Six Flying Dragons: Episode 31
by HeadsNo2
Bang-won faces one of his biggest and most important decisions yet, and it’s one he must face alone, even if it pits him against everything he once held dear. It’s hard to watch without wanting to just give him a hug, but it’s another great performance feather for Six Flying Dragons to put in its hat. Though it was hardly wanting for stellar acting before, episodes like this are always a welcome bonus.
SONG OF THE DAY
Infinite – “Bad” [ Download ]
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EPISODE 31 RECAP
While Bang-won eavesdrops nearby, Jung Do-jeon emphatically explains his proposed system of governing to Jung Mong-joo, adding that the dying nation of Goryeo wouldn’t be able to sustain such a change. Only by creating a new nation can any of these reforms hope to be achieved.
For his new country to exist, Jung Do-jeon adds, the king must have the power only to appoint a prime minister—and he wants Jung Mong-joo to be it. The success or failure of the country would rest on his shoulders, and not Lee Seong-gye’s.
Though it would be near impossible to expect any king of Goryeo to hand over all his power, Jung Do-jeon claims that Lee Seong-gye is one hundred percent willing to take the job. “Please… please become the first prime minister of this new nation,” he begs.
Then, in a surprise move, Jung Do-jeon rises from his chair to kneel at Jung Mong-joo’s feet. “Please,” he asks again. “Please accept this lacking student’s sincerity.” Now the ball is in Poeun’s court. What will he do with it?
After the two part, they have a telepathic conversation as they come to terms with everything that’s just been said. Jung Mong-joo wonders why it has to be him of all people, which Jung Do-jeon answers by saying that he’s gone too far to be considered a true Confucian scholar, and couldn’t dare to take on the job himself.
Bang-won updates Jung Do-jeon on the Ji Cheon-tae/Cho-young situation, and that she’s been taken in for interrogation by Officer Nam. Jung Do-jeon congratulates him on a job well done and puts him in charge of any operations regarding Nameless from here on out, since there’s nothing Bang-won can’t achieve with his resourcefulness.
And though he asks about his talk with Poeun, he deliberately doesn’t mention that he overheard the entire thing. All Jung Do-jeon says is that he poured his heart out to his old friend, so now, they wait.
Yooksan is enraged to find out they’ve been tricked by Bang-won, and now, he’s taken Cho-young from them. Their first priority is to get her back before she can spill vital information, though Yooksan is reticent to report any of this to the higher-ups, considering it was his mistake that caused it.
Gil Sun-mi recognizes what a bad spot this puts them in, and recommends that they try to find a different weapon to stab at the heart of Jung Do-jeon’s movement. Jung Mong-joo just isn’t cutting it anymore.
Even Cho-young is amazed to find out that Bang-won tricked her into revealing her Nameless affiliation using a made-up term, but she’s not about to let an opportunity to sow discord go to waste. With a shrewd smile, she seems about to tell Officer Nam about Bang-won’s eavesdropping.
After hearing from Officer Nam that Cho-young will only speak to him, Bang-won heads out with an overeager Moo-hyul, who’s all too happy to laud Bang-won’s awesomeness. He’s happy to know he picked the right person to protect, and remembering Moo-hyul’s dream brings Bang-won out of his dark reverie.
He turns to Moo-hyul and says that the day he came up with his dream—to make people smile through politics—was the day Gil Tae-mi died. Specifically, it was the day Moo-hyul promised allegiance to him because he saw all the people smiling because of what Bang-won had done.
Moo-hyul lights up to know that Bang-won’s dream came about because of him, before Bang-won continues, “You said that it was your first time seeing the people smile like that, that you knew I was the one who made it happen. Those words made me so happy that I thought I was going to die. Politics that will make people smile and be glad… that became my dream from that moment on.”
Since he says all this in such a dour tone even though the words are uplifting, poor Moo-hyul can’t understand why he’s so down about it. “You can do it. It will happen if you do it,” he says encouragingly. Aww. Best bodyguard/friend ever.
Thinking about Yooksan’s need for “a new sword” in their fight against Jung Do-jeon, Cho-young goes into her conversation with Bang-won with a very clear plan. She knows Bang-won didn’t tell anyone about the conversation he overheard, and uses the contents of it against him.
“General Lee Seong-gye will be confined in a prison called Being King, and his family will be imprisoned there with him,” she says with a smile. Not only that, but the country would be ruled by a prime minister, and not his father.
Jung Mong-joo flashes back to Jung Do-jeon saying the same thing to him, expounding on the idea that the king and his family would be kept in the most secure prison, aka the palace.
At the same time, Cho-young explains this to Bang-won, who returns that it’s an obvious choice to entrust the country to more than just one man. Enacting a checks and balances system is only right. “Still, you don’t like it, do you?” Cho-young fires right back. No matter how great the country is, she knows he won’t like it if it’s a country where he’s powerless.
Then, her voice lowering, she tells him that Nameless isn’t against establishing a new nation. In fact, they’re thinking of supporting Lee Seong-gye as king, and even tried to stop General Choi’s foolhardy war. “We are on the same side,” she explains. Except for one thing, of course: Land reform.
At this, Bang-won laughs. Here he thought Nameless had a great cause, but in the end, they were just trying to hold onto their land? Cho-young still tried to bait him by telling him that he can learn more about their cause. A new country can still be established without such a powerful prime minister and land reform, after all.
But Bang-won’s had enough, and grabs her by her collar to make his point. Outside, Boon-yi pelts him with questions about what Cho-young might’ve said—about Nameless, about her mother, about everything.
Bang-won just stares at her as her words begin to meld together until they can’t be heard at all, replaced by a high-pitched ringing sound. At last, he just says that he needs to sleep.
He tries his best to do just that, but ends up sweating in a fever dream filled with Minister Hong’s predictions that he would fail, and Jung Do-jeon’s harsh words about how he had no place in the new country. That’s what sticks with him now as he worries, “Do I really have no place in that country? Have I lost my way again?”
Jung Mong-joo does some brooding on his own, and mentally thanks Jung Do-jeon for showing him his resolve, since it means he can give up on trying to convince his old friend. He knows there’s no way Jung Do-jeon will give up the country he’s worked so hard to create, and respects that.
“However, I won’t be that new country’s first prime minister,” he adds to himself. “I will be Goryeo’s last subject. If Heaven hasn’t abandoned Goryeo, then I should be able to protect it from you. Even if this country’s luck has run out, as a Confucian scholar, I will face my end with her. I will die before Goryeo comes to an end.”
And so, he visits King Gongyang late that night to talk to him about the land reform, while the same issue gets a heated discussion from Jung Do-jeon’s camp. Jo Joon doesn’t believe the land reform has any hope to pass as long as Lee Saek still has a spot in the dodang, but they can’t impeach him when that was one of Jung Mong-joo’s explicit conditions.
Gongyang is surprised when Jung Mong-joo tells him that they must pass the land reform in order to protect the country, since they need landowners to pay them taxes. In a more surprising move, he advocates that they need to protect Goryeo not from Lee Seong-gye, but from Jung Do-jeon.
They have no hope against Lee Seong-gye’s military might, Jung Mong-joo explains, so his only hope is to drive a rift between Lee and Jung Do-jeon. Since it’s likely that they’ll impeach Lee Saek, Poeun says it’s a sacrifice that must be made. The king has to gain the people’s trust in order to succeed.
Knowing how important Jung Mong-joo is to his cause, Gongyang charges Sa-kwang with protecting Poeun as if she were protecting him. They’ll be sending all communications through her henceforth as well, since Jung Do-jeon’s camp will undoubtedly be watching.
Jung Mong-joo goes to Lee Seong-gye first to tell him that he’s supporting the land reform as well as Lee Saek’s impeachment, but stays mum about joining their cause. He plays the same game with Jung Do-jeon, who gets too distracted by his support for the land reform that he’s happy to give him all the time he needs to decide on New Joseon.
But at least Jung Mong-joo thinks to himself, “I’m sorry, Sambong. For the sake of this ailing country, I need to deceive the world and you.” They both emerge just in time, since Bang-ji was beginning to sniff the air for the presence he felt nearby—which, unknown to him, was Sa-kwang.
Da-kyung is worried for her husband when she finds him the next morning, grim-faced and tying his hair into a sangtu, or the common topknot. She finds it strange that it’s his first time styling his hair this way, though he remarks that it was stranger he hadn’t done so yet. (Traditionally, noblemen would switch to a topknot once they reached manhood/got married.)
Bang-won pays a visit to Jung Do-jeon after news of Lee Saek’s impeachment reaches him, and the elder notes his new ‘do with a smile. Bang-won lays out a daring scheme he’s come up with to destroy Nameless from within by pretending to be swayed by Cho-young’s attempts to bring him to the dark side.
If he leads Nameless to believe he might side with their cause, then he’ll have better access to them. He’ll “fall” for Cho-young’s offer, and make sure they believe him by gathering his own separate private soldiers to make it seem like he’s planning to revolt against Team Joseon. Jung Do-jeon gives him the green light to do it, even though I have a sneaking suspicion that that’s exactly what Bang-won planned on.
He comments on Bang-won’s topknot before he goes, and Bang-won gives him a forced smile in return. Inside, he thinks, “I’m not a child anymore.” Outside, Moo-hyul congratulates him on his ingenious plan.
Lee Saek and Ha Ryun are impeached and arrested, and Jung Mong-joo surprises his followers by not doing a thing about it. In fact, he instructs them all to lay low until the land reform has passed, and to quietly take up any government positions that have the power to advise the king.
Nameless gets news of the impeachments, and realize that they’ve failed in trying to use Jung Mong-joo. They don’t need to report it to their mysterious leader, since he’s coming to them. Dun dun dun.
Having found where Team Joseon is holding Cho-young, Gil Sun-mi goes to free her, only to be beaten to the punch by two masked men. He follows them to a spot in the forest where Bang-won waits by a fire.
When she asks what he’s doing, he tells her that this is his answer to her offer. He opens up about his use of planting trees to represent foes he wanted to defeat, and of chopping them down when the job was done. The first one he ever planted was for Lee In-gyeom, the second for Minister Hong.
He tells her how Minister Hong wanted to make him powerless so he’d have no choice but to join hands with him, and how he almost fell for it. His life would’ve been much different had he taken that hand, but instead he wandered, which is how Jung Do-jeon came in.
“You found your way,” Cho-young notes. “I did,” Bang-won agrees. “Even just thinking of participating in his great cause made my heart feel like exploding. The idea of ending this rotten Goryeo and establishing a new country where people can enjoy life! But… he said I have no place in that country. Then I realized that there is nothing I can do in that country.”
His expression graver than ever, Bang-won adds, “No, from the very beginning in his great cause, I now know there was no place for me.” Coming back to himself a bit, Bang-won tells her that if they so much as think of using him the way they used Hong Ryun to assassinate King Gongmin, they’ll be very, very sorry for it.
Cho-young agrees to his terms, but is stopped before leaving when he asks her if she knows Yeon-hyang. How about Nameless returning her as proof of their alliance? Cho-young is shocked to find out that Yeon-hyang’s children are looking for her, since she didn’t even know they were alive.
Moo-hyul and Young-kyu (the two masked men who freed Cho-young) are practically giddy from watching Bang-won’s fireside chat with her, convinced that their master is the best liar in the world. What they don’t know is that Bang-won wasn’t lying for all of it.
Gil Sun-mi finds Cho-young afterward, having overheard her entire conversation. He gets after her for talking about Yeon-hyang, only for her to return that he was the one who brought two corpses and said her children were dead.
Shrugging, Gil Sun-mi adds that there are a lot of dead boys and girls in Goryeo, and he just took two bodies when he couldn’t find Yeon-hyang’s real children.
He wants to keep the matter closed in order to prevent an internal war with Nameless (apparently one happened in 1378), but Cho-young’s not sure how long it’ll stay that way when Yeon-hyang’s children are actively looking for her.
While Jung Do-jeon tells Boon-yi and Bang-ji that Cho-young’s rescue was a trap set by them, Cho-young faces the Nameless tribunal to explain not only how she lost Hwasadan to Jung Do-jeon’s side, but why she agreed to bring Bang-won in. She’ll have to face their master’s judgement for both counts.
Bang-won meets with his father to tell him he’ll be moving out (that topknot has magic powers), and wonders internally if his father knows what kind of diminished role he’d play in the new country.
When his father warns him not to work while expecting something in return, Bang-won summons up a smile and replies, “Of course that won’t happen. What else could I possibly want?” How about the world?
Daddy Min is in charge of their new lodgings, having given daughter Da-kyung the family’s Gyeongdeok Manor. Before Bang-won thanks him for the gift, he asks for his support—he wants to have his own private band of soldiers that aren’t already his father’s, which is a daunting prospect.
Master Hong, Grandma, Gab-boon, and Boon-yi get to move in with Bang-won and his wife as household servants, and are all thrilled at their new digs. Master Hong’s jaw drops to the ground when Bang-won refers to him as such and calls for him to follow, along with Moo-hyul.
He’s already recruited a small army of soldiers, and asks Master Hong to take over their training. He wants him to make each of those soldiers into another Moo-hyul, so he can have an army of them. (If only!) Master Hong is humbled and honored by the opportunity.
Da-kyung tells Boon-yi that her family will take over funding for her network of marketplace spies, and that she should take orders directly from Bang-won now instead of Jung Do-jeon while he’s working on his plan to fool Nameless. She also gives her some assigned reading.
Bang-won assembling his own private army has the effect he wanted on Nameless, since they begin to wonder whether he really does have other motives (that could benefit them, of course).
And in a morbidly hilarious break, we find Ha Ryun screaming in the torture chamber, only to find out he hasn’t even been tortured yet. Bang-gwa’s confusion is priceless, but any would-be torture is interrupted when Bang-won asks for some privacy with the prisoner.
The news that he’ll be exiled for enthroning the young King Chang is no news to Ha Ryun, who’s been exiled twice before. But what Bang-won says next catches his interest: “Make sure to come back alive again this time. I will be waiting.”
Ha Ryun asks what he means, and Bang-won says that he’ll take him in. With him, he’ll attack two enemies—the cancer that is Nameless, and someone he’s not sure of yet. But he will be when Ha Ryun returns.
That’s all fine and well, Ha Ryun says, but he doesn’t serve anyone who serves another master. And Bang-won serves Jung Do-jeon, doesn’t he? But something in Bang-won’s face tells him that’s not so, and he laughs maniacally. In that case, he cautions Bang-won to lay low until he returns from exile.
Boon-yi heads toward the New Joseon Cave on Bang-won’s request, only to be pelted with snowballs while en route. She knows it’s Bang-won and playfully warns him to stop, but it is on when he emerges from the trees with freshly packed snow in hand. Snowball fight!
Neither of them can help from giggling helplessly as they lob fresh snow at each other, and even Boon-yi isn’t above a bit of trickery to get a good hit in. Eventually they both dissolve into fits of laughter on the ground next to each other, only Bang-won suddenly stops laughing.
A tear slips out of one eye, before his face melts into a mask of sadness as he cries. Boon-yi sits up, wondering what’s wrong with him. He straightens up as much as he can to turn to her, “Now… Now… I’m done playing. I don’t think I can have fun with you like this anymore.”
COMMENTS
Oof. I was wondering what got into Bang-won for him to break loose and have a bit of fun, but it should figure that no fun is ever free in dramaland—it’s always the last act of unbridled joy a character gets before embarking on a dark journey. It’s the same as the let’s-be-a-couple-for-one-day trope, and in a way, that last scene was a bit of both.
But that doesn’t lessen its impact in any way, since seeing such a drastic change in Bang-won’s expression hit all the right notes and tugged on all the right heartstrings. It was perfectly played too, and so unexpected that I went from smiling along with them to looking confusedly at the screen, thinking I must’ve missed something important. I knew the snowball fight was uncharacteristic of him, but I wouldn’t have guessed at the internal struggle going on until it actually unfolded moment by painstaking moment.
What makes Bang-won’s inner war so poignant is that he’s fighting it alone, with no one he’s willing to take into his confidence. When he had problems before, he was able to talk them out with Jung Do-jeon or even his father directly, but ever since he overheard that fateful conversation he’s receded into himself. There’s no real knowing when it comes to what he’s planning, but where Bang-won excels as a manipulator is his ability to mix genuine truth in with his lies, lending them a believable authenticity that no one so far has been able to see past.
For instance, his meeting with Cho-young was supposed to be all business and his way of infiltrating Nameless for Team Joseon, but he only managed to convince her by telling her his real feelings. Because he is wavering, and presumably is thinking about turning to the dark side, laying out his soul to her served a dual purpose for him. Although his conversation with Ha Ryun leads me to believe that he’d much rather dismantle Nameless than join it, it’s clear that he’s not just doing it for Jung Do-jeon anymore.
If anything, this episode was about Bang-won putting himself first, even though he may be a bit misguided in that notion. I get why he couldn’t go to Jung Do-jeon with what he’d learned, since there was little chance of convincing him otherwise when it came to kingly powers, and since exposing his thoughts on the matter could potentially put him in a precarious spot within the group’s hierarchy. By fooling both sides, Bang-won’s giving himself time to make a decision while making sure his options are advantageous. Except now, it only matters that things are advantageous to him, and not necessarily advantageous to the cause.
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Tags: Byun Yo-han, featured, Kim Myung-min, Shin Se-kyung, Six Flying Dragons, Yoo Ah-in
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26 Marshmallow
January 20, 2016 at 3:22 AM
@Shinubi Wang lmao I hope you're aware that Dakyung was a real person while Boonyi is a wish-fullfillment, self-insert fictional character. Everyone hoping for romance between Bangwon and Boonyi make me laugh. Bangwon and Dakyung are end game, and it pisses me off that the writers wrote a Disney romance between Bangwon and a fictional character.
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Stella
January 20, 2016 at 5:02 AM
Why not? If you check out Lee Bang Won’s genealogy and family history, he had one official wife and 17 concubines and A TON of kids. These are the official women who made it into his courts likely due to their backgrounds of nobility (suitability), we are talking about a king who defies tradition and enjoys hunting which probably means he goes out of the palace often. The love affairs with the commoners cannot be discounted, definitely a casanova in his time.
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Stella
January 20, 2016 at 5:07 AM
Da Kyung though a real life figure is not first love material for sure since its recorded she was only a political marriage partner that was arranged. I think its cool that SFD gave him a pure first love that humanizes him and keep us distracted about the true history of King Taejong and his many women.
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Kiara
January 20, 2016 at 5:48 AM
I don't think he was defying tradition when he took in that many concubines. As I said before marriage was mostly based on politics so it was a political move on Bang-won's part.
If you look at his concubines, they were from powerful noble families. He did not want his queen's family to be too powerful.
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nara
January 20, 2016 at 8:35 AM
maybe its not defying tradition but it is considered quite excessive even for those times
seems like LBW wanted LM to know her place and to flaunt infront of her
it is said that he immediately took plenty of concubines to undermined her and her family this is probably the most hated think he could have done to his queen
so the assumption that he wasnt in love with her is logical
to try and hurt her so much
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Kiara
January 20, 2016 at 9:15 AM
This is a man who did not want to share power so his first move was to keep her power and her powerful family under his control. He picked Ha Ryun as prime minister because Ha Ryun knew him well. Ha Ryun just want to survive and live a long life.
Governing with absolute power was his way. That's mean his wife the queen and Prime Minister will have no real power in his court.
From her point of view, he was being cruel and ungrateful. I won't be surprised if she did try to kill him and it wasn't written down in history heh.
nara
January 20, 2016 at 10:05 AM
i would have if i was her and claim self defense
she must have been great and amazing
she also was ahead of her time
and tohave such a great king as Sejong she was a great and smart mother
and GSY does great here and will become more prominent very soon
but i think that even if the kig appreciated her he feared her and i dont think he ever loved her
Kiara
January 20, 2016 at 12:46 PM
I would've poisoned him.
Four brothers and her father also died from shocked after hearing about their exile.
I may not care about the rest of the Min queens but I always thought that Queen Wongyeong paid a heavy price for helping Bang-won sit on the throne.
shirayukihime
January 20, 2016 at 8:00 PM
i think the min brothers abused King Taejong's power and their influence.. i watch King Sejong the Great and they want the 1st prince to become the king cause he was easy to manipulate.. and king taejong found out that they have so many slaves, hidden lands, and private armies. so that's really dangerous if the first prince become the king.. there will be revolts. and i don't think min brothers is good to be around, they will influence king sejong and have control the politics over him. King taejong said that prince yangnyeong don't know how to distinguish the flattery from loyalty.. min brothers were not really loyals, sooner after king taejong they will have more power than the king and sedo politics will be introduced in the early dynasty. that's very dangerous.. if it would be me, i'll do the same thing.. eradicate the the one who helped you get the throne and consolidate your power.. it is for the better anyway
shirayukihime
January 20, 2016 at 8:05 PM
i think LM understand what he did. In joseon dynasty, when you got married the daughters have no connections to her family..the center of her world is her family..she must have lover her children so she in the end choose her children instead of her brothers. king sejong wouldn't become great if they are still around. we have seen what happen to goryeo royals... the goryeo king have only few years of reign cause they were killed in the power struggles between the relatives. so that's dangerous...
nara
January 21, 2016 at 1:58 AM
of course she chose her children and she acted that way to protect them
but just as LBW expected that JDJ will count him in his big plan bc he had helped so much
LM brothers had expected that as was LM herself
i know one is fiction and one is true history but the emotions are the same
they helped him ascend the thrown they expected being more influential
but LBW being an absolute ruler would not allow therefor rooting for the other prince
LM wanted to be the most influential women can be and also that her children will ascend the thrown
Kiara
January 21, 2016 at 7:48 AM
Her oldest brothers were charged with disloyal to the king. The other 2 brothers were hanged for protesting against their older brothers punishment. It pisses Bang-won off so he killed them all.
27 Ema
January 20, 2016 at 3:28 AM
Thanks kiara..(i can't use reply)
Big hugs and thank you for head...thank you for your time
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28 nara
January 20, 2016 at 5:15 AM
i wonder why it is ok to judge JDJ negatively for withholding information while judging LBW favorably for doing the same
is it ok to do the same "wrongness" just bc it was done to you? are you allowed to wrong another just bc you were wronged first?
what kind of justice are you looking for in your leaders?
i really dont get the justification i see here
they are doing the same and should be judged the same
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Kiara
January 20, 2016 at 9:24 AM
I agree with your first paragraph nara.
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drag_on
January 20, 2016 at 4:15 PM
LOL. I feel like you're trying to seek fairness/truth/right in most every aspect related to this drama, including what you called as 'the justification you saw here'.
Well, I might be doing the same, but I decided to stop 'thinking' with the same way like you do, because It would make me lose all the fun I could feel in watching a fictional drama here.
I have to have a character to root for, to look forward to what's coming next, to get better feels. lol. I choose Bang-won because I understand his situation. I've seen how much he has done, and he's still the same 'child' in the first episode who try to achieve his dream, to find the meaning of his existence. He seems capable of anything (he does, tbh) but still is inexperienced in so many ways (considering his age, perhaps).
(For the record, this isn't the attempt to disregard the fact that things in a drama might happen in real life, or the writer was intentionally depicting some realism so viewers should notice the real issue and take a real action. But, It's just me believing that there's nothing pure white or pure black when it comes to human nature, or the world)
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nara
January 20, 2016 at 4:35 PM
well LOL thats just the best compliment ever and if you tried to render me speechless this is the most beautiful way to do it
i agree you have to identify yourself\root for someone and im rooting for BY
for me its a threeway battle monarchy ministry and the ppl
and as i said in this forum bf
since ima women and probably would not have been a noble BY is my only option i see myself in her and im rooting for her
bc there is no black or right or absolute truth or absolute anything is why im also against absolute rulers for them even if the intention is good there is only one way theirs
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I Will Goryeo You
January 21, 2016 at 8:01 AM
THIS
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Kiara
January 20, 2016 at 4:21 PM
Funny to go back to the last episode and read all the name calling on JDJ lol.
The writers have been twisting the history to throw us off.
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nara
January 20, 2016 at 4:37 PM
what do you mean?
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Kiara
January 20, 2016 at 4:56 PM
Our reactions can change with every episodes. There is twists and turns.
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29 CaroleMcDonnell
January 20, 2016 at 5:45 AM
This sageuk is turning out to be my most favoritest of all. It is simply awe-inspiring in writing, directing, and acting. That snowball scene was just heartbreaking. Thanks for recapping.
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nomad
January 20, 2016 at 7:06 AM
Hear Hear!
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Giegie
January 20, 2016 at 9:42 AM
Mine, too. ^^
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drag_on
January 20, 2016 at 4:19 PM
This is indeed the best sageuk because it has been doing very amazing in so many ways, so far.
Hopefully, the ending won't ruin everything
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crazyahjummafan
January 20, 2016 at 6:30 PM
Agree with you. The snowball scene is also breath-taking! I just love all the beautiful scenery this drama has shown.
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Lisa Purba
January 21, 2016 at 10:10 AM
Agreed! This is my first 50 episodes of Sageuk and so far I'm loving it!
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30 bluefoureyes
January 20, 2016 at 7:32 AM
It's painful to see Bangwon's struggle... At least, I hope Boonyi can eventually look behind that mask and understand what he's going through...
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31 shinmudejuve
January 20, 2016 at 9:00 AM
So, ep 31 was the start of Lee Bangwon turning to the "dark" side. But, deep down in my heart, I could understand his way of thinking and decision. Jeong Dojeon's reformation strategy seems ideal and perfect, but I dislike the process how he build up his plans. He manipulated and lied to his ally (Lee Seonggye) and family.
I know that in the end Lee Seonggye would agree for being a puppet King, because he loves his people so much. But his sons might not agree (especially Bangwon,of course) that's why JDJ didn't tell anything to Lee family about his entire plan. He didn't want his plan to be failed so he deceived his ally, I just.. don't like it.
But then again, if I put myself on neutral side.. what Bangwon is going and planning to do right now has no different with what JDJ did to him. He is now deceiving his teacher and people around him to get what he desires.
It's all about worms that grows in their heart, their personal desires to achieve the so-called new perfect country. Bangwon want to has power in politic while JDJ trust Confusianism in running politic. They have same goal, to make people smile, but the worms lead them to the separate ways.
[WARNING: SPOILER ALLERT!!!]
In a good light, now I have a good understanding about how Lee Bangwon would grow to be King Taejong. Because due to real history, King Taejong is a ruthless king who doesn't dare to kill anyone (even his family) to build his dream, country that make his people smile.
[SPOILER END]
I'm now waiting how the writers tell us moreee about the process of new Joseon dinasty build up. I'm totally an avid fan of their writing style! (Only ONE critic tho: when will they give the 6th Dragon title to Moohyul? LOL)
This drama is seriously EPIC from too many aspects to mention one by one.
And I just want to comment 1 more thing: this drama gives great opportunities to some not-so-good-to-meh actors/actresses to show their "hidden" acting skills.
Yoon Kyunsang, I like him in Pinocchio, not because his acting but he's handsome.. and I found his acting pretty terrible in The Time We're Not in Love. Now he is good and sooo entertaining here as Moohyul!
He still needs to learn alot, but come on.. who doesn't like Moohyul? :P
The other one is Shin Sekyung. I've watched many of her dramas and the only drama that I found her acting is okay was Tree With Deep Roots. I've once said it and will repeat it: SSK is good in sageuk. Because she is really good in here. I surprise myself that her acting got me hooked many times in this drama.
So.. yeah.. YAAAYYY for Six Flying Dragons team. The BEST Kdrama of 2015 and 2016 so far (yes, both years!!)
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32 nara
January 20, 2016 at 10:30 AM
i think LBW got worm juice in his ears when he was watching BY talk
so he couldnt hear her
the problem with the worm is that it can be to late once you finally notice it - it had already taken over
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33 Yeri
January 20, 2016 at 11:52 AM
I share your sentiments about BY en BW!tho the fact is,"happy ending only exist in fairytaleland"not in this era! I dnt have the right to question the writer's point of view,but cant help!! Why they need to make her charcter perfect as a queen when she cant? I feel bad for the real Queen,her chrcter is realy interesting,but got block by BY!! Maybe to blnce the historical en fictional but why she??--they want to make her(BY) a concubine I guess,too bad for her,! I rather want to see her cultivating their land or to go back to their normal life en live peacefuly away from politics than to live in a palace with a messy life!!
One thing that I noticed,Kings of this era are all playboy(almost all of the king I know(^_^) sorry to say this,i know for a purpose but 5 is more than enough!
Good thing that i'm born in this time,!
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34 shirayukihime
January 20, 2016 at 8:30 PM
Guys, Is BW going to join Nameless?
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Lisa Purba
January 21, 2016 at 10:09 AM
He will join hand with Ha Ryun for sure, to crush the Nameless from the inside, because they are useless.
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shirayukihime
January 21, 2016 at 3:50 PM
thanks.. so excited for that.. but part of me , I don't want nameless to disappear.. it existed fr 700yrs , i don't think that's easy anyway..
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Lisa Purba
January 22, 2016 at 6:23 AM
Yeah it won't be easy, but this Nameless organization existence doesn't do any good for the country. Or they did?
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35 shirayukihime
January 20, 2016 at 8:34 PM
Man, every time i see BW on screen this last ep. I remember Bidam's transition in GSQD..
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36 shirayukihime
January 20, 2016 at 8:53 PM
some part of me wants him dead.. he should have let himself died.. it's so painful for me to watch him like this. i wanna know if someone said that he should take the throne cause it's his destiny,
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nara
January 21, 2016 at 2:01 AM
no one said it but i think HR insinuated this and if we go back it as if this conversation made start thinking about it
and his father in law also i think - wanting to keep the power of his clan
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37 I Will Goryeo You
January 21, 2016 at 8:05 AM
Yaasssh! Yoo Ah In showed a top notched acting in this episode I love love love et to bits! And finally the conflict is deepen. Feel bad for Bang Won. I want more LBW and Haryun for the next episodes! SFD fighting!
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38 hipployta
January 24, 2016 at 7:10 AM
Such a great show
I totally get Lee Bang Won and can see how he becomes King Taejong
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