Age of Feeling: Episode 12
by HeadsNo2
Our hero turns to revenge in his darkest hour to fill the empty hole in his heart that once/an hour ago was consumed by hatred for his father. Now he has the opportunity to fill it with hatred for his father’s murderer, so, healthy choices are being made all around. As far as the gang politics go, Ka-zzzzzzzz…
Also, ratings dropped (if only slightly) back down into the single digits, going from last episode’s 10.3% to 9.8%.
SONG OF THE DAY
Age of Feeling OST – J2M – “Good Day To Die” [ Download ]
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EPISODE 12 RECAP
Doctor Jung and Ok-ryun get an unexpected delivery to the clinic in the form of Daddy Shin’s body, brought there by Jae-hwa’s men.
But it seems like they may not be the only ones behind the body switch, since Jung-tae heeds So-so’s words about where his father’s funeral should rightfully take place and sheds his funeral clothes. So-so beams: “I guess you’re not fake after all. Let’s go.”
Jung-tae claims he has some business to take care of first, which leads us back to the body reveal with Leader Seol and Kaya. Leader Seol is the only one to open the casket and spot the random dead person inside, and closes it before a sudden letter arrives from Jae-hwa informing him of what he’s already confirmed: that they don’t have Daddy Shin’s corpse.
Leader Seol sends the Chilinbang Elders home, even though they don’t seem the least bit concerned that they didn’t see the actual body. (So all that hubbub for nothing?)
Kaya is the only one who insists on seeing the body, but she has to fight Baek-san to get to it. She opens it to find that Daddy Shin isn’t inside, smirks, and declares that they’re even—I’m guessing in regard to the whole body-stealing thing from earlier, since neither party ended up with it in the end.
Jae-hwa’s minions start freaking out about what Hwangbang will do to them for stealing the body, while Doctor Jung calmly goes about autopsying the corpse and photographing it.
She finds a stab would as the direct cause of death (due to Kaya), but only after cutting into the body does she find that there was another cause of death. Daddy Shin would’ve died from his internal injuries whether or not he was stabbed. Hah. Remember how Shinichi was supposed to die eventually from his internal wounds? (…Remember Shinichi?)
Leader Seol discusses the swapped body schematics with Jae-hwa, only for Jae-hwa to reveal that he was a step ahead of them the whole time—he’d switched the bodies with the help of Old Man Fly before Baek-san came to take it. Smart.
With the body as his leverage, Jae-hwa gives his conditions: Club Shanghai stays under his management and that Chilinbang is made aware that he controls Bangsamtong.
Leader Seol isn’t too thrilled at this prospect, even though Jae-hwa threatens him with revealing to the world that Hwangbang tried to hold a funeral without a body. It would jeopardize Leader Seol’s place in Chilinbang (he’s one of the elders?). But the elder just smirks as he threatens, “Do you think your club would be safe then?”
Cut to: Leader Seol’s men breaking into Club Shanghai to look for the body. Jae-hwa knew he’d pull this move and all but sighs, “Do you think I would have taken him there?” Leader Seol takes out his Unlit Cigar of Arrogance as he names the next place it’d be—Doctor Jung’s clinic, which also happens to be a clinic of the Shanghai International Red Cross Committee.
So that means that Leader Seol can’t dare to touch it or risk stirring up trouble on an international scale, though Leader Seol looks like he needs a furless cat to stroke as he wonders, “Why wouldn’t I be able to do that?” His answer is still clear: he won’t give Jae-hwa Club Shanghai.
Jae-hwa pulls up his shirt to show Leader Seol the bruise he got from fighting Baek-san as yet another reason for the elder to comply. He threatens to show the Chilinbang Elders Daddy Shin’s body and give them the autopsy report, because the unique bruises covering his body look remarkably like what Jae-hwa received from Baek-san’s hands…
His implication—that Baek-san might’ve been Daddy Shin’s murderer—has Leader Seol looking mighty nervous. When Jung-tae enters, still oblivious to the goings-on, Jae-hwa is all, “Our generous leader approved the funeral in Bangsamtong! Let’s go!”
Leader Seol can only bite his tongue and smile, now mercy to Jae-hwa’s will. He declares that he’ll come to the funeral and discuss the topic of management with Chilinbang, ideally in Jae-hwa’s favor. Based on how afraid Leader Seol is, I wouldn’t be surprised if he really WAS behind it all.
Jae-hwa’s men trumpet their victory over Hwangbang in Bangsamtong, and declare to the people that Daddy Shin will be returned to them. Even though Jae-hwa takes to a soap box to tell everyone that all the funeral food and drink will be on him, the people don’t look at all enthused.
So-so finds Jung-tae standing amidst the meager crowd to reassure him that he’s done his duty as a son by bringing his father here.
Kaya is updated on the state of affairs, and seems pleased that Jae-hwa ended up with the body after all. It means that they don’t have to worry about Hwangbang seeking retribution for Yamamoto stealing the body, since Leader Seol couldn’t afford to let the rumor slip out that he lost the body in the first place. (Body body body.)
She sends all this in a message to her grandfather and Shinichi(!), so that Denkai knows Hwangbang lost to Jae-hwa. This means that Hwangbang’s reputation will go down while Jae-hwa’s will go up, which Denkai thinks is only a good thing in the end.
He’s not even upset that Kaya lost Club Shanghai, because he thinks she gained something greater: intel. She now understands the conflict between Hwangbang and Jae-hwa, and can use it to her advantage. “That will lead to Jung Jae-hwa’s death, just wait and see. Kaya has grown up so much,” he adds with a proud smile.
Jae-hwa celebrates his victory with minions and women, drunkenly telling them his rags-to-riches story of being sold by his parents at the tender age of ten, and how it took him twenty-five years to get to where he is now—the leader of Bangsamtong.
Doctor Jung pays a visit to the club to give Jae-hwa the autopsy report, causing him to swiftly push away the girls he’d been holding out of guilt. He seems delighted when she tells him that Daddy Shin’s internal injuries were an indirect cause of death, and would have been the direct cause had he not been stabbed.
He remembers Baek-san’s blow to his solar plexus, and wonders aloud whether Hwangbang was the true culprit after all. But when Doctor Jung gets up to leave, he pitifully grabs her wrist as he asks, “You didn’t forget the promise you made, right? That you’d date me if I became the owner of Bangsamtong? Did you forget?”
She gives him a rueful smile: “Try becoming the real leader of Bangsamtong. Then I’ll date you.” Jae-hwa’s completely flummoxed as he holds up the autopsy reports, all, “But I am the owner! This is proof!” Aw. I’m warming up to him.
Jung-tae presides over the smaller and much more intimate funeral for his father in Bangsamtong, which at least he gets to hold in the traditional Korean fashion. The line of people paying their respects is endless, even including Russian refugees that Daddy Shin took in after the communist revolution.
All of a sudden, Jung-tae is swarmed by children (his favorite things!) trying to touch him in some way. So-so explains that there’s a belief among the children in Bangsamtong that they’d become strong like Daddy Shin if they touched his body, and that their sicknesses would be cured. To parents with sick children whom they couldn’t afford to have treated, it was their only way of comforting them.
So-so comforts Jung-tae by telling him that he can become just as strong as his father, the owner of Shanghai. Now that he’s seen the kind of person his father was to the people of Bangsamtong, he can gather the courage to be like him.
Old Man Fly comes to pay his respects (more or less) after reaming two guys for bringing meager food offerings, before he sets to eating the altar food anyway. So-so cringes at both the fact that he’s there, and that he and Jung-tae seem to know each other—likely because the crusty Old Man Fly is her father.
At the old man’s urging and guilt-tripping, Jung-tae finally goes inside to send his father off to the next world in peace. “I don’t hate you anymore, Father,” Jung-tae admits, as he tells his father to go in peace and forget all the sorrow and pain of this life. He wants him to leave only with the good memories.
“Father… do you have any good memories to take with you?” Jung-tae asks, as tears start to well up in his eyes. His voice grows hoarse as he adds, “If you don’t, then take this one memory with you: Your son and your daughter have never once forgotten about you. We missed you so much. And we love you.”
Tears start falling, both from Jung-tae and everyone in the room mourning with him—and okay, also from me. It’s sad to see Jung-tae struggling so, so hard to hold back his tears enough to say these words to his father, because his grief is just that raw.
As the people of Bangsamtong bow formally to his father, Jung-tae loses all control over his emotions and devolves into terrible, wretched sobs. (*grabs tissue*)
Jung-tae and Ok-ryun spread his father’s ashes into the sea, with Ok-ryun taking some time to say goodbye to Daddy Shin personally. She starts holding back tears as she tells the spirit of Daddy Shin to tell her mother, when he meets her in the next world, that her daughter is living well.
“I couldn’t give her a funeral and just sent her away… please tell her that I’m so sorry,” Ok-ryun cries. “Please tell her… that her daughter loves her.” Awww.
Baek-san and Leader Seol get into a tiny tiff about him “temporarily” leaving Club Shanghai’s management in Jae-hwa’s hands, since he’d once said that Daddy Shin’s management would also just be “temporary.” Leader Seol defends his choice as being due to Jae-hwa knowing that Baek-san killed Daddy Shin (now they’re admitting it as fact), and they can’t afford to let that rumor leak out.
Leader Seol gives Baek-san permission to kill anyone who might’ve seen him on the day he fought Daddy Shin, and assures his most trusted warrior that Jae-hwa’s time on this earth is coming to an end. Baek-san: “Does that mean you will groom Jung-tae?”
Leader Seol says yes, and that with a little time, Jung-tae can become something great. Baek-san firmly disagrees, claiming that he watched Jung-tae fight and that he’s not even worth the effort. He asks Leader Seol’s permission to test Jung-tae, which the leader grants on the basis that if Jung-tae can’t beat Baek-san, then he certainly can’t beat Ilgookhwe.
But then when Baek-san asks if it would be okay if he killed Jung-tae in battle, Leader Seol all but shrugs. “If it’s the only way, then there’s nothing we can do otherwise. It’s fine if he dies.” Um, okay. I don’t understand you people.
Ok-ryun asks Jung-tae what he plans to do now that his father’s funeral is (thankfully) over with, and whether he’ll go back to Shineuijoo. To her surprise, Jung-tae says he’s staying: “I will find the person who killed my father.”
She grows concerned when Jung-tae’s talk turns to revenge, as he plans to find the man who deprived him of his father and make him feel his pain. In order to do that, he asks Ok-ryun if he can work at her clinic/restaurant/hot water fountain, because he needs money as well as a place to live. She wishes that he’d drop the revenge talk, but isn’t about to say no.
Suddenly they hear the sound of police whistles and horses, causing Ok-ryun to look wildly around her as though she forgot something. “What day is it?” she asks, before Chinese police come riding in on horseback to beat every single person they see. Aw, did someone forget it’s Police Brutality Day?
Jung-tae leads her to a hiding spot, where they remain until the police drag off their latest victims. Ok-ryun takes a decent stab at explaining the politics of the situation, though I’m still admittedly very lost—because Bangsamtong is partially controlled by both the French and Chilinbang, they do a routine monthly check on the citizens’ papers.
Apparently, the people of Bangsamtong have to lie about their identities depending on whether the French are checking their papers or the Chinese, and bad things happen if they’re caught lying.
There’s a visible change in Ok-ryun once they’re alone, like she finally can’t hold it in anymore. She finally asks why he never sent any word after he left Shineuijoo. Did her mother, Mal-sook, and Mal-sook’s mother mean nothing to him?
At least Soo-ok gets a mention: Ok-ryun claims he died and that she buried him with her bare hands. Everyone around her died, and so Ok-ryun returned to Shineuijoo to try and find Jung-tae. Even though she had no one and no place to go, she stayed there for six months to wait for him, just in case he’d come back.
“I’m sorry,” Jung-tae sighs. And then again, “I’m sorry.” Ok-ryun’s eyes grow distant and unfocused as she says that for as much as she longed for him, her contempt for him has also grown. “You shouldn’t expect too much from me,” she adds bitterly.
She returns to the restaurant/clinic, and her unni Doctor Jung seems to know what happened without Ok-ryun saying a word. She tries to comfort the younger girl by telling her she should’ve yelled at Jung-tae that she’s hurting, and that she should’ve demanded to know why he came only now.
Ok-ryun just shakes her head as tears fall. “I couldn’t. The blood flowing out of his heart… it still feels like it’s on my hands. I feel so guilty about it. How could I?” Jung-tae listens from outside and sighs.
After Jae-hwa proves just how differently he’s running things in Bangsamtong (“I was acknowledged by Chilinbang!”), he seems surprised to spot Jung-tae working as a hot water delivery boy. He didn’t even know he was still in the area until one of his minions tells him that Jung-tae is staying for the long haul, and now works alongside Ok-ryun.
So-so works at the shop too, and gives Jung-tae instructions for his next delivery. But when he doesn’t set out right away, she gets after him for waiting about—Ok-ryun isn’t at the shop anyway.
Jung-tae gets nervous and defensive (“Who was waiting?”), causing So-so to have a lightbulb moment: “He likes Ok-ryun? It’s not me? Why? What am I lacking?” Haha, and aww.
Jae-hwa meets with Kaya to return the pieces of silver they’d given him to rent Club Shanghai, since he is officially kicking her out. She tries to sweeten the deal by offering a chest of gold pieces, but Jae-hwa still refuses.
Before he leaves the table, Kaya asks him about Daddy Shin’s body—he saw it, so that means he knew how he died. She wants to know. Jae-hwa doesn’t tell her the full truth, only that the autopsy stated that Daddy Shin died from an injury caused by two swords. Nothing about the internal bleeding.
Jung-tae is suddenly attacked by a shady man who’d been following him, but is at least aware enough to defend himself against the attacker’s samurai sword with his water jug. The man doesn’t say who he is, nor does he answer Jung-tae when he asks if he’s his father’s killer.
They fight in the middle of the street, and Jung-tae’s unarmed state actively works against him—his attacker lands a cut on his arm, his leg, and then flat-out stabs him in the side. Jung-tae tries to remember his fight with Shinichi, but it’s not of much help when his attacker’s style is different. He doesn’t know why.
Nonetheless, his attacker is relentless in trying to end him. He outmaneuvers Jung-tae enough to stab him in the belly again, even twisting the blade for good measure. Eek. Who is this guy?
Meanwhile, Kaya asks Jae-hwa if the sword wounds weren’t all that killed Daddy Shin—were there no internal injuries? Jae-hwa knows that there’s only one way she would know that, and asks, “You know who killed Shin Young-chul, don’t you?”
Kaya refuses to answer Jae-hwa’s question, and turns on him with her two jitte swords when he tries to stop her. He throws his arm up as a shield, protected by the chain mail (hah) he’s wearing beneath his suit.
But once he sees her two swords, he swiftly puts the pieces together: Kaya killed Daddy Shin.
And all this happens as Jung-tae is brought to his knees by his wounds, no less ready to keep fighting.
COMMENTS
I had a feeling Hwangbang was really an eeevil organization when the camera kept lingering evilly on Leader Seol last episode, so while it’s not that much of a surprise that they’re the ones behind Daddy Shin’s death, it did feel like something of a disappointment. After nine episodes where all the warring organizations (save for Ilgookhwe) were made of humans with actual beating hearts, it’s a major regression to end up in a dreary place filled with dreary characters who only know how to be greedy, secretive, or inordinately pleased with themselves.
Jae-hwa is the most interesting out of the lot, since he at least mimics being a person much better than his fellow side characters in Hwangbang, both of whom are such bores. Even if Leader Seol is a villain, we should be given at least one reason to care about him, right? I mean, it’s in every storyteller’s best interests to humanize their characters, so that even if they’re evil they have some redeeming quality that makes them worth watching, no matter how despicable their acts… right? (New Writer: “Wrong.”)
So with the major players coming down to Hwangbang and Ilgookhwe, what makes either one of them better than the other? Nothing. While the time skip did everyone a disservice, Kaya’s treatment is perhaps the most criminal—literally and figuratively. She says stuff and does things that have immediate scene-to-scene motivations (like trying to out Leader Seol, or trying to kill Jae-hwa), but which have no clear overall purpose other than to serve Ilgookhwe’s wishes. Which is fine and all, if your goal is to dehumanize a villain, but not so much when she’s supposed to be someone we care about. All we see is the smirking facade Kaya puts on for others, but not who she really is underneath it all. (Unless we are, and this is all there is to see.) It doesn’t help that she’s surrounded by extras almost constantly, and that she doesn’t even have a familiar face like Shinichi to act as a sounding board. Sigh.
I don’t know whether Jung-tae has given up his search for his sister, but at least he has something to do now, even if it’s another vague and possibly-endless motivator like revenge. I can buy it at least, and am still invested enough in his character to see what becomes of it. Mostly, I was just holding my breath when Ok-ryun confessed to him about how the past five years have been for her, eagerly waiting for him to chime in to explain why he never sent word or looked for her. And then he didn’t.
All I want to know is why he apparently chose to be incommunicado for five years, because when he says “I never forgot you, Ok-ryun,” it seems like he just forgot to finish his sentence. At least the episode gave us one consolation prize:
RELATED POSTS
- Age of Feeling: Episode 11
- Age of Feeling: Episode 10
- Age of Feeling: Episode 9
- Age of Feeling: Episode 8
- Kim Jae-wook quits Age of Feeling on heels of writer change
- Age of Feeling makes sudden writer switch
- Age of Feeling: Episode 7
- Age of Feeling: Episode 6
- Age of Feeling: Episode 5
- Age of Feeling: Episode 4
- Age of Feeling: Episode 3
- Age of Feeling: Episode 2
- Age of Feeling: Episode 1
Tags: Age of Feeling, featured, Im Soo-hyang, Jin Se-yeon, Kim Hyun-joong, Kim Jae-wook
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1 Orion
February 22, 2014 at 4:24 AM
I know strong female characters (as in written with problems, detail and qualities usually only found in male heroes) are rare in Korean drama, but I was hoping Gaya would be left alone to be good, rather than her getting pushed aside in favor of the typical "pure" (and usually prize for the male hero) one dramas love to make the main character.
It seems this new writer might be going just there with things. I am not liking the focus on Ok Ryeon and the fact that Gaya suddenly turned into a robot.
I think getting rid of characters is fine, they had too many, but not writing their exit in in some sound way is just bad writing. It is also bad writing to suddenly change the driving force of characters. What happened to Jung Tae finding his sister? What happened to finding who killed Gaya's parents? This is either one big detour the characters are taking before we get back to the core of things, or the core changed and I do believe they said this would not happen with the new writer and should not happen in a story.
I think it's still very enjoyable, the fights are nice, the visuals are nice and I am liking some of the new characters a lot, but if the main characters and their development and motivations change and if everything starts getting drama-like and loses its so far quite unique and nice touch, I'll be disappointed, but not surprised.
This is not the first time I will have seen wonderful ideas highjacked and shoved back into the drama formula by the productions and stations. But I was hoping... Hope dies before Na Young, as I have been saying after 'Prime Minister and I'. KBS needs a new management. It's been messing with its series too much lately.
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pogo - sailing HMS Queen of Tears and HMS Sailboat Lovely Runner🍉
February 22, 2014 at 4:49 AM
yeah, this drama has no idea what to do with even the notion of a strong female lead who has her own motivations - Ok-ryun is sweet, but somewhat, dare I say it, one-dimensional, and they just made Gaya a robot.
And drifting back to the casting news from all those months ago, Lee Jun-ki really dodged a bullet by not taking on this one - Two Weeks had a better script, a better role for him, and absolutely fantastic female leads who were fully realised and did not take cr** from anyone.
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pogo - sailing HMS Queen of Tears and HMS Sailboat Lovely Runner🍉
February 22, 2014 at 4:56 AM
and I agree on KBS too. God only knows how they went from the glory days of Gaksital/Nice Guy just what, a year and a bit ago? to such consistent flops in their weekday dramas now. At least their weekend dramas do well, though.
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Silverteem
February 22, 2014 at 6:23 AM
Firstly, gaya is still the main female lead of the show, what is bothering me more though is the notion that the main female should always end up with the male lead. There are other k dramas that subverted that trope and was able to make a strong, independent woman in their female lead that doesn't need their knight to be successful - such was the case of jumong or two weeks. Precisely, that is what I want gaya to become - the hero of her own story. She doesn't need to get entangled with JT, in fact it would have been great if she wasn't part if this contrived love triangle.
The problem within this drama is not the lack of focus, because god forbid OR's story and progression has already been derailed and she was reduced to a water heater girl hiding for the past 5 years. It is for the fact that gaya simply lacks depth, may it be the directing, writing, or the actress' lack of nuance or combination of all three.
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pogo - sailing HMS Queen of Tears and HMS Sailboat Lovely Runner🍉
February 22, 2014 at 9:12 AM
That's just the problem with Gaya - she's on this grand mission, and we don't even have any real reason to care. I love it when female characters don't conform to the sweet love interest mode, but they've robbed her of all the potential that young Gaya had. There is no reason why this show should be all about the hero, if they're going to have a female lead worth the name then at least spend a little time on her motivations and why she has them!
Two Weeks did a fantastic job of telling a story without making a romantic storyline the focus of it, it's too bad that show went up against such strong competition in its timeslot (but still, ratings in the steady double digits are not to be sneezed at, this days).
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Orion
February 22, 2014 at 9:37 AM
They were going there for a short time. We saw Gaya sneak out to visit her past, we saw that she was not so honest with her hate towards Jung Tae, we saw her more human moments sometimes. But those were few and have now disappeared entirely, when they should have been increased.
They probably just want to focus on her being a villain and stopped trying to portray her as a layered human being and grey character. We will only know after the two next episodes, if the characterization really became shallow and/or changed direction.
As for Im Soo Hyang, she seems to go for non-bubbly characters and that is a smart choice in an industry struggling to pigeonhole every cute looking young girl into certain roles, but as with 'IRIS2', they are placing more emphasis on making her act tough than giving her character actual characterization and development and the actress something to work with.
Which is ok if a caricature villain is what they want, but not ok when she has been introduced as a human being and female lead, like Gaya started her journey. This is why it is bad writing. You can't radically change the very essence and type of your main characters. If you made her nuanced and human and placed importance on her thoughts and feelings and struggles when you introduced her, you keep at it!
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Yuki
February 22, 2014 at 4:00 PM
This is exactly how I feel about the story. To me, the most promising thing in first episodes was the relationship between JT and Gaya: two kids that grew up on the street, living a hard life but yet finding love, they were sweet....and I thought the show would keep this feeling between the two of them, that this would be the love story and an important part of the show. Sadly, it's all gone.
pogo - sailing HMS Queen of Tears and HMS Sailboat Lovely Runner🍉
February 23, 2014 at 1:54 AM
If you made her nuanced and human and placed importance on her thoughts and feelings and struggles when you introduced her, you keep at it!
Exactly! I have no problems with her being a villain, if a female Shunji is what they are going for then depth is still possible.....but as things stand, she's just what Heads says - a cipher. And Ok-ryeon is pretty much serving as the female viewer self-insert, i.e. a Mary Sue.
KBS has absolutely no excuse for just what a mess this is. It's been in the works for what, a year before airing? All those months of prep and an expensive overseas shoot.....I'm really glad no actors I love are part of this (now that Kim Jae-wook is out)
whatsthescenario
February 22, 2014 at 5:23 PM
The last 2 episodes were truly boring and it felt like the frantic pace for survival slowed down to a lackadaisical stroll. It seemed that the grandness of the previous episodes was reduced to a single plot point. All that work and sword fighting for...nothing.
The fight scenes also seem very stylized and a bit lame now. I now that Baek-san is supposed to be awesome, but he seems like something out of the matrix. The fights do not seem so urgent or life threatening, like they did when JT encountered Samurais.
The whole thing seems to have lost its edge. It feels like petty criminals fighting over territory and loses the "fight for survival" urgency it had before.
I'm a little glad it dipped in it's ratings. It's only fitting. The other writer was better.
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2 zakin89
February 22, 2014 at 4:25 AM
I watched both of this week's episodes though it was hard to stay awake -.-
Next week is going to be crucial and will decide wether I continue to watch or not. Because frankly... This week's episodes were lame and... God damn it I want all the Shineuijoo people back T.T The writer change is very noticable and not in a good way... I hope for the drama to convince me next week but that hope is very small :(
Thank you for the recap though and even if I stop watching I will continue reading the recaps :)
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Mrs.Jang Guem Suk
February 22, 2014 at 2:33 PM
Yes I agree Next week is definitely crucial for me as well ......... Show I'm telling u if u killl Jaehwa I'm DONE WITH YOU and I hope hope hope that this is not going to the case
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3 ebay
February 22, 2014 at 4:26 AM
LOL on the last comment! It is indeed a prize! Thanks for the recap!
There are too many story going-on, not to mention some are still hanging on air or those are already forgotten... and probably this is the prize of having two different writer for a one drama!
Can they just settle their mind on what they want to tell? I feel bad for KHJ for keeping a good job (way better than before!) but the story is messing-up!
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4 nada
February 22, 2014 at 4:52 AM
I hooked with this drama...episode 12 is amazed me.
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5 Mia
February 22, 2014 at 4:55 AM
I got over Kim Jae Wook leaving but now Mo Il Hwa is gone, too? we barely got to find out anything about him! first I thought he was a bad guy all dressed in black and poker faced but then he had this mysterious connection to Jung Tae and his father and he was being all noble and saving SJT, I really wanted to know more about him :(
also, what happened to Aoki??
I agree, Hwangbang are bad villians, as in, boring and one dimensional
the only interesting one is Jung Jae Hwa because he seems human, pining after the awesome doctor lady, and he is the underdog here, poor david climbing up the ladder against several goliaths, I can understand his motivations, if only he could feel some compassion with all the other davids around him...
So So is awesome! I hope she doesn't die or mysteriously disappear :P
and Gaya...oh Gaya what did they do to you? I can't help but root for her because she is a woman in a world exclusively for men, she must be very lonely, I wish they'd given her a female sidekick
in conclusion, I was so impressed with this show at first, getting almost ecstatic when they the kept the quality up, but ep 11 and 12...meh...I'll wait and see
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CaroleMcDonnell
February 22, 2014 at 6:20 AM
I so hope Il Hwa isnt gone. Didn't they show a preview with him and Jung Tae being all bromancey?
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artchase
February 22, 2014 at 6:48 AM
The scenes between the two of them were cut from episode 9 and were just shown as a bit of fan service at the end of the episode. According to a rep from the network Il Hwa's role in the show is done and he most likely will not be back on the show.
With 2 of my favorite characters now gone, I'm one more boring episode away from giving up this show. The last two episodes felt like a completely different show from the first ten.
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Dream-Petals
February 22, 2014 at 11:16 AM
I don't mind when characters finish their role in a drama if it is done right and completed but his wasn't. I mean what happened to his revenge story?
I feel like the writers should have at least completed that or have his in some sort of final battle.
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jomo143
February 22, 2014 at 3:55 PM
Mo Il Hwa is gone, too?
I am beginning to see the logic of the creative team. Any character that has positive fan reaction is being cut, the rest stay. Excellent plan.
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Nomi
February 22, 2014 at 5:18 PM
Can't have those pesky, pesky popular side characters outshining our hero, eh?
AB
February 23, 2014 at 4:02 PM
@Jomo - A lot of characters have come and gone in this drama not just those that you seem to think have had "positive" fan reactions. If you and others are only in it for certain characters then you will never be satisfied or like it.
@Nomi - I don't usually even bother with comments like you just made but seriously that is just ridiculous. No one is outshining anyone in this drama. They are ALL doing an outstanding job.
I was reading these recaps and the comments because I found it sometimes helped me catch things I missed or helped me when I didn't quite understand some of the translations but the negativity on here is just too much. Sadly I don't know if I will continue reading recaps here.
CaroleMcDonnell
February 23, 2014 at 1:20 PM
What the?????? SERIOUSLY!!!!!!!!
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6 Crissy
February 22, 2014 at 5:02 AM
Love episode 12 though...still gonna watch it till the end....KHJ is getting better in every episode....can't wait for next week episodes.....IG fighting...!!! Xoxoxo
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7 john
February 22, 2014 at 5:24 AM
Heads ~
Thanks for the recap. Who is that unknown swordsman? Someone sent by Baek-san to test Jung-tae? Probably not since it's a swordsman rather than a kung fu guy. It seems as though Baek-san and Leader Seol are evil bastards.
Perhaps Jae-hwa really is a man of the people after all. I'm glad that Ok-ryun let Jung-tae know how much she hurt, but it was odd that this came out during the the Weekly Police Beat Down.
Viki is subbing a Chinese drama Sanctuary:
Set in 1920s Shanghai during a time of warfare by competing warlords from China and Japan, there was a time of brief peace and prosperity before the wars.
Stars Nicky Wu. His character can kick ass and not even muss up his hair . The guy is dressed to kill in this show.
The show has it's own preposterous plots, logic leaps, etc. Features a nightclub where the singers actually sing for more than 10 seconds. It also suffers from the Back To The Future syndrome that plagued Basketball , (people driving cars and motorcycles from the future), *sigh*
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CaroleMcDonnell
February 22, 2014 at 6:22 AM
LOL re: confession during the "Beat-Down." Ah, plot-exposition convenience.
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john
February 22, 2014 at 6:56 AM
Carole~
It just seemed out of place. If it had occurred during the Skattering of the Ashes scene that would have made sense. I will lay this one one the director rather than the writer.
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8 lucy
February 22, 2014 at 5:37 AM
the fighting scenes are somewhat good, jung tae is still jungtae, gaya is starting to irk me, and ok-ryeon is like no progression right now. sigh
when a currently airing drama switches writer, director or producer, it will either turn out to be very good, or slowly losing its audience.
i can't really tell the case for AoF. lets wait for another 2 episodes. but i bet some people are already starting to read recaps instead of watching it.
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9 CaroleMcDonnell
February 22, 2014 at 6:18 AM
LOVED THIS --->>>>> "inordinately pleased with themselves."
Thanks for the recap.
I'm just watching the new writer flounder around for a flop. I get a feeling, this is yet another drama where the writer is aiming for a great ending which will redeem everything that came before it.
I'm feeling awfully protective of Ok Ryeon right now because I'm wondering what the new writer is going to do with her character. Will she have to give way --in the viewer's heart and in Jung Tae's heart-- to peppy Female Artful Dodger sidekick girl. Writer-nim, please do not do this to me. And please don't kll her.
The cynical part of me did love the way they put the nail in the coffin for our fired/removed Jae Wook. "The Ahjussi with me died; I buried him with my own hands." So yeah, we are told very blatantly to stop wishing for the actor or his character to return...unless as a ghost. Well-played, writer-nim, well-played.
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10 Waiting
February 22, 2014 at 6:59 AM
I am still hanging in there and, yes, part of me was watching this episode hoping that it would not tank for Heads' sake.
There were a few things that were not clear or seemed like a small mention (explanation of how KJW's character died). But, I am most confused about...
"Ok-ryun just shakes her head as tears fall. “I couldn’t. The blood flowing out of his heart… it still feels like it’s on my hands. I feel so guilty about it. How could I?” Jung-tae listens from outside and sighs."
Why would she feel guilty toward Jung-tae?? Because the death of his dad was still so fresh so this would be poor timing??
KHJ is still doing a great job although it is sometimes inconsistent. (there was a scene last episode where his emotions felt forced rather than the raw he had portrayed earlier). Still, good on him for his efforts.
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11 plumseed
February 22, 2014 at 7:28 AM
Am I the only one who's wondering where Aoki is?
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magnus
February 22, 2014 at 6:00 PM
No you definitely are not.
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Thea
February 22, 2014 at 9:32 PM
A few days ago Yoon Hyun Min (Aokki) tweet message, he says 'worry worry worry worry' maybe he's worried his role uncontinue like Son Jae Rim who left first.
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12 cheekbones
February 22, 2014 at 7:41 AM
I love your recap, Heads ! Despite everything, I still enjoy reading it.
Unfortunately, I'm falling out of love with the show :(
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Guymonday
February 22, 2014 at 3:17 PM
Agree. I feel like someone let all of the air out of this show and all we're left with is a flat tire and even flatter characters. Between the two time skips and a new writer all the tension built by the early episodes have vanished.
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13 Nomi
February 22, 2014 at 9:07 AM
Based on the character posters, isn't "Old Man Fly" Mo Il-Hwa's martial arts master? Or did that change too with the new writer?
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14 owl
February 22, 2014 at 9:40 AM
"… right? (New Writer: “Wrong.”)"
You funny, HeadsNo2.
When a drama is as expansive (territory, story line, and number of characters, not to mention gang affiliations) and then a 5 year gap with a lot of unanswered "how did that happen?" takes place, it is hard to pull in one's thoughts to care enough about what's going on. This is one of those dramas for me that I just watch without thinking about it too much. It is because of things like oh, writer switch, actors dropping out, and time gaps. Speaking of time gaps, OR just did a running narrative of her last five years while she and JT hid behind the cart during the raid and it was so filler. However, I do like that she informed JT that since he wasn't there when she needed him and he remained awol for so long that he had kinda lost his place in her heart. JT was a little too obtuse and unappreciative of OR and that has made her not cling to him in her heart like she had earlier.
Somehow I just don't care aobut Gaya's revenge. Or princess position. Even her swift martial arts moves don't do it for me.
So I'll just watch to watch. For those little consolation moments, hey HeadsNo2?
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15 jomo143
February 22, 2014 at 10:18 AM
Heads, I feel for you...this was zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz mostly for me. I dropped out at about 30 mins with a bad case of I-don't-care-what-you-are-saying-why-am-I-wasting-my-time-here?
It feels like a completely different show. The first few episodes introduced us to a lot of folks, but we grew to love them flaws and all. They killed some, then lost some.
Now we are in a new city, new time, new mission from gahd, with a bunch of whogivesaf^ck people, for the most part.
It makes me really mad, too, because I really reallly wanted to watch the drama that we started with, but this disappoints.
Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr...
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16 belle2010
February 22, 2014 at 11:10 AM
Wow i see a lot of anger here. i like the show and still enjoy the story. I think everything we are talking about will reveal slowly one b one. I don't mind the change as long as the story line is good.
I also share with many of us here that would like to see strong OR that will pursue her own dream.
Hope writer will speed up with JT development a bit.
Can't wait for net episode.
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17 Dream-Petals
February 22, 2014 at 11:21 AM
I'm glad that this episode answered what happened to some characters but I'm upset that this keeps happening off screen. I feel like any character that we have seen before can just disappear or be dead and that we might not see them again.
I really hope that Jung-tae's friend is alive and that the gang is taking care of him or something.
With all these old characters dying or disappear off screen all of a sudden I'm not too sure which characters we will see again.
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18 ilikemangos
February 22, 2014 at 11:44 AM
No matter if you fall under the "extremely disappointed" or the "still enjoying", one thing that is undeniable about this show is that some magic was lost from the first 10 episodes.
I now find myself watching dispassionately. I am neither angry nor optimistic. I am simply watching with my brain turned off and my heart closed off. I feel myself going through the notions just because i have invested those 12 hours of my life into this show and because maybe there is an ounce of care left about the hero's journey. For now, it seems like our hero lacks any strong motivation and acts like a pawn in this political battle so i find myself not caring much. Even Jae-Hwa is getting more screen time and given more juicy material as of late.
Also, if Jung-Tae is trying to refer back to the fight he had with shinichi that took place FIVE years ago as a guideline to fighting this samurai, that could very well mean Jung-Tae never fought any other samurai up to that point -- atleast not on the same level as Shinichi. Or that he never really improved on his skills when it came time to fight an opponent with swords. So, you didn't do much in those 5 years, huh, jung tae?
Yes, i am saddened some good characters were offed, but i have made my peace with it, even if their story arcs were never given the closure it deserved. I am even open to the new characters that are introduced who i've started to warm up to -- the doctor, jae-hwa, and so-so.
I want Jung-Tae to become an active part of the game -- to find his true calling and to become his own leader. I want him to act solo. For once, i want him to freaking be Gaksital. It's so much easier to root for a hero who's out saving the world on his own -- higher stakes, epic battles..Okay, so this show is not that show. But clearly there is something missing from this show that fails to reach that emotional part of my drama soul.
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19 tata
February 22, 2014 at 12:31 PM
THE CONSOLATION PRIZE WAS BREATHTAKING!!! HAHAHAHA. Yum.
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20 mintiefresh
February 22, 2014 at 12:51 PM
So... is Ok-ryun not doing the singer story line anymore (I thought she would even with Soo-Ok gone)? Just makes me shake my head if that's the case cause that's how the character was promoted in the posters and whatnot. *sigh* Still upset about no more Soo-Ok.
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21 Pearl~ai88
February 22, 2014 at 3:34 PM
I'm so sad! I was completely into this drama but as of last episode the motivation to watch is gone. Really, three big bad gangs (2 of which were just introduced) chasing around a body (of the Messiah apparently) for a whole episode? And now it seems like all the character motivations and directions have changed :( WHY, it was so good before!!! This was gonna be my epic tense action fix this cycle, but I just can't care anymore. KHJ really won me over this time too, but I can't continue just for him and his abs. I'll miss you Jung-Tae! Fighting KHJ!
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22 August
February 22, 2014 at 4:03 PM
Thanks for the recap HeadsNo2!
Favorite line from Episode 12:
“Sir, my head isn’t made of rocks.”--- Jung Jae-Hwa
Aigoo,
Like the world's preeminent designations B.C. {or B.C.E} and A.D. {or C.E.}...
Will episodes of Age of Feeling/Inspiring Generation henceforth be abbreviated or referred to as Before Episodes {B.E.} 1 - 10 signifying the old writer Chae Seung Dae's tenure and After Episodes {A.E.} 11 - 24 signifying the new writer Park Gye Ok's tenure?
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23 nada
February 22, 2014 at 4:23 PM
Still worth to watch IG since Jung Tae journey getting tough to fine the right path of him.Believe in to the writer and enjoy the show rather than try to bring up the own story...and start to complaining.IG story line is still strong enough depend to the point of view.IG daebak!!!!
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lucy
February 23, 2014 at 5:29 AM
you are KHJ fan right? your opinion is very well respected. so here is mine.
I dont think other comments are considered as complaining.
We can see Jung Tae is still Jung Tae, his storyline is somewhat still reasonable. But other characters just turned blehhh. Gaya storyline seems interesting at the beginning but now she turn out to be like a new character. I can understand switching writers would change the plot but i feel like i'm left hanging with the old Gaya. Same as Ok Ryeon, why she suddenly become less important? not to mention Soo Ok and leader Mo, vanish into thin air.
viewers would appreciate a good and enjoyable drama even if there were multiple writers switches. a good writer would write a drama to satisfy the viewers and themselves. that is what entertainment industry suppose to be like. not for the sake of money and self-satisfaction. this is my humble opinion.
so 8 more episodes to go, i am hoping this drama wont disappoint their loyal fans and of course KHJ fans.
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Dramanut
February 23, 2014 at 9:49 PM
I think the drama have 24 eps.
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24 dvahn
February 22, 2014 at 4:54 PM
you know what I thought I see at the end of episode 10 the training of JT with Mo II hwa of what really happen to him on that 5 years lapse. but because of the changing of the writers they take that scene out.
to Ok ryun did the writers take out her to being a singer?
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25 kitkat
February 22, 2014 at 5:50 PM
Hmmm. My feelings are currently mixed towards the show and the new writer. I'm going to hold judgement until next week's episodes. I really enjoyed this show early on. There were, however, some redeeming moments in this episode.
I expected the show to centralize its story line around key characters but with this, I expected more focus on character development. I'm not bonding with most of the key characters of late and my attachment for the main characters are mostly residual from earlier episodes.
*I like so-so.
*I need JT to stop being so gullible and start gaining some street credit. You can't have his experiences and continue to be naive. He needs to step up and change or rattle the power structure. It's time.
*Gaya is trained to be one dimensional. Got it. But as a central character I need complexity. She has the potential as a character.
*Ok-ryn is nondescript. I'm still not sure what her role is. She just can't be selling water throughout the episodes.
* I don't like Jae-Hwa and that's good since he's going to be JT's rival for control.
*The show made a mistake removing Mo Il Hwa. His character was interesting and cerebral.
* What happen to the Dobi Group, Il Hwa, and Aoki?
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26 Adal
February 22, 2014 at 8:08 PM
I read comments that episode 12 was better than 11. I agree, it was only marginally improved but no where near the magic the first 10 episodes had. I've lost my enthusiasm for this show and not only because I no longer see characters I loved, but because the ones that remain seem to act out of character and I find it difficult to fathom their motivations.
I don't get why Jung tae abandons his quest to find his sister and suddenly changes direction to find his dad's killer, (granted his new found love for his dad made him realize his dad's worth,) but a few episodes ago he claimed he didn't care if his dad died. And had he forgotten Gaya's comment that, the person who killed his dad might have been her? Sounds like she's a good place to start his investigation.
Secondly, I thought Jung tae trained under Mo Il hwa for the last five years, but it doesn't seem like his technique has improved, (in my humble opinion as I'm no expert), he's still getting injured by the sword and is basing his judgment on a sword fight he had FIVE YEARS AGO with Shinichi. Am I to assume he had no real swords fights since then? Then, just what has he been doing for the last five years?!
And why would Doo sung order Baek san to kill Jung tae if it came to it? Wasn't it his intention to make Jung tae the head of Club Shanghai and the leader of the poor district (I forget its name)? He had all these grand plans and then he goes and does a complete 180. Seems inconsistent, shouldn't his loyalty to Jung tae's dad give him some protective vibes towards the son?
Ok Ryeon's charm was that she was a bright note of hope in a world of gloom. Now they've made her mournful and funeral. That's a huge shame and I find that quite depressing. It was my expectation when watching the trailers and seeing the stills that Soo ok was going to use the connections he had and her marvelous singing talents to make her a star. I really was looking forward to seeing her play dress up. At the beginning of episode 10, I half expected her to be the lead singer in Club Shanghai. But the drama has gone all political on me and frankly it's quite boring. There's still hope yet. I hope the new writer can interject some lively scenes into this drama to brighten things up a bit.
I don't much care for the politics, but I'm sticking this drama out to the next two episodes out of my love for KHJ. After that, if it doesn't improve, I'll stick to reading the recaps.
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27 YY Chats with Toast Between Bites
February 22, 2014 at 9:01 PM
Not watching this anymore.
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nada
February 26, 2014 at 9:28 PM
It's okay since you don't want too... don't worry million of people will replace you friend. Enjoy your life.
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28 snickers
February 22, 2014 at 10:01 PM
1. Hwangbang and Ilgookhwe seem to be the mirror image of each other, except the former is the defender while the latter is the aggressor. It's war and both use any means necessary. Daddy Shin wandered around too much to be an effective protector of Shanghai. He was impossible to replace while alive. So he must die. Culture and people's hearts and minds make the son the logical choice, assuming he's up to snuff.
2. The mysterious swordsman's style looks Chinese. Most people don't know the difference and would assume he's a samurai based on the sword. If JT is killed, Ilgookhwe/Japanese gets the blame.
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29 dramanut
February 22, 2014 at 10:18 PM
I totally agree with all of you. Change the writer kill the show. I enjoy the first 10 eps. However, I feel both the old and new writer do not know what both OR and Gaya's character should be.
With the success of the Nice guy, I think KBS want second half of the drama focus on the revenge instead of the journey of JT and Gaya.
I saw last couple of the KBS dramas, most of them start with promising story, But end with disappointment. I think there are couple bad practices in the Korean TV drama. First, they did not have a full scripts to start filming. The writers write the scripts and filming at the same times. Second, if the drama have low rating in Korea, the productions company and the TV station will changes the story and the characters to please the Korean audience. They did not think about the international audiences like us. Third, by do not have a full scripts, they may have a difficulties in assess the budget and the expense. With a big cast like this drama with 15 million budgets. I think the drama already over the budgets. so they want to cut the story and the characters to cut the budgets. All these practices sometimes will result of bad quality in drama.
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30 xvanex
February 23, 2014 at 12:34 AM
Gaya is so boring!! I care nothing about her character! Literally surfed the internet in every scene with her & the gangs since i was so bored. I hope this drama gets better.
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dramanut
February 23, 2014 at 10:01 PM
I wonder how they are going to connect Jt and Gaya's character again. After the first 4 eps. and after Gaya came back from Japan, JT and Gaya just pass by each other and never have more than 5 min screen times together. How can they be suppose still love each other. May the writer decide they don't be lover any more. the writer may be decide that JT should be with OR because everyone like the kissing scene.
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31 Iris
February 23, 2014 at 2:08 AM
Drama what's ailing you? You were so full of promise and excitement from ep 1-10, I was falling in love with you. Then WHAM, a big disappointment with ep 11-12, you turned into one dimensional drag. I could not believe the drastic change they did to you. They badly re-routed your storyline, devoting two episodes on a funeral that did not make sense. Dear drama, I hope you can find your direction back to where you were before.
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32 coby
February 23, 2014 at 3:36 AM
I still have hope for this drama.... writer please please.. I o love dramas set during 1930s....
Thanks for the recap Heads!
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33 bleeechk
February 23, 2014 at 4:19 PM
KBS doesnt care about what internatiobal fans think because Online viewers arent included in the ratings. They only care about korean audience and what they think...too much violence??? Try watching the walking dead and compare the violence and gore, but no one's complaining.i guess thats how they do drama in korea.they dont care about the plot so long as their people watch it and amass them big bucks. So stop complaining people and stop watching if you arent satisfied.
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ilikemangos
February 24, 2014 at 2:55 PM
I still find the whole "too much violence" fishy. Gaksital was also blood-filled with tons of torture scenes. The show ended on a 22.9% = more people watching. Yet, no complaints then?
The one flaw about this system is that they tend to cater to the audience and rarely stick to their artistic vision.
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34 nantha
February 23, 2014 at 5:32 PM
So in the end Hwangbang is the one who killed Daddy Shin huh? Is that mean Mo Il Hwa also bad guy? Damn.
But wait, when Il-hwa took Jung-tae from Gaya he asked his man wether he save Jung-tae for twice reciprocation or ten times revenge, what's he mean?
And is that So-ook dead just like Ok-ryeon said? is he just disappear without any reason like that since KJW out from this drama? arggh~~ this drama so damn michievous.
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35 kooriyuki
February 23, 2014 at 6:46 PM
Thanks for the recap, Heads!
I can't stop LOLing at clinic/restaurant/hot water fountain. That was ingenious!
And wrt the comments above, Mo Il Hwa can't be gone! Say it ain't so!!! I dunwanna wait for eons before seeing Song Jae Rim on screen again *sadface*
Lastly, I keep feeling there's something more to Gaya being this eviiiiilllll killer robot, like you know, when she asked Daddy Shin who killed him. I wish we get more insight to her, but it seems really foreign now =(
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36 Cheezeemelt
February 23, 2014 at 8:03 PM
Another one missing is Jung Tae's best friend Jjang Ddol. The last time we saw him was (I forgot what episode) when he's in jail praying for JT to save him. After that, there's no sign of him at all. Jjang Ddol supposed to be an important role especially to us who watched this from the very start. I'm hoping in the future episodes, the new writer can make up to missing links. 'Coz seriously, I'm gonna drop this drama also even though Hyun Joong is in it. It's a total mess now.. but let's see.....
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37 nada
February 24, 2014 at 7:36 AM
Next tomorrow...will see Shin Jung Tae.IG staff ,we always respect and proud of you.Wish you listen all the people who not satisfied with story but still you can't lost your basic story.Inspiring Generation,GO HEAD!!!
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38 belle2010
February 24, 2014 at 11:23 PM
Very exciting for tomorrow episode. I hope the writer and the production team will listen well to the viewers opinion but be strong in their craft and listen to their gust rather than keep changing according to viewers .
IG team fighting.
I think if we did not know that IG did change the writer we probably just follow along and enjoy the unpredictable story better.
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nada
February 25, 2014 at 5:28 AM
Yap!you are right belle...agree. I thought so,if this matter never came up,would be different...however still stick with this show,IG all the way♥♥♥
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39 Michikohime
February 26, 2014 at 4:30 PM
Does anyone know where I could find the manhwa on what this drama is base upon?
Since I feel like a lot of characters are lacking good motives and, like, any kind of logical sense sometimes, I feel like I would prefer the books over this drama.
I feel like I'm on a rollercoaster with this one. There's episode that I really like, the cliffhangers is great and I want to know how things are gonna unfold. Then there are others when I really ask myself why I bother with this... That one was of the second kind.
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