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Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo: Episode 2

And now it’s time for Episode 2 of Moon Lovers, which I know aired yesterday, and there’s a whole third episode sitting here waiting for me to get to it. I’m recapping like the wind, I swear! A really slow, tired wind with joint problems.

The second episode was a lot more action-packed than the first, since we could move past most of the introductions (even though I’m still working to keep all the princes and bloodline loyalties straight in my goldfish-memory brain). I do wonder if there was a better way, conceptually, to start this series in a way that could still introduce everyone properly and have more plot happen off the bat. I think there probably are other approaches, but barring a whole rehaul of format and gazillions of flashbacks and other devices, I think it’s just inevitable that it would take a little while to settle in. So let’s start settling.

 
EPISODE 2 RECAP

Hae Su (or to be more accurate, 21st-century Ha-jin, who’s decided to live as Hae Su) is rescued from a fall off a ridge by Wang So, the fourth imperial prince of Goryeo, as he charges by on horseback. Well, I suppose it was his fault she almost fell, so it’s the least he could do.

Su stares up at So with wide eyes, clinging tightly as he continues riding for a bit before halting the horse. She’s transfixed, looking intently into his face, and he glances back at her… before dumping her onto the ground in a heap. Heh.

Glaring, she stops him to chastise him for his rudeness. He’s taken aback at her forthrightness, but responds by purposely rearing his horse up on its hind legs to scare her. She falls down and he rides on with a smirk, leaving her fuming in his wake.

Su exclaims the she ought to report him to the police, but a bystander lets her know that he was the notorious fourth prince—it’s a lucky thing she survived the encounter.

Su’s maid Chae-ryung comes running up to tell her that Princess Yeonhwa is looking for her.

Currently, the princess is with her brothers, or at least the six of them that get along; So is absent. The meeting is for the princes to prepare for the upcoming ceremony, held on the last day of the year to chase out evil spirits from the palace. The others take this opportunity to complain about how difficult it is to get along with So, who’s moody and scary.

Which is, of course, the moment So chooses to step inside, and the princes snap to attention, tensing with worry. The only one who looks happy to see So is Princess Yeonhwa, who (historical spoiler alert!) is both his half-sister and future wife. She lives here with eighth prince Wook (her full brother), and invites So to stay in this house while he’s in the city, which Wook agrees with.

But shifty-looking third prince Yo interjects, telling Wook not to try too hard with So: “He’s understands the language of beasts better than people.”

The others stiffen at the barb, but So just replies, “Ah, that’s why I understand my hyungnim’s [Yo’s] words so well.” Nice burn.

The maids enter with snacks, which is also Su’s cue to join the gathering, although she does her best to hang back out of sight. Her skulking behind a pillar gets the attention of tenth prince Eun, who gets in her face and tries to place why she’s so familiar, while she goes cross-eyed and prays that he won’t figure it out.

Eun makes the connection, though, and asks if she was the peeping tom at the baths. Su blurts a denial, and accidentally knocks down a maid carrying a tray, sending plateware crashing to the ground.

Faced with the princess’s anger and a roomful of staring princes, Su runs out in mortification.

Thirteenth prince Baek-ah comments that Su has changed; she used to be quite modest and careful. Wook merely replies that he was never that close with her and wouldn’t know. (Or so you say—I’ve got my eye on you.) Princess Yeonhwa supposes that Eun was mistaken, since it would have been impossible for Su to get entry to their royal bath.

Su calms her racing heart and tells herself to hang in there, then spots Eun stepping outside—he’s still convinced he recognizes her correctly and goes searching for her.

Su initially ducks for cover, but then sees Eun stopping to peer through a tear in the door. He doesn’t find Su there, but he sure doesn’t stop watching the maid undress.

Then maid girl Chae-ryung sees him and screams, sending Eun running, only to be blocked by a stern-faced Su. Eun insists, rather unconvincingly, that he’s innocent of the slave’s accusation, and Chae-ryung can’t be absolutely sure it was him.

But Su retorts that she saw it clearly, and scolds the prince like an ajumma schooling an errant schoolboy. She orders him to apologize, which Eun can’t even fathom doing—a prince, bowing to a slave?

He storms off, and Su chases him to insist he apologize, grabbing at his cloak. He shoves her off, and when she crashes to the ground, that just pisses Su off more. She trips Eun, then engages in a full-on hair-grabbing tussle.

The sounds of their yelping reach the other princes indoors, and they get up to take a look. All but So, who remains disinterested.

By the time the princes get outside, the fight has progressed to headlocks (his) and biting (hers). Eun knocks her down, she kicks him over, and then she climbs on top of him and smacks him repeatedly. Eun warns that she won’t escape unscathed, but Su is caught up in her fury, calling him a sexual harasser.

He mocks her openly, and then Su delivers the final blow: a mighty head-butt that stuns everyone watching. She rolls up her sleeve and pulls back to deliver a doozy of a slap—only this time, a hand grabs her wrist.

It’s So, who seems amused while she gapes in surprise. Eun tries to charge at Su, but Wook intervenes, warning him that there are many eyes watching. Eun flounces off in a pet.

Su finally wrenches her hand free of So’s grasp, then follows him to have more words. She demands an apology from him, too, for his rudeness. He asks who she is to demand that—what is her social status, that she could treat royalty so roughly?

It’s not an argument she finds persuasive: “So if I’m a slave you’d ignore me, but apologize if I were a princess?” She declares that she’ll get her apology from him, and also “that little kid prince” too.

So nods along, as though conceding—but then he leans way down to look her eye to eye, warning that after he apologizes to her, “You’ll have to die. And you’ll be okay with that?”

He starts to say the words, “I’m sor¬—” but Su exclaims, “Unni!” and uses the arrival of her cousin, Lady Hae, to cut him off.

She then accompanies Lady Hae to the temple for prayer, and Lady Hae tells her that no matter the reason, she laid a hand on an imperial prince—she won’t be able to escape punishment. It’s even possible that Wook will face punishment considering she’s in his care.

Lady Hae wonders how Su could have changed so much, and explains that this is where mothers come to pray for their children. She doesn’t have children, but indicates her tower of prayer stones and explains that these are on behalf of Su.

Lady Hae explains having decided to look after Su, who’d lost her own mother, as a mother would. But on a day like this, she fears her efforts and affection have been insufficient, and feels ashamed thinking that Su’s mother is watching.

At that, Su starts to cry, thinking of her own mother. Lady Hae envelops her in a hug, and asks tearfully what she is to do with her. She tells Su to get along well here, if only for her mother’s sake, and that makes Su cry harder.

Su sits outside the temple for a long while, thinking of how she’s causing trouble for people who take care of her. She wonders if there’s a way to go back and asks Chae-ryung after that man she’d seen earlier (Astronomer Choi)—she recognized his face as the homeless man on the pier, the only link to her time.

Su considers the bathing springs, but Chae-ryung shudders at the thought, warning her against returning to the site where she almost died.

Astronomer Choi examines Eun’s black eye while ninth prince Won and thirteenth prince Baek-ah snicker in amusement. Eun fumes over the audacity of the girl who’d dare raise a hand to royalty, but Won teases him about his “fateful meeting.”

Baek-ah fans the flames, saying that a woman wouldn’t bother raising a hand to him if she were uninterested. Clueless Eun actually seems to believe that, and asks follow-up questions while his brothers try not to laugh.

They clam up when So enters the building, and watch curiously as he makes his way to a room, shoving aside a court lady to force his way in. So wears a smile of anticipation on his face as he enters the room…

But it fades when he sees that his mother, Queen Sinmyeongsunseong, is sitting with his two full brothers, third prince Yo and fourteenth prince Jung. Ouch, that’s got to hurt, considering that she treats him with indifference at best.

So joins them anyway, and his mother consciously refuses to look at him. Younger brother Jung fills the silence by talking about So’s recent improvements in martial arts. At that, the queen asks if he’s really been learning martial arts, and So replies that he hasn’t. The queen supposes that his adoptive family in Shinju would have no reason to do that.

Yo chimes in with the rumor of a dog-wolf appearing in the city, clearly aimed at So. So just replies levelly, “He’s said to be from Shinju, isn’t he?”

The queen calls the visit to a close, and So can barely mask his disappointment, saying that it’s been two years since they’ve seen each other. The queen merely says it’s out of consideration for his adoptive mother, but So replies that he intends to stay longer this time, and asks to stay with his brothers at the family’s private residence.

It’s almost painful to watch So alternate between hope and disappointment, continuing to try for his mother’s affection despite the constant rejections. The queen balks at his suggestion, declaring So a member of the Shinju Kang clan; his return to his birth family would cause strife between the two clans.

So chokes back his bitterness, saying, “They said I was sent as an adopted son, but hostage was right.”

Yo mocks his use of “hostage,” as though So is being overly dramatic, and the queen asks, “How could I use you as hostage?” So replies, “When you say that, I must believe you.” Then he reaches into his cloak to give his mother a present.

But Jung beats him to the punch, presenting her with a lovely hairpin that she fawns over. Stunned and hurt, So keeps the hairpin he’d brought her tucked in his cloak.

He excuses himself to leave, and Yo throws a parting shot at his back, remarking that it’s quite an embarrassment to see a prince so pathetic. So doesn’t react as he exits, not even when he finds his other half-brothers eavesdropping in the hallway.

After his departure, the queen tells her other two sons to make sure So is sent back after the ceremony, calling soldiers if necessary.

Then Jung shares an interesting rumor he’s heard, that the queen herself was the cause of So’s disfigurement. He says it like it’s unbelievable, but Yo rebukes Jung sharply for repeating groundless rumors.

On his way out, So is stopped by Astronomer Choi, who suggests he bathe before the rites and has a servant escort him away.

That night, Su makes her way alone to the bathing pools in search of a link to that man she’d seen. She supposes seeing him could have even been a divine sign, and hopes that means there’s a way for her to return home. With her prince-hitting punishment hanging over her head, she’s motivated to leave Goryeo as soon as possible.

Once in the bathing pool, So removes his mask (oh thank god, I’ve been dying for that thing to come off), and we see the multitude of scars all over his back and torso. He stares into the still water… and then rears back when Su bursts out of the pool.

She comes up gasping, and as she locks eyes with So, they both freeze. After a beat, he claps a hand over his scarred eye, looking ashamed.

“Did you see?” he asks hesitantly. Su just stares in shock, speechless, and So grabs her throat and bellows, “I asked if you saw!”

She begs for mercy, and when he orders her to forget him, she nods jerkily. So grabs his mask and clothes and leaves the pool—and misses seeing that the hairpin he bought for his mother falls to the ground.

Su spots it and takes it with her, then takes the long walk back home. By the time she arrives, the whole household is outside waiting for her, which stuns her.

Lady Hae chides her for leaving without a word, leaving the whole family to worry. The word “family” sticks with Su, and she realizes, “I’ve… come home.”

Later, Su asks her maid Chae-ryung about the fourth prince, and Chae-ryung freaks out just at the mention of him, urging Su to avoid him at all costs if she were to run into him—his cruelty is famous.

Chae-ryung describes his background as we see an exhausted, bloody So making his way down rocky terrain, to the men who wait down below. They’re his adoptive family members from the Kang clan, and the leader seems both awed and disappointed that So didn’t die—they forced him to battle wolves for sport, and he’d supposedly killed all the wolves in Shinju.

Chae-ryung adds that So is said to kill people, too—especially those who see the scar on his face. Alarmed, Su realizes that she really did just escape death. She’s also surprised to be told that So’s royal status is what enables him to travel freely, because people here can’t stand to look upon people with disfigured faces. Su grumbles to herself that the tendency to give the upper classes preferential treatment hasn’t changed in a thousand years.

So’s mother, Queen Sinmyeongsunseong, bathes alone and thinks back to a recent conversation she’d had with her eldest son, Yo. They’ve been biding their time for a while, and they feel the need to speed things up because of the recent rumors that the king may abdicate the throne to Crown Prince Mu. The queen says that the upcoming ceremony is their best chance at eliminating Mu, and Yo assures her not to worry.

On the day of the ceremony to chase out evil spirits, the palace bustles with preparations. Queen Sinmyeongsunseong is elaborately dressed and adorned, and comments that she will shine the brightest in the palace today.

She encounters another royal consort in the courtryard, Queen Sinjeong, mother to Wook and Princess Yeonhwa. (Queen Sinmyeongsunseong is the third consort, while Queen Sinjeong is the fourth.) With her and the princess is daughter-in-law Lady Hae.

The queens exchange pleasantries, and Queen Sinmyeongsunseong invites the princess to visit her for a chat sometime. They maintain smiles until Queen Sinmyeongsunseong moves on, at which point Princess Yeonhwa’s face darkens.

The princess dislikes the idea of her mother having to deal with Queen Sinmyeongsunseong all alone in the palace, and wishes her brother Wook would bring his mother into the private residence. At that, Lady Hae cautions her to watch her words in the palace.

Queen Sinjeong agrees, and advises her daughter “to forget it all.” The princess asks bitterly, “How can I forget that grudge?”

Queen Sinjeong wonders why Su wasn’t brought along with her, and Lady Hae replies that Su has been making many mistakes in the wake of her accident, and she thought it best to leave her behind.

The princes do one last run-through of their sword-dance, and Crown Prince Mu beams in approval. Tenth prince Eun asks Wook if Su will be here today (now that the idea is planted that she likes him), and that question gets him roundly teased by his brothers, who joke about him getting another black eye to match his first. It brings a smile to everyone’s face, even So’s—although the second he sees Wook noticing, the smile fades.

Meanwhile, shifty-looking Yo looks over at a line of black-clad men arriving for their part in the ritual, wearing demon masks.

But Crown Prince Mu is working his counterplay, and secretly exchanges costumes with So.

Meanwhile, Su and Chae-ryung head out into the city to enjoy the festivities there, admiring the dancing and lights.

At the palace, So takes the lead position as the ceremony begins, though everybody else believes him to be Mu. In this ritual, he plays the part of the leader in driving out the demons from the palace, with princes providing backup.

The performance is a mix of martial arts and dance, and Queen Sinjeong compliments “Mu” for his skilled showing. (This is not a surprise, since Mu has a military background, though notably, So does not—despite his reputation for savagery, his lack of official fighting training has been noted.)

Then it’s time for the demon-masked men to join the performance, and So takes them on in an impressive choreographed display. Masked Yo joins So as they drive out the demons, reciting an incantation together.

But suddenly, more masked men fly in from above, and immediately the king and Astronomer Choi know that this wasn’t part of the planned ritual. The demons draw their swords to attack So, and Astronomer Choi sounds the call to protect the king.

Soldiers rush the king’s platform to guard him, and by now the princes realize something’s amiss. So—still masked—takes on an army of demons, and Wook is the first to charge into the fray to help. The other princes follow suit, evening the numbers.

At one point Yo exchanges a glance with the demon he’s pretending to fight, then maneuvers their swords and points it at So—to the eye, it would look like an accidental stabbing. The sword slices So’s arm and he goes down, and then a demon swoops in for the kill.

But a masked prince jumps in at the last second and defends So—ah, the real Mu—and the demons sense defeat and scatter. Yo orders the soldiers to catch the assassins, and the king hurries to check on his son. The mask comes off, and he’s stunned to see So’s face instead of Mu’s.

Immediately, the king demands to know where Mu is, and ouch, there’s such a look of hurt on So’s face as he registers his father’s priorities, and how he doesn’t figure in them. Mu reveals himself, the king relaxes, and the queen realizes her plot was foiled.

So says he will catch the culprits and runs off alone. Mu grabs his sword to follow, but his father stops him.

So heads into the city streets, spotting the assassins traveling on rooftops, and chases. The pursuit leads him through the city streets, and at one point Su spots him while taking a break from sight-seeing.

Curiosity compels her to follow, even as the chase takes So into the woods. What. Why are you going into the woods?! Don’t be that idiot!

So catches up with the assassins and engages in a swordfight with one of them. They face off in a fierce clash, while Su wanders into a different area of the woods. There, she happens upon a meeting of the other assassins as they meet with their leader—Prince Yo—and bow before him with heads bowed. And then, at his command, Yo’s guards kill the failed assassins.

Su stares in horror and quietly retreats, but lets out a tiny gasp… and Yo hears it. When he whirls around, however, she’s gone.

Back to So, who demands to know whom the assassin is working for. He offers a deal to spare the assassin’s life in exchange for the name, and the assassin wavers, uncertain.

And just as he starts to lower his sword, Su comes running up, gasping about the scene she just witnessed. Gack!

So obviously, the assassin now grabs Su hostage, and holds his sword to her throat.

But So just tells him to go ahead and kill her, to the assassin’s shock. “Or should I do it?” So asks.

He raises his sword and points it at Su’s face, and as one blade digs into her neck, she begs to be saved. So smirks that one woman means nothing to him and presses the assassin for a name.

Once more the assassin wavers, loosening his grip, and So feels victory in his grasp… but Su sees the blade moving away from her neck and bites the assassin’s hand, shoving him away. I think this is the definition of digging your own grave.

The assassin moves to kill her anyway, and So starts to react, but a dagger flies in and embeds itself in the assassin’s head. It’s Wook, arriving in the nick of time.

Except, it’s not good timing for So, who’s just been robbed of answers. He grabs Su angrily, raging at her for ruining things. His sword presses close to her neck.

But Wook holds his sword to So’s neck and tells him to let her go. In one quick move, So whirls to clash swords with Wook, and replies that he won’t.

 
COMMENTS

This episode was more satisfying than the first, although I found the premiere episode entertaining and adequate for its purposes. (Although maybe “adequate” is part of the problem, when we were promised glorious. I suspect that the undercurrent of disappointment I’m hearing has a lot to do with elevated expectations, that killer of dramaland fun. Perhaps it’s not the only reason, but surely it’s a big one.) We got to see more of the princes we cared about (So), and it was easier to relegate the lesser princes to background territory, offering moments of levity while the primary princes did the dramatic lifting.

I also liked the way the show had Su slowly seeing this world as more of a permanent place to live, even as she’s still searching for a way out. I still find her reaction to being dropped in Goryeo to not quite ring true, but aside from that point, I like the moment she realizes that her actions have consequences for the people here, who have been very nice in looking after her, and that for now, this is the closest thing to family she has. (I don’t think my feeling of disconnect has to do with time constraints—i.e., needing to set up story quickly—because I recall that the heroine in Splish Splash Love got that across in even less time. It’s all about taking some care to establish tone and emotional connection, and I feel like we’re skipping some of that here.)

And don’t get me started on the frustrating foolishness of her wandering into a forest at night alone while men were clearly fighting to the death. At that point I had to throw up my hands and think that if she died, it would be her own damn fault. I appreciate that she has spunk, and doesn’t let social rank cow her into deference, mostly because that means nothing to her. I like that version of Su, who is driven more by what’s right than what’s expected of her. But the end of this episode was an annoyance, and the show had better smarten her up from here on out, y’hear me?!

By contrast, I think the show’s doing a marvelous job with So, or maybe that’s Lee Jun-ki’s work. Probably a combination of the two. It’s partly to do with the way the story is setting up his background and affection-starved life, but also owes much to his diverse range of expressions and microexpressions. The scene with the queen and her two other sons is a prime example of this, because there was so much emotion going on there and I could track every single thread—So longing to see his mother, feeling hope at her reaction and disappointment at her lack of one, being hurt and her continued rejections, and forcing nonchalance to act like none of this affects him.

It also provides a meaty basis for the adult he’s grown into, who can commit savage acts without flinching. I can’t say I love the way he treats our heroine, but I do like that the drama is humanizing him and providing the explanation without necessarily romanticizing his brutishness. At least, I really hope they don’t take it in that direction; so far, I feel hopeful about the portrayal. And his reaction when she caught him in his most vulnerable state was a lovely moment—not lovely that he tried to strangle her, of course, but that we saw him drawing back first, and then lashing out to cover up. It’s pretty telling of his M.O. all around.

I’m not sure I’m feeling all of the princes, and while we have plenty of time for each one to get his own moment in the spotlight, I think it’s a four-man show with four bridesmaids. Which, really, is fine by me, so long as the conflict remains interesting. Yo’s scheming is familiar strife, but I hope we have more than that as a source of conflict; I find Wook the more interesting potential source of clashing. He’s the most civil and friendly, but he’s also the one I’d peg as the smartest and likely to play his cards close to the vest. I wouldn’t take my eye of him… not that I’d want to.

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Lee jun ki looks so good even with that scar on his face. I like this show except for the fact as to why do they keeep his pretty face hidden ? He is so handsome????

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I have so much expectations but I'm trying not to keep my hopes up as well. So far the first three episodes have not disappointed me and I love all three of the leads! I just can't wait for their story to unfold and for the angst to kill me inside.

Also I have a lot of expectations from Ji Soo's 14th prince. He's the fan favourite in the original version, so Ji Soo has some big shoes to fill and I hope the writers really buck up on his character.

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even if i feel dizzy due to lack of sleep, i cant stop watching.currently watching episode 3 subbed.
i pity the 4th prince, Wang So.I feel his pain. What a heartless mother.really..
If only i can tap his shoulder and say, its ok.dont be so sad.?
On the other hand, those scenes with IU & Kang Haneul are really entertaining.i cant help to smile & laugh on the scenes.
Very captivating & entertaining till the end of the episode.

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I actually watched the Chinese version first when I found out that there will be a Korean remake. So far I like their treatment of the story thus far. And I guess the differences are mainly based on the difference of the fact that the Chinese one was in the Qing dynasty and the Korean one is during the Goryeo period.

i love that LJK's role as the 4th prince isn't as similar as the Chinese version. He's was a more ruthless kind but then again his character was probably mainly driven by it's historical background. I think it's a really start.

i like the addition of the 3rd prince Yo. in the chinese version the conflict was clearly between the 4th and 8th prince even if they were quite civil with each other. i like that the Korean version steers up the pot a bit because of the evit queen. The chinese version just had an unaffection mom for the 4th prince who favors her youngest son.

All in all I look forward to this series and I'm hopeful that it will have a better story telling than its Chinese counterpart.

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Ahh is it too early to have a favorite episode? So far we've had three and this one is mine so far!!

I never doubted he would, but LJK is killing it as Wang So! As scary and crazy as he's perceived to be, I never feel like he's that way because he likes it, but rather because he HAS to be. We don't know his age when he was sent to Shinju, but imagine baby Wang So being dispatched there as a kid, thrown to the wolves figuratively and then quite literally as a grown up?? I suspect he's been shown some semblance of kindness in his life (I'm excited to see more of his scenes with Crown Prince Wang Mu because it looks like he's got an ally or at least a mutually beneficial relationship there), but it's obviously been too little and too rare, so of course he's yearning to come home. Although I hope he stops craving his crazy mother's affections and approval soon, because that lady is just awful. And as others have pointed out, the King is hardly any better.

Still loving Hae Su . Her fight with no.10 made me giggle as much as all her near death experiences made me groan. Girl, I know you have a death wish, but you're really playing with the second chance you've been given here! Be more careful!! Although if I had a His Royal Hotness Prince Wang So in my near vicinity too, I probably wouldn't be doing a great job staying away either. I liked how Su realized that her action have implications for the people around her, although I do love that she still gets carried away-that to me is believable. No matter how hard she's trying to meld into the past, she's only been there a few days and she's not learned how to navigate the waters yet. Looking forward to seeing her do so, yet keep that spark and spunk.

The cinematography continues to impress-that sword fight, dance choreography was sooo pretty and I love all the action scenes! I'm neutral about the music, it although there are some lovely instrumentals there, it's not a make or break for me and doesn't bug me as much as it seems to bug others so I count myself lucky! I'm looking forward to Monday, FIGHTING MLSHR!!!!

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First of all, i haven't watched the episodes, but I have seen the original chinese version (although not the whole thing, coz my mother insisted on watching the ending and after that she started watching backwards. That just ruins the experience).

Anyways, I'm sad that Ha Jin's character is not knowledgeable in history, unlike the original. Because she was able to wary of certain princes and it made her friendship with the princes more sad in a way, since she knew their (tragic) endings.

I can't really complain about the stark differences between the two versions of the 4th Prince, because they are two different people based on actual historical figures.

I'll watch with an open mind, and hopefully will be able to finish it, because I have been invested to the drama since the trailer was unveiled.

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That ending scene where our two male leads are pointing swords and shooting fiery glances to each other and then that 'ta tara tara' blares in the background. Such a mood and tension killer LOL.

Anyway, I'm just chiming in that those who are unhappy with the first two eps may want to check out the third ep. It's a lot better, to the point that I wonder whether it belongs to the same show as ep 1. IU's acting is on point in many scenes, and LJK's martial art show-off is such a feast. The plot is also more well-packed, though filler scenes with the other princes are still here and there, but I have decided to ff those so the flow is more coherent. The music score is better too, more instrumental music that actually fits the scene and less distracting and blaring songs, though I have yet to warm up to the modern songs.

It's a shame really because the writing, editing and directing should have been set right from the beginning to create a stronger impression.

I'm also curious as to how HS and Wook will come to love each other. With his current wife clearly showing her affection to him (and him to her no less), I hope the writer would tackle this in a tactful manner.

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Re: Wook and HS, literally the first scene of the wife/Su's cousin involves her coughing persistently.

The drama's practically beating us over the head with the foreshadowing of her death by tuberculosis - which, I assume, leaves the path clear for #8 and HS if he doesn't have a wife anymore. I'm just wondering if she'll actually have a relationship with him or it'll be a one-sided/missed connections/never happened kind of thing like most kdrama second leads.

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Ugh Which one should I use for my wallpaper? It's such a hard decision. Maybe the one that changes every 10 sec? Lee Junki is life. I was just in awe looking at him. Like how can someone look so darn good?

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hahah I feel your pain. LJK has too much beauty, and he seems like such a sweet and goofy guy in real life...wishing him a lot of luck and even more success in life!!

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I like Hae Su. What I don't like is Hae Su running into a dark forest after a man she barely knows for God knows what. I loved the scene when she beat the Prince up. He deserved it. He was being a dick.

And Lee Joon Ki!!! I seriously love to watch anything he is in because he is so freaking good! He nails it every single time! The scene with So and his Mom, just proves how great he is! I can gush about Lee Joon Ki all day.

And I'm not feeling the love line between Su and Wook. The thing is he is married to her cousin and he is freaking married. To her cousin. That is just disrespectful.

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1.I LOVE THIS SHOW. It's official. The ritual dance with the masks and the attempted assassination was so gripping I quite forgot to breathe...

2. The part where she wanders into the forest was mindboggling. Probably had something to do with her perpetually widening her eyes in freeze mode, that probably did something to head.

3. LJK rocks. I LOVE THIS GUY!!!!!The part in the bath...when he took off his clothes, for once I wasn't screaming in joy, but weeping for him...all those scars, they broke my heart, what must he have endured all those years growing up in exile, then his first reaction, "Did you see it?" ....so, so sad.

4. Not much KHN, but still, the moments he appears and looks across the room at her,and smiles, oh so slightly, that little lift at the corners, ahhhhh, I swooon....

5. And finally, a shout-out to Horse No. 2, 4th Prince's new mode of transport. I swear I'm beginning to understand horse language after just 2 episodes, and for those of you, who are curious what Horse said, here are the subs:

Scene 1, Start of Ep 2.

Horse: Whinnyyyyyyy-yyyy-yyyy!!!!!!!!!

Subs: Dude, there be a strange girl look out dude you gonna kill her I don't wanna do this no more dude you gotta stop stressing me I be a horse but I have rights too arghhhhhhh!

Scene 2: 4th Prince rears his horse at Hae Su

Horse: Whinnnyyy-yyyy-yyyyyyyy-yyyyyyyyyy?????!!!!!!

Subs: Dude, no, no, don't do that, my back hurts, stop that now, dude, dude, I'm warning ya, ah ah, I'm st-retching, str-etching, I can't stop myself, ah ah, my back, my back, ouch, ouch, arghhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!

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I totally agree on #4 (your point #4, not Prince #4, but yeah, him too). Kang Haneul can do a lot with a mere look at IU even if he's across a courtyard from her, I think the glue-making scene last ep demonstrated that perfectly.

And somehow IU's charming enough that I actually get it and don't get annoyed about why he's wasting that gaze on a block of wood (the way I would be if they didn't have chemistry)

Also dying @the Horse-to-English subs.

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That glue-making scene , omg, forgot about that, yeah, so agree with you, pogo, loveddddd the way she chuckled out loud over the bubbling pot at him, like a naughty child caught stealing candy, brazening it out with a bright you-caught-me-at-it grin...her chuckling was so infectious I was bowled over by her charm that brief suspended moment, and I could feel KHN, the actor and 8th Prince, was, too. I love IU, never watched her act before, love this girl to pieces, so happy she can act, was worried that she wouldn't be able to act and spoil the show, but she's just so natural and lovable, and she draws me in.

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Dang! So now I know what they did with #4 So's ex-horse... Hae-su is working at the glue factory!

Yay for Equine-to-English translations!

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I had huge expectations of this show...thanks to the original BBJX and the novel.

But....

This version is quite different from the novel and Chinese series. The casting of 4th and 8th is pretty good. How bad can LJK be?? Love him to bits.

IU isn't too bad but comparing her Cecelia Liu wouldn't do justice to either lady.

But the rest of the princes...they look like show fillers! Music is distracting, costumes could be better and the editing is also choppy especially for a pre produced drama. Hubby watched the last 15 min of ep 2 with me and commented - the assassins and Prince Wang So are supposed to be adept with qing gong (basically the skill of floating from one roof to the other) - how did the girl managed to keep up with them and witness the entire killing spree?

I really want to fall in love with BBJX Ryeo but it is not getting me at hello. Hope that the show gets better over the next few weeks.

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I thought I'll be bothered with Wook having feelings for Su with the whole married to her cousin situation. Its history and it was allowed then. I mean, those consorts in the king's palace are not there as interior decoration. Its not like now where we will attack Wook with a bread knife for even daring to look at Su while he's married to her cousin.

I am ready for any type of love triangle or polygon.

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Uhh...... is Lee Jun Ki gonna spend the rest of the drama with his face half-covered? I mean, I'm watching this TO SEE HIS BEAUTIFUL FACE!!! Grrrr...

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When I first started watching historical dramas set in places like Silla and Goryeo and Geogeoryeo I was so confused, because the dramas were more colorful and the sets had more gold then Joseon times even though Joseon is more modern.

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Also I didn't know Goryeo was so looks centered. Because of a scary he normally wouldn't be allowed into the palace? I like historical dramas because they teach a lot about the history and culture of Korea.

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*scar

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Thanks for the recap, GF!!

I agree that the plot is moving rather slowly and welcome the more action-packed ep. I'm already finding that I jab to pause, rewind, rewatch just cuz I'm watching the Youku Chinese-subbed version and it's taking extra concentration to read all the subs. LOL I might rewatch with English subs later when time permits; just opted for Chinese since I find it usually more accurate for sageuks simply cuz of the historical word usage.

The younger princes continue to be a hoot to watch. LOL at the HS-Eun cat fight. You don't mess with modern girls, 10th Prince!

The ep continues to make me feel empathetic towards So. Gosh, dude just can't get a break!! From the lack of motherly love (Jung giving their mom the hairpin just when So was about to gutted me) to lack of fatherly love (him searching for the crown prince to ensure his safety instead of asking So's well-being)... I just wanna wrap So in a big hug.

The highlight of this ep for me was So meeting HS in the bathing pool. That look of fear and shame was so well acted by LJG!!! Such a contrast with his usual cold, cruel facade and to catch him at such a rare moment of vulnerability just struck my heart. I find myself naturally rooting for So. I want him to be loved, I want him to be accepted, I want him to let down his guard, and I want to see him smiling.

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Thanks for the comments and recaps. I understand better.

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Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo

Que pena, no entendi el final

Alas, I did not understand the end

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This is not as bad as I thought it would be, it is interesting to see scarlet heart in a Korean setting. But as how people did not like Chinese remake of Korean dramas, I like the original version of Scarlet Heart more. It will forever have a special place in my heart.

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Su is making it hard for me to root for her. One can have spunk, and still act logically. Her actions sometimes are just plain stupid. Her survival instincts are lacking. Ugh.

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