meganbmoore: (wbds: ji: sword)
Soo Baek Hyang, The King’s Daughter is one of those sageuks whose title has a lot of variants when translated into English but that and just straight Soo Baek Hyang are the ones I prefer. I typically dislike “woman’s role and status determined by relation to male” titles, but in this case the designation is extremely plot relevant, and also not something that the main character bases her view of herself on.

The series is set during the reign of Muryeong of Baekje, though with impressive liberties. I mean, it is an MBC sageuk. Historically (as I understand it), Muryeong is believed to be the son of his predecessor, Dongseong, but is made Dongseong’s cousin for VERY IMPORTANT PLOT REASONS. Muryeong is in love with Chaehwa, the daughter of Baekga, the eventual assassin of Dongseong. When Baekga is manipulated into assassinating Dongseong by a supporter of Muryeong, Marshall Hae, Muryeong brings what can only be called unholy vengeance down on Baekga. He intends to spare Chaehwa but STUFF HAPPENS and Chaehwa is saved from a fire by a servant, Kuchon, who takes her to the neighboring country of Gaya, with bother believing Muryeong intended to kill her too.

Side note on Kuchon: Kuchon is a deaf mute (Though they seem to sometimes forget the deaf part, as there are a few times he’s definitely responding to sounds.) who was a Gogoryeo assassin who was captured and converted into an agent of Baekje by Marshall Hae and sent to spy on Baekga, only to dump Marshall Hae when he falls in love with Chaehwa. He is the guy who carries unconscious pregnant women dozens and dozens of miles without breaking a sweat, gets stabbed a bunch and gets back up, grabs swords with his bare hands, and takes a twig and beats down a dozen well trained soldiers for the crime of approaching his daughter in a threatening manner. Kuchon is what happens when you merge a wuxia hero with a shounen hero after his 4th or 5th powerup.

Getting back to the plot, unknown to Muryeong, Chaehwa is pregnant and names her daughter Seolnan, but also secretly names her Soo Baek Hyang, The name she had told Muryeong she would give their daughter, if they ever had one. Eventually, she falls in love with Kuchon, and a couple years later, they have a daughter named Seolhee. Meanwhile, back in Baekje, Muryeong is wallowing in guilt because he believes he killed The One Great Love Of His Life, and because he knows his cousin was killed to make him king, which is what happens. Then he happens to be watching his three year old son, Myongnong, playing with Dongseong’s son, Jinmoo. He notices they look almost exactly alike and hatches a plot to swap the boys. Both mothers are conveniently long dead, so there’s no one to yell at him about what an incredibly terrible idea this is. The official canon reasoning given is that this way, Dongseong’s son will still be king one day, and Muryeong will never be convinced to have Jinmoo banished or killed to secure his position if Jinmoo is actually his biological son. BTW, I’m only going to refer to Myongnong and Jinmoo by the names they grew up with after this. He also latches onto the idea of having Jinmoo raised by a supporter of Dongseong’s who hates Muryeong and thinks he had Dongseong killed to get the crown and wants vengeance. I mean, surely that setup won’t lead to Jinmoo being raised to hate Muryeong and think he has to avenge his father. NO, MURYEONG, THAT ISN'T THE OBVIOUS OUTCOME. NOT AT ALL.

Anyway, that’s the official canon reasoning. The real reason is so that there can be a lot of fake-cest wallowing later on.

Moving on to the main plot (gotta love how long it takes to explain the essential back story in sageuks) Seolnan and Seolhee grow up in Gaya, blissfully ignorant if their parents’ pasts. Seolnan is perfectly content as a mountain peasant. Seolhee has a hefty dose of typical petulant "But I deserve SO MUCH MORE. I should have been born someone IMPORTANT." teen stuff going for her, which escalates quite a bit before long. Myongnong grows up superresponsible and becomes Muryeong's spy master in between crown prince duties (In another drama, Muryeong would be a cold jerk. Here, he's ruthless can can be standoffish, but is pretty much relentlessly good intentioned, and only ruthless or cold out of absolute necessity, and has few moments that comes close to jerkishness.), and Jinmoo grows up a playboy who bounces between "I HATE MURYEONG AND WILL AVENGE MY FATHER" and "I really really really want Muryeong to like me and we can bond over board games and maybe one day he'll be proud of-WAIT WHAT AM I THINKING?"

Things go bad when, on a political trip to Gaya, both Jinmoo and Marshall Hae learn that Chaehwa is living there an has a family. Marshall Hae goes to Muryeong with his tail between his legs and prepares his "So, uhm, you know twenty years ago, when I told you I'd learned Chaehwa was dead? Well, I sorta-kinda-maybe lied about that-FOR YOUR OWN GOOD-and have felt really guilty ever since. Anyway, she lives here now and has a family. Including two daughters. One of whom is probably yours. I kinda neglected to tell you she was pregnant due to the whole lying about her being dead thing." speech. Jinmoo's reaction is more along the lines of "I WILL HAVE BLOOD AND VENGEANCE. BRING HER TO ME. But don't hurt anyone. I WILL TORTURE HER AND HER CHILDREN BECAUSE HER FATHER KILLED MINE. Hey, don't hurt anyone, ok? This is, like, a peaceful, non-violent kidnapping. FOLLOWED BY VENGEANCE AND TORTURE." Jinmoo rather sucks at being a tortured-half-villainous bad boy. Too bad he's so good at causing destruction anyway, because things go TERRIBLY WRONG and people die and Chaehwa is blinded with she and her daughters are the only survivors of their village. (My personal opinion is that Jinmoo's guardian pulled his men aside and told them to be sure to murder everyone from the outset, but I have no proof.) Chaehwa dies of her wounds, but because of Plot Significant Hairpins she thinks she's alone in a cave with Seolnan and unknowingly tells Seolhee that Seolnan is Muryeong's daughter, and how to prove it to him.

Later, Seolnan is determined to find the bandits and GET VENGEANCE AND JUSTICE for their village (it's a genetic thing) and Seolhee fakes her death (except Seolnan takes the evidence she leaves behind as indicators of abduction by bandits, not death, and adds AND SAVE MY SISTER to her vengeance plans) and travels to Baekje to convince Muryeong that she's his daughter with Chaehwa.

And all this is just the setup.

Eventually, Seolnan meets Myongnong and becomes a member of Bi Mool, Baekje's secret band of spies, and they totally-do-not-fall-in-love. Except for the part where they do. Naturally, at some point, one of them learns that Seolnan, not Seolhee, is Muryeong's daughter,, resulting in a lot of "OMG NOES I AM IN LOVE WITH MY HALF-SIBLING. THE ONE GREAT LOVE OF MY LIFE IS MY SIBLING. I MUST PULL AWAY AND NOT TELL THEM WHY BECAUSE I CAN'T LET THEM SHARE IN MY AGONY." Seolhee successfully passes herself off as Muryeong's long-lost daughter and becomes increasingly involved in court politics. And maybe becomes reeeaaallllyyy close to Jinmoo, causing Muryeong to engage in some "OMG NOES, INCEST. YOU TWO CANNOT BECOME CLOSE FOR REASONS I CANNOT TELL YOU EVEN THOUGH IT WOULD BE PERFECTLY ACCEPTABLE FOR COUSINS TO GET MARRIED AND IT WOULD ACTUALLY BE A POLITICALLY SOUND MOVE BECAUSE THEN MY DETRACTORS WOULD SHUT UP BUT IT CANNOT BE BECAUSE OF INCEST THAT I CANNOT TELL YOU ABOUT."

A lot of the series is Seolnan and Seolhee involved in (and in Seolhee's case, sometimes causing) political intrigues not only in Baekje, but also in other countries. There are some filler bits, but overall, it's stuffed with plot that manages to be consistently interesting, with great characters.

cut for length )

I eyed the series when it was airing but was leery about the "enemy sisters" aspect, and then one day I looked and saw there were about 90 episodes and went "Nuh uh." Later I learned that it was a daily drama that was 108 episodes. Unlike most dramas, which air 2 60-70 minute episodes on two consecutive nights, daily dramas air half-hour episodes Monday-Friday. There are even fewer sageuks among daily dramas than in your average kdrama percentages. Like their hour-long countparts, daily drama sageuks are more expensive and difficult than contemporary-set dramas, but with less exposure and typically lower ratings, making it harder to get big-name actors, which sageuks often rely on, and they also have to film more scenes per week because they have to have an extra half-hour of scenes per week. I actually only know of one other sageuk that's a daily drama.

I actually find 108 half-hour episodes less daunting than 54 hour long episodes. It's a lot easier to sit down and know you have time to finish an episode when it's short episodes. That's just me, though. The different format is that it also allows for different narrative structures. An obvious one being that, if needed, an episode can focus exclusively on one character or plot, without actually losing momentum or distracting form all the other plots going on. For, example, Seolnan barely features in the episode where Seolhee first presents herself to Muryeong, but features heavily in all the episodes around it, so the show was able to exclusively focus on that one important plotpoint without losing focus or momentum for everything else for the week. Later on, there's an episode that's almost entirely two family members who thought the other dead for two years barely missing each other the whole episode, to be finally reunited in the last couple minutes. Normally, that'd have to be split between other plotlines in the episode because a series couldn't devote half its airtime that week to it, but here they can comfortably fit it in while still keeping everything else going for the week as a whole. Airing 5 consecutive days and never having more than 2 days between episodes also means that the series could do cliffhangers and storyarc climaxes in ways that other dramas can't do. Certain cliffhangers are just fine for a 24-hour wait, but not a 5 day wait, so they could end on a rising BAM moment anytime they wanted without worrying about viewer frustration.

There are some things that rely on irritating contrivances, like the toddler-swapping (MURYEONG THAT WAS SUCH A TERRIBLE IDEA DESTINED TO BACKFIRE ON YOU) and times when characters are clearly not knowing about something or being kept out of something purely because ever so much could be cleared up by their seeing something or hearing a description, but the overall drama and plot and characters are great enough that I could usually roll my eyes and move on. I think I watched this in the space of about 3 1/2 weeks, if that.

Hulu has it but, sadly, neither Netflix nor DramaFever do. It is very, very worth watching, though, and everyone should hunt it down and watch it so we can talk about it.

TeeVee

Jul. 16th, 2015 05:39 pm
meganbmoore: (10k: virginia white)
1. I never thought the addition of a Ladyspy to one of my shows would be the thing that finally got me to be pretty sure I won't be checking out the next season, but Sleepy Hollow may have just pulled it off. Tumblr post and commentary that explains how they pulled it off. 

2. For US shows I'm currently watching: Stitchers, The Astronaut Wives Club, Wayward Pines, Beauty and the Beast, Dark Matter and Killjoys. I don't really have much to say about any of them, but Stitchers, and The Astronaut Wives Club both improved for me a lot after the pilot.

3. I finished Soo Baek Hyang and will post substantially on it...soon. Hwajung is still great, and the politics interest me more than they usually do in Joseon-set sageuks. (I tend to find the political aspect more interesting during the Three Kingdoms era.) I've mostly been making tumblr picspams for it, though.

4. Taraji Henson and Viola Davis rightly got Best Actress Emmy noms. Trai Byers did not, nor did any of the not-Scoobies (as I tend to think of them at times) from HTGAWM, both of which make me very sad. Jane the Virgin got nothing, which is even worse. I guess I'm happy that Tatiana Maslany got nommed and I'm happy for those who are excited, but my main reaction was "ok, good."

5. I'm somewhere in season 10 of Murder She Wrote. This show is still a lot of fun, but the "Look, we understand TECHNOLOGY!" aspect to a lot of the episodes in more recent seasons keeps me from enjoying it as much as I did before. The absence of "LOOK! TECHNOLOGY!" in earlier seasons was such a nice break from more contemporary mystery shows.
meganbmoore: (yona: fanservice)
I realized the other day that I haven't posted on any anime in a while, even though I've been watching some.

Akatsuki no Yona and the second season of Kamisama Kiss I did post on a bit, I think. Both seasons covered parts of the manga that I'd already read, and pretty faithfully. Yona switched up the order of a few things, and KSK added some stuff to wrap up the season, but those were the main changes. If you like either manga or liked the first season of KSK, you'll like them. Yona is probably my favorite new anime in a while.

Wolf Girl and Black Prince is about a compulsive liar creates an imaginary boyfriend so she can one-up her friends when they talk about their boyfriends, and shows them a picture she took of a random boy when they demand proof. It turns out the boy goes to their school, and he agrees to pretend to be her boyfriend if she'll be his obedient "dog." It's weirdly addictive and I spent the first half of the season condemning myself to a Feminist Pit Of Shame for liking it so much. About halfway through, it gets the awful setup out of its system and become a more typical shoujo romance. Pretty much, I liked it and will probably eventually read the manga, but can offer no real justification.

Fate/Stay Night: Unlimited Blade Works, which is based on a VN that I haven't played, though I did watch the series from several years ago, which followed a different game route, and the prequel series, Fate/Zero. I'm mostly watching for Rin and Saber and Rin/Archer and Rin/Saber. And Ilya and Sakura, but they aren't in this one much. This one has a more interesting plot than the first series and some impressive animation at times, but also does some things I'm meh about. It's pretty enjoyable, though. It just finished airing, but I have a couple episodes to go.

Fairy Tail is my endless shounen comfort series. That's about it, really.

Puella Magi Madoka Magica, which I've started several times over the years, but only made it a few episodes in each time. This time I powered through it for the Magical Girls panel and Wiscon and...still am not a fan. I get why it's popular, it's brilliantly constructed, it does what it wants and the art direction is amazing. I just don't like it. It's brutal deconstruction for the sake of deconstruction, and it's deconstruction that is deliberately NOT for the target audience (young girls). It removes the empowerment of the genre but doesn't build anything up in its place, and way too much hangs on BUT TEENAGED GIRLS ARE JUST SO EMOTIONAL. And, as tends to happen with Urobuchi, an awful, abusive system is set up and he draws attention to it and has his heroines aware of it, and...leaves it in place to continue to be an unchallenged, horrible system indefinitely.
I am glad I finally watched it and I'm glad the people it works for have it, but it wasn't for me.

Shirobako is an anime about making anime. Like most PA Works shows, it's laid back and slice-of-life. It isn't about the dream of making anime, it's about the work and the tedium and repetition, about working with creators and getting all the different views on the same page. And it's especially about how you won't make it in the anime industry unless you really, really love anime. It's a meta series, though it doesn't rub your face in it. One of the most telling bits is probably early on, when the producer of the anime they're working on in the first half announces that they have to completely rework the main character's personality, because girls will identify with her, and boys won't like her enough. It actually wrapped up a month or two back, I just haven't watched the last few episodes yet.

Ore Monogatari is a shoujo series about Takeo, a huge teenaged who looks like a thug but has the heart of a marshmallow. He always reaches out to befriend people, but they always prefer his standoffish, handsome, friend, Suna, including all the girls Takeo likes. When he saves a girl named Yamato from a groper, he assumes that she, too, likes Suna, but she actually likes Takeo, who is now trying to matchmake Yamato and Suna. It's hilarious and so sweet I'm in danger of getting cavities every episode. The manga it's based on is by the writer of High School Debut, which gives you an idea of what to expect.


Not anime, but since last Friday, I've watched the first 60 episodes of Soo Baek Hyang, The King's Daughter, a Baekje-set sageuk. It's a daily drama, so the episodes are only 32 minutes each (35 once you factor in hulu's commercials) as opposed to the normal hour+. I was off work for a couple days last week, which accounts for a decent bit of that episode count, though. It's my 4th sageuk in a row to have the "secret princess" theme (well, I suppose Hwajung is actually a "lost princess" plot, as opposed to a "secret princess" plot, but still!) I swear I'm not seeking the theme out.  The series follows the general sageuk formula that MBC seems to like.

It's incredibly addictive, though I haven't quite figured out how to put why I love it into words, aside from blathering a bit about the fake!cest in IMs. It's 108 episodes total, and I may just set all my other shows aside until I finish it.

Though, may I just say that it seems to be trying to win an award for the slowest slow burn ever? I'm sitting here going "OMG, you two, we're over halfway there! Make at least SOME progress before plot things come out and you spend who knows how long thinking you're half siblings!"

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