Six Flying Dragons: Episode 23
by HeadsNo2
Now we’re starting to see a pattern emerging whenever a task needs doing that requires going outside, since Jung Do-jeon loves to send the young’uns out for the sort of things he can safely outsource without having to worry. If it requires manual labor, is a late-night mission, or involves physical danger at all, you can bet he’ll put the dragons on it. Just like you can bet all the hot-blooded males in the group have at least one eye on Boon-yi, whose ideology really does bring all the boys to the yard.
SONG OF THE DAY
Lee Juck – “거짓말 거짓말 거짓말 (Lie Lie Lie)” [ Download ]
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EPISODE 23 RECAP
While Lee Seong-gye confronts General Jo over going behind his back to select Crown Prince Chang as the new king, Jung Do-jeon and Jung Mong-joo do the same with Lee Saek, his former teacher and General Jo’s co-conspirator in the kingly plot.
To make things worse, Lee Saek, General Jo, and Queen Jung all seem to be working in cahoots together against Lee Seong-gye. They even reinstate Lee In-gyeom, thanks to the edict of their tiny king. (Obviously they haven’t heard that the man is dead.)
Bang-won tries to find the not-a-peddler now that he suspects him to be the mysterious scholar, but to no avail—they can’t even find the little boy who led them to him, since no boy by that name exists in the village. They unwittingly pass by the man they’re looking for, but he’s got bigger fish to fry when the dismaying news of Lee In-gyeom’s reinstatement reaches him.
General Jo and his cronies think they’re meeting with Lee In-gyeom, only to be faced with Ha Ryun instead. They’re about to find out what Bang-won is currently telling his father and older brothers: that Lee In-gyeom is dead.
Ha Ryun admits to masquerading as Lee In-gyeom to fool them, but claims it was necessary to make sure the dodang didn’t fall into Lee Seong-gye’s hands. He tells them to remember his simple, two syllable name very well, and come looking for him when they need him. While they’re on the subject though, he’d like a government post.
Bang-won, Shin-jeok, and Jung Do-jeon work through the information they’ve gathered on the burned scholar who masterminded recent events, and though Jung claims he doesn’t have an idea as to who it could be, he has his suspicions.
By using information that may or may not be made up as a bargaining chip, Ha Ryun is able to get General Jo to start thinking long and hard about giving him the position of finance secretary. His lackey, LEE SUK-BEON, realizes that they’re being followed…
…But that realization comes too late for them to do anything about it, since they soon find Bang-ji’s sword held to their necks. Jung Do-jeon appears then, congenially greeting his old colleague, who he calls by the nickname Ho Jeong.
He knows Ha Ryun’s been in and out of exile the past eight years, and guesses that the burn mark on his wrist came from a torture session with the hot iron. That’s all the chitchat he’s up for, since he asks the main question on his mind: “Why did you help General Jo Min-soo?”
Ha Ryun admires Jung Do-jeon’s sharp intellect, since Jung knows exactly how he’s been working in the shadows since the incident and Jangpyung Gate and even the Liaodong Expedition. He was always there, but Jung now wonders if he went into exile because he was against the expedition.
It’s no secret that Jung Do-jeon has an uncanny ability to read people, Ha Ryun notes uncomfortably. But he knows Jung Do-jeon wants to know why he got involved when he’s not interested in worldly affairs, and challenges him to guess why he put Prince Chang on the throne.
“To the one who only has but a hammer, the world looks like a nail,” Jung Do-jeon notes. But since he knows Ha Ryun has no interest in the bigger picture, he guesses that he got involved with Prince Chang and General Jo in order establish himself as a strategist.
So then Jung Do-jeon lobs a question at him: “What am I trying to do? Make a guess.” When Ha Ryun doesn’t, Jung leaves him with a warning to stop playing with fire and people’s lives. Ha Ryun tries to lighten things up by telling Jung to just consider this a game of baduk between them, and looks quite sour when Jung throws back that Ha Ryun’s never been able to defeat him at that game.
Now that Ha Ryun’s in the game, Jung Do-jeon tells his followers that they have to advance their reformation plan if they want to stay ahead. Meanwhile, Ha Ryun tells his somewhat inept bodyguard, Suk-beon, that he’s accomplished his first goal by getting his name circulating amongst Lee Seong-gye’s people.
Truthfully his name is now on everyone’s lips, including Da-kyung’s and her father’s. Da-kyung promises to learn more about Ha Ryun while pushing her thoughts of Boon-yi aside, and whether she owes Boon-yi for staying behind to buy them time to escape from General Choi’s forces.
To that end, Da-kyung visits Jukryong with a box of gold bars to buy any information he can collect on Ha Ryun. He offers her two gold bars in exchange for telling him why she wants to know, but Da-kyung is too smart to fall for it. She won’t do any of his work for him, that’s for sure.
Jung Do-jeon pays a visit to the other name that’s been on everyone’s lips, JO JOON (pen name: Woojae), who greets him violently and accuses him of sending men to steal written materials from him.
He throws Jung Do-jeon off his property and claims he’s hidden them so well no one will ever find it, while Ha Ryun watches curiously. He guessed that Jung Do-jeon and Jo Joon were connected and now has the proof, but what he plans to do with that is anyone’s guess.
Jung Do-jeon has Boon-yi use her men to kidnap Jo Joon so they can have another chat, and as you can probably imagine, Jo Joon is not happy about it. But Jung’s intentions are good, as he urges the recalcitrant man to reveal the research he’s done, the same research that whoever stormed his house tried to steal.
Jo Joon obstinately refuses to do so, claiming that what he researched will never come to pass anyway. But Jung Do-jeon doesn’t leave it up to him, and fishes though his clothes to find the book he’s kept hidden. In it, he’s detailed a plan for land reform that would give citizens like Boon-yi’s people the land they need to actually survive and thrive off of.
This is something Jung Do-jeon is very passionate about, and something he knows Jo Joon is equally passionate about, or else he wouldn’t have gone all over the country to gather data for his plan. It calls for an even distribution of land based on the number of citizens, which Jung claims will help the people and the country as a whole.
Jo Joon is still adamant that the plan will never work, causing Jung Do-jeon to call him out on carrying it around with him still—if he really believed there was no hope for it, wouldn’t he have burned it by now? “Because you did the work, is it yours? Do you have a right to hide such exceptional work from the world?” Jung asks.
“No, no one in this world has such a right!” he declares emphatically. Then, taking Jo Joon by the shoulders, he adds, “Let’s do this together.” At last, Jo Joon relents.
At the same time, Ha Ryun attempts to warn Lee Saek about Jung Do-jeon’s possibly dangerous plans for the future, claiming that he’s always been full of dangerous ideas. To make his point, he even quotes Jung’s “To the one who only has but a hammer, the world looks like a nail” speech, which Lee Saek hilariously doesn’t understand.
But Ha Ryun knows that Jo Joon’s been wandering the country working on some project, and guesses that it’s got something to do with complete land reform. Whether he knows more than what he’s telling is up for grabs, but he’s succeeded in planting the seed of doubt in Lee Saek’s mind.
Jo Joon has his doubts that Jung Do-jeon will be able to implement the land reform plan when they haven’t even been able to get the lands stolen by the evil dodang members back to the citizens, but Jung tells him that if he doesn’t trust in his power, he can trust in Lee Seong-gye’s.
After hearing about Jo Joon’s plan, Boon-yi can’t hold in her excitement. It spills over in her chat with Bang-ji, as she finally tells him what her dream is: for the two of them to return to their hometown and farm their own land with their own families. “I hope that you’ll dream this dream with me,” she adds.
She turns to explain the whole land reform concept to her people, who all rejoice at the thought of being given their own land to farm. The catch being, of course, that they have to first take that land from the nobility.
In the New Joseon Cave, Bang-ji haltingly tells Yeon-hee about Boon-yi’s dream for the future, and how she wants the two of them to go back to their hometown, start families, and tend to their land. “If all this ends,” he ventures, “what will you do after?”
Yeon-hee pauses a moment before diplomatically saying that Boon-yi’s dream will definitely come true, and that they’ll have to work harder to make it so. She turns to leave, but the next words Bang-ji speaks stop her dead in her tracks: “Do you want to go together?”
“No, I do not,” she replies. She waits until she’s away from the cave before she allows herself to truly process the question as tears spring to her eyes. “Thank you for asking, Ddang-sae,” she thinks to herself. Bang-ji just mopes in the cave.
After convincing Lee Seong-gye that they need Jo Joon on their side, he takes him to meet the man himself, who’s currently enjoying drinks with Master Hong in the army mess hall.
What starts off as an innocent enough back-and-forth over Lee Seong-gye’s ability to take his research and implement it takes an unexpected turn when Jo Joon challenges Lee Seong-gye to kneel down if he wants to prove how badly he wants the reform.
Lee Seong-gye tries not to take offense to that, deciding that they should reconvene when Jo Joon is sober. But since Jo Joon is never sober, he claims no such time will ever come. “Kneel down!” he bellows. Understandably, Lee Seong-gye leaves.
Jung Do-jeon tries convincing Lee Seong-gye that he needs to gain Jo Joon’s trust, though he’s not advocating for him to kneel. Nor can he convince Jo Joon for him, since this is a matter only the two of them can hash out—the most he can do is simply to bring them together.
He explains that Jo Joon is just looking for proof of Lee Seong-gye’s resolve, since the land reform he’s proposing is a matter that will be a hundred times more difficult than establishing a new nation and king. “It’s about confiscating all the land in this country and dividing it amongst the people,” he stresses.
What Jo Joon is looking for from him is his resolve to give away all his own private land, his wife’s private land, and all the land his sons own. The way he speaks so passionately, it’s like he’s also unsure whether Lee Seong-gye truly has the resolve to endure the hatred, resentment, and bloodshed that will undoubtedly arise from him implementing the reform.
Proclaiming that he’ll find his own way to prove his determination to Jo Joon, Lee Seong-gye pays him a second visit, this time with a sword in his hand. He orders Jo Joon to kneel, and cuts him off before he can guess what he’ll say next—contrary to what Jo Joon and others would believe, he has knelt to someone before.
But the person he knelt down to and swore loyalty to is also the same person he betrayed and killed a few years later (must’ve been Jo So-saeng), so him kneeling to others means nothing. “However, I have never betrayed anyone who knelt before me,” he adds.
So if Jo Joon wants his research to be distributed among the public and implemented, he should do the same. Though Lee Seong-gye is asking him to kneel, Jo Joon seems very pleased with the resolve he’s shown through the proposition.
Ha Ryun goes to General Jo and his minister minions with the information he’s gathered on Jo Joon, having followed him to a cave where he’s been compiling all his research on how much farm land, farmers, and land possessions in the country—many of them unrecorded.
Which means, he adds a bit more delicately, that their illegal land holdings as well as the sadaebu’s illegal land holdings have been recorded. Now, Ha Ryun has his captive audience in the palm of his hand. The question remains, where is the research?
Jung Do-jeon asks that same question of Jo Joon, after the latter reveals that an assassin broke into his house to look through his books. Guessing that it was someone sent by Ha Ryun, Jung asks where his research is now, which is when Jo Joon tells them he drew it on a map. Bang-won, Bang-ji, and Moo-hyul are ordered to go with him to find it.
Meanwhile, Ha Ryun tells his audience that he knows where to find Jo Joon’s research, but that he’ll need money for the journey. And maybe that position as finance secretary, which he’s again denied.
He’s caught on the spot when Minister Woo Hak-joo asks who he was originally chasing that he stumbled across Jo Joon’s trail, and covers by saying it was nothing important.
However, multiple flashbacks reveal otherwise—Lee In-gyeom had actually tasked him with finding the secret organization behind the Red Seal, and it was while he was searching for the not-a-eunuch that Lee In-gyeom saw again the day he was being carted off to exile that he’d discovered Jo Joon. Innnnteresting. So it’s not Ha Ryun behind the seal after all.
Boon-yi invites herself on the boys’ quest to find Jo Joon’s research, since she can’t just wait idly by when their findings have the potential to fulfill so many people’s dreams. Bang-won relents and says he’ll take responsibility for her, but since that’s a loaded term, Bang-ji gets all upset, “Why would you? I’ll be responsible for my own sister.”
Poor Moo-hyul is left behind with a handful of cabbage, and mutters to himself, “I’ll also take responsibility. Who wouldn’t?” This just in: Boon-yi is the luckiest woman in Goryeo.
Using the gold given to him by General Jo, Ha Ryun goes to Cho-young to hire twenty of her best spies as protection/help for the quest, while Team Bang-won follows the direction on Jo Joon’s map to an unremarkable and vacant-looking building.
Following the written instructions, Bang-won knocks a set pattern onto the door, which should presumably give them access. Only nothing happens. Detecting the smell of blood in the air, Bang-ji breaks down the door to reveal the recently murdered inhabitants inside. Ha Ryun’s men must have already gotten to them.
One of the men, mortally wounded but alive, is able to tell them that a group of men stole the research. Bang-ji remembers passing a suspicious group earlier, and takes Moo-hyul with him to hunt them down.
They come upon the group of thieves meeting another, larger group of soldiers, with both expecting a certain someone to arrive. When Bang-ji’s attempt at diplomacy fails, he laments how his title of best swordsman has done nothing to deter attacks. “I agree. You’re not even the least bit scary,” Moo-hyul adds unhelpfully.
So it’s two against a small army, but two of the best swordsmen in the country. They’re forced to stay behind and deal with the resolute men while the one carrying the casket of research runs away.
Luckily, Bang-won spots him from a nearby cliff and takes the chest after shooting him down with a bow and arrow. Only when he’s well on his way does he realize he’s being followed by Cho-young’s Amazonian army, and by the time he thinks to draw an arrow, he’s already surrounded.
He vows to take down the first one to approach him, and he does just that when one of the spies sacrifices herself so her sisters can nab him. They’re ready to kill him for killing one of theirs, but their leader says she doesn’t have the authority to take his life.
They take him with them instead, while Boon-yi watches from her hiding place nearby.
Moo-hyul and Bang-ji are doing pretty well for themselves for being vastly outnumbered, at least until a blue-clad figure jumps into the fray. He knocks Moo-hyul down flat, which leaves Moo-hyul agape with surprise—it’s not often that someone can beat him in terms of sheer strength.
We don’t see who the man is because of his wide-brimmed straw hat, but he’s an excellent fighter, able to parry all of Bang-ji’s blows and even toss him into the air.
Bang-ji lands on his feet like a cat, and cuts the brim of the man’s hat to reveal a blast from the past—it’s Gil Sun-mi, Gil Tae-mi’s twin brother.
Bang-won is brought before Ha Ryun, recognizing him as the pretend peddler from before. “I have also been extremely curious about who you are,” Ha Ryun replies. “Lee Bang-won, is it?”
COMMENTS
They’re certainly not making it easy to track all the different players in this game, are they? But I guess that’s what adds to the intrigue, because there’d be no fun in knowing everyone and their motivations at this stage. As it is, it’s the good kind of challenge to do some guesswork when it comes to looming questions like who’s behind the Red Seal, and who—if it wasn’t Ha Ryun or Jung Do-jeon—got to Jo Joon’s people first.
And, more importantly, what does Gil Sun-mi have to do with all of this? He’s always been a mystery, though it’s safe to say that he’s a much better person than his twin brother at heart, since he saved Bang-ji all those years ago. The only other glimpse we got of him was when he placidly witnessed his brother’s death, but why was he in the capital in the first place? Why has he chosen to stay under the radar all these years when his swordsmanship skills could likely rival those of his brother’s?
I was so expecting Ha Ryun to be behind the Red Seal that I was honestly (but quite pleasantly) surprised to find out he wasn’t, since it means there’s still something much bigger at work. Or maybe it’s all an elaborate ruse and he is behind it all, because I have a hard time believing that he’s pulling all these political strings for no greater purpose than that he feels like it, or that he wants to make a name for himself. Like Jung Do-jeon said, he’s playing with lives, and whatever he puts into motion now can have lasting repercussions that are well beyond his comprehension.
Of course, the question remains as to whether Ha Ryun is actually so foolish, or if he’s got an act going in order to make sure people like Jung Do-jeon continue to underestimate him. Considering the impact he’d have on history, I’m inclined to believe it’s the latter, though he’s playing it off so well that it’s entirely possible he’s just been flying by the seat of his pants thus far. Or he’s a calculated manipulator and master schemer secretly orchestrating everything from the shadows. You don’t have two-toned eyebrows and a good heart in dramaland—it’s either one or the other. That much I’m at least certain of.
RELATED POSTS
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 22
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 21
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 20
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 19
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 18
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 17
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 16
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 15
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 14
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 13
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 12
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 11
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 10
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 9
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 8
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- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 2
- Six Flying Dragons: Episode 1
Tags: Byun Yo-han, featured, Kim Myung-min, Shin Se-kyung, Six Flying Dragons, Yoo Ah-in
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1 JanuaryBlues
December 22, 2015 at 8:25 PM
So Ha Ryun is not behind the red seal letters.
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Kiara
December 22, 2015 at 8:56 PM
Apparently not and I'm glad because it keeps us guessing. I actually watched the whole episode instead of FF through it.
The suspect list at least is getting smaller but that doesn't help either lol.
Would it be great if it turns out to be Yeon Hyang (Bong Yi and Bang Ji's mother)? She has been very mysterious from the very beginning.
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sundaexstory
December 22, 2015 at 9:55 PM
Oooh that would be a fantastic plot twist!
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2 MagMag
December 22, 2015 at 8:32 PM
First to comment!
So sad for Bang ji and Yeon Hee.
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Adal
December 23, 2015 at 12:43 AM
Me too.
I wish they could both get together, but considering her inability to forgive him (though she clearly sees him as a victim ) and his guilt, they seem to be stuck on the path of star crossed lovers.
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 4:25 AM
Since this is a prequel to Tree we know how things turns out for them. At least they will be on the same side till the end.
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becca
January 20, 2016 at 8:46 PM
I haven't seen Deep Rooted Tree o.o do you know which characters appear in both, and like if there's someone whose made a post showing connections between the two shows please? I know from wikipedia that Shin SeKyung is in both series so I'm curious about that also ><
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little-muffin
December 23, 2015 at 6:31 AM
Every time I see Bang-ji and Yoon-hee on the same screen, it's pure goodness.
Though this is supposedly prequel to TWDR, I've seen things that are different. For example, in TWDR Moo-hyul said that he didn't really know Bang-ji as they've never really interacted when they're younger (go to eps 17). But here, they are 'team-mates' working together towards the same goal (and being so awesome together)
So if they continue to ignore whatever is happening in TWDR, one can just hope that we have a happy ending for these two obviously love-birds!! Drama gods, pleaaaseeee....
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redeemee
December 23, 2015 at 12:11 PM
your comment gives me a sliver of hope that Dragons won't follow TWDR exactly... i would really hate to see BangJi x YeonHee's ending to be like the one in TWDR. they're my favorite ship so far :'(
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little-muffin
December 23, 2015 at 5:44 PM
I know right! I'm shipping them so much.
I think I'll be so depressed if they are going to follow TWDR :(
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3 BA
December 22, 2015 at 8:34 PM
Just finished as well. Somehow this ep was not as interesting. I hope writers keep up with pace. Fighting??
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4 dukdam
December 22, 2015 at 9:03 PM
So Ha Ryun and Bangwon meet.
If Jung Dojeon had won, Joseon would have been a much better place for Boonyi and her folk. Unfortunately, Ha Ryun will get his claws into Bangwon and that worm in Bangwon's mind will grow and grow. So sad in terms of history, but am looking forword to how Bangwon changes and eventually turns his back against Jung Dojeon.
Oh, and if Ha Ryun isn't behind the red seal, the I think its Muhak dosa.
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Lisa Purba
December 22, 2015 at 11:14 PM
I want the 6 dragons to keep together till the end, though it's impossible, history-wise. In another hand, I'm looking forward to the moment Bang Won turns against Jung Do Jeon too.
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sundaexstory
December 23, 2015 at 1:00 AM
Me too! It would be interesting to see how Bangwon turns against Jung Dojeon but then I don't want to see not-six flying dragons at the end. And how would Boonyi feel if someone she loves kills the person who built a better world? >. <
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dkaoru
December 23, 2015 at 11:01 PM
I think something Jung do Jeon planned will caused Boon Yi to loose her life. This is the only thing that will make Bang Wong turn against Jung Do Jeon. Just my theory :)
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Agassi
December 23, 2015 at 12:37 PM
I just had this thought that when conflict arises btw Bang won & jung do yeon maybe we'll be seeing Moohyul facing off against Ddang sae
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Kween Ramyeon
December 23, 2015 at 1:29 PM
The way the story is set out in 6FD, it does look like it'll be the major turning point.
Bang Won is portrayed as super intelligent with a lot of foresight - I wonder how they'll show him think and justify his decisions. It'd also be interesting to see how Boon Yi and Moo Hyul react. I guess this conflict will lead to the big show down.
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Kdrama Addict
December 23, 2015 at 8:20 AM
Taejong (Yi Bang Won) was the one who revised the existing legislation concerning the taxation of land ownership when he became king, not Jung Do Jeon or Taejo. So basically, he did make Boon Yi's dream come true.
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 9:29 AM
I believe Bang-won revised the taxation later but the actual distribution of the land was done by Lee Seong Gye and his team after they burnt Goryeo's land deeds.
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shirayukihime
December 23, 2015 at 1:55 PM
yes.. he reinvestigate it.. cause after lSG became the king , he gave his supporters the land for supporting him... so there's corruption.. scholar officials tried to hide the land to avoid taxation.. but when king taejong became the king he reinvestigated it and found out there's corruption... so he revised it.
thanks for the info...
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 2:05 PM
I was about to comment on the hidden land so thanks for bringing it up.
I think Bang-won also distributed land among the farmers but I'm not sure. It's been a long time.
5 pjk
December 22, 2015 at 9:33 PM
Yeonh-hee and Bangji always hitting me with the feels.. :,(
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mary
December 23, 2015 at 12:48 AM
*rides the feels train with you*
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6 sundaexstory
December 22, 2015 at 9:51 PM
The two face-offs at the end was....wow. And Gil! Sun! Mi!
Here's a question: I am dreading the moment when Bangwon turns against Jung Dojeon...will it be portrayed in this drama? Or will SFD just end when Joseon is formed so we can have six dragons standing together on the same side?
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 4:42 AM
(Possible Spoiler)
We are only about 3 years away from crowning the new king of Joseon so they will most definitely cover the strife of the princes where Sambong and Bang-won/Ha Ryun face off.
Currently Jo Joon and his Land reform (implemented in 1391) was a big deal because it destroyed the power of the ruling class and enable Lee Seong Gye to seize complete power both in Dodang (politics) and military.
1392: Goryeo was overthrown and Lee Seong Gye ascended the throne as King Taejo, the first king of Joseon.
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Kween Ramyeon
December 23, 2015 at 2:45 PM
Despite it being a drama and taking some poetic licence with history, thanks for providing some of the historical dates and facts, Kiara. It's interesting to get that background and learn a bit of Korean history.
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Kiara
December 24, 2015 at 11:32 AM
I'm mostly going by memory so I don't always get it exactly right.
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7 Lisa Purba
December 22, 2015 at 11:05 PM
Omona! Haryun wasn't that red seal person! This is totally unexpected to me. And I'm glad Park Hyuk Kwon is back as Gil Sae Mi.
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Lisa Purba
December 22, 2015 at 11:07 PM
*Gil Sun Mi. Lol I'm still missing Gil Tae Mi
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8 Boomboompow
December 22, 2015 at 11:15 PM
I haven't watched this (only because end of year is really hectic at work and heavy saeguk is not exactly a stress reliefer at the end of the day) but seriously Heads, your writing made me laugh so hard that I clicked more just to see what is going on in this episode.
Heads, your wit is always a gem.
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Giegie
December 23, 2015 at 12:00 AM
Her comment about Ha Ryun's eyebrows made me laugh so hard. :D
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9 Meisa
December 22, 2015 at 11:47 PM
In TWDR, Mu Hyul went against Bangwon (former King Taejong) while in 6FD he is Banwon's bodyguard. I want to know what happened in between it.
I keep forgetting it is a fusion sageuk duh (^_^)
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Giegie
December 22, 2015 at 11:56 PM
Mo-hyul was given to King Seojong when he became King and he went against King Taejong when he tried to kill his son after saving young Jang Hyuk's character.
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 5:07 AM
That scene, the confrontation between Bang-won (Taejong) and his son Lee Do (Sejong) was my favorite in the whole entire show.
I think Moo-hyul would have killed Bang-won if he didn't withdraw.
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earthna
December 23, 2015 at 10:18 AM
It's my favorite too! I can recite a part of the confrontation by memory (and in Korean!) now. I probably watched it a million times.
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 8:13 PM
"I WARRIOR MOO-HYUL" <3
I am hoping that the writers are not going to make Moo-hyul earn his dragon status by eliminating Poeun (Jeong Mong-ju).
I'd be very mad if that happens because I love them both.
I'm hoping they'd stick with the history although it will make me cry like a baby.
shirayukihime
December 24, 2015 at 1:33 AM
i cried just watching ep. 3 of TWDR..cause it's the opposite...king taejong is known for ruthless to his political enemies but a good father to king sejong. i have read that Yi Do won't stop reading his books so king taejong confiscate his books..and asked about why he is neglecting his health.. when king taejong retired,king sejong built him a palace for his retirement...when king taejong,king sejong cried and won't eat and sleep for several days..he stayed with him ...it's different in TWDR..
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10 Adal
December 23, 2015 at 12:49 AM
I am so glad that Boon Yi never loses sight of her goal to own her own land, farm, and have her own family. Humble goals, but one she's willing to fight to death for. Now I have no fear of her being Lee Bang won's concubine, knowing how determined she can be. Considering all that happened in her life to bring her to join Jung Do Jeong's movement, her determination is even more admirable
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Kween Ramyeon
December 23, 2015 at 10:15 AM
Yes, that's true. But I do feel a pang for Boon Yi and Bang Won, since their very heartfelt though matter of fact declarations of love for each other.
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11 nara
December 23, 2015 at 1:37 AM
thanx heads having fun reading your comments and recap
socialist BY promising land to the peasants with the risk of a fight on their hands for it - me like
HR is he really just about power and making a name for himself?
and the feels - YH BJ such a quite waters run deep relationship
so beautiful
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 6:05 AM
Based on history, Ha Ryun lived a long life so I think he chose his battle wisely in order to survive.
(Spoiler)
Bang-won ruled with absolute power. Ha Ryun was holding the office of the Chief State Councellor (Prime Minister) by name only.
Jeong Do Jeon and King Taejo was the opposite. Taejo kind of took a back seat while Prime Minister JDJ was running the country. It only last for 6 yrs before he was killed.
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nara
December 23, 2015 at 6:16 AM
what would have been the benefits of being a prime minister in those times - or was he afraid to leave BW side later on?
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PeepsLeAwesomePotato
December 23, 2015 at 6:42 AM
You mean HaRyun?
Bragging rights, bullying rights and money, duh. As long as he didn't piss off BangWon in any major way, there was no downside, especially when he didn't have any agenda or great dream like Jung DoJeon. I think he'd be fantastically happy being a rich puppet.
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 7:13 AM
Agreed. I think Ha Ryun was pretty content being Bang-won's spin doctor after making a tyrant out of him.
nara
December 23, 2015 at 8:00 AM
i wonder what is better - a prime minister puppet or a king one
but would BW really let him do whatever he wants?
i thought he was a good king to the citizens how can that happen with a prime minister who is not one
Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 8:50 AM
Bang-won was pretty much capable of running the country in all areas. He was a Confucian scholar and a military leader unlike his father. Taejo needed Jeong Do Jeon because he spent most of his career as a military leader.
Bang-won kept Ha Ryun as his adviser and Ha Ryun helped him deal with the people's concerns etc. That's what prime minister do, assist the king.
nara
December 23, 2015 at 10:29 AM
you meant did, right? :)
what i meant that
1 - if LBW let him bully take advantage then it puts LBW in bad light
2 - if he didnt as he was a good king to citizens then HR was afraid of LBW and actually stayed out of fear
we have to remember that what actually is happening with LBW in the drama never happen
the conflicting ideologies never happen and in real life dont
theres a consistency to a person psychology and development
i meant was HR afraid of LBW history wise or was it not mentioned
Adal
December 23, 2015 at 6:44 AM
I guess that says alot about their personalities, doesn't it?
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 1:56 PM
One is a dreamer and the other a survivor :).
Ha Ryun knew when to draw the line, Jeong Do Jeon went too far by getting involved in the Lee's family feud.
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12 PeepsLeAwesomePotato
December 23, 2015 at 6:48 AM
Man, seeing that little king give orders was such a sobering experience.
To think, that there were times in history when that exact scenario played out and that thousands of civilian lives had hung on a child's every word.
It's been hours since I watched this episode. I don't have much to say about it other than: "Eeep!"
Also, Head's "two-tone eyebrows" comment made me check back. Haha
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 8:14 AM
That kid was obviously coaxed by his mother. What does a 7yr old know about politics?
Jo Min-soo is really pushing it. Making an enemy out of Lee Seong Gye is a big mistake.
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Adal
December 23, 2015 at 9:06 AM
I know right? And for no other reason other than jealousy. He let people put a bug in his ear.
Not very smart, in my opinion.
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 9:45 AM
Yes and his days in Dodang are numbered.
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13 earthna
December 23, 2015 at 10:13 AM
I'm so loving Ha Ryun's character. Very smart at times but very foolish as well. Bon Won pinpointed it, he looks like he's just playing and treating people like toys. Jo Hee Bong is playing the character really well.
Yay for Gil Seon Mi! But now I miss Tae Mi too. :(
Oh gosh, someone help me with this heartache. I can't help but be sad whenever Bang JI and Yeon Hee are on screen. Too much pain.
Thanks for the recaps, Heads!!
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14 ha ji won
December 23, 2015 at 10:18 AM
Hi guys this is my first time posting. Love d recap, Love kdrama alot esp. This particular drama. I hope all 6dragons will live 2 see their dreams come tru especially my BY and LBJ.
Great work drama beans. Love u guys
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15 kerfuffleee
December 23, 2015 at 11:52 AM
i actually really loved jung do jeon's passionate outlining of what the land redistribution plan really meant for lee seong gye cause it also helped us as viewers understand exactly what he's signing up for. i feel like we as viewers might have underestimated how big a move the land plan is because we saw how happy it made boon-yi's gang of villagers, cause of how the world we live in now works, and who can say no to punishing those corrupt officials? but jung do jeon helped illuminate the other side we may have missed: that the land plan doesn't only mean taking from the corrupt rich, but also the rich we have come to love (lee family etc) which really effectively highlighted the conflict of the situation for me.
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 1:07 PM
This land reform (Land Rank Law) will be a huge victory for Seong Gye, Sambong, Jo Joon and their followers. The fastest way to confiscate the land from nobles and rich landowners was by burning the land deeds.
This will totally destroy their economic power because the tax revenue goes straight to the government instead of their pockets. Brilliant work team Joseon!
Next comes the land distributions. 3 things could happen in my opinion.
1. Bong Yi and her people will get their land back.
2. They will be given land to cultivate.
3. They would become landowners as merit subjects.
The only big obstacle left would be Poeun (Jeong Mong-ju).
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 1:58 PM
I meant one out of 3 lol.
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16 kathy
December 23, 2015 at 2:07 PM
i believe that jung do jeon is behind the Red Seal...i mean, remember in Tree with deep roots, it started with this organization mil boon or something called like that.
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 8:24 PM
Milbon has been on my suspect list. I'm still not sure if the organization existed this early.
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17 sam
December 23, 2015 at 7:27 PM
obviously jung do jeon is not behind the red seal , gil sun mi mentioned that the red seal people feel differently about lee seong gye. If he was behind the red seal why send bang won and co to retrieve it. My guess now is master yooksan , he has yet to be introduced
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Kiara
December 23, 2015 at 7:55 PM
One look at Ahn Seok-Hwan and I'd say guilty as charged lol. His past sageuk characters irritates me.
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Lunatic4KD
January 9, 2016 at 7:51 PM
I so agree! I realize that Ahn Seok-Hwan is a marvelous actor but he always plays annoying characters. Oh my how he bugged me in Gaksital (Bridal Mask) which now, next to Six Flaying Dragons and Tree With Deep Roots has always been my very favorite historical piece. Ahn Seok-Hwan's voice can real get to me - but the guy is the ultimate character actor! Props to him for that.
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18 sam
December 23, 2015 at 8:12 PM
me too . I have seen him in tree with deep root and shine or go crazy
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19 dramapotatoe
December 24, 2015 at 10:41 PM
"Just like you can bet all the hot-blooded males in the group have at least one eye on Boon-yi, whose ideology really does bring all the boys to the yard."
This cracked me up so badly ????
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20 azkaa
December 26, 2015 at 9:47 AM
Though i declare myself as Bangji's groupie, he can be so frustrating, can't he. YH-BJ relationship is murky but i really wish he said sorry or something along the line, although he was also a victim and she probably wont forget that incident ever. And he is such a lost puppy. When BY told about her dream, it's obvious that he doesn't even know what to do after this (assuming there will be an end). It's kinda pitiful :(
On the other hand, Byun Yohan is amazing as usual. When realizing he is facing Gil Sun Min his faces changing from ready-to-attack to confused & surprised in mere second. His little bromance moment with MH is always welcomed. Now charged as guilty for judging Yoon Kyun Sang based on his previous super boring drama because he is good good good in here. Moohyul you bundle of joy ❤
Always enjoy your recap Heads, thanks! That eyebrow one is good LOL
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21 Lisa Purba
December 26, 2015 at 10:17 PM
I Just realized that the actor who plays Ha Ryun was at the same movie with Yoo Ah In (Antique, 2008). He's a really good actor especially when he acts as a cunning man.
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Lisa Purba
December 26, 2015 at 10:25 PM
PS: Was JO JOON (pen name: Woojae) a real historical figure?
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Kiara
December 27, 2015 at 7:57 AM
Yes he was part of the Sadaebu scholars and a close friend of Jeong Do Jeon.
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22 Shaista
December 26, 2015 at 11:27 PM
Lee Seon Gye's way to prove his determination to Jo Joon is awesome. I love him more and more. Ha Ryun is kinda funny guy. He's another unique bad guy character after Gil Tae Mi.
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