Descended From the Sun: Episode 1
by javabeans
The highly anticipated warzone-melodrama-romance (and Song Joong-ki’s army comeback!) drama Descended From the Sun premiered today to a strong start, and I wouldn’t be surprised if it turned into a runaway hit. Ratings were very good (14.3%, making it the highest premiere in two years for a mid-week miniseries; Come Back, Ajusshi’s premiere logged a 6.6% and One More Happy Ending a 5%), and the drama is making a case for pre-produced series with seriously well-filmed cinematography and high production values.
The chemistry is sparking, the supporting actors are solid, Song Joong-ki is magnetic, and the dialogue is witty. Storywise… well, it’s a bit early to decide anything, but while I was entertained and found the first hour an easy watch, I really don’t think this is a drama I’ll be watching for the story. I’m not totally sold on the show yet, but I do think it’s one where I’d be able to enjoy the more I turned off my brain. At least with so much pretty to look at, it won’t be too hard to find other distractions.
SONG OF THE DAY
Chen, Punch – “Everytime” from the Descended From the Sun OST [ Download ]
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EPISODE 1 RECAP
Nighttime at the DMZ.
At the military headquarters control center, a meeting of army brass is held to deal with a volatile developing situation: Three North Korean soldiers have crossed the border and taken a couple of South Korean soldiers hostage. No gunfire has been exchanged, but tensions are high; they interpret this as a bold ploy to provoke the South into making the first act of aggression.
The South can’t have that, and their best option to avoid a political firestorm is to let the North Koreans go quietly. To that end, they’ve sent in a team of special forces agents to defuse the situation.
The special forces team arrive at the front line of the standoff, outside a small bunker taken over by the North Koreans. Their leader identifies himself as Alpha Team’s Captain YOO SHI-JIN (Song Joong-ki) and declares that they’ll be taking over the situation from the unit currently in charge.
Shi-jin and his second-in-command, SEO DAE-YOUNG (Jin Gu), approach the bunker with hands raised in the open. They’re allowed inside at gunpoint, the air thick with tension, while the troops stationed outside prepare explosives to use as a last resort.
The North Korean leader gives up his gun, but pulls out a dagger, saying that he can’t just leave without giving the Southerners a fight. Shi-jin pulls out his own knife and agrees to one.
After a tension-filled stare-down, the soldiers launch into a fierce knife fight, with Shi-jin battling the North Korean leader and his comrade Dae-young juggling the other two enemy soldiers. They’re in tight quarters and the action is fast and powerful, with both sides seemingly matched.
The fight swings back and forth as both sides gain the advantage and lose it; everybody attacks amidst an air of supreme calm and concentration, no fear in sight. Everybody gets in some good blows, but the main fight between Shi-jin and his quarry remains tight.
At one point the alarm button gets hit and sirens start to blare, but nobody breaks focus. The intensity of the action mounts, and Shi-jin and the Northern leader end up outside, still locked in close combat.
That’s when Shi-jin gets slashed in the abdomen, though he barely betrays feeling it. He’s got his own knife at the North Korean’s neck, but the man rightly notes that Shi-jin can’t shoot first; his hands are tied politically. But, he says, soldiers from the North are different—and a gun cocks and points at Shi-jin’s head.
Shi-jin doesn’t flinch. He corrects the North Korean leader, saying that the South can shoot, if it’s to keep the peace. In the distance a South Korean sniper aims his rifle, and a red dot shows up on the North Korean gunman’s face. Everyone stills. Holds their breaths. Waits.
Then the North Korean leader calls off his man, easing the tension and saying it was nice to meet Shi-jin. Shi-jin replies that he’d prefer not to meet again, and both men drop their knives. The North Koreans walk away, and crisis is averted.
Some time later, Shi-jin and Dae-young are on leave from duty, shooting toy guns (badly) and wondering at their faulty aim. The arcade manager (Lee Kwang-soo in a cameo) tsk-tsks like the “ajusshis” don’t know what they’re doing, chiding that they’ll break the guns.
Outside, a disturbance breaks out when a young thief steals someone’s motorcycle and zooms off. Shi-jin and Dae-young borrow the toy guns and station themselves in the street, positioning themselves in the thief’s path. He barrels recklessly toward them, at which point the soldiers let loose a barrage of toy pellets, striking him in the face, distracting him into crashing off the bike.
A grumpy (and ungrateful) ajusshi retrieves his motorcycle from the scene, and Shi-jin turns his attention to splinting the thief’s injured leg.
After sending him off in an ambulance, the soldiers chat in a cafe, and Dae-young expresses sympathy for the young delinquent-in-the-making. It strikes a chord with his own youth, when he’d engaged in gangster activity before turning things around, and he sighs that while there’s not a lot of difference between them, this guy is set to become a criminal.
Shi-jin gets a call from someone in the army who’s not from their unit, and the name on his phone reads YOON MYUNG-JOO. Dae-young leaps to prevent him from taking the call, throwing out a whole string of bribes, like dinner and expensive liquor and a date with his cousin.
But when Dae-young reaches for his phone to show pictures, he realizes that the thief pocketed his phone while he was being treated. All of a sudden he’s full of swears, which Shi-jin notes is ironic given his earlier sympathy.
Young Thief is brought to the hospital, and a nurse picks up Dae-young’s stolen phone when it falls to the ground. A call comes in from the same person who’d called Shi-jin, Yoon Myung-joo, and the nurse answers and tells Myung-joo that the phone’s owner is at the hospital following an accident.
Inside, we meet Dr. KANG MO-YEON (Song Hye-gyo), who assesses Young Thief’s injuries, aided by the diagnostic notes Shi-jin had written on his arm. Among them: “THIEF: Administer treatment as painfully as possible.” The thief protests loudly to be let go, and the second he’s left alone, he strips off the splint and hobbles away.
Mo-yeon speaks with a senior doctor about a position she’s up for, but gets distracted to see the thief off in the distance making his getaway. She excuses herself and goes after him, and wheels him back inside against his protests.
He wants to be let go, arguing that his hyungnims will be sending him to the morgue next. But Mo-yeon and the nurses are a tough bunch and refuse to budge until he grudgingly agrees to stay. He leaves a phone with Mo-yeon to prove he won’t run away…
And then runs away again, of course, talking on his other phone. Dae-young and Shi-jin pull up at the hospital right as a crowd of gangsters strolls by, and head inside a second too soon to see the thief slipping out.
Shi-jin continues calling Dae-young’s phone without getting an answer, until finally Dr. Mo-yeon picks up. She’s sitting just feet away from him, and scoffs to see the name: “Big Boss.”
Given the circumstances, she interprets this to mean gangster boss, so when Shi-jin motions to her, she regards him coldly and tells him to wait outside. He tries to explain that she’s got the wrong idea, but she’s firm, and the two soldiers are pushed aside while she finishes treating a patient.
Dae-young figures the thief skipped out and suggests going to look for him, though Shi-jin isn’t in any hurry to leave the pretty doctor he’s clearly smitten with. When Dae-young shoots him a look, Shi-jin suddenly fakes appendix pain (poorly, on the wrong side) before agreeing to head out.
On Dae-young’s hunch, they look for the gangsters they’d encountered earlier and find them brutally beating up the wayward thief. Shi-jin is reluctant to get involved, but his buddy is stern and determined to step in.
So the two soldiers call out to the gangsters, who laugh at them for butting in. The badly beaten thief—Ki-bum—begs Dae-young to save him, and his friend explains that Ki-bum wants out of the gang, but has to come up with an exorbitant “exit fee” (5 million won, just over 4,000 USD), which is why he’s been stealing.
The gangsters jeer, asking sarcastically if Dae-young will take on the burden—but Dae-young readily replies that he will, and that he’s Ki-bum’s hyung. Aww.
Dae-young holds out his wallet, saying that he’s got plenty of cash. Offering it to anybody who can snatch it from him, he invites the gangsters to go for it.
A couple of guys launch themselves at him with fists and switchblades, though they’re more nuisance than threat. We’ve already seen Dae-young fighting at his best, so no surprise that he hardly breaks a sweat knocking around the first two who come at him.
Shi-jin sees they’re using switchblades and goads everyone to pull out their weapons now and go for it… though he’s a little taken aback when no less than ten knives come out. He takes a teeny step behind Dae-young and says that at least there are no guns.
Thief Ki-bum’s supposed guardian arrives thinking Dae-young is the patient, and Yoon Myung-joo turns out to be a woman in army uniform (Kim Ji-won). Moreover, she and Mo-yeon know each other, although there’s no love lost between them. Mo-yeon even jokes that there’s always a man involved when they meet, which, groan. Can we not go thirty minutes without failing the Bechdel test?
Myung-joo’s also a doctor and she demands to see the chart, calling the patient “important to me.” Mo-yeon simply tells Myung-joo to pay the patient’s bill, which he skipped out on, and says that the hospital has done its duty in trying to treat him twice.
Mo-yeon informs a mutual colleague of Myung-joo’s arrival—that rude but pretty army doctor they interned with who stole away Mo-yeon’s crush. Mo-yeon huffs jealously that Myung-joo’s not even that pretty, and she didn’t actually date that sunbae. She also calls Myung-joo crazy for dating someone now who’s maybe twenty at most.
But her colleague corrects her, since it’s well-known that Myung-joo, the daughter of a three-star general and an officer in her own right, is dating an army officer. That’s news to Mo-yeon, who wonders what the deal is with Ki-bum, who left his phone with her.
Shi-jin and Dae-young return to the hospital with Ki-bum, who’s now in much worse shape. While nurses rush to take care of him, Dae-young stands stock-still upon seeing Myung-joo, who looks at him with accusing eyes and orders him to follow her. Huh, no jondae speech even.
Mo-yeon tends to Ki-bum’s wounds and asks if it was Shi-jin who did this to him. The kid insists that Shi-jin was his rescuer, but she doesn’t believe him, thinking he’s saying it out of fear. All the while, Shi-jin just sort of smiles down at her flirtatiously, though she either doesn’t notice or ignores it.
He chases Mo-yeon out to set her straight about his character, explaining the whole story about getting the cell phone stolen, coming to retrieve it, and saving Ki-bum from his gangster hyungs. She expresses exactly zero interest in his explanation and starts to call the police to report the patient’s assault.
Shi-jin leans in and, with a flick of his finger, knocks the phone out of her hand. Saying that involving the police would be a problem for him only supports the misunderstanding that he’s a gangster, even though he tells her that he’s a soldier on leave, and that getting into a tangle with the law would be a headache. He supposes that showing her his dog tags or army ID won’t convince her when she’s determined to believe he’s lying.
But then he asks if she went to a certain medical school and knows Myung-joo. That makes her connect some dots, asking if he’s “that” officer. Shi-jin must know she means Dae-young and says no, but assures her that Myung-joo can confirm his identity.
Myung-joo confronts a stoic Dae-young with frustration and hurt, asking how long he means to keep avoiding her. She demands that he tell her why, saying that it’s not that she doesn’t know the reason, but that she wants to hear him.
“It’s not the reason you think,” he says stiffly. He asks her not to jump to conclusions about leaving for her sake, and says that his feelings have changed, that’s all. Ah, she must think he’s being pressured to leave her, and tearfully says she doesn’t believe him.
Dae-young walks away, ignoring her pleas to stop until she pulls rank—ever the soldier, he has to stop then to give a formal salute. She orders him to stand there like that all night, until he dies.
That’s when Shi-jin joins them to request that Myung-joo identify them to the skeptical Mo-yeon. Coldly, Myung-joo tells her, “Report them to the police. They’re AWOL soldiers.” A woman scorned, I guess.
Still, Mo-yeon’s seen enough to accept their identity, though she’s not ready to absolve them of the assault and insists on checking the security footage.
While they wait outside security, Shi-jin stands next to her against the wall, and when his fingers brush hers, she visibly jumps. She asks how he knows Myung-joo, and replies that they’re sunbae-hoobae from military academy. He asks if it’s really necessary to see the footage, assuring her that he looks like someone who can’t lie. She replies that killers are often likable.
He tells her not to worry, since it’s his rule to protect children, the elderly, and the beautiful. She quips that it’s good to be one of the three, he banters that she’s not, and she retorts that she means the elderly.
It’s only now that she thinks to ask his name, and gives him hers.
Dae-young has guessed that Ki-bum was once an athlete, and it’s another commonality between them. Dae-young practiced judo in high school, presumably before he went astray; he recognizes that Ki-bum learned to be hit like an athlete, where taking a blow is part of the training.
Asked why he just took it, Ki-bum replies that it would be over faster that way. He admits to practicing taekwondo, even winning gold medals.
When the nurse asks for his guardian, Ki-bum insists he doesn’t have one. Dae-young contradicts him, which, aww.
Watching the CCTV footage, Mo-yeon gives good reaction to seeing Shi-jin and Dae-young kicking some serious butt. She gets adorably caught up in the proceedings like she’s watching them live, calling out instructions: “Do that! Good job!”
Misunderstanding cleared, Mo-yeon apologizes for misjudging Shi-jin. He replies that she can repay him by treating his pain, which sounds like a glib pick-up line. So she doesn’t believe him when he points to his side, or when he doubles over in pain when she pokes it. But when he lifts his shirt, she gasps to see the blood-soaked bandage.
The fight tore his stitches, and as she redoes them, she recognizes his other scar as a gunshot wound. He’s surprised since she isn’t likely to run into gunshot wounds in Korea, but she explains seeing them in her volunteer work in Africa.
Shi-jin adopts a cheeky air and says he got the wound in Normandy while rescuing a comrade amidst a hail of gunfire. She asks wryly if the friend’s name was Private Ryan, and he smiles at her. The obtrusive pop soundtrack informs us this is A Moment.
Mo-yeon instructs Shi-jin to disinfect his wound through the week, after which he can have the stitches removed. He asks if he can come back here every day to do it, and whether she can be his assigned doctor. She banters along when he says a doctor’s looks are an important factor, and agrees to see him during the week.
Then he leans waaay in and says, “As a doctor, you probably don’t have a boyfriend, since you’re so busy.” She replies in kind, saying he probably doesn’t have a girlfriend as a soldier, and he just asks, “Who knows what the answer will be?”
Back at barracks, Shi-jin enlists his unit’s opinions in deciding which of two identical uniforms looks better for his trip to the hospital. The others wonder why he’d travel so far just to disinfect an injury, until Dae-young informs them that the doc is pretty. Ahhh.
Shi-jin points out that none of the army docs is pretty, and Dae-young argues. A clueless soldier pipes up that Myung-joo is hot, but that she supposedly just got dumped really badly, and it takes the rest of the unit to shut him up.
Dae-young goes to the hospital too, to pay Ki-bum’s bill for him. Guh, I just love his stoic care for the wayward soul, and it makes Ki-bum feel both grateful and awkward.
Ki-bum says he can’t pay him back and says a bit defensively that he doesn’t want a lecture about his life, but Dae-young doesn’t expect payment and just tells him to take care of himself. Then Ki-bum asks how Dae-young got out of his gangster past, since being beaten and paying up haven’t worked.
“I ran away to a place they could never follow me,” Dae-young replies.
In the lobby, Shi-jin spots Mo-yeon caught up in an emergency situation, kneeling on a gurney to stanch a patient’s bloody wound. He joins the entourage of medics and helps push the gurney faster, his eyes fixed on her the whole time, though he goes wholly unnoticed by her.
He waits outside the operating room for hours, but when she finally emerges, he’s gone.
He’s working out that night (obligatory army abs scene!) when she calls, which makes him smile. He notes that she’s scored his number, and she tells him to save hers. Like you have to tell him twice.
“I’d really like to see you tomorrow,” he says, which makes her laugh at his boldness. He says in a deadpan voice that he meant for treatment, and her face falls and she quickly says that’s what she meant too.
She asks what time he’d like to come in tomorrow, and he asks if she’d like to meet now instead. She doesn’t reply right away, and he asks, for the first time a little hesitantly, “You don’t want to?”
She replies, “No, I don’t dislike it. Come.”
So he heads over to the hospital again, decked out in civilian clothing while she primps with her PPL makeup. He waits for her in the lobby… and then his eyes land on the breaking news report showing on TV about the kidnapping of two UN staffers.
Immediately his mood grows serious and he takes a call from a colleague, stepping into the elevator just as Mo-yeon steps out. Arg! Curses, ye olde K-drama Elevator Miss!
Shi-jin calls to tell Mo-yeon he’s here, but has to leave. He mentions he’s on the roof, so she heads up to see him there, and he apologizes for having to stand her up.
A helicopter hovers overhead, which he identifies as his ride. He promises to fill her in later, and asks to meet next weekend. Not for treatment this time, but for a movie date.
The helicopter lands, and he leans in to ask for an answer. Note that what he says could mean “Do you like [the idea] or not?” it could also mean “Do like me or not?”
She answers, “I like [it].” He breaks into a smile and calls it a promise, then jogs over to board the copter, pausing for one look back at Mo-yeon. Then he’s off.
A short time later, Shi-jin’s unit is deployed on their covert mission, which requires them to remove their identifying dog tags in case of capture. “Where are we?” his teammate asks.
“Afghanistan,” Shi-jin replies grimly.
The hatch of their aircraft opens to reveal the landscape below them as they fly toward the fiery warzone.
COMMENTS
Descended From the Sun could have swung either way for me, because I do like all of the cast and there is a certain refreshing quality to a story that isn’t placed (mostly) in Korea, set against a backdrop that’s just a bit different. I really like Song Hye-gyo being a no-nonsense professional, and Song Joong-ki is charm incarnate. (He’s really almost too charming that it’s disconcerting. Some of his deeply intense gazes are so intimate as to be uncomfortable, and I found myself thinking that if he weren’t so darned adorable, he could very well be creepy.)
On the positive front, all of the actors are doing their jobs, the characters show flashes of compelling backstory (particularly Jin Gu right now, who is seriously wonderful in this role), and the director has a skilled, assured hand. This drama looks gorgeous. (The music editor could use firing, though—how many Big Musical Cues could you get through before bursting into laughter? What starts out mildly distracting soon becomes unintentionally hilarious the more times we encounter the *stare* *stare* *music* exchanges. And I do believe there were at least seven or eight of them in the first episode.)
Plotwise, I think I’m cautiously optimistic—I like that the couple meet in a relatively low-pressure environment, make a connection, and then presumably reconnect while working in the warzone. It feels a little more like we’ve got something to build on, rather than plopping them down into massive trauma and then engineering some kind of meet-cute. On the other hand, a big fear I have is that the drama will take its rich, dramatic, interesting backdrop and then just steamroller over it with Romance Romance Romance. I kind of hate how this writer has a tendency to reduce all her dramas to a very simplistic romantic throughline, even though she does have a way of tapping into emotions and lovelines that get audiences all excited. But she tends to overplay them to the exclusion of all else, which I find a shame. (Previous drams include Heirs, A Gentleman’s Dignity, Secret Garden, On Air, Lovers in Paris, and Lovers in Prague.)
I’ll admit to having previous issues with this writer, who has never written a woman I could identify with or understand, who also has the habit of injecting all her male leads with a frustratingly domineering alpha-male swagger—men who never saw a boundary they didn’t consider an invitation to cross, who were presented to us as swoonworthy romantic ideals. It’s that darned charm again!
But I do also feel that every drama is its own thing, and wanted to see this one as a separate entity from the rest of her oeuvre. In that respect, it sort of works, it sort of doesn’t. Song Joong-ki totally makes his character click, mixing that glib facade with hints of more intensity underneath, and I really look forward to seeing him reveal layers behind than the facile front he shows to everyone. But I do feel this romantic dynamic is pretty familiar—and super-fast. It’s kind of a Big Bang of instant attraction—one moment it’s nothing, and the next moment it’s already blown into a universe of Feelings. I suppose there are worse things, though! Say, a full drama lacking any romantic tension at all.
I went into Descended From the Sun with as open mind as possible, trying to get a clean first impression. What I come away with is that it’s pretty much what you think it’s going to be—if you like Kim Eun-sook’s dramas and squee over her addictive romances, you’re in luck. If you don’t like her shows for whatever reason, those reasons are still hanging around (she hasn’t changed her style, is what I mean), and it’ll probably be up to you to decide how much that matters.
RELATED POSTS
- Dueling press conferences: Descended From the Sun vs. Come Back, Ajusshi
- Sparks fly (literally) in Descended From the Sun’s main poster
- Descended From the Sun teases love and war
- Apology or confession in Descended From the Sun’s first teaser
- Song Hye-gyo and Song Joong-ki on the set of Descended From the Sun
- First script read for blockbuster melodrama Descended From the Sun
- Star cast confirmed for healing romance Descended From the Sun
- Song Hye-gyo to romance Song Joong-ki for Descended From the Sun?
- Song Joong-ki considers new drama Descended From the Sun
Tags: Descended From the Sun, Episode 1, featured, first episodes, Jin Gu, Kim Ji-won, Song Hye-gyo, Song Joong-ki
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51 piepie
February 25, 2016 at 12:58 AM
OMG SONG JOONG KI IS FREAKING H.O.T am burning... my fav drama so far this year after OMHE
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52 jaejyj
February 25, 2016 at 12:59 AM
I hvn't watched yet. I really don't mind about story either. I just want to watch.tje song-song couple!
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53 saranga
February 25, 2016 at 1:01 AM
enjoyed your observation about song joong-ki's gazes, and how they could be read as creepy if he weren't so attractive. heck, if they stuck him in tvn's signal as an outwardly charming but inwardly murderous psychopath, and added some dark haunting music and the right lighting, he could fit right in. in the end, so much of it is about the presentation!
yeah, i'm also not really sold on the show. to be honest, the army stuff bored me and i found myself fast forwarding a lot, which i didn't expect to do with this show. but we'll see, we'll see.
maybe this will be the show where kim ji-won finally gets her big break? i just think it's too many years overdue, especially when noting how freaking beautiful she is. she's always reminded me of kim tae-hee—small face, eyes that take up half the real estate of her face, full lips, etc. but she also has her own look. her popularity needs to explode, soon!
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54 so
February 25, 2016 at 1:01 AM
i really like the acting from both kim ji won and jin gu.. ji won is great young actress..she was so into her character.jin gu is the first time i see him in a drama and he is really good too!!can't wait to see more of them!!
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55 Dorotka
February 25, 2016 at 1:02 AM
Well, it's... pretty...
And are we having "Love is The Moment" moments here again????
Though the episode was better than I expected, I'm not irritated... yet...
And my love for Song Joong Ki may make me finish the drama.
Plus Jin Gu's character is interesting... and the actor as well :--)
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56 Jon G.
February 25, 2016 at 1:11 AM
Javabeans, that was awesome ...
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Kween Ramyeon
February 25, 2016 at 1:53 PM
+1
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lindl
February 27, 2016 at 2:56 AM
+1
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57 appy
February 25, 2016 at 1:14 AM
veru good start... at first site they fall in love.... I was going to watch thus drama only for onew but now I like all the other main character...
can't wait for 2nd episode...
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58 Ai Sky
February 25, 2016 at 1:23 AM
I watched this drama because of SHG and I will continue to watch it because of her. I rarely saw KES dramas, I don't watch heirs or secret garden, so I had high anticipation for this drama. But the result is far from my expectation for 1st ep. The story is unusual, I like it, but it didn't catch me. The thing that keep my eyes on screen is the casts. SHG is goddess, SJK is hot and JG got the character. So I think the drama doing Ok for 1st ep.
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59 korini
February 25, 2016 at 1:24 AM
"Have you ever seen bullet wounds in a hospital?" "Not here, I've seen them in Africa". Kim Eun-Sook, really? Is South Korea completely crime free? Wow!
So, Kim Eun-Sook, is truly the wizard of ratings... I can't say I'm surprised.
Personally, I never miss her first four episodes. They are always superb. Yes, even Heirs. In that aspect Kim Eun-Sook is the exact opposite of Hong Sisters who start peculiar but "ascend" afterwards. Kim Eun-Sook tends to lose her plot after episode eight and just fill the rest of the drama with super annoying relatives, mothers, mothers-in-law, sisters, ex-girlfriends, cousins (NOT OPPA OSKA). And that's my problem with her and not how much I identify with the female characters, my Dearest Javabeans. I actually never identify with any of the female roles in k-dramas. Most of the times, I wonder "who are those women? It's a wonder they managed to get in their age with that mentality" or even worse, "how do they find they way home without throwing bread crumps?"
But let me return to the Descendants. This time I'm more optimistic for three reasons: 1. there's a co-writer I read. The writer of Queen's Classroom and that can't be bad, 2. I don't see in the cast "older" actors, so hopefully no more evil mothers and mothers-in-law and 3. we have a stellar cast. How do the girlies put it here? Song Joong-Ki is my bias! He has the "whole package" to make him big and Song Hye-Kyo is beautiful. Not beautiful in the "eye's of the beholder" but truly, objectively beautiful.
Another plus, the wonderful Greek sun and scenery where a part of the drama was shot.
Oh, I almost forgot! "Afganistan!" Very GI Joe... Well done...
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newbie
February 25, 2016 at 2:44 AM
Not crime free, but I guess it's rare the bad guys have guns. (As we saw in this ep, too.)
I'm willing to bet, that almost no doctor here in Germany saw a gun wound, too.
American reality is quite different.
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lala
February 26, 2016 at 4:46 AM
Honestly in country like SK, it's quite hard for a doctor to saw a real gun wound,
South Korea has one of the most restrictive gun policies in the developed world. Hunting and sporting licenses are issued, but any firearm used in these circumstances must be stored at a local police station. Violation of firearms law can result in a $(US)18,000 fine and up to 10 years in prison. Even possessing a toy gun that resembles a real gun is strictly prohibited.
and with that afganistan word, we knew she work is volunteer job before and make their meeting later in war doesn't sounds out of place
"oh you actually a volunteer doctor in war too?" something like this
I hope you actually take a moment to search something
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60 Ek Ladhki Thi is Kim Eun-sooks no 1 fan
February 25, 2016 at 1:29 AM
I'm just going to say this right now, I'm ready to go as far as needed with this show. One of the things I was most worried about was if the leads would have chemistry with one another, I don't know why I was ever worried. I was heoling so much during this episode. Does Kim Eun-sook make it a criteria for her leading men to be extremely skillful at melting me with their eyes? Every time one of her heroes stares at his girl I feel like my own heart will explode. I know she's not very loved around these parts because of Heirs (one of my favourite shows by the way. I accept how strange that sounds), but I have yet to meet a Kim Eun-sook drama I didn't love. No scratch that, I hated Lovers but I loved 6 out of the 9 dramas she has written. I'm crazy I know. Okay, fangirling over!
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61 angskeet
February 25, 2016 at 1:36 AM
Why would the song producer use the same melody as "Best Luck" from "It's Okay, That's Love" soundtrack? LOL When I heard it in the drama, it made me think I was watching the wrong drama.
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62 hwaiting
February 25, 2016 at 1:48 AM
Loving it so far! I have a feeling I am going to invest on this drama big time...and we are not even in Greece yet! :)
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63 redfox
February 25, 2016 at 1:55 AM
well, I guess I am powerless against SJK´s snake-eye charisma. why does he have such a hypnotizing glance? I feel like a helpless little animal. Fox cub, who is about to get eaten.
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64 Lai Pei Yee
February 25, 2016 at 2:27 AM
Please don't let me turn off my brain or heart, show. Or else be ready to suffer the same faith as Secret Garden or even Heirs..
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65 hwaiting
February 25, 2016 at 2:29 AM
Song Joong-ki, what is it about you that makes you all together lovely! :)
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66 Gil
February 25, 2016 at 2:35 AM
I'm surprised that the drama is using current events and if I'm not mistaken they haven't hinted at what country they will be working in right? If they do choose a specific conflict ie Syria or Afghanistan I feel like that the romance and the plot can become insensitive. Not to mention that the drama would most likely contain portray the country and its conflict in broad strokes, engaging in a lot of racist tropes present in Western media on this subject. Especially, since the drama as a lot of people have noticed, has a very Hollywood flair to it. Kim Eun-sook is not a writer I would go to for detail or nuance. I understand that there is a certain level of suspension of disbelief needed, but with how the geopolitics of the region is shaping up I think that would be difficult.
At least in King2Hearts, it was established that the politics of that universe were drastically different from our own and that a lot of the inaccuracies and illogical plot points regarding international relations could be explained.
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TJ
February 25, 2016 at 4:30 AM
I don't really understand this way of looking at entertainment. I know there are blogs and youtube videos devoted to simply finding plot holes and "mistakes" in movies and television shows. I guess for some people it's fun just looking for the mistakes. Of course this drama is not going to paint any of the world's conflicts in anything more than broad strokes, so what? This is a entertainment production not a documentary. I don't see how anyone can consume korean drama on a regular basis and not have to overlook how trite, formulaic, misogynistic and redundant it often is.
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Gil
February 25, 2016 at 11:01 AM
It's not necessarily looking for specific mistakes; most entertainment is trite, formulaic, misogynistic and redundant not just Korean dramas. But me raising these questions isn't an attempt to check off specific boxes to determine if this piece is non-problematic. I wish I could close my eyes and pretend that nothing is wrong in the entertainment I consume but I can't. That's not how the world works. A drama is not a documentary, yes but that does not mean a drama does not have impact.
You underestimate the power of popular media on society and the history of state propaganda(the U.S. does this too, the CIA invests in films) through popular films and tv shows. I am not expecting everyone who watches it to be super critical and self-aware all the time, its just that knowing Kim Eun-sook's successes with previous dramas as well as the high ratings, the broad strokes that the show will paint can be harmful if it attempts to set in a conflict that is occurring today. Media shapes our perspectives and our perspectives shapes media, and with this drama is basing its plot on is bothersome to me. This drama is coming out at a time of intense and important debate on the refugee crisis, and escalated tensions in the Middle East. Xenophobic and nativist rhetoric is fueled by mass media perpetuating a specific trope or image of something whether it be a person or an issue.
I'm still watching this because of Kim Ji-won and Jin-goo, who are actors I both like and their chemistry was appealing to me. But I can both enjoy entertainment but also at the same time critique it, and that is not to say that people who don't engage critically with entertainment are wrong or bad for doing so. Also this is a field that I am studying, it is nearly impossible for me to ignore the gross misconceptions and simplification of various issues surrounding international politics.
Justice Antonin Scalia of the US Supreme court defended the use of torture arguing that it is necessary in time-ticking bombs situations shown in popular media like the show 24. Fun fact, this argument is based on false claims and ticking bomb scenarios do not actually occur in real life. Yeah, a justice from the SCOTUS used an incorrect argument based on a t.v show to justify torture. Let me remind you that the SCOTUS have made decisions on landmark cases that have significantly impacted the United States(look no further than Citizens United).
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anotheraddict
February 25, 2016 at 12:06 PM
Well said. Thanks for speaking up.
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TJ
February 25, 2016 at 4:21 PM
I understand how powerful the media is especially in my country, the US. I was pilloried by my own sister on FB for saying the American Sniper guy was either a sociopath or had absolutely no class. You don't come home from war and brag about "kills". Claimed to have been sent by the CIA to kill black people in New Orleans. Guy's a hero to some people and the movie was Oscar nominated. Sure I know the power of the media, I used to be a politics junkie. Korea skims tough subjects on television. Korean tv is heavily content censored. You aren't going to get but so much of a realistic portrayal of current tough subjects anyway . I guess I suffer from low expectations. Honestly, I'm not sure I want to see tough subjects tackled in my kdrama. I can see all the grit and grime I want if I watch American TV. That's one thing I'm not too keen on about this drama to start, it's cinematic format. Nice chat.
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Gil
February 26, 2016 at 8:05 AM
Oh man American Sniper, that is a whole other clusterf*ck of bullshit man. The CIA also played a role in the movies making as well. But to your point about Korean censorship, its true I think that is an important point. It is heavily censored, especially when we are considering who is the president of Korea right now. However, I don't think I agree with the assessment that Korean tv skims tough subjects. No, we are not going to see blatant criticisms of the Park Geun-hye administration but they do cover heavy topics. I see T.V. shows like Signal that critiques government and police corruption, Gag Concert had a skit that criticizes Korean politicians.
Sure, I don't expect all my k-dramas to tackle heavy topics, I agree. I'm not watching Oh My Happy Ending to find a nuanced discourse on Korea's neo-colonial project in Southeast Asia but this show's premise is a romance in a war zone. A war zone where people are dying and living in a state of fear, even if it's a romance you can't ignore that it is in the middle of a conflict. That's why I am raising questions regarding it.
Dolly
February 26, 2016 at 8:53 AM
(This could be a spoiler) The country which will be the main stage is called Urk(Not sure about the spelling)and it is a fake one. There will be a natural disaster which is trigger for the major crisis, not the war or ISIS like situation. Not sure the camp is the one for refugees. The villains will be the illegal arms dealers. From the impression I got from the first incidence with North Korean Soldiers, they are not portrayed as the in-humane war machines. Even our hero and that NK captain kind of understood each other's situation and acknowledged their names. (I bet this person will appear again). Also this solder-doctor frame between main leads could be also one factor that shapes the major message of the drama. As many of you guys seem to not knowing it, the DofS is actually written by two writers, one of them is a male writer who wrote the Queen's classroom, Kim Won-suk. Especially, the original script was written by him, and KES kinds of later modified it to make it more commercially appealing. I have already watched Ep2, and there are really good signs that this drama has actually very sophisticated side in terms of characters and messages.
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Gil
February 26, 2016 at 12:20 PM
Awesome! Thanks for clearing that up, I wasn't sure and the ending of episode one threw me off because I thought that they were going to an invented disaster zone. I had heard that Kim Won-suk was co writing it but I was kind of wary of it because Kim Eun-sook seems have a larger and longer body of work and I thought that her decisions might overshadow his, but here's to hoping it turns out well.
Also the soldier-doctor juxtaposition seems interesting, it makes me wonder if the drama will go into examining the more recent trends within conflict of the military providing humanitarian assistance. There's a part of me that's super excited to analyze this new context using Agamben's Homo Sacer and Hannah Arendt but probably shouldnt...
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67 Meow
February 25, 2016 at 2:49 AM
Oh My. I didn't realize how much I missed SJK until I saw him on my screen! Waaaaah
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68 Jeanie
February 25, 2016 at 2:53 AM
I enjoyed the first episode. It was an easy watch, though it had some really cheesy dialogue at times. And I was actually surprised when the episode ended, which is a good sign for me. Story is still starting and I'd want to see where it goes. Aside from the good acting of the cast, the cinematography was also beautiful. Can't wait for tonight's episode.
I was also happy to see Joongki back in dramaland!! At some point I was rather confused whether to read the subtitles to understand the story or to just stare at Joongki the entire time, haha!
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69 Rj
February 25, 2016 at 2:59 AM
Thanks for the recap loved it!
Jong ki seems to have lost his baby cheeks after millitary service but guess what he looks more manly now ^^ ;)
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70 mjusikurd
February 25, 2016 at 3:28 AM
I am more interested in Jigoo's character and i have to say that he stole episode 1 for me also i feel like they gave us more background about his character than SJK character and he is just a damn good actor ,his facial expressions are so on point and i have to say that i am left with a very good impression from his character i am looking for more about him to be unveiled so I hope they don't kill him off because if they do i will stop watching the drama.
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TJ
February 25, 2016 at 4:34 AM
I love Song Joong ki. I wish he'd stop choosing these heavy dramas in some attempt to shed his pretty boy image. He also has great comic timing so I'd love to see him do a rom com. He's a baby faced pretty boy and that's part of his appeal but he keeps doing this macho men roles. That being said. Jin Gu is just sexy, period. He looks like a man. Yummy.
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Adal
February 25, 2016 at 12:05 PM
lol.
Stop.
You're cracking me up! Ha Ha.
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71 angel
February 25, 2016 at 3:39 AM
I'm sorry but whenever Kim Ji Won is on screen, all I can think about are her uneven eyes.
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72 foofoo
February 25, 2016 at 3:57 AM
Man am I still so mad that I had to wait almost 3 years to see Song Joong Ki back on my screen. He's been out of the army SO FREAKING LONG already! I have to say I'm liking the drama so far. It'll take a couple more episodes to see if I'll love it or not, but I liked everything except for the terrible music. I really hope they tone that down or get rid of it entirely, otherwise I'm just gunna be facepalming every time those songs pop up.
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73 p3rk3le
February 25, 2016 at 4:02 AM
I was pleasantly surprised with the first ep. I expected it to be more heavy but it was too easy to watch, and the characters were introduced nicely (in contrast with Come back mister, which I expected it to be fun and breezy but it was so hard to go through the first ep). I also had my fears for Joongki's character but he seems way better than all her previous leads (for example, given the preview, the cellphone scene made him look like a jerk, but within the story I did get why he stopped her like that). All in all, i am happy over the premiere, I hope it stays good :D
p.s. i find the second leads very interesting as well ^^
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74 TJ
February 25, 2016 at 4:14 AM
I'm not fan of Song Hye ko. She's incredibly beautiful but I think she's a one note actress. However, I like Kim Ji won. She might have bit of growing to do professionally but she's an adorable young actress.....Personally I don't have a problem with this writer's dramas. She's being accused of having aggressive male characters and shallow female characters in a genre that abounds with such portrayals. Pretty standard for kdrama.
What I was originally going to say here is that despite the fact that I usually don't like my dramas to be so "cinematic" I'll give this one a try for one reason only. It's just stuffed full of good looking men. Yah! Call me horny fan girl all you won't you can even pretend I'm 15. I think I'm flattered.
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75 Prettysup
February 25, 2016 at 4:15 AM
I am watching this for Song JK but suddenly I discovered his friend who is so good looking ! Haven't known Jin Goo before this.
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TJ
February 25, 2016 at 4:37 AM
It would be nice to see this drama boost Jin Gu's career a bit. He's no baby faced teenager. He's been around awhile in minor roles. He's pushing 40 so yeah, he's got some acting experience and he's just hot.
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kalel
February 25, 2016 at 10:20 AM
Jin Goo is mostly a film actor, however he was so unlucky with Ad Genius. It was his first drama as a leading man but the project was just bad. Thank God this writer has a very good eye for actors...
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76 flower4junsu
February 25, 2016 at 4:16 AM
I just finished watching the 1st ep. It's soo good. I do hope this drama will remain interesting until the final episode. Cause sometimes I found some other dramas were interesting just for their first episodes that I cannot manage to continue watching.
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77 sadness_
February 25, 2016 at 4:29 AM
waaa really highly anticipated drama!!
the story is quite interesting both main story of YSJ-KMY and side story of SDY-YMJ. I reallyyyyyy like YSJ's character here. just my style. sweet as man for his (?) woman and dedicated to his job. but that SDY guy is charming too. aaa otteokhae.
I think I can guess where the story go because this is a romance drama. but my point is the story about their job and its relation with their romance life. something new. because k-drama need a story that not only about rich guy fall in love with ordinary girl who can't take care of herself.
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78 anna
February 25, 2016 at 4:33 AM
i have to agree about the music editing! if it goes on for the entire series, i would have to spend more time trying not to laugh then actually concentrating on the series.
for someone who have been seriously anticipating for this drama ever since the news of it came out like almost two years ago, storyline wise, i am not sure yet about it (but again, it is only the first hour). although how ever it goes, im most probably going to stick to the end. how can one stop watching if song jong ki is in it?
i was a bit confused tho, i thought the drama will be set in a fictional country. so i am assuming that they will have a totally fictional storyline when it comes to the war. when he said that they are in afghanistan at the end, i was like please no! i really hope thats just for this particular episode, and the actual wartime part of the drama would be in some fictional country and fictional events. (cause for someone who is studying these kind of stuff, i really don't want have auto-corrects constantly in my head when they use real events in a..err.. less accurate way)
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TJ
February 25, 2016 at 4:39 AM
It's already pretty inaccurate if you ask me. Why would they send in the South Korean special forces when the US has a plethora of their own?
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kalel
February 25, 2016 at 10:24 AM
The US usually use their "allies" almost everywhere. There are UN-SK forces in Africa and many European countries have been involved in Irak, Afghanistan and in Syria. That's very well-known.
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TJ
February 25, 2016 at 4:30 PM
I know. SK is a steady ally to the US as well. Perhaps they do occasionally send their special forces guys. It's just not my genre although I did used to read Ken Follett novels.
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79 fatraspberry
February 25, 2016 at 4:58 AM
this drama is so pretty to look at. I'm not that interested with the story and I find it cheesy at times but I'm gonna keep watching for SJK lol and I find Kim Ji Won really pretty.
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80 Kandiboo
February 25, 2016 at 5:00 AM
Ah, Afghanistan...
Was there for a few months last year for a medical mission.
I'm interested at how they will depict the country - the mountains and aerial scenery is truly spectacular....
The people whom I have crossed paths with are wonderful too... If only they had not been at war for so long...
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kalel
February 25, 2016 at 10:26 AM
No Afghanistan... Mediterranean sceneries and the Mediterranean sun all over.
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Kandiboo
February 25, 2016 at 4:29 PM
Yeah that's why I said "ah"...
The Mediterranean has much prettier coastal views.... Which obviously will be absent in real life Afghanistan XD
The sunset and sunrise are gorgeous either way
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81 salt n' pepper
February 25, 2016 at 5:18 AM
I gotta admit the first episode wasn't bad. I've been waiting for this drama to start since the day they announced the casting because of all the pretties that are in this. But given how bad and cringeworthy The Heirs was, I've kept my expectations low. It's pretty early to tell but so far it seems a lot better than Heirs. I mean, it's nothing deep or noteworthy but it's an easy watch. And I don't care if you judge me but I am very appreciative of the fact that we have SHK, SJK and KJW's pretty faces to stare at a whole hour each episode. Once the plot goes haywire, (which I fear might happen later on, but let's hope it doesn't) it sure makes watching the drama more tolerable. Oh, but LOL, talk about the horribly cheesy BGM timing! Hahaha!! I now see what everyone's laughing over, lol. But yeah, so far no major complaints here.
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salt n' pepper
February 25, 2016 at 5:25 AM
And regarding the topic on how unrealistic/realistic the military and medical scenes are, I'd rather not think about it. Sometimes I prefer switching off a part of my brain while watching a drama coz then I'd actually enjoy it more. Anyway, I'm here for the entertainment. If I wanted something closer to reality then I'm better off watching the news. LOL
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82 elleyred
February 25, 2016 at 6:13 AM
OMG I am so happy this series finally came out. I am really enjoying the look of the show, the way it's filmed etc. Song Joong Ki is amazing, but I'm really looking forward to the supporting casts story line as well! YAAASSSSSS!
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elleyred
February 25, 2016 at 6:47 AM
And I also love how cheeky SJK is, I think he's doing an awesome job, now if only he can be on a full episode of running man :D
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83 Ju
February 25, 2016 at 6:46 AM
Whoohoo! Song Jong Ki and Jin Gu are off to a flying start! Looking like it might be a a smart and engaging drama. Kim Ji Won is promising without being all dolled up.
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84 cinnamon
February 25, 2016 at 6:47 AM
> Having a kind of high expectation (I'm a fan of Endless Love), I thought I would drop this drama after watching the trailer. Glad that I finally gave it a try.
> The first episode is not disappointing. I have to admit that it indeed could make me smile all day long. I hope it stays good till the final ep.
> Compared to SJK's character in Nice Guy, I like SJK here better. I just didn't get his chemistry with Moon Chae Won. The guy was just unpredictable, looking like he's totally alone in his world and he didn't really let others step into his life. I couldn't read what kind of guy he was.
> Kudos to Jin Gu. I watched Falling for Innocence, but hey, he's totally different here. I love how he portrayed his character. Please don't kill him (but the serious-looking guy always suffers--cry, cry, cry--just like Shi Kyung in The King 2 Hearts who broke my heart). Could it be possibly Myung Joo who died in the end and Dae Young would mourn over her for letting time slip without showing her his affection? I don't quite understand the plot yet so it's too early to guess. We have no idea the situation prior to Dea Young-Myung Joo's awkward relationship.
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85 poorvi
February 25, 2016 at 6:51 AM
I really have a gut feeling somebody is going to die so I'm trying so hard not to get too attached to both of them. I mean war zone and all makes it a bleak romance for them and I know it'll break my heart
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Delurker
February 25, 2016 at 1:55 PM
I am betting on Onew's pregnant girlfriend; don't like that setup one bit...
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86 Littlederps
February 25, 2016 at 6:52 AM
Shit song joong ki is so adorable I'll still have to watch even if the drama gets bad or smtg hahahha.
I'm really liking the first ep though
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87 stargazer
February 25, 2016 at 6:57 AM
I was wary about starting this drama after having watched Heirs but Song Joong ki is in it so I couldn't resist.
I enjoyed this episode,the acting is good and the couple seem to have chemistry. I agree with javabeans about the music. It's annoying and unnecessary. I think the actors are good enough that we know when they're having a moment, we don't need the music to tell us.
I like that the 2nd leads are paired together which hopefully means no annoying love triangle *knocks on wood*.
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88 August
February 25, 2016 at 7:20 AM
"...a full drama lacking any romantic tension at all." You don't say. Hmm, wonder which drama or dramas could you possibly be referring to? LOL
The storyline for Jin Goo as Seo Dae-Young and Kim Ji-Won as Yoon Myeong-Joo captured my interest and attention the most.
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89 shwebartzky
February 25, 2016 at 7:34 AM
Reading diz comment n ah cnt stop laughing. . z every1 praying for jin gu to die. .lolZzzzzz. Love diz recap tanx dramabeans. .ah tink jin gu n kim ji won has d strongest chemistry here.
ps :can't wait for her getting a lead role
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90 Snowy
February 25, 2016 at 7:41 AM
Didn't click with me. Most of the new shows are boring and uninteresting. =/ after OMHE and Signal, I'll be on a Kdrama break.
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91 Singer
February 25, 2016 at 7:50 AM
Javabeans thanks for the recap. Have always appreciated your writing style somehow this episode it feels off. Feels like you dont want to write but forced to write. Dont take me wrong could be my only observation. Come on javabeans its Song Joon ki ... get that spirit you always have. First episode was worth watching twice due to all that charm and beauty. Who wants a good story lets enjoy a good drama with amazing fast pace narration ..it felt more like a movie than a drama ,, I do believe the music is very off, trailer had some amazing music was expecting the same ...else SJG, SHY , Jin Goo are devastatingly good. Also, as you mentioned lets have more faith in our Joon ki revealing the layers of his character.
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92 jasmin
February 25, 2016 at 7:57 AM
So they have 16 episodes but they didn't get the plot rolling in episode 1? That's a fail imho already. But oh well.
The music is terrible... Like the strings of drama? Music from old RPG games? Also the sound effects in the fight scenes - did they steal them from martial art movies from the 80s? xD
I try watching this because it's SJK's comeback project.
It's definitely a well-made production - minus the music - and beautiful cinematography. Even though the shaky camera is making me feel sick a bit sometimes. We're not in the warzone YET so please CALM down!
Other than that it's so underwhelming. Not enough to be bad or disappointing but not so good either it makes me WANT to watch episode 2. And that's saying something.
For the sake of this expensive production I hope they can keep their ratings up aka people watching. I will give this another chance but if episode 2 isn't convincing enough plot-wise I'm out. Life is too short for average dramas. :)
Also: chemistry? What chemistry? ;)
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93 blue_seoul
February 25, 2016 at 8:14 AM
first time to comment, just a bystander but cant help myself. Isn't weird that after watching the 1st episode it keeps popping out in my dream? I think this means I was hooked right? cant wait for episode 2.
Thanks for the recap Javabeans. Been your avid fans and this blog since My Girlfriend is a Gumiho. ;-)
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94 JKP
February 25, 2016 at 10:33 AM
I have not watched it yet but what a pretty pair! I hope I can find a free online website soon..
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95 Kit_exol
February 25, 2016 at 10:36 AM
HE IS BACK♡
I LIKED HIM FROM NICE GUY♡
NO WONDER ,MOST OF K-CELEBRITIES LIKE HIM♡
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96 BA
February 25, 2016 at 11:30 AM
My IG @l0vekd, i posted below:
#decendantofthesun
I like #songjoongki in this type of role - a smart aleck exterior with a kind heart- Reminiscent of #yeorim in #sungkyunkwanscandal
I am still not sure about this drama though?
Yes, it is visually stunning, has best sidekick friend, current political scenario, good looking OTP but.....something is lacking and I cant put my finger on it. Will watch for few more episode to decide if it is worth it
OST, well it sucked big time ?? Singer trying to sing English lyrics with so so voice and bad pronunciation too. Hoping for better quality OST in future episodes!
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97 Thegardens
February 25, 2016 at 11:34 AM
I belong to the majority I guess. It was a strong episode with strong performance by the cast, esp SHK and SJK.
Thanks for the recap. And please continue to recap it, Javabeans. I love your recaps because they are good and you are fast.
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98 Laila
February 25, 2016 at 12:12 PM
Oh my God,
I wasn't sure whether to watch DoTS but wow. They nailed the first episode. The chemistry, is wow. I haven't seen that in a while in Kdramas. I love SJK character. I am all about alpha males.
Just afraid of the sad part that might come later on. The way the first episode has hooked us all, i hope all the rest of the episodes do.
Watched Come Back Aujusshi. Started out good, but i hope it becomes better or people will lose interest in it very fast.
One more happy ending will be over soon. Going to still stick with it. Thank God i can watch all of them on Viki.
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99 saphia
February 25, 2016 at 2:31 PM
I watched the first episode and I actually really liked it especially the tibits of humour we got, which I was surrised about.
I love that the main leads have chemistry and lol you're right that shi-jin's character's stare seems really intense and personal. I love it!
Though the 'insta connection' was really fast but oh well, KDrama world, I can let that go.
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100 KDramaNewbie
February 25, 2016 at 2:53 PM
Right now the thing that stands out in this drama is the overwhelming prettiness of everyone and everything.
I found the NK-SK fight in the beginning to be completely meaningless and a poor introduction to the main characters.
Nevertheless, the rest of it was nice. Did not notice the soundtrack.
SJK is back in sparkling form. SHK's acting pales before him. The second leads are stereotype stoic character and stereotype princess character. I already dislike the army surgeon character for trying to ignore ground realities and forcing a relationship. Oh and pulling rank. I hope her tantrums wont continue on warfield.
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