!! *^*
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2 darcyM
August 17, 2013 at 4:55 AM
Thanks for the recap. I found this episode really boring, to be honest. I was all excited from the cliffhanger of last week, where Choong appeared to have found out she was still alive, and I was looking forward to lots of angry, tense, confrontational scenes between them, and then all we got was, "Jokez, lols, I'm actually adopted." "Oh, why you no tell me? Grr. Here, shoot this guy as a test of your true identity." And then the monument. Yawn. What a waste of episode.
I did enjoy General Yeon, as always, but there just hasn't been enough of his awesome, lately. Nam-saeng is still enjoyably psycho. And the sword fight. I do enjoy a good duel, and even though it served no purpose plot-wise, it was fun to watch. Less flowers, please, show, and more swords.
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CaroleMcDonnell
August 17, 2013 at 7:13 AM
Everytime someone touches the princess' chest when she falls, I think of Kang Chi and the revealing breast touch in Gu Family Book. How many times can someone faint or be held firmly by the chest and folks NOT feel those tiny breasts. True, they are not melon sized but even lemon-sized breasties are feelable through all those layers of clothing.
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Peridot
August 17, 2013 at 7:32 AM
"[...]but even lemon-sized breasties are feelable through all those layers of clothing." Priceless comment :)
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Kiara
August 17, 2013 at 7:53 AM
I think they are apple size (not a Fuji type like the ones in Korean markets but a small organic size) and you can totally see them moving when she runs. How can he not stare at them or grab one so we can all move on with our lives haha.
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Waiting
August 17, 2013 at 11:40 AM
LMAO!!
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CaroleMcDonnell
August 17, 2013 at 11:48 AM
LOL!!!!! oh gosh, i can't stop laughing. Ah me...
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darcyM
August 17, 2013 at 11:28 PM
Yes! And sorry: minor spoiler ahead, but there's a bit in ep 14 where I'm pretty certain he actually does touch them, and I'm like "This is how you're going to reveal her secret, show? Okay then, at least it give us lols, and does away with this plot-induced-madness." But no, he still doesn't realise. Gah.
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3 Carmensitta
August 17, 2013 at 5:07 AM
This drama...wow... can anything save it now? The only silver lining is the fact that the recaps are funny!
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Peridot
August 17, 2013 at 6:31 AM
Yes, I am reminded of the recaps for Dr. Jin. I loved reading those and the ensuing commentary.
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4 Bibianni
August 17, 2013 at 5:19 AM
I m watching it for uhm force...plot wise...i just keep reminding myself that this is drama land..
still hope something exciting can happen next..
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Niki
August 18, 2013 at 2:45 AM
UHM-FORCE to the rescue! He's this show's saving grace. I'm so in love with this man. What intensity! He burns up the stills in these caps and turn my screen to cinders. lol
I guess the only reason why Moo Young's 'disguise' is plain as day is a plot fodder to entice Choong. The writers are such sadist. Puh-lease...i really dont need to see choong pine for the princess this way in order to know that he loves her.
It saddens me that this show is not doing well in terms or ratings cause i love Tae Woong and Kim Ok-bin (not so much the princess right now. She was so much better in the first few ep.) But understand why people are not tuning in. Some of the scenes are so jarringly edited that it gives me wtf moments.....
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5 Peridot
August 17, 2013 at 5:34 AM
As always, thank you for the recap, Heads :)
At this point in the game, I am also having a hard time connecting with the characters. I do not really feel Muyoung's urgency in avenging her family and righting all of the wrongs that have been done. I do not really feel her emotions. She is almost like a blank canvass (I do not know if it is a problem with Kim Okbin or the way her character has been written). She seems to be more reactive than proactive, despite her assertions that "Tonight, General Yeon will die," "I will kill General Yeon," etc., etc.
Your comments, Heads, regarding the introduction (or lack thereof) of new characters were spot on. I was thinking along the same lines when I thought about the introduction of Namsaeng. I was looking for a more fluid integration of his character into the story-line.
Characters just come and go, and I do not particularly feel anything for them. The princess has been living in hiding and planning (supposedly) her revenge for three years. I am assuming that her life must have been very difficult and that years living in the woods, sneaking around, with nothing but thoughts of vengeance should have taken some toll on her appearance. Instead, she looks immaculate and sports the same side bangs of her less depressing days in the palace. While three years have not actually passed--this being a show and all :)--I want to believe that they have. I want Muyoung to be an altered person, both physically and mentally. I do not feel or see any of that. We as viewers are just supposed to believe what we are told. I am reminded of when I had to suspend my disbelief when Muyoung seemed to hold her own in that fight against Choong three years earlier. Viewers had been told of her fighting skills but the few, fleeting moments of her using her sword were less-than-noteworthy. Then she is suddenly able to fight for an extended period of time with Choong, who could realistically put her down in a matter of seconds. There are many other moments and plot points that have required the suspension of disbelief and I think that they have done this show a disservice.
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Kiara
August 17, 2013 at 6:15 AM
“Tonight, General Yeon will die,” “I will kill General Yeon,” etc., etc.
LOL Seriously, I'm not sure what she is smoking but she needs to stop.
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Peridot
August 17, 2013 at 6:30 AM
It's probably a drug called Delusion :)
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CaroleMcDonnell
August 17, 2013 at 7:10 AM
Wouldn't it have been so much fun to see the princess in the woods as a lowly woodsman's daughter? Heck, I don't see why the spies are even necessary right now. At this point i would've welcomed her not being saved by the umbrella maker who happened to know the spies. She should have been alone and we would grieve as the writers make the princess understand poverty isolation and sorrow. Heck, give her a peasant guy who wants to marry her and take her away from her sorrow. But nooooooooo three years go by and she has all her friends and buddies. Very poor creative choice.
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Peridot
August 17, 2013 at 7:43 AM
I agree that those three years could have been spent on major character development. Maybe she did not have to be completely alone, but some isolation and experience of the bitter, un-sheltered world would have helped a lot in shaping the person she could have become had this show be written better. A peasant love interest? Ooh, interesting.
May I ask what you think about the way the love story between Muyoung and Choong has been handled? And are we supposed to believe that Muyoung has lingering feelings for Choong beneath her hatred and resentment. Do her conflicted emotions explain why she is never quite able to run a sword through his flesh? I assume that this is all supposed to be the case, but for some reason, I do not feel the complexity of emotions that Muyoung should be experiencing. Again, I do not know if that is due to the performance of the actress or the way her character has been written. Instead of showing us five to six shots of the same scene and other nonsense filler, this show should be focusing on character development and backstories. If things don't heat up in the remaining episodes, I shall have to lament the wasted potential of a show that was aiming for something more artistic and creative than the standard saegeuk.
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CaroleMcDonnell
August 17, 2013 at 11:56 AM
I feel pretty silly but I am TOTALLY hoping the fortuneteller's prediction of happiness and children is foreshadowing a happy ending. (Ending of episode 14 notwithstanding)
So if the lovers are to be reunited, the princess has to go through a dying to royalty, dying to self, acceptance of her lot bootcamp. Which she has not had...so it's gonna be hard to see her go off happily into the future with her husband.
Now...if she were to get amnesia and forget who she is....that might be good for her future.
But..if episode 14 is really "true" and not like a previous certain episode (which shall not be mentioned because it's a spoiler) then the love story is finished and only father-son issues remain.
I think the Princess is as conflicted as he is but she is supposed to be determined. Hence she is always shown as grimly determined and vengeful...which doesn't work because this actress can't really carry off conflicted emotions so well.
I have the feeling that somewhere along the way the writer lost her/his way and slipped into kneejerk plot territory.
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Peridot
August 17, 2013 at 1:07 PM
For some reason, I do not think that we are headed for a happy ending, even if the words of fortunetellers in k-dramas usually ring true.
I hope that amnesia doesn't factor into the plot :) We can't have any more overly-used drama tropes :)
6 Kiara
August 17, 2013 at 5:51 AM
Thanks for the recap Heads and your translation makes more sense than some of the subs out there. The position of Chief Minister is different from Yeon's position. I would say Yeon's position would be like the Commander in Chief. Yes?
This so call intelligent agency is full of stupid people. Mo-seol is probably the only one using her head because she is calm and collective. Ma-saeung is all over the place and Choong is stuck in... is she or is she not mode.
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CaroleMcDonnell
August 17, 2013 at 7:06 AM
Oh my gosh, so true about the stupid folks in Joye Agency. There were a few scenes where I thought: "Oh really??? Do not tell me that THAT just happened."
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7 TS
August 17, 2013 at 6:36 AM
I really don't need to see that guard (from School 2013) shirtless. Somehow, he's not doing it for me.
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8 CaroleMcDonnell
August 17, 2013 at 7:03 AM
I dunno...somehow everytime the Princess says, "Choong doesn't recognize me" or "He doesn't suspect" I wonder what world she's living in. He keeps testing her, eyeing her askance, asking her strange questions...so how can she say that he doesn't suspect?
I totally think she should've either remained a girl or stayed away in the woods. When I saw her give away money that she ostensibly had earned I thought, "Dang, folks in hiding have money to spare?"
I really only care about "Tempestuous but nevertheless needy younger Bro." He is at least "acting." He has passion. Heck, he and Bo Chil are the only ones with passion. Everyone --nephew, Gaesomun, Spy leader, Choong, Princess-- are all sitting around...waiting, planning, enduring, pondering. Nam Saeng is the only person who has an immediate goal and whose motivation is happening in the present and whose end result we see succeed or fail.
Is it right that the only character I care about right now is a character who should've been woven into the story from the beginning? I'm sitting here waiting to see how his love/bromance/romance/friendship for Moo Young is gonna pan out and if he'll be grieving over any loss of the friendship.
Thanks so much for the recap.
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CaroleMcDonnell
August 17, 2013 at 7:05 AM
ooh, gotta add that Spygirl is also an interesting addition to the cast. Lord knows what her intentions are..She seems to be playing all sides..but she does seem to help Choong more than the others. She is also an interesting character.
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Peridot
August 17, 2013 at 7:54 AM
For some reason, I can't take spygirl seriously.
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CaroleMcDonnell
August 17, 2013 at 11:58 AM
She's pretty conniving, though, you gotta admit. She has Gaesomun, her dad, Nam Seaung, Choong, all listening to her...I just love that actress a lot. She must be aiming for the go-to actress to play sly characters.
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Peridot
August 17, 2013 at 7:53 AM
Hi Carole. You are right about Namsaeng being the only character with real passion left. I hope that his character is given greater depth and that we can explore the complex dynamics of his relationship with his brother and his relationship with Muyoung. I agree that he should have been introduced earlier, if not in the beginning. How could someone with his passion and personality have been completely/conspicuously absent until last week (or for three years in dramaverse)? I hope that he does not become some caricature of a character. But with this show's record of dumping characters on us and having them perform unexplainable disappearing acts, I'm not sure. I do not want his relationship with his brother to be simply of antagonism and jealousy. I wish we could have seen how they first met and their initial interactions. Again, the show just expects us to see things as they are presented to us and accept that time has actually passed. Viewers need to feel things not just accept them or take them for granted. I sort of felt the same way with "The Great Seer," which had characters appear and disappear and which thrust strange character relationships onto viewers that left me asking, "Well, how did that happen?"
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CaroleMcDonnell
August 17, 2013 at 12:03 PM
Funny thing is I'm looking forward to his anguish should he hear that "Moo Young" has died. Whether from affection or romantic love, he's not gonna take her death or her betrayal well. I worry for his hopeful little sociopathic wanting-to-please cold daddy heart. I am looking more forward to his anguish than to Choong's. Choong had his moment of anguish but alas, am not sure if he can handle the princess dying again...if she dies.
Wouldn't it have been so wonderful to see younger brother trying to win older brother's love and approval?
Trouble is we don't have many episodes left. I was really surprise that even with those long unmoving scenes so much time has flown and we're already near the end.
Yeah, i had to give up on the Great Seer. And i was really liking it in the beginning.
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Peridot
August 17, 2013 at 1:02 PM
I am hoping that something can be salvaged in the remaining episodes :) Despite my disappointment with "The Great Seer," I suffered through all the episodes. I usually stick with something that I start, even if it is terrible or disappointing.
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9 come2noona
August 17, 2013 at 7:15 AM
Thanks for the recap, Heads. You articulated perfectly how I feel about this episode. Good thing they have plenty of time to bring back the awesome. Sooner than later though, please.
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Kiara
August 17, 2013 at 8:02 AM
Yes pleaseeeee. I still love this show with flaws and all.
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CaroleMcDonnell
August 17, 2013 at 12:04 PM
Plenty of time? Really? Omo...how long is this drama supposed to last? I'll be pleasantly surprised if there were a lot more episodes to come.
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10 snow_white
August 17, 2013 at 8:25 AM
The actor who is a CN Blue member.....are they not showing him anymore..??
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Kiara
August 17, 2013 at 12:02 PM
You will see him again :).
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11 whimsyful
August 17, 2013 at 8:40 AM
It's not the crossdressing that's bugging me as much as the fact that Choong *still* hasn't found out Mu-young is the princess. Cmon show, you have 6 eps left, why are you spinning your wheels when we could be exploring the potentially delicious fallout?
That would also lead to more of an emotional connection with Mu-young, since her character has felt very distant since the time skip. In the early eps we had her freely interact with her father, brother and Choong, but now she's all shut off.
Also, does anyone feel like the directing style has changed? It's still very pretty, but it doesn't have that almost-dreamlike quality anymore. I'm not sure whether that's a consequence of the live shoot or they're trying to change it because of the very low ratings, but I kinda miss the old directing style, as crazy as it got sometimes.
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CaroleMcDonnell
August 17, 2013 at 12:06 PM
Yep...fallout. There should be reconciliation or conflicted love or even lovers scheming against Daddy and Young Bro..but no such thing.
Yep, the dreamlike quality has gone.
When I saw the ending of epi 4 and heard that OST with that video at the end, I remembered again what I loved about it
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Kiara
August 17, 2013 at 12:21 PM
I'm kind of frustrated I cant think straight lol. That's the thing with visual dreamlike quality stuff. We get lost in it and I think it makes the writing/story better than what it really is. So when the visual quality is down then see the flaws.
Sorry I'm not making much sense here but I hope you get what I'm trying to say. You are right, its still pretty but not as dreamy and its hard to fall out of love with this kind of show even with all the flaws.
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12 herc
August 17, 2013 at 2:54 PM
Not the most exciting episode but i still love it. Thanks heads.
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13 JenJen
August 17, 2013 at 3:19 PM
Instead of crossdressing I think the screen writer would have been better off writing her in as a girl i.e. have Choong's spy-roommate-guy return from that Daeja castle or where ever with news that MuYoung is actually the guy's daughter rather than son. Then the writer can put in some romance back in (as if Choong was falling in love again) or something.
Also, the Geumhwadan's revenge plot is going too slow if at all.
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Kiara
August 17, 2013 at 6:15 PM
Women went to war in those days. She could have been one of those female soldiers. They could cut her hair or something to make her look different.
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Cheryl
August 17, 2013 at 6:33 PM
"have Choong’s spy-roommate-guy return from that Daeja castle or where ever with news that MuYoung is actually the guy’s daughter rather than son."
That would have been extremely interesting, and I definitely would love to see how that would play out. The only problem I can see is that we'd be bashing our heads against the wall even harder if Choong didn't immediately call her bluff and out her, even privately, as the Princess, because it would be so incredibly obvious. If he did know and had to keep it a secret...oooh, tension and angst and UST to the max! I'm loving it!
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darcyM
August 17, 2013 at 11:35 PM
Yeah, I'm looking forward to Choong finding out who she is and then being all conflicted and keeping her secret. And her knowing that he knows and all the tension and UST and the forced proximity of them both knowing that each other knows... y'know? Please show, give me this.
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14 Cheryl
August 17, 2013 at 6:47 PM
Nam-saeng totally has a thing for Mu Young, which makes me cringe because the last thing Choong needs is more offenses for Nam-saeng to lay at his door when Mu Young chooses Choong over him, and that's not including whatever deluded, paranoid fantasies Nam-saeng dreams up about what Choong and Mu Young were secretly plotting to overthrow the General when it comes out Mu Young is a) a woman and b) the Princess.
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Niki
August 18, 2013 at 2:52 AM
Nam-saeng will totally sell Mu Young out once he knows that she's the princess. I think the only reason he's interested in MY is because he notices that Choong is affected by MY's presence.
At this moment, i am not certain if he recognises her as Princess So Hee as he didn't show up till now. It could be that he has seen her before and is toying with her. Who knows....
I really like No Min Woo in this character. The slightly crazed-devious and insecure second son trying to one-up hyung and overthrow daddy dearest.
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Nekoi
August 18, 2013 at 8:34 PM
or he's actually gay. Because if he doesn't know MY is a gal... the way he looks at her, and the amount of attention he gives her is a tad too much. Not that I am complaining.
But I like the idea that he thinks he is toying with her, when she is not in the least affected. LOL.
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CaroleMcDonnell
August 19, 2013 at 4:50 AM
Either he's gay or it's a platonic affection. I really don't think he's toying with MuYoung. I'm thinking he actually cares, maybe because he sees himself in Mu Young a little. I'm banking on him being devastated if MY dies or is discovered. Maybe anger at being deceived will make him go ballistic though. He's kinda tempestuous. Will see.
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15 SHOPENJULIE CLAUDINE
August 18, 2013 at 1:16 PM
I really love Korean series based on the history and facts.
One series that captured me, is yisan and for years since 2007 I could not find a series can compares
Dong-yi was very good ..cause it is by same pd and writer
Since I watch intently, looking for and here it starts well with a great photos and interesting characters for some reason something goes wrong on the way
I'm trying to understand why this series is stuck in what way did not bring the promise
I know that politics aggression and war is boring sometimes. Although I personally really love
Although this series was not ratings but it should remain on the list of best and quality.
i must say that general yeon is awesome
i enjoy the recaps it becames part of my day
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16 bearla
August 18, 2013 at 6:54 PM
how come he do not really realized that she is the princess?
it is not logic as we can see how feminine looks alike the face of the princess even in manly disguise....
isn't hat if u really love that person, how many changes happen to that person, we can still identify them just like in the drama 'shark'???
besides that, they already meet face to face so many times already....
confuse!!!!!!
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Kiara
August 19, 2013 at 7:13 AM
The cross-dressing does not bother me as much. There is no way she is ever going to look like a dude. Boobs, voice, face etc are hard to disguise. Look at Suzie in Gu Family Book. Lee Yo Won in QSD, YEH in Coffee Prince etc. None of them were convincing except for Moon Geun Young who came close to pulling it off in Painter of the Wind.
What bugs me is how long its taking Choong to discover her real identity. We only have 6eps left and this train needs to get moving.
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SHOPENJULIE CLAUDINE
August 19, 2013 at 11:06 AM
PAINTER OF THE WIND REALLY GOOD AND FASCINATING DRAMA ..
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