Gaksital: Episode 25
by javabeans
Yikes, Gaksital is so good today. Just when I’ve been starting to worry that the show has let its rebellion storyline overtake the smaller character moments, it brings back the emotion back — and in a big way. Because in addition to big movements in plot, we get some significant shifts in character arcs, coming at a time when I’ve though we wouldn’t see much more change in trajectories. What this show has done consistently well, though, is constantly moving — in its secrets, allegiances, and above all, feelings.
SONG OF THE DAY
Gaksital OST – “심판의 날” (Day of Judgment), in which Joo-won sings, with Bohemian and Lee Jung-hyun. [ Download ]
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EPISODE 25 RECAP
Thanks to Tamao’s tip-off (sob), Gaksital & Co. crash the party to intercept the money hand-off, taking the funds Kishokai intends to use for their Joseon draft operation.
Rie and Katsuyama jump into action and the fight divides down gender lines: Rie against Jin Hong, Katsuyama against Ahn Sub (the drama finally realizes their supporting cast needs names!). I’m rather impressed at their prowess, given that Comrade Ahn takes on a samurai sword with nothing but his bare fists and even gains the upper hand. Comrade Jin disarms Rie and knocks her out cold, which is a relief to me, mostly because that seems to be the safest place for Rie.
But save the worry for Kang-to, who is chased out by Samurai Kinpei and faces him, flute against sword. Ack! And hooo damn, the editing does no favors for my blood pressure either, all clashing metal and quick cuts, with nothing more than a hairsbreadth standing between safety and our hero’s disembowelment.
But Kang-to’s learned a few tricks from his last encounter, and a slice that would have gutted him gets blocked this time. Knocking Kinpei’s sword aside, they shift into hand-to-hand combat and again Kang-to stays ahead of the curve, blocking a punch while landing a blow of his own. And then he head-butts Kinpei’s swinging fist with his face, oww, although I’m hoping it’s the mask that takes the brunt of that impact.
It’s a whirl of flying kicks and tangled limbs, which is pretty damn cool. I love that this show uses so much “real action,” as opposed to camera tricks and wire assists, because it feels, well, real.
Kinpei staggers in pain (so he’s NOT a robot!) and Kang-to goes in for the K-O: a jumping, spinning kick straight to the head that sends him flying backward across the lawn. Oh thank god this fight’s done.
The two comrades win their fights and join him. Together with the money, they make a safe getaway.
Inside the gisaeng house, the count goes looking for his son, his face crumpling at the sight of Tamao lying in a pool of blood. It’s actually quite sad; the count has always been a silly character but his great weakness was always his cowardice. I don’t doubt his love for his son, and his grief is affecting.
The countess finds him cradling Tamao and sobbing, and screams in horror. Shunji arrives and takes in the sight. Do you feel like an ass now? If you’ve got one shred of decency left in you, you’ll feel like an ass. Shunji flashes back to his last words to Tamao, scorning a friendship with a damn Korean.
Our disgraced fighters face a displeased Chairman Ueno. Shunji, his father, and Murayama are also present and they all bow their heads in apology. The chairman growls that he was wrong to trust Shunji with catching the rebels, but Shunji begs for another chance, promising to kill Gakistal, Yang Baek, and Dong-jin. I’m pretty sure this isn’t the first time these baddies have pleaded with “just one more chance,” but who are they to point that out? The chairman agrees.
Kang-to delivers the money to Dong-jin and Reporter Song, and volunteers to handle the procurement of arms for the rebellion. Oh no! Are you going to raid the police stash again, with Shunji on your tail?
Knowing Shunji is bound to retaliate quickly, Comrades Jin and Ahn find Mok Dan at the inn and urge her to leave immediately, planning to escort the circus members into hiding as well. As expected, Shunji arrives with a troop of armed officers, storming inside just as the trio are headed out.
They jump out through a window instead. Shunji bursts in to see the escape and follows, but he’s too slow to stop the getaway car.
The comrades escort Mok Dan to Gaksital’s cabin by morning, where Kang-to anxiously waits. She sees that he’s dressed in uniform and protests — surely he can’t go to work when Shunji’s on to him.
Kang-to recalls his jailbreak of Reporter Song, when the Kishokai assassin showed up and strangely didn’t kill him. He realizes that Shunji must have been playing ignorant this whole time to get to Yang Baek and Dong-jin. Oh thank you for making the connection!
He says that Shunji won’t kill him till he gets the two leaders: “Don’t worry, I’ll be fine as long as I keep acting like I don’t know I’ve been uncovered.” You’ll have to forgive me for not being reassured about Kang-to’s safety one bit. Mok Dan is likewise worried, but he says there’s no better place to get the rebellion’s needed firepower than the police station: “Once I do that, I’m going to quit.”
Ack! Don’t say that! The “one last mission” are the hero’s famous last words in every movie ever. I do NOT have a good feeling about this…
Kang-to sneaks back into town and sees the officers patrolling all around. Shunji paces in his office, wondering if Kang-to took Mok Dan and Boss Jo away intending to disappear for good. He realizes with dismay, “If he never comes back, I have no way to catch him.” Well, that’s what happens when you play with your food; it walks off your plate when your back is turned.
But then, Kang-to shows up for work. I do love that this should relieve Shunji’s fears, but instead it just infuriates him even more, messing with his head. Without warning, Shunji charges at Kang-to and punches him in the face.
He grabs him and demands, “What did you do last night?” Kang-to fires back, “Do I have to report everything I do even after I’m off-duty?” Shunji punches him again, then starts in with the kicking, hurling swears at him.
But today Kang-to fights back, landing a punch of his own: “Why are you doing this? What did I do that was so wrong?!”
Shunji resumes the beating, knocking him to the ground. With his foot on Kang-to’s chest, he growls that one more snippy response like that, “and you’ll die by my hand.”
Shunji keeps a close eye on Kang-to, thinking to himself that Kang-to must know his cover’s been blown. So if he knows, then why is he pretending? What is his motive? (Aaaaaack! Here I was, thinking Kang-to had the upper hand by pretending he doesn’t know that Shunji knows… only to have Shunji one-up him by pretending he doesn’t know that Kang-to’s pretending not to know that he knows…)
Kang-to thinks to himself that he needs to raid the weapons stash: “I hope you’ll fall for the lie just one more time…”
Shunji briefs his team on the theft of defense funds. He asks Kang-to directly what he thinks Yang Baek and Dong-jin are plotting. Kang-to asks, “Have you decided the government general bombing plans are fake?” He advises that Shunji stay on his guard — what if he lets it down and the terrorists go through with the bombing?
Shunji says it’s a good thought, but with an ugly sneer. He orders his men to find the rebels’ headquarters, no matter what. He’s not at all taken in by Kang-to’s answer, and this sends his suspicions in another direction — did Kang-to return to work to spread false reports and confuse the investigation? “Lee Kang-to, do you think I’ll fall for your lies?” A girl can hope.
Dong-jin’s death squad continues their firebombing of government buildings, upping their count to six courthouses out of the thirteen nationwide. This leaves the upper brass scratching their heads — why? Shunji proposes that they’re after the official registers, augggggghhhh. Shunji-ya, why so smart? You’re killin’ me here.
This tips them off to the rebels’ intent to fight the draft and spur a large-scale revolt. Kimura is frustrated at their inability to find any trace of either leader, but Shunji assures Dad that he’s got a guide to both of them, right in the palm of his hand.
Kang-to heads to the tailor’s shop… not seeing Koiso on his tail. Damn damn damn.
Inside Rebel Headquarters, Kang-to informs the team that Shunji suspects the bombing info to be false… and therefore won’t be on his guard about protecting the weapons. Eeek! That is a smart deduction, but what about the other thing? The one where he’s on to your real plan too?
Damsari’s worried that raiding the Jongro station is especially dangerous, but Kang-to counters that it’s the one they know the best. He assures him that he plans to quit the force right after this mission, which just about makes my heart stop for a second. He said it again! Omg. Don’t die!
Yang Baek commends him for his service while maintaining his double identity, but says the time has come for him to cast off the uniform and the Sato Hiroshi name, and join in with his fellow citizens. All this stating of the obvious has me really nervous… that the obvious will not come to pass.
Kang-to hands over the police station’s blueprints to be studied, and says he’ll give them the signal when the time comes to raid.
He emerges from the tailor’s and scans the view, and still misses seeing Koiso parked in stakeout. Kang-to-ya, where be your sharp eyes? Be suspicious! Do I have to jump you to put you on your guard? ‘Cause I can do that. For freedom and country, of course.
I guess Kang-to did shake off one officer, but the fact remains that Koiso reports this news to Shunji, who heads straight over to the shop. The tailor confirms that Kang-to frequents his shop, and when Shunji narrows his eyes saying he doesn’t earn enough money for that, the tailor says that even the governor shops on credit.
Shunji seems to smell something fishy and asks which suit here is Kang-to’s. The tailor says Kang-to is so picky he’s still fussing over the design, and Shunji — not buying it — just says it’s too bad, he thought he’d ask for the same suit. Since Kang-to’s so fashionable and all.
The tailor manages to stick to his story with believable answers, but Shunji can sense fear, and it’s not a good sign.
The count and countess are dragged to meet the chairman. The countess squawks about this lack of respect on funeral day, but the count walks on in a grief-stricken daze.
The countess launches into a defense — all she did was help collect that money! It’s not their fault it got stolen! Rie orders her to shut up, and shows them the letter found in the room with Tamao’s body. Oh shit.
The countess shrieks to read the confession, and curses Tamao (“that crazy bastard”) for screwing with them even from the grave. The count bleakly says he’d amassed a fortune and sang the emperor’s praises, all to leave his one and only son a comfortable life. That airplane donation, the streams of cash he poured into Kishokai — what was all that for?
The countess disavows any ties to Tamao: “He’s not my son!” Chairman Ueno tells them to act as befits a Kishokai member, “And leave.”
At those words Katsuyama and Kinpei draw their swords. The count and countess blubber for mercy; the count cries that he never gave those rebels a cent and wasn’t unfaithful to Kishokai.
Rie presents them with a contract to sign, stating their responsibility for the lost funds. The count grabs it like a lifeline and promises to come up with that amount, if it takes selling the roof over his head.
(For reference’s sake, the amount stolen was 100,000 won. While that would only be $100 today, a previous episode gave us the handy conversion that 600,000 won in Gaksital’s time is 19.8 billion won in today’s world. So the count is on the hook for what would be nearly $3 million today.)
The count signs. And then… the samurais strike anyway. Whaaaa?
Ohhh, I see — you’ll claim the money from their estate, regardless of whether they’re alive. Clever, in a ruthless sort of way.
How sweet, the chairman turns this into a teachable moment: “Ueno Rie, there’s only one thing to trust in this world. Power.”
Shunji mulls over the clues, landing on the fact that Kang-to mentioned the bombing of the government general. Was that a real tip, or fake? Could he have conspired with Deuk-soo (Hothead)? He realizes, “Wait, then they need munitions.” Gasp! Nooooo. Shunji’s really firing on all cylinders today, isn’t he?
He swings into action, telling his force they’ve been barking up the wrong tree. He acts like he’s embarrassed to have fallen for another lie about the bombing, and even apologizes to Kang-to for preventing him from strangling Deuk-soo to death and interrupting his revenge.
All generous smiles, Shunji offers to treat everyone out tonight. He directs them all to meet at the Angel Club after work. Trap laid.
The rest of the officers party in the main hall while Shunji and Kang-to drink in a private room. Tonight Tasha’s deep into the bottle too, due to Tamao’s death. She sighs that she knew he was a fool, but not this much of one — how could he do it, when he had so much fear?
Kang-to doesn’t follow and asks if something happened between them, shocked to hear about the suicide. Shunji tells him Tamao did it after giving the military collections to Gaksital, and says remorsefully that he wouldn’t have treated him so horribly if he’d known this would happen. You’re… acting, right? You don’t actually feel sorry, do you?
He adds in his drunken slur, “Kang-to-ya, I don’t like myself. Mok Dan’s gone too, and I… don’t like living.” He’s confusing me because it sounds so real… and it might be real… which is why it’s so treacherous because it’s also fake. Its ring of truth is the trap, so when Shunji lays his head back and seems to fall asleep, Kang-to leaves the room to call the comrades into action — and Shunji snaps awake.
Kang-to checks to see that the rest of the force is drunk, then quickly leaves. Shunji emerges to give Koiso the nod… and half of the police officers suddenly straighten, only playing drunk. Omo, you Keyser Sozed him. You brilliant bastard.
Gaksital leads Comrades Ahn and Jin onto the police premises, with death squad members serving as backup. They take down the skeleton staff guarding the building and break into the arms room — just as Shunji’s crew returns, one step behind them. They see the fallen officers outside and enter on high alert.
The rebels load the truck waaay too slowly for my nerves to handle. Comrade Jin alerts the men that officers are approaching, and Kang-to urges them to escape first — the weapons are the priority.
They slip out, and Koiso bursts into the room before Kang-to can jump out the window. He easily disarms the several officers who charge him… but gets a gun to the head. Shunji.
“Take off the mask, you bastard,” Shunji orders. Kang-to doesn’t move, so Shunji does it for him. The mask drops.
It’s no shock to Shunji, but the other officers get up and gape at Kang-to’s bared face. Shocked, and in Koiso’s case, doubly enraged.
Outside, Deuk-soo wants to jump in and help, but the comrades hold him back. They’ve got to flee. Aw, it’s a crushing thing, abandoning your hero.
Kang-to is taken to the torture room, where Koiso is still sputtering in disbelief. He’s only too happy to vent all his Kang-to frustration with the whip, and Kang-to just takes it stoically.
At headquarters, the comrades return and report the bad news. Mok Dan and Yang Baek both take it pretty hard, in shock.
A battered Kang-to is taken off his chains and sat down before Shunji, who asks if he killed his brother. Kang-to replies, “You know that Kenji killed my mother too, don’t you?”
Shunji asks, furious and hurt and spewing hate, “You, whom I liked even better than my own brother, who was at one time my only friend! You beat my brother to death, is that right?!”
Kang-to growls back. “Yeah! That was the only way I could get revenge. If I didn’t, I would have gone crazy. My brother — my idiot brother Kang-san hyung — that hyung was the same Gaksital I drove myself crazy trying to capture!”
And finally, here’s news that shocks Shunji. Kang-to adds, “I swore to catch Gaksital. My hyung… I shot and killed him. Not knowing that hyung was out to avenge our mother’s death, I fought alongside Kenji… and shot my brother dead. So it was for my brother, for Kang-san hyung, that I put on that mask. Kimura Shunji, thank you for capturing me. Now that I’ve been caught, at least I won’t have to kill you by my hand.”
Oof. Tears. And that’s the burden that’s been weighing on him all this time, which I almost had forgotten was there, considering all the cat-and-mouse maneuvering of recent weeks. He killed his brother; he desperately doesn’t want to kill his best friend.
Shunji’s shaken by that admission, and gets up trembling. He leaves without a word, dazed. Now the memory that floats to the fore is that emotional bike ride, after Kang-to lost his family and Shunji lost his brother, and they’d cried together.
Shunji’s face starts to crumple into tears… but in the span of a split second he tamps it all down and hardens his demeanor in a shift that’s frankly a little hair-raising.
Rie has an unexpected visitor that night: Mok Dan. Ooh, nice turn. Rie faces her coldly, but Mok Dan offers to do anything Rie asks: “Save Lee Kang-to.”
She asks for her help, offering to leave if Rie asks it of her. She’ll forget all about Kang-to, if she’ll just save his life. Okay, the gesture is noble, but now you’re just giving her ideas. How ’bout you wait to hear her demands before forsaking your love?
Rie’s stunned to hear Kang-to is being held prisoner, but she tells Mok Dan to go home; she doesn’t have the power to help anymore. Mok Dan kneels before her and begs.
Shunji reports to his superiors that Kang-to is Gaksital. Kimura is so furious that he heads immediately to Kang-to’s torture room, remembering how it felt to see his son lying dead in the station. He grabs Kang-to’s face: “You dared kill my son?” Kang-to returns, “Is there anybody who would save the life of his mother’s killer?”
Kimura clocks him in the face and orders him put in the box of nails. Even Shunji protests, saying they need to capture Yang Baek and Dong-jin.
Oh, fuck fuck fuckity fuck. Kang-to is put into the box, and Kimura carelessly rocks it back and forth. Well, now we know where Shunji learned his tricks. Kang-to groans in agony, bleeding everywhere, but refuses to talk.
Shunji urges him to confess quickly so he can let him free, and I almost believe he feels actual concern. Kang-to says he doesn’t know where the leaders are, enraging Kimura into kicking the box furiously. Kang-to screams. I scream. Auuuuuuugh. This is hard to watch, and we’ve watched a LOT of things that were hard to watch.
Afterward, he’s strung up on those chains again, unconscious. Shunji’s alone in the room with him, and he slaps a bowl of water in his face to wake him. There’s that creepy smile again — calm Dr. Jekyll today — and he’s brought along someone to give Kang-to a push…
In comes Tailor Park in chains. Aw, dammit. It’s like helpless Boss Jo all over again. The tailor stutters that he doesn’t know where Yang Baek is.
Shunji threatens to turn the man into Kang-to’s bullet-shield if he doesn’t talk. He starts with drowning, and Kang-to begs him to stop, to torture him instead. Kang-to watches in horror, and Shunji’s face takes on that demonic look.
At headquarters, the comrades urge Yang Baek to relocate to a new hideout. Yang Baek refuses, however: “Until Kang-to returns, I will not step one foot elsewhere.” Oh, that’s a beautiful show of loyalty, but isn’t it also dumb? Aren’t you all safer with the figurehead moved to a new den? Have you learned nothing from the Mok Dan Chronicles?
The comrades are already organizing a rescue mission, and although Damsari wants to be a part of the team, they assure him they have better odds only sending their elite agents.
That night, a team of four agents infiltrate the police station, using the police’s own smokebombs against them (ha).
The comrades make their way to the torture room and fight with the officers there as Kang-to watches from his tiny cell in the wall. Comrade Jin frees him and assists him along.
Shunji is knocked unconscious by an agent. As he heads out, Kang-to casts a long look back at his friend(…emy). So sad. You can’t have it back, but you can mourn it.
COMMENTS
Oh boy, now I can resume breathing. This was a pretty intense episode, and this is coming from a drama where intense is the default setting. I loved so many things about it, especially in light of recent events where Kang-to has receded a bit as a character — he has become a crucial part of the independence, and he’s still definitely had the lion’s share of screentime, but I was starting to feel like his story arc had already peaked. That the camera was moving backward, giving us the Big Picture — where Kang-to was a critical piece, but only one of many.
Instead, this episode snapped that focus back squarely on the couple at the heart of the show, by which I mean Kang-to and Shunji. I’m actually relieved that Gaksital is laying off the romance angle, and it’s not just because Mok Dan’s intensity can’t compare to the others (it’s a necessity given her character and her place in the story, but even so, not my favorite thing about her). But I feel like the conflict is so taut and intense elsewhere that the romance actually brings down the dramatic tension.
As for the count and countess, I can’t say that I mourn their loss or even think the world of this drama is losing anything when they go, but given their place in the story I think their exits were handled about as well as could be hoped. And really, they owe a lot to Tamao, who lent them depth by association.
I’ve always found them one-dimensional and silly before. But wouldn’t you know, Tamao’s anguish provides a different facet to them, and the count’s reaction to losing his son was a nice touch — a rude awakening to seeing the meaninglessness of all his actions. He sold out his country, and for what? A dead son, that’s what. Even worse is the cruel irony of his actions being motivated by love for his son, which become the very thing to bring about son’s demise.
I’ve always wondered whether the count felt shame deep down, and pushed it aside as a survival instinct. If he was motivated by a deep-seated fear, I can find him cowardly, yes, but not incomprehensible. Whereas without that layer, he’s just a buffoon taking up a few comic relief moments. Inasmuch as they were characters we had to put up with, I think killing them in this way is the best way to resolve their roles. The count sees his mistake — but isn’t strong enough to actually change anything — and so he exits a tragic figure, ruined by his own selfishness.
I absolutely love the revisiting of the Kang-to-and-Shunji love, because for so many weeks we’ve focused on the hate and betrayal. Both men have traveled so far in opposite directions that you almost think they’ve become too different, too much of new people, to let that common ground affect them anymore. I don’t love when dramas sort of let us play amnesiac about broken relationships like this, when both characters set out on their trajectories and then never stray from those fixed paths.
So I’m so thankful that Shunji constantly walks that line, even after it’s become clear he’s completely far gone. I don’t expect him to be redeemed, and I don’t know if he can be even if they tried — there’s such darkness there that he’s fundamentally become a different person from the sweet teacher of old days — but that doesn’t mean he can’t still display conflict credibly.
There have been so many scenes where he has played the part of the morally conflicted guy who’s still nice deep down, while actually just using that affectation of humanity to get what he wants — and as I mentioned, the reason it’s so convincing is because it’s rooted in something real. Same with Kang-to, as a matter of fact. So most of the time I believe Shunji’s in his evil-genius mode where he fakes his emotions — but every now and then the facade will crack, and we’ll get a glimpse of something that feels true. I love that we’re still getting that from a villain, this close to the end.
The scene when they confronted each other about each other’s betrayals and spoke plainly for the first time in ages was incredibly moving, especially in the way Kang-to thanks Shunji for relieving him of the burden of possibly killing him. Those words really strike a chord with Shunji, perhaps because he feels that same burden, or maybe because it’s an admission that Kang-to still cares for him. Kang-to would kill him if he had to, for the cause — but one wonders if that would break him. And vice versa.
RELATED POSTS
- Gaksital: Episode 24
- Gaksital: Episode 23
- Gaksital: Episode 22
- Gaksital: Episode 21
- Gaksital: Episode 20
- Gaksital: Episode 19
- Gaksital: Episode 18
- Gaksital: Episode 17
- Gaksital: Episode 16
- Gaksital: Episode 15
- Gaksital: Episode 14
- Gaksital: Episode 13
- Gaksital: Episode 12
- Gaksital: Episode 11
- Gaksital: Episode 10
- Gaksital: Episode 9
- Gaksital: Episode 8
- Gaksital: Episode 7
- Gaksital: Episode 6
- Gaksital: Episode 5
- Gaksital: Episode 4
- Gaksital: Episode 3
- Gaksital: Episode 2
- Gaksital (Bridal Mask): Episode 1
Tags: featured, Gaksital, Han Chae-ah, Jin Sae-yeon, Joo-won, Park Ki-woong
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51 tazzy
August 30, 2012 at 2:24 AM
Ugh this dram is so good I don't know what to do with myself T.T
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52 somewhere
August 30, 2012 at 2:39 AM
I thought there is no reason Shunji to feel sorry for Kang To. If Shunji has to feel sorry, it's for alot of people who have been tortured by him. KT is the one who betrayed him, why He have to feel sorry? If the writers want to show us there is still human feeling from SHunji, he have to feel guilty for the people he has been tortured.
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53 Yoke Ling
August 30, 2012 at 3:35 AM
So heartwrenching and so brilliant an episode.
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54 Yuhotarubi
August 30, 2012 at 4:09 AM
What can I say!? this drama is the best Kdrama I ever watched so far, it's the best. Thank you so much JAVABEANS for taking the time to write these amazing recaps.
now that I read the recaps I don't want to watch the episode subbed again, since I watched it raw yesterday, I definitely don't want to see Kang-to tortured again, it really hurts T_T
Shunji, what can we say about him ??? there's no way back for him, the look from Kang-to at the end of the episode proves it, it's a farewell look, so no more looking back to old times cause those times are history.
on another note, I kind of like that Mok Dan begged Rie to save Kang-to, Mok Dan the brave girl who was ready to get into that nail box without any fear, decided to beg for Kang-to's freedom.
that's all I'm going to say for now, cause this episode is really making me speechless, I cant' imagine how this drama is going to end, but I know it's going to be EPIC !!!
3 more episodes to go, GAKSITAL FIGHTING !!!!
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55 darahkay
August 30, 2012 at 6:07 AM
lol I remember seeing Abe dancing to Gangnam style while the entire station was partying in Angel Club. HAHAHAHAHAHA. Best part of the entire episodeeee!
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56 Elise
August 30, 2012 at 6:41 AM
So far, not a single drama comes close to Gaksital, not one. Brilliant! Just write their names on them trophies already-Abe too, for being so freaking adorable!!
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lizzie
August 31, 2012 at 4:33 PM
I disagree.
I dislike when people treat a drama as something it isn't.
Gaksital is good but also have many flaws and it gets repetitive sometimes.
If MD's actress gets any award I'll be bitter because it'll be only because her drama got good ratings.
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57 katiamon
August 30, 2012 at 6:42 AM
This show is freaking awesome. Poor kang to, the box of nails???? My dearest puppy!!!! The ending is near and i'm afraid he won't make it....
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58 FeKimi
August 30, 2012 at 8:27 AM
Kudos with you!
The line when Kang-To thanks Shunji by being caught by him so at least he won't kill him is EPIC!! It's gonna be legendary!! The best line ever!!!
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59 ee
August 30, 2012 at 9:03 AM
I always look forward to your reviews because it is usually as engaging as watching the episodes itself :)
Could someone explain the significance of the flashback where Kang To and Shunji were crying (when seated on a bicycle, I think) in what looks like the countryside. I missed the earlier episodes. Thanks
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60 psatori
August 30, 2012 at 9:49 AM
obviously, having come this far, i *know* kang-to sided with kenji and murdered his own brother as a result of his obsessive need to put gaksital down and move up the ranks, and that later that very same evening, he found out kenji killed his mother and subsequently set out to brutally take revenge --against his best friend's brother...right in front of his best friend.
this's been a powerful undercurrent for the duration of the show, providing Evil!Shunji impetus and motivating kang-to (albeit initially for less-than-noble reasons) to begin his journey on the Path of the Hero and catalyzing a zillion other, tinier story threads --so, sure, the horrific events of kang-to's Longest Night Ever have been an inextricable element of the overarching story from very nearly the beginning.
but it wasn't until this episode, when shunji sits kang-to down in everyone's favorite torture chamber and they had their, er, heart-to-heart (so to speak) that the impact of all those tragic events really hit me.
it also wasn't until that moment that i realized how completely and utterly f*cked up kang-to is. serious propers to joo won for that scene; he really brought kang-to's soul-deep turmoil to bear in an achingly visceral, heart-breaking way. in one fell swoop, he lost everything, his whole world --his brother, his mother, his best friend; and a large portion of the reason *why* he lost everything can be chocked up to decisions *he* made. his damage is all-encompassing and wholly unfixable, and joo won made these facts manifest in an almost palpable capacity.
love for mok dan and a deep, still-growing commitment to The Cause notwithstanding, if that scene showcased anything, it was definitely that kang-to's got a seriously massive death wish.
d*mmit it all if my love for this show (and the ever-increasingly sick&twisty kang-to/shunji dynamic, especially) isn't bordering on the obscene.
thankyouthankyou for your always-insightful recaps, mizz beans.
your brains are mighty shiny.
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annie
August 30, 2012 at 11:37 AM
Love your comment - agree completely.
The scene where he finally spoke honestly to Shunji - the look in his eyes gave me a really bad feeling that Kang-to is not going to survive to see a happy ending. How can he, with all he's gone through and now his identity exposed to all the baddies?
I don't know if my heart can take the next three episodes. :/
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61 $t!tcH Hsu
August 30, 2012 at 9:55 AM
i even tried to wish that shunji gonna be good again but he is still a pain in the ass as ever!!!it's gonna end soon!:9
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62 wileecoy
August 30, 2012 at 10:18 AM
I wouldn't say this is the best drama I have ever seen but its' definitely the top 3 dramas. It's very hard for any dramas to top Tree with Deep Roots, it was such a engrossing drama and King 2 Hearts was also very well done. I must say this drama does tug at mind and heart, the bromance is such a tragedy. Like JB has said also I found it humorous that Mok Dan was willing to ship RaRa and Lee Kang To if she rescues them ... lol ... if that is how she fights for love how is she ever going to be a revolutionary.... lol
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63 lizzie
August 30, 2012 at 10:38 AM
You know the female comrade girl who helped to save Kang To? She is what I wanted to MD to be. So awesome, useful and badass.
But what MD does? Only pray.
I feel sad they give us awesome MD in the first episodes just to make her the weak girl who can't do much.
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namcha
August 30, 2012 at 11:51 AM
I was thinking the same thing. Mok Dan should have been the one rescuing KT. They have made MD character so useless as the show progessed.
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Awe
August 30, 2012 at 1:40 PM
let's all be like comrade badass-chick with sticks.
she totally rocks the smack-downs.
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64 Anabanana
August 30, 2012 at 10:45 AM
I think a fitting ending for Shunji would be in the end he can't kill Kangto -- even if he has the upper hand. Some emotional dialogue will ensure, he decides he can't kill KangTo because he loves him as a friend/bro still (no matter how small), and in the end... he is partially redeemed while dying his own way (be it walking into a battle field unarmed or something else). I can't believe deep down (really really deep down) Shunji does still care for KangTo. But he has to. He definitely has to or he wouldn't have been so furious with him all these past months he has been Gaksital and for killing Kenji.
But at least we now know, no matter how infinitesimal, Shunji does care. The question is... will Shunji still care for him as a former friend once KangTo revisits Kangsan's original goals to eliminate the Kishokai original council of 5? This time he'll have to kill Taro to avenge Lee Sun, the boys' father. I had almost forgotten there was the whole "You killed my father, now prepare to die" plot. I almost wish there wasn't one -- it would be too much like City Hunter and I want this drama to be different. :(
Shunji may have forgiven KangTo for killing Kenji since KangTo's explanation makes sense (he drove himself crazy after killing his own bro, the original Gaksital). But I don't think for a minute Shunji will forgive KangTo if he eliminates Taro... even if Taro was the one who wielded the sword that ended Lee Sun.
oh, dear. Don't they learn?!! Revenge is just a nasty cycle...
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somewhere
August 30, 2012 at 2:23 PM
Right? RIGHT?
I'm glad I'm not the only one who felt that Shunji still love his FRIEND! (I actually feel doubt about my own prediction since SJ keep showing Hatred towards KT)
This episode said it all. He just doesn't want to admit it... It started in epi 22, when I believe about KANG TO being Shunji real weakness besides his father. Because all this while he honestly want to prove his prediction about Kang To being Gaksital was not true. My initial impression I get when he finally unmask KT, the look on his face when he want to try to Killed KT? priceless..! He can't kill him with his own hand. After that, He keep making another excuse to avoiding him for killing KT. He just doesn't want to trust his own heart. He has believe he has no heart anymore since become police officer, He want to shut down his own heart. Let us know who will win, his heart, or achieve his (father)own ambition
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Ann
August 30, 2012 at 6:42 PM
I am seeing an ending rather like that of The Devil, where Mok Dan finds Kang To and Sunji sitting side by side, both dead.
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65 MsB
August 30, 2012 at 11:23 AM
Again, another episode that I a in such awe and amazement that I cannot comment! Loved the Keyser Sozed reference too!
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66 loversandlies
August 30, 2012 at 11:53 AM
I can't even describe all the emotions this damn show puts me through, and this episode in particular just completely robbed all the feelings I had and twisted them in a bundle of mush and tears and pain.
That scene where Kang-To sat in front of Shunji, revealing how he became Gaksital and how he killed his brother with his own hands....jfc can someone get Joo Won a damn oscar? I couldnt even watch, it was so painful, so good, so well acted. Shunji, you think you had it tough? Dude you don't even know.
You know around episodes 20 ish I thought the drama kinda dragged a bit and it was just back and forth - gaksital fighting, gaksital escapes, shunji vs kangto etc, but this episode really upped the ante...all the reveals and now with kang to accepting the fact that shunji and the jap squad knows...how will this all play out? I can't believe theres only 3 episodes to go. I can only hope we have a happy ending. Anyway thanks for all the recaps dramabeans, I'm looking forward to what the show has in store for us addicted, on the edge, drained but excited viewers!
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67 ryalred
August 30, 2012 at 1:13 PM
I love the fight scene at the beginning. It reminds me of tekken. I really expected a loud KO voiceover at the last kick.
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68 Awe
August 30, 2012 at 1:37 PM
Holy Mask Tape!!!! the smack-downs in this episode are epic. the emo smack-downs, the box o' death smack-down, dance floor smack-down, the samurai sword-to-the neck smack-down and then of course, there's your garden variety smack-down after we free the hero-sucks to be you, shunji smack-down. all this, gangnam style.
and here i thought being jinned was bad...my nerves are raw, my breath racing and i feel a young-rae coming on. MOAR, i say! i want more...sigh.
ps--thanks for the recap smack-down. epic.
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69 Lilly.com
August 30, 2012 at 2:12 PM
Yeah it really is all about the guys, the two best friends. Too much romance would have ruined it.
A friendship shattered by fate and circumstances sets it apart from other dramas with this story done so excellently to go with the action and adventure.
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70 Quiet Thought
August 30, 2012 at 3:27 PM
This would be a much shorter series if the heroes actually killed their enemies instead of leaving them alive to torture and murder more patriots and innocents another day. Other than that, some fine scenes.
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Ann
August 30, 2012 at 6:45 PM
I understand your frustration about the bad guys being left alive. However, one of the inherent qualities of heroes is that they don't kill indiscriminately. They try to bring criminals to justice.
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71 Crazyjnx
August 30, 2012 at 3:54 PM
Thank you for the recap! I truly love the bromance angle, and how it literally boils down to their bromance being on the line. Yes, the independence war and evil club is the big picture, but to these two little boys, their own treatrous journey of tears and love is also a very big picture. I think both have the same fear, of finally having to end the others life, and yes, we all know, them two know, that it will break them. Even if they ever recover from the trauma, a little bit of them would already be gone forever. Thank goodness they flashed back to the crying bike ride scene. One of the best sad scenes I've scene in kdramaland. Two boys who've found love and kinship in each other, crying because their lives are changed forever, crying for themselves, crying for each other. Not realizing what they were mourning was actually the loss of that moment they were able to share with each other, in a beautiful field, on a bike...Gaksitaaaaaal!
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72 Lena S.
August 30, 2012 at 5:37 PM
this episode was so good!
thank you for the recaps JB.
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73 Ann
August 30, 2012 at 7:15 PM
I found a video of the song with the lyrics:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mK_QqnDxg5Q
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74 pea
August 30, 2012 at 10:11 PM
tq..this is soooo crazyy....tears everywhere...TT_TT
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75 sweetspring
August 31, 2012 at 8:10 AM
all i could think at the end of this episode was "DAMN! that was good!!!"
gaksital & us, we come a long way & the end is upon us soon. it got draggy here & there & some characters could have been beefed up more but thanks to some stellar acting by the 2 main male leads & some great cliffhanger endings i have remained faithful in watching all the episodes & look forward to more of Joo Won's future projects (if, for some insane reason, he does't get cast in some meaty role soon & just shows up for 1n2d then there will be some real waste of talent going down... & that goes for park ki woong too).
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76 qmiwook
September 5, 2012 at 6:27 AM
JB's comments in the last paragraph is exactly what I LOVED about this episode among many other great and horrible moments. Seeing KangTo and Shunji each right smack in the middle of the screen talking plainly to each other. It was brilliant. Forget about rules of thirds in composition for pictures. That scene demanded all our attention. I love love love this show.
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77 Ennayra
September 11, 2012 at 2:16 PM
Thanks for the recap! I also felt like the show was slowing down the past few episodes, but I certainly paid attention all through this episode.
I hate the nail cage so much. I think it's the creepiest torture in the drama, and with Shunji having perfected the art of creeper staring through the blinds, that's pretty creepy.
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78 Morose
October 30, 2012 at 4:50 AM
Comment was deleted
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79 hiba
March 8, 2013 at 7:31 AM
this is just epic !!
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80 Angel Yi
August 10, 2013 at 7:21 AM
I want a refund from this show for my tears. And broken heart. Okay, so before I watched the episode, I decided to read the recaps for 1-3 again, and guess what I saw???? Kang To/Shunji's epic bromance. Then I watched this episode, and I think I died. Like a million times. Idk if I'll be able to finish this show but I have to. I LOVE it, but I want a refund for my shattered heart. I think the show ate it already though. I'm kinda glad for this pain, because it's like... Feels, but good feels. Painful feels of course, but still a lot different from these Melos/"romantic comedies" that try to squeeze years out of you (some succeed, but I don't think any I've watched we're this emotional.)
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81 prettysup
April 12, 2015 at 11:36 PM
Hi I am another sadistic fellow who loves to see my heroes getting injured /tortured. I am trying to visualise the nail box torture that they put LKT in. Which part of the body do the nails actually poke him? Did they show any visual of this box's interior in this drama ?
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