google.com, pub-1996401214588839, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 Asian Drama Queen: Go soo

The Queen of Asian Drama is Back with more Irreverent Reviews and Snarky Commentary.

Showing posts with label Go soo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Go soo. Show all posts

Monday, May 12, 2014

The Golden Empire

Empire of Gold / 황금의 제국 / Wanggeum-ui Jegook


2013 SBS K-dorama about a Chaebol family, their legacy, greed, and influential power over all else in their tiny corner of the world. It's about a poor guy from a poor section of that world who is down-trodden, brow-beaten, and disillusioned by it all. After losing his father to that corrupt system, he vows revenge.

Another Korean rehash of another Korean over-borrowed genre that played out precisely as had all of the others written, directed, and starred the same way.

I gave it three out of five because despite a lot of flaws, it actually intrigued me. I'll admit to being riveted for most of the 24 episodes. At least until about episode 18, when I began to realize and feel like I'd been there before, I'd seen this thing played out already, I'd heard enough of the same-old, same-old dialogue being reiterated again and again, and that the outcome for everyone involved was going to be entirely too predictable.

Then I wasn't as enthralled anymore.

Yet, and still, the star of the show, Go Soo as Jang Tae joo, had my attention start to finish, and even if I knew precisely what was going to happen (and, it did) he helped keep me interested, entertained, and drawn to him.

Go Soo as Jang Tae joo


Another star, Son Hyun joo as Choi Min jae, did nearly as fantastic a job of keeping me into the drama and rooting for him some of the time.

Son Hyun joo as Choi Min jae

The synopsis was misleading (again), too. Jang Tae joo DOESN'T fall for the leading lady of this Utopian household. I'll apologize if you think that might be a spoiler. For me, it was simply a lie that annoyed and upset me but not enough to keep me from watching the show.

Zero romance, too. I mean zero, and for 24 episodes, this isn't a good thing. A majority of the scenes took place either at the dining table of the Chaebol house or inside the office of the Empire. 24 episodes, a little more than an hour long each, and nothing but bickering, conniving, scheming, back-biting, hate-spewing dialogue start to finish.

For me, the most disheartening thing about these Korean (and Japanese) dramas that concentrate on one aspect of life and run with it for the duration, is the lack of human emotion, predictable behavior, and common-sense psychology involved in human contact.

This story was supposed to have spanned 2 decades, too. From 1993 to 2013.

Can you imagine living 20 years of your life this way? I certainly can't.

Sure, there were scenes that strayed from the mundane usual, like Min jae visiting his ill wife in the hospital, and Tae joo spouting off one-sided dialogue about his future plans to the ever-faithful Jang Shin yong as Yoon Sul hee, but even then it was dialogue and nothing emotional or embracing.

Cold, stiff, one-dimensional characters start to finish that leave me feeling as cold and uninterested in their story as I did for their plights.

No one touches, embraces, shows compassion, or even desire in these things, and there is nothing romantic about it to keep me involved emotionally.

The leading lady in this one, Lee Yo won as Choi Seo yoon, didn't interest me, either. Not that she didn't do a good job of acting, but that she remained as one-dimensional throughout, never swaying, varying her opinion, growing or learning from her experience.

There was the irritating time conundrum in this one, too.



If what she says is true, then she was 40 when she entered the house as a pregnant widow. Not entirely a stretch of the imagination, but ... if everyone in the household was under the misguided notion (for 30 years) that her son was their real brother, then it isn't likely she entered that house with a child on her arm or at her side.

If what she said is true, then that means Seo yoon is 40 as well. Which would mean that at the start of the show, she couldn't possibly have graduated college and garnered a college-level teaching position. Not at age 20, anyway. She'd have been more like 28, going on 30 at that time, which would make her 48 going on 50 at the end.

At the start, the stepmother had a 28 year-old college-bound, college-grad, not sure son. At the end, she said she was now 70. Do the math. The son was born 27 years ago. That would actually make him 28, - 29 is a stretch - and after 30 years, how old would he be then? Yet, he remained perpetually 27-28-29 whatever throughout the story.

These 20-somethings at the start would become 40-something's at the end, right? So, what would prompt Sul hee to want to remain by Tae joo's side all this time? What would make either supposed lover still talk about love, marriage, kids, and a sea-side home in the Philippines?

Tae joo referred to her as Sunbae, which would make her older than him. Which would mean she, too, was in her late 20's early 30's at the start and ended up in her late 40's early 50's at the end.

She went to jail for seven years, and after seven years ... was that supposed to be the leap from 2003 to 2013? That's ten years, or more depending on when you factor in her fall from grace and eventual incarceration to her final release.

The fashion strayed as well. Nail polish, hand bags, shoes, hairstyles, short-shorts, etc. that conflicted greatly with the era in which it was being worn or used - at whim and on occasion. Though there were also times when the characters wore the same thing over and over again ... argh.

The only thing that remained constant were the clunky, old hand phones that suddenly became 2013 models while everyone in this story stayed relatively the same as they had from the supposed 20 years earlier variety of themselves.

They never once used a computer, a laptop, or a tablet and received all of their bad news (insider trading, corruption, scandal, and even business slumps) via the news on 2013 big-screen, flat-screen televisions start to finish.

Do empires learn about their own stock slides, employee scandals, and consumer slumps via the news?

Crawling into bed in your street clothes.

Don't get that and never will.

How clean is clean over there anyhow? And, by clean I mean day's worth of grime collected on the body as well as ratings, time-slot, censorship clean via the broadcast system in that country.

I'm positive that before Korean's crawl into bed each night, that they at least shower but definitely change into something more comfortable, like pajamas, sweats, or a t-shirt, if not go nude prior to falling asleep.

Tae joo was dirt-poor at the beginning, and then he suddenly had 2 billion won in his hands. If anyone in this world knows the value of money, it's the poorest of the poor. Metaphor and symbolism aside, when he went to the pier and tossed two handful's of the stuff into the air, it made me furious.

Stop with the unbelievable crap already. It has no meaning, no lasting or redeeming qualities to it, and it makes no sense. A rich guy who is drunk or angry will do something that stupid, but not someone in Tae joo's shoes.

I liked and rooted for the seemingly budding friendship that sprang up between Tae joo and Min jae. I didn't like or feel any chemistry between Tae joo and Seo yoon.

Seo yoon abused Tae joo and then used him in a most cruel way but constantly worked against him - maybe put her faith in him once or twice - but never even bothered to explore her feminine side. Is she a robot?

After experiencing the things she and her family experienced, what was the actual lure of that responsibility supposed to be, anyway?

So she started out wanting to be a teacher and succeeded before her unaffectionate and cold father ended up relying on her for help in his waning years. Did she ever, really have a life? Get out and explore it on occasion? Meet new people and knock back a few cold ones with friends from her past? Was she really that stupid to believe her spiteful, wounded siblings would eventually see things her way?

She turned out to be as selfish and self-absorbed as the rest.



Actually, dear, he walked into Sung Jin Group because you were desperate for his help. Remember? The 2 Billion Won you needed in order to save your father's flagging empire? My, oh, my, how quickly we forget, eh?

Like I said: one-track, one-dimensional characters start to finish.

The reviews were quite favorable at aznv.tv, too. Poignant BS that nearly sounded excess in critique and made me laugh. For me, there was nothing profound, believable, or even outstanding about this drama other than the two male leads did a great job in their stereotypical and over-done roles.

Sorry ... man and woman living together for 30 years without contact is just too much for me to swallow, much less believe.

Or, was it four? Four years that turned into 30 or maybe seven years? I'm so confused, I don't know anything anymore.

I despised the ending, too.


Monday, June 14, 2010

백만장자와 결혼하기 / baek-man-jang-ja-wa gyeol-hon-ha-gi




2005 end-of-year SBS drama that stars Kim Hyun Joo as Han Eun Young, a poor girl working as a bank clerk.

She's a stepdaughter working to keep her stepmother & stepsister (both shiftless nothings) from sending them all to the poor house.

Go Soo is Kim Young Hoon, a poor guy (middle son) who isn't intelligent but extremely good-looking, and he works extra hard to help HIS shiftless family from ending up in the poor house.

Yoon Sang Hyun portrays Yoo Jin Ha, a wealthy 'PD' asked to take over a Korean version of "Who Wants to Marry a Millionaire?"

Eun young has a secret crush on Jin ha, who frequents her bank to make deposits, but her first love was Young hoon - that is, until the day in school when he was last in his class as far as grades go, and then suddenly he was a nothing loser to her.

She wrote him a mushy love-letter BEFORE she found out the earth-shattering truth about the cute, new boy in school, and then she had to move away.

Young hoon kept that letter in his wallet, and years later, they meet again when Jin ha decides it'll be Young hoon who succeeds at fooling a bunch of millionaire-wonna-b's into thinking he's the man of their luxurious dreams.

And, believe it or not, Eun young ends up being one of those girls!

He knows the truth and so does she, but for handsome PD's sake, we keep everything hush-hush til the bitter end, when Young hoon has to decide between Eun young and another hopeful.

Eun young isn't rich, but she's still a snob who tells our adorable Young hoon right to his gorgeous face that she hates him because he's stupid, a loser, and will never amount to anything.

I guess Young hoon is too stupid to even know his own heart, because despite her bitchy ways, he still pursues her.

Maybe this could have been a 'good' drama, or even a worthwhile story - but like most people who commented at aznv.tv - it dragged and made little sense.

The only draw was Go soo,





and then suddenly Yoon Sang hyun (after he shaved off the moustache) - but it was Kim Hyun joo who annoyed and irritated a majority of the time.

She's pretty and has talent, but the part she played made me think stupid things like the idea that being poor is horrible, and that if you want to get ahead in life or escape an unbearable existence, then being heartless is the only way to succeed.

I stuck this one out because of Go soo, who broke my heart beginning to end and made me wish there was some way to reach him physically so I could hold him tight and let him know he's better than anyone else (including the rich & powerful) in the whole world.

His optimism and adorable face made me root for him and want to see him get what was owed him.

By the end of this show, I even wanted to give the whole drama another shot - since it suddenly got better and made me a lot more interested.

What happened at the beginning was good, though annoying, so perhaps all the 'fake reality-show within a drama' stuff is what wasn't interesting to me (or anyone else) that ruined it for me.

PD ends up falling for Eun young, and a rich actress ends up falling for Young hoon, and while Young hoon's career sky-rockets after the show, and he becomes a highly sought-after actor, Eun young's life continues to spiral downward into the abyss that is her poor existence.

Her feelings for Young hoon continue to blossom until she wants him - but since she's an Asian woman, expressing those true feelings is impossible, so she continues to lie and make Young hoon think she isn't interested.





Then a scandal erupts and all hell breaks loose - thus ending Young hoon's lucrative but brief career and he ends up running away.

PD keeps after Eun young in the hopes she will reciprocate, and the female actress supposedly in love with Young hoon ends up being the one to shove the dagger in his back 'in an effort to force him to her side' - ah yes, the Asian way of thinking that force=submission=love.

The 'message' here was that the more you do for people, the more you're going to suffer until finally, blessed relief in the form of miraculous pay-back that helps the giver to become rich.

Yes, I teared up watching this drama, and yes, I liked the ending - but, I'm still at a loss about the middle and why it ruined the whole thing for me.

If you tried and gave up on Marry a Millionaire, I suggest you go back and try again - maybe the second time around, it won't seem as offensive or boring.

At least the last, few episodes were worth that confusing annoyance!

It took until the end of episode 13 of this 16-episode drama for this to occur ---




here are some hilarious subtitles: