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Jang Ok-jung, Live By Love: Episode 1

Jang Ok-Jung, Live By Love is well into its second week (and approaching its third), but nonetheless we’re taking a late peek into SBS’ newest history-rewriting sageuk, which promises to give a fresh take on the old story of one of history’s favorite scheming concubines and turn it into a rollicking tale of fashion and love. Maybe. Even if I’m not sure of the endgame, this first episode does prove intriguing, *if* you can swallow the alternaversion of history the show is presenting.

More than anything, I’m not really sure which side of the show I want to see more of and which side we’ll actually get more of, because when the pendulum swings from a runway walk-off to a harrowing suicide, my guess is that anything goes and everything’s game. Which could be really fun OR really terrible, depending on how you look at it.

This is just a one-time recap, and though premiere week has come and gone it’s worth noting that Jang Ok-jung was neck and neck with fellow competitor Gu Family Book for its first episode. It dropped in the second, and Episodes 3 and 4 have since dropped into single digits.

 
SMIDGEN O’ BACKGROUND

While the story of the infamous Lady Jang is somewhat well-known (since it’s been dramatized over and over and over again), it’s worth having a little background on a period in history this drama is attempting to subvert. And when I say little, I mean itty bitty and very bare bones. Here goes:

Our leads in this story are King Sukjong, who took to the throne at age fourteen in 1674, his second wife Queen In-hyun (his first wife died a year before, having married Sukjong when he was still Crown Prince at the ripe age of ), and Lady Jang, Sukjong’s royal concubine. She’s known in history for being sly and ambitious, so much so that history points the finger at her for the reason why King Sukjong deposed and exiled Queen In-hyun, only to have everything come full circle when Sukjong realized his wrongs and reinstated his queen at the cost of demoting Lady Jang.

The plot thickened when In-hyun suddenly fell ill and died, with the blame going to Lady Jang in a (still unproven) poisoning plot. In retaliation, Sukjong had Lady Jang executed by consuming – wait for it – poison. And they all didn’t live happily ever after.

 
EPISODE 1 RECAP

In a room filled with all different types of hanbok (ceremonial, wedding garments, everyday outfits), our heroine flits from item to item, straightening out a norigae here or a binyeo (ornamental women’s hairpins, you’ve seen them in every sageuk ever) there. It’s like a boutique, only Joseon style.

As history will know her, she’s the future Lady Jang (or Jang Heebin, the latter used to denote her high status as a concubine), but we’ll go with what the title says and call her by her name: JANG OK-JUNG (Kim Tae-hee).

She receives a visit from the future QUEEN IN-HYUN (Hong Soo-hyun), though she’s not queen yet. We meet her before the official selection process for crown princesses, which happens to be why she’s looking for a show-stopping outfit – she’s got a king to impress.

Then we get a rather jarring quick-cut to the future, when Ok-jung and In-hyun meet face to face in the palace – though by now, In-hyun is queen and Ok-jung has been bestowed the title of heebin.

It’s back to the Hanbok Boutique, as In-hyun clucks her tongue at the rather risqué selections. The thought of not being selected as queen hasn’t even crossed her mind, so she’d rather stay safe and go more traditional. She leaves without buying anything.

Meanwhile, In-hyun’s maidservant/slave knocks over a mannequin and tries to escape with a stolen norigae, but Ok-jung catches her in the act, displaying benevolence when she decides to gift her the stolen item instead. The maidservant is happy to not have been punished, and declares that she wants to be just like Ok-jung one day.

And we see that “one day” in another flash to the future, where that maidservant is introduced as CHOI SUKBIN (Han Seung-yeon), the sukbin being another title denoting her status as a royal concubine. For ease of use, we’ll call her Lady Choi.

Our hero has his fortune misread by an old blind man, who claims that he’s a beggar. With a scoff, our hero informs him that he couldn’t be more wrong – he’s actually YI SUN (Yoo Ah-in) Crown Prince of Joseon and future king.

Ok-jung fastidiously prepares for what looks to be a Joseon fashion show, which is invitation-only to try and deter knock-offs of her designs.

Her mother, Lady Yun, beams with pride when she finds one of the invitations. The lord of the house and younger brother of the Queen Dowager, is kind to her despite her status as a slave, arousing the ire of his jealous wife, who doesn’t hesitate to slap Lady Yun once they’re out of his sight.

She reminds Lady Yun that her daughter Ok-jung is as much a slave as she is, despite receiving favor from her husband. After threatening to make Ok-jung perform traditional slave labor (rather than designing hanbok), she snatches the invitation and leaves.

Backstage at the fashion show, Ok-jung prepares her gisaeng models to walk the runway. I do have to give the show props, since this really does seem like a realistic Joseon adaptation of a modern runway, down to the makeup and hair details, plus the hustle and bustle of a live show.

Ok-jung knows her stuff, and changes this or that before sending models out on the runway, instructing them to accentuate a certain accessory or feature. The final show-stopping number is an ornate wedding gown (hwarot), which has all the young maidens squealing: “I want that for my wedding!”

Reports of the fashion show’s success reach JANG HYUN (Sung Dong-il), a cousin of Ok-jung’s father. Is that his happy face or his mad face?

Ok-jung walks out after the show like we see fashion designers do today, only the big difference comes when her mother’s snarly mistress dumps a pail of water on her in front of the attendees.

Needless to say, she’s pissed that her husband displayed favor for Ok-jung’s mother and has decided to take it out on Ok-jung, outing her as nothing more than a slave to the crowd (where previously Ok-jung could claim that she was a respectable niece of her rich uncle, Jang Hyun).

When that’s not enough, she has men chase away the spectators in order to wreck the show.

Meanwhile, King Hyeonjong (Yi Sun’s father) frets over how to please the Qing emissaries in attendance of a festival he’s thrown for them, though they only want to see the most famous geomungo (the traditional Korean black zither) player perform.

To that end, Hyeonjong has entrusted Yi Sun with the task of recruiting him, putting Yi Sun’s visit to the old fortune teller from the start of the episode in perspective, since he’d outed the old man as the famous artist.

One of the palace eunuchs tracks down PRINCE DONGPYUNG (Lee Sang-yeob), Yi Sun’s once-removed cousin, and begs him to play the geomungo for the Qing emissaries to help buy time while Yi Sun brings back the old master.

Dongpyung huffs and puffs at playing on such a cheap instrument, though he relents in the end. The emissaries take this as an insult since they didn’t sign up to see Dongpyung play, though Dongpyung ends up impressing them by speaking in their native tongue.

Meanwhile, Yi Sun urges the reluctant elder to play even if he can’t play like he used to because so much is riding on his performance – if it all goes well, Joseon can settle her border disputes with Qing.

There’s a malicious minister in attendance (isn’t there always?) who realizes how important the elder is to good relations with Qing, even though he seems to have a contingency plan in case Yi Sun were to convince him to play…

And lo and behold, Yi Sun and his caravan (carrying the elder in a palanquin) are attacked while en route to the festival by masked men. Yi Sun is fast on his feet and impales one of the attackers with his sword just in time to save the elder from a bloody demise, and soon it’s an all-out battle. (And no, I’m not really sure why we keep cutting to black and white.)

Yi Sun cuts his way through a line of attackers skillfully, but he’s not the target, and he finds himself too far to save the elder.

One of Prince Dongpyung’s geomungo strings snaps in foreboding as the elder is stabbed in the palanquin. The attackers fade into the forest, leaving a devastated Yi Sun as the last man standing.

Dongpyung recovers smoothly, while the scheming minister receives the secret word he wanted to hear – probably that the elder has died.

Ah, but it looks like Yi Sun out-schemed the minister when he shows up to the festival in his Crown Prince regalia… with the elder, alive and in tact, there to celebrate the alliance between Qing and Joseon. He seems to know which minister was behind the scheme and offers him a victorious smirk.

We see exactly how Yi Sun saved the elder in flashback, but it isn’t a pretty sight – two guards had packed themselves into the palanquin with the elder to act as human shields, so they were the ones who got stabbed and killed. All for a good cause though, right?

Yi Sun has a less-than-amicable meeting with the scheming minister, whom we find out is MIN YU-JUNG, In-hyun’s father. He chides Yi Sun on being too young to understand politics.

Yi Sun holds his own, but backs down a little when Minister Min alludes to a painful past event with the warning that Yi Sun should have already learned how dangerous authority without humility can be. He ends their conversation with an aside on how Yi Sun’s mother, Queen Myeongseong, keeps asking for his input in regards to royal family affairs.

We find Myeongseong with Minister Min as she discusses her son’s future marriage, and she makes it clear that she wants a bride from her Western (seo-in) political faction. To that end, Minister Min suggests his own daughter (future Queen In-hyun) since he’s groomed her to become queen all her life.

Yi Sun’s mother worries about the match because her son is no fan of Minister Min, so the sly politician suggests that they hide In-hyun’s identity as his daughter until she’s safely married to Yi Sun.

Meanwhile, Yi Sun and Dongpyung practice sword fighting, with the ever-chipper Dongpyung announcing that he’ll soon be wed to his favorite type of girl – a rich heiress. Hah.

Two court maidens come bearing letters for the two princes with regard to their matches, but they get mixed up along the way, so that Yi Sun gets Dongpyung’s letter and vice versa. (Translation: Shenanigans!)

Ok-jung tries to pick up the pieces from her ruined event, and in her quest to push sales through before everyone starts to cancel on her, she ends up signing on to deliver a message for one of her spoiled clients who slyly notes to her friends that Ok-jung is a slave, and therefore doesn’t count as a human being.

We find In-hyun being carried in a palanquin through the mountains as part of a plan organized by Queen Myeongseong to have In-hyun and Yi Sun “coincidentally” meet so he’ll think it’s fate. Unbeknownst to them, because the letters were switched, Prince Dongpyung is the one waiting for her instead of Yi Sun.

Her caravan is attacked by thieves (not sure whether this was also part of the plan), but Dongpyung sweeps to the rescue by using a cherry blossom branch to beat the attackers into submission. Service with a smile. D’aww, he’s adorable.

In-hyun and her maid don’t seem too shocked, which makes me think the attack was part of the plan. Dongpyung happily introduces himself to the fair maiden and mistakes her shock for her associating his name with his womanizing reputation, unaware that she thought she was meeting Yi Sun.

Yi Sun heads off to the date Dongpyung was set to have, though he meets Ok-jung instead. She wasn’t the intended date for Dongpyung, but was instead sent by her spoiled client to measure him for clothing, so all the misunderstandings add up to Yi Sun thinking that she’s his intended.

Ok-jung interrupts him before he can introduce himself, and his hard expression melts slightly as he asks, “Have we met before? You look very familiar…” He doesn’t mean it as a pick-up line, but it sure sounds like one.

She’s very direct, and instructs him to assume the position for measuring. Yi Sun thinks his mother ordered her to make clothing for him to see how well her future daughter-in-law could sew and acquiesces, leading to a moment that reminds me of the intimate clothes-measuring scene in Arang and the Magistrate.

Ok-jung’s client finally arrives to break the mood, and Yi Sun watches as Ok-jung acts subservient to her mistress before she’s off to make clothing.

Queen Myeongseong throws a fit when she realizes that Yi Sun went to the wrong place, but In-hyun is much more collected as she just shrugs it off. What’s meant to be will be.

Yi Sun and Dongpyung joke over the mixed messages that landed them in the wrong places, but Yi Sun is troubled Ok-jung – he knows he’s seen her before, but he can’t remember the details.

Ok-jung takes a chest of money to her mistress, providing the agreed-upon amount to buy her mother’s freedom from slavery. She’s taken aback when the mistress refuses it with a sneer, pointing to Ok-jung’s uncle, Jang Hyun, as the reason why her mother is still a slave.

So she goes straight to her uncle to demand an answer. She already guessed that he was responsible for ruining her fashion show, but she didn’t know he was paying her mistress off in order to keep her mother enslaved. So the big question is: Why?

Turns out dear old uncle Jang Hyun has been subverting Ok-jung’s attempts to buy her mother’s freedom in order to keep her from escaping to Qing with her mother, because he wants to keep her close in order to fulfill his own ambitions.

“Would you like to take over Joseon with me?” he asks, a gleam in his eye. She’s the only one capable of replacing his dead daughter, and he figures that her girlish wiles and his silver tongue will open any and every obstacle they’ll come across.

Ok-jung knows how her uncle works, especially since he made his late daughter into a palace maid, and firmly denounces him. She won’t become another pawn for him and makes that stance clear, though something tells me Jang Hyun doesn’t take “no” for an answer very often.

The sight of flowers outside her uncle’s house sends Ok-jung into a flashback, where his daughter, Hong-joo, told a young Ok-jung about the flower’s legend: A lovesick court lady, neglected by the king she dearly loved, died of neglect. The flowers grew in her place on the wall, where she would always wait to catch a glimpse of the one she loved.

Hong-joo tells the story with longing, sighing that such is the fate of a palace maid – if the king doesn’t like you, you die alone. Ok-jung asks if this is her fate as a court lady, only for Hong-joo to whisper a secret: She’s in love with a man, but not the king – and for court ladies, that was forbidden. Even if the king didn’t like you, you had to like the king. Forever.

Before she goes to meet her lover, Hong-joo gifts Ok-jung with a handmade norigae. Unfortunately, Hong-joo is later caught in her illicit affair with a palace prince, and it’s Queen Myeongseong who orders her to be made an example of.

And who should be the officer in charge of her interrogation but Minister Min, who even looks bored as Hong-joo is tortured. While her royal lover is free, she protects him by claiming that she was the one who did the seducing. And aww, her prince truly did love her, but any attempt to try and shoulder his fair share of the blame is rebuked by an all-too-eager Minister Min.

Jang Hyun scrambles to get enough money to bribe Minister Min for his daughter’s life, though his efforts are interrupted when his cousin (Ok-jung’s father) comes begging for Jang Hyun to free his wife from slavery now that they’ve got slave hunters on their tail. Jang Hyun is unmoved, since he blames his cousin for marrying a slave when everyone knows that any children he’d have would also be considered slaves.

A young Ok-jung looks Jang Hyun straight in the eye, and maybe he sees something there as he shows not-quite-kindness by letting them escape out the back door. It doesn’t get them far, but when Ok-jung and her family are cornered, her older brother chooses to sacrifice for the family in order to lead their pursuers away.

Jang Hyun visits his daughter in prison, and chides her for being caught – he sent her to the palace to get into the king’s bed. Despite his anger he promises that he’ll set her free, and brings his hefty bribe to Minister Min, who literally throws it back at him.

Not only is he angry with Jang Hyun for funding the Southern (nam-in) faction, he’s angry that Jang Hyun parades about like a noble when he isn’t one. Jang Hyun endures the degradation because his daughter’s life is on the line, but Minister Min is unyielding in his belief that class status comes before personhood. And Hong-joo isn’t a human being.

In jail, Hong-joo hangs herself. Her dad finds her while her body is still swaying, and holds her feet close through the bars. His grief ranges from near-hysterical laughter to agonizing screams.

Ok-jung’s father leads his family to the doorstep of his last remaining friend, only for his wife, Madam Kang, to answer the door since her husband is deceased. She sees their sorry state and invites them in as the slave hunters close in. Her son, HYUN CHI-SOO (future Jae Hee) helps.

The slave hunters break in anyway, and her father pulls out a last-ditch effort to stop them from dragging Ok-jung away – he used every penny he had to buy his own daughter and produces the bill of sale, which means that she’s not eligible to be taken since she’s already someone’s property.

This is a sobering moment for Mom, and we see it in her face. Her husband technically bought her daughter’s freedom but not hers, so in the end it’s she who’s dragged away while her husband and Ok-jung stay behind.

Ok-jung’s father is coughing up blood from being beaten, and Ok-jung stays dutifully at his side as he convulses, before he ekes out that she must find her mother and brother. He dies.

Jang Hyun plots revenge for his daughter with her lover, Prince Boksun, who’ll be next in line for the throne if Yi Sun disappears – which, of course, means treason.

He claims he’ll need seven years to raise an army, and asks for only one thing in return – Boksun’s promise that Jang Hyun’s last remaining kin will produce an heir to the throne. Now that his daughter’s dead, he’s got one eligible family member in Ok-jung.

Ok-jung stays up all night to sew her father’s funeral garb out of scraps of fabric she found in the room. Madam Kang marvels over her sewing skill in the morning, and while I get that this is setting up Ok-jung for her life in fashion, all I can think is that this kind of discussion is really inappropriately timed. Her dead father is lying right there, and you want to admire the girl’s needlework? Priorities, lady!

Her father’s funeral is the next day, but Ok-jung finds dearest uncle Jang Hyun waiting outside the threshold.

“Are you Jang Ok-jung?” he asks.

 
COMMENTS

When the promotional materials for this show came out, claiming that they’d turn a figure commonly known in history as a villain into a heroine, I was half intrigued, half ambivalent. Artistic license is the lifeblood of the fusion sageuk (and I love me some fusion sageuk), but by taking such an (in)famous historical character and giving her a job in the Joseon fashion industry, this show is asking us to reconsider a lot. To that end, I can’t help but wonder… Why?

That sounds more existential than intended, but really it boils down to me not really understanding the aim of this re-imagining, since I found myself thinking that this sort of story would have found a better foothold if it had gone the completely fabricated historical route of a show like The Moon That Embraces The Sun rather than this middle ground that seems to have one foot in Sungkyunkwan Scandal‘s level of fun historical irreverence and the other in The Princess’ Man, which told a fictional story fully embedded in the backdrop of real history.

Namely, we seem to be going down a route where In-hyun is the true villain, all while making Ok-jung an innocent and maligned victim, though time will tell whether the show’s aim is to make a point that history did Ok-jung wrong, or whether this is all just fiction for the sake of fiction. Which is fine in its own right, but then why use such well-known historical characters to weave such a bizarrely different tale? (I suppose the opposing argument could be: Why not?)

Granted, this first outing makes for a difficult barometer when the plot really didn’t move forward, instead putting us in the present, fast-forwarding to the future, rewinding back to the present, then rewinding to the not-so-distant past before we chose to settle there. While this episode was a technical achievement that surpasses its time slot competitors (which is almost a given when the network overlord is SBS), in the scope of setting up an entire series, it wasn’t a structurally ideal first outing. At no point did it seem like this show was unsure of the story it wanted to tell, but it almost felt like there was some overconfidence going on behind the scenes – either the man behind the curtain was very sure that his audience would stick around while we trudged through narrative backstories for characters we haven’t yet been given a reason to really root for, or they just had a lot of backstory that needed telling and they didn’t know of any better way to do it than to just put it all out there.

It’s an unusual dilemma because drawn-out childhood backstories are ridiculously common in dramaland (and childhood backstories comprise my top vote for drama tropes I wish would disappear), and many dramas build their audiences solely on child actor labor before revealing the headlining stars. Here we were even shown the stars before delving into the backstory, as if the show wanted to reassure us that beautiful faces would be waiting for us at the end of it all. The problem is, as is a problem with many dramas that have childhood phases, the story was more compelling in the past than it was in the present, coupled with telling a very different tale tonally than its present counterpart.

The change in tone between the time shifts was handled well, but they still had a jarring effect, which is kind of how I find myself reacting to the first half of the episode. I can maybe buy Jang Heebin being reworked as a heroine. I can maybe buy King Sukjong as a swashbuckling, ass-kicking youth. I can maybe buy that a character like Prince Dongpyung even exists. But if fashion is such an important part of Ok-jung’s life that a little reminder had to be inserted even at the scene of her father’s death (“Your dad is dead, but boy, can you sew!”), I find myself feeling a little lost as to what this show wants to tell me about her. Right now I’m a stuck between two extremes: Is she a girl with strong moral fiber, or is she just really good at using fibers to make pretty outfits?

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So far it's pretty good just finished epi 4 ... Im hooked

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I like this show. Nice chemistry between the lead :)

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I finished the first 4 episodes as well. A little dizzy trying to keep all the characters straight but thus far, I like it. Seems a little better acted and produced than The Moon Embracing the Sun(....and I liked that one too although the ending in that one kind of flattened on me.) Atleast in this one, the adult actors and actresses have the focus. YAI and KTH seem to have some chemistry too.

by switching around the heroine, it;s probably equivalent to writing a drama where Benedict Arnold, Judas or Jonathan Wilkes Booth is the hero. i can see where that;s hard for the Korean native audience to get behind.

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I love this drama a lot, can't wait to see more

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I am very intrigued as well, but than I'm not so I'm not sure what to expect. I just have to keep watching! ^^

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I think the fashion aspect is to give Ok Jung an identity and independence. Unlike other love story in saguek, Ok Jung do not fully relied on love. At least she is not constantly busy with just being in love. Fashion seems like an obvious career choice because a Joseon woman doesn't have much option for career anyway. And it could also explain she's not some nurture damsel in distress, and where she got her gumption and tactic-mind from.

First episode is too early to tell, but Jang Ok Jung is definitely not painted perfect. Obviously there's something she want to protect, something she want. At this point, we haven't see it yet but I dont think she will shun from playing dirty to get what she want.

Secondly, Queen In Hyun is not portrayed as the evil villain here. Yes, she's an antagonist to our heroine, but she's not flat out evil. She's got conscience, pride, ambitious but fair and kind. She is portrayed as entitled in the first episode but i dont think that is an exaggeration given her status. She doesn't go bitch crazy or demeaning to anyone so Queen In Hyun is definitely not portray as senselessly evil. However, she is also a woman who is ambitious and know what she want, so she doesn't sit idly and let things happen to her.

The court politics are alright, I've seen worse. I think the politics are at an appropriate level because the central theme of this drama is about LOVE anyway.

What i appreciate about this drama is that both leads don't spend ALL their time thinking about each other. They think about each other on their down time, but their life goes on. Each of them has their business to take care, and a dream they want to achieve.

I do agree that the history backdrop might be the reason for the falling ratings. Jang HeeBin is so ingrained in cultural norm as the villains and it's going to take more than a drama for people to change their perspective on her. Previously knowledge and opinion about Jang Heebin could prevent people from fully enjoying this drama.
As for me, I know Jang Heebin is a villain from Dong Yi, but i haven't form such a strong opinion on her that it's stopping me from enjoying this alternative perspective the drama has to offer.

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Thank you for the recap! I know you will probly not be recapping this in the long term, but I really think JOJ and Nine are turning out to be two absolutely stellar dramas!!! Hope you guys will at least give them a chance and take a look. :D

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Very reluctant to pick it up and continue after the first episode. Stuck on till the 4th and find it really lame.

KTH falling in love and having heart break in such a short period of time? Just as how this site tries to figure if the point of this show was to make her /appear/ as a strong fibre, or she /makes/ really strong fibre that stops bullet from penetrating the heart.

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If you watched till 4 ep then the ending scene shows her heartbreak for her mom and her own fate, how she must resort to desperate measures to free her mom. It has nothing to do with heartbreak for love. She's not really in love yet and she has no idea who Lee Soon is, much less that he's the prince and has chosen his queen. This drama is intricate and has a lot of nuances that you should pay attention to. It's a strong plot and quite absorbing.

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I would also say that she is both, one reflecting upon the other. They are not 2 extremes but quite complimentary. She's a strong character who is talented with the cloth and knows how to utilize her talents to survive, adapt and overcome many adversities in life.

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I think she got so much better as an actress and shes gorgeous to look at, i think this drama has potential

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I think this show deserves a better rating! Dramabeans, please please please do more recaps for Jang Ok Jung, live by love! I'm at ep 8 and I can't wait for next week already!

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im full korean and although the history part did turn me off a little bit to watch this drama, it did not stop me.
i was like ehh i dont really want to watch it cus the trailer looked boring and kim tae hee cant act but omg she is SO good in this drama.. i finished episode 1-6 in one day and i got so addicted to it.. i just finished ep 8 and can i just say it is just magnificent? this drama is so underrated.. i honestly think gu family book is absurd.. its not even good and suzy cannot act for her life... yes they have the popular actors in the drama but this drama moves you. it gave me goosebumps and AH i love it so much..... WATCH IT YOU WONT REGRET IT

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THIS.

THIS. THIS. THIS.

At first I was SO skeptical (the childhood stories bore me), but getting past that, my love for the show solidified after the 6th episode. And seeing the compelling episodes that aired this week.... Shall I say new drama crack?

I've been following War of Flowers as well as Jang Ok Jung, and the latter somehow grabbed my attention more than the former. Both are terribly good, but *spoiler alert* I guess it just pissed me off that Nam Hyuk died in episode 7. Couldn't they have played out the forbidden romance between the power hungry concubine and her noble lover just a bit more? :(

I'm going to miss his handsome face.

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I really hope you'll continue recapping this series... it's beautiful so far. and you can't really tell what's about to happen to the characters because each and every one of them has such depth and layers...

I hope you reconsider your decision ;^;
it's such a waste
and I'm always a fan of dramabean recaps :)


awesome recap as always btw

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It's crazy good. This drama is my serious new crack of the year.

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Holy cow..... so i've been half following gu family book and jang ok jung live by love and I got to say JOJ'S ep 8's ending was fantastic.... fantastic chemistry between YAI and KTH.... please please be like the princess' man and give them a happy ending but from the feel of the drama I think it will be melodrama all the way to the bitter end... as for suzy and seunggi's chemistry its abit meh which is a shame cuz i can tell they will have a happy ending.... maybe kangchi still needs to get over chungjo but still I wish the writer would develop yeo wool and kangchi's relationship a bit more.... contrary to what most people seem to think here, i didn't really like arang (please no haters ok its just my opinion) but i did like the first 2 eps of GFB....
Which one will I definately watch? I'm preparing for my exams but its nearly summer time which = kdrama time in my book! it's like k2h and rooftopprince i was half following them in the spring and then watched them fully in the summer. they were both brilliant although i have to admit k2h i thought which much more interesting in terms of action and anything other than the romance which was basically rooftop prince but rooftopprince had the cuteness and chemistry which was just as great.
right now i like JOJ more and i think i will watch it unless it just suddenly goes downhill.. i tend to lean to more darker dramas but if a drama is cute and light has witty banter with awesome chemistry between leads then i will watch it for sure. i just feel like chungjo and kangchi in GFB is a better duo than yeowool and kangchi (dunno if its down to actors' acting or just writing but whatever )
sure KTH's acting is a bit lacking at times but i feel it is getting better and yoo ah in.. awesome actor. didn't watch FK due to negative reviews but boy is Yoo ah in really good at acting. can't believe why ratings are falling.
this is the first time ive done this but my opinion is leaning towards koalasplayground here, i feel this drama is a gem among the likes of Princess' Man.

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Jang Ok Jung should be renamed 안구정화 (Angujeonghwa/ Eye Candy) coz boy is it full of good looking male leads!!!!

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I've followed this show since the first episode just because it sounded interesting and boy, do I love it.
I keep hearing about Gu Family Book's popularity and I've tried watching it but for some reason, it doesn't go as well with me as this show. Maybe it's just me.
Either way, Kim Tae Hee and Yoo Ah In are amazing in this drama and though I'm still waiting on the second male lead, Jae Hee, to make an appearance, I must say this drama is wonderful. And points to Lee Sang Yeob on becoming my favourite in this drama agaist Yoo Ah In!
Jang Ok Jung, keep fighting! :D

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I was uncertain about watching this drama but it turn out to be one of the best drama this year. The first 2-4 episodes were tedious and uninteresting since I know the ending but the latest episodes are so good. I don't think the drama is trying to convey Queen In-Hyun as the villain and JOJ as the hero but instead show how and why JOJ transform into the JOJ we know in history. it didn't distort IH image but show how she had to compromise and bargain to become the queen (which has been told with the many adaptations of the story). I think the writers are trying to get away from JOJ being the evil consort who dethrone IH but show the viewers a side of her that we don't get to see in the different adaptations. I like this version since I understand why she would do all the evil things ( dethrone IH, kill the king's mother and do everything and everything in her power to make her son become the next king) because any woman would do the same thing she did to keep the man she love and to get revenge on the people who made her feel like dirt because of her class.

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I agree with you and I'm so glad I didn't watch Dong Yi before I watched this. Hopefully when I watch Dong Yi, I will understand why Ok Jung did the things she did. It doesn't justify her evil deeds, but it does make her human. I wouldn't do all that to keep a man, but hey, I haven't dated a king yet so who knows?

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The sacrifices that Prince Dongpyun has to make for Ok Jung and the King oooof!My heart is breaking for him. He is such a nice guy!!!

I don't understand why In Hyun would want to be with a man that clearly doesn't love her. She clearly doesn't seem to love him either after having to endure all his humiliation, so I can't say it's one-sided love.

I love that most characters in this show are neither black or white. For example, the Queen loves her son, and when it comes to sacrificing for him she will go to the ends of the earth. It's hard to hate a mother who considers dunking herself in ice cold water with just a layer of clothing to revive her beloved son. On the other hand her evil schemes with minister Min, the way she treats the queen dowager and Ok Jung, and always playing the "I saved your life" guilt card on Lee Soon are just...urrghh, so grossly evil and frustrating!!! Even good and faithful Dongpyun tries to dissuade Ok Jung from her one true love. Our Ok Jung suddenly realizes that when the world screws you over, you can't just cry and do nothing about it. Everyone in this show has a blemish.

What can I say about the way the king rips off his ritual garb when he finds out where Ok Jung is ? *heart melts*!!!

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Went on hiatus for a spell from sageuk in Jan. Came in through kdrama vis a vis Dae Jang Geum, RN1, Jejungwon, which heroine, crack, and MJ respectively over the holidays. Then went on a massive binge over available titles. The more I looked, the more dismal the choices got.

Been waiting for something to pop out and above the local flavors. Something out of the norm, with a little more universal twang, and springs forth and out the usual pitfalls that I see repeated almost religiously through drama land: the screechy heroines, the oddball redheads (what is that obsession??), and the anticlimatic flatlines in the middle. Bad casting choices, disjointed scripts, the mandatory female banshee will also repell me from a show.

Gye Baek - for one - fell for Cha In Pyo's Moo Jin, and other supporting cast members like Park Sung Woong but could not, for the life of me, bond with the first tier cast.

In the first 2 episodes of a Kdrama, I will either stay and invest hours I will never get back of my life... or move on. Was flipping through Hulu a couple of weeks ago, found JOJ. And I've stayed put! I am glad that I went into without the bias of the back story. Maybe I'll back up and find out why ilk... maybe not. :-)

To each, her/his poison aye? :-)

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I felt so distraught after watching the past two episodes, I just felt that if only King Sukjong could protect her, the story of JOJ life will be different.. I felt so sorry for her...now I'm beginning to understand what she has gone through and why she became like that...if only evil people like Prime Minister and King Sukjong's Mother was not in the picture ...omo omo...what a tragic love story...if only...if only....she just loved dearly the King and she's just desperate to protect her son....maybe that is the reason also why the future Crown Prince was infertile....maybe they tried to harm her when she was carrying the baby like forcing her to drink something....the palace is very dangerous....and the throne is very scary and cruel...

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agree with plumeria9! i ve never thought i'd be so excited siding with the bad girl! but she sure showed them! smart girl, an given JOJ background, i think it is "evil" that made her survived.

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