google.com, pub-1996401214588839, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 Asian Drama Queen: So Ji Sup

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

Showing posts with label So Ji Sup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label So Ji Sup. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

주군의 태양 / Joogoonui Taeyang / Master's Sun




The Sun of My Master / The Sun of the Lord






This was great. I loved Master's Sun beginning to end.

At first, though, I was disappointed in our leading lady. I understood right away that she was another of the Cinderella types, this one suffering with insomnia because of her ability to see and communicate with spirits who tended to 'haunt' her after hours. Although they did continue to show up randomly, and during the day as well.

Still, I didn't care for her even when she finally got some sleep and started behaving on the normal side.

She did an okay job of acting, but for me, it seems somewhat forced and a bit on the overdone yet unrealistic side.

I adore my man, everyone knows that by now. I said I'd watch him in anything, even if it was a silent film of him sitting at a pojangmacha knocking back soju with the boys. I still feel that way about Mr. Perfect himself - So Ji sub.




I probably don't have to say this, but, it was his hair style that turned me off. But, ONLY his hair style. The man will always, even when he's 62, ALWAYS do something for me in the libido department.

I figured out awhile back that Korean male fashion sense is what makes me disappointed.
Sometimes.
There are instances when too much accessories, strange color choices, and even a dab of make-up look good, but not often.
Photo shoots, for example.
Dapper Dan might be the appropriate time to show up at a cocktail party, or an office get-together. Hell, maybe even for omiai meetings. Just not everyday, casual down-time at home, office visits, and sporty, weekend outing events. Then he just sticks out like a sore thumb.

And, don't get the idea that the opposite pendulum swing means grunge, ripped trousers, greasy hair, and filthy t-shirts, either. Of course this is just as bad and thus makes my whole point, doesn't it?

The other plus in Master's Sun was 



After Answer Me, 1994, I was anxious to see him work again, and right away, Master's Sun picked him up. Two for the price of one kind of deal that I always appreciate.

He's good.
REAL good.
At acting, convincing me he's real, and getting into character without making it look difficult or played.

Still, and I have to say this regardless of the flack it'll generate: there was something a tad on the subdued side throughout this drama that made me stop and wonder why, on occasion. I mean, he was supposed to have fallen for the leading lady at the start. And, yes, I get that his character was working as a spy for the leading man's appah, so when he found out the boss's son was after her, too, he felt inclined to take a step or three back.

Love doesn't work as easily as, well, work does, though.

I think he missed the mark or didn't care about her as much as he thought because he wasn't as forthright with them feelings as he should or could have been.

Sure, he may have gotten fired or something, but a few attempts at trying to win her heart or steal her away from So-fine would have brought a bit more interest and vitality to his role.

And, there was the ever-present other woman who had her claws sunk deep into Joo goon (So's character) until she kept bumping into Gang woo (In guk's character) and then she wasn't quite sure anymore how she felt about anything.

And, hallelujah, saint's be praised, and Oh, Myyy! She didn't go after our leading lady with talons drawn, a sour face, and hateful barbs of insecurity!

Which vainly makes me wonder if someone over there might be reading my posts.

Master's Sun was the first drama that attempted to curb this type of behavior (at least from what I've viewed thus far) but then I watched Protect The Boss (2011) and there it was again. The leading lady ended up capturing the heart of the lead man, who had a rich girl on the side that yes, got all jealous and stuff, but she didn't do any of that over-the-top, unrealistic nasty crap to make ALL women in general look stupid, petty, and useless.

Keep up the good work in that regard, please!


The second, eerie point I'd like to stress - apropos for such a drama as Master's Sun - is that prior to it's release, yours truly (me) had always been in the habit of using her hands to convey her feelings, or just to talk in general. I'm weird that way.
And, while it was hilarious to see someone else do it, our Mr. So-fine was a Master (pun intended) at this, particular move



My gesture is identical, but it indicates to friends/loved ones that they're wearing too much make-up or have food where it shouldn't be. Other times, it says 'go check yourself' if someone is being snarky.

I do these types of things because my mind is always churning a few minutes faster than my mouth. The speech will never catch up, either. The hands, however, are always ready and haven't let me down yet. When they're done making a point, then I can say what I need or want to say.

I'm actually in the process of finishing a second-draft novel right now, and I noticed that my main character uses the same trait. This could turn out to be a good thing, or something my publicist will say '86' to, I don't know yet.

Anyway, I adored seeing Mr. So-fine use this technique throughout Master's Sun.

Speaking of which, I need to do the critique now, don't I?

Mianhae

Master's Sun is about a girl who has the ability, after some accident that was never, really touched upon or explained in any, understandable detail, and despite the fact that YEARS have passed since then, she remains a terrified insomniac who hates water and the dark now, because those are the two times when phantoms make their appearance.

Even when she knows who the ghosts are, she still acts all skittish and 'go away!' like.
It was too bad, because I, for one, ended up embracing that side of my life. At least she's able to see them - as gruesome and disgusting as some of them appeared - because all I ever get are faint hints that something abnormal is around me, or they enter my dreams with vague messages that only help to make me more absentminded during the day than I already am.

Okay, so the first ghost she meets sends her running into the arms of our leading man, Joo goon.
Almost immediately the vision evaporates, indicating to the leading lady that Joo goon is the key to her restful side. She clings to him, follows him everywhere, and ends up getting a janitorial job at the shopping mall he owns just to be close enough to touch him and get some shut-eye.

Like all Korean dramas with a Cinderella theme, Joo goon pretends he's not interested, and yet he permits this total stranger with dark circles and bags under her eyes to do as she pleases.
They end up in bed together, believe it or not, but not in the sexually charged, romantic way I, for one, would like to see happen right off the bat in any of the shows that star a guy like SO.



Joo goon has figured out that Tae yang can see his first crush, who died while he was kidnapped and held for ransom. 
He's an angry man with a vendetta that can't, really be excised from his tortured mind, too.

It's one of them complex plot-twist shows where each of the guilty characters starts out making us believe one way and then suddenly we're shown another side. And, of course, it was easy to figure out ahead of time who the bad and not so bad characters were, though not always.

It lent itself to a lot of nail-biting moments that always help to make the watch enjoyable and have you crave more. Still, there were also times when the story dragged out unnecessarily in places, making you groan. Not often, though.

I liked the ghosts. All of them. Some hung out for the duration, only to have their stories revealed near the end while other's took up an entire episode and were gone. It was cool, original, and refreshing from a Cinderella story K-Do standpoint.








and everyone's personal favorite



And the creepiest of them all (imho)



the damn, disturbing doll

Yeah, I did that thing, too, where I whimpered at the computer screen and quietly begged the gwiyeoun baby boy not to leave the swing set. No! Stop! Don't do it! And then, in my best sinister voice: it's eee-vil.

Poor doll.

Seriously, though, how many of you asked yourself: right. if it was me at his age, would I have done the same thing? 
Hell, naw! I'd be so far away running, screaming bloody murder, wetting myself and crying buckets that people would think I was actually possessed, even though I wouldn't be cause I sure as heck wouldn't have wanted to go near that doll, much less pick it up and risk losing my soul. And, I was (still am) quite the curious child, too.

Short of trying to get my own head to spin 360 degrees before this one finished, I managed to keep it together and have a good time watching Master's Sun.

Now, in the 20-episodes it took to unravel this interesting plot of a good story, the leads flop back and forth with their budding emotions, then they finally agree to be one, and something awful happens to our Joo goon.

YES ... yes, dear hearts, I was so drooling, staring without blinking, and then sobbing like a jerk during that hospital scene.

Yeesh, what a cliff hanger. And, way-so romantic!

He's hot, what can I say? Pulls them scenes off with all the grace, charm, and dignity of a true Prince Charming.

So, when this type of thing happens in a KDo you know damn well what comes next, right? For the next, few episodes the table turns and she walks away from the guy, all pouty and pissy-moany like, shedding tears yet stiffening that stubborn resolve to 'do the right thang' regardless of the cost.

Cool thing, though! Joo goon can't remember her now.

And around this time, hot-as Kang woo has started straying over to the has-been model's side.

I really liked her. 

She was great without being catty, realistic without being too sappy or needy, and just jealous enough to add some zest to an otherwise ridiculous, over-done character.

She fell fast enough for Gang woo to make us not have to hope she didn't show up during certain scenes between the two leads.

It also helps us to root for Gang woo-type characters now and in the future, too.

Yes, it's good to have some angst thrown in the mix, but there are also times when you WANT to see the second-string player get what he deserves right away. Give him some episode cred before tossing in the 'uh-uh!' stuff, eh? Let him have his way, at least for awhile, because if you're going to hire someone this fine to play a second-string roll, you can't expect your viewers to go along with the notion that ANY chick under the sun won't find him irresistible.






The last thing I want to point out about this drama is that I had been longing - and I do mean LONGING - to see So Ji sup portray anything other than the type-cast gangsta, down-n-out brooder he has always been in all his other MASTER pieces.

Comedy was one of those hopes, and he actually delivered and then some.
He was believable and well ... funny!
It wasn't over the top nonsense, forced, or unmemorable.
He was cool while also having his strange quirks.
He was all "I'm so trying to be serious here" when those moments were what made you laugh the most.
He's so cool. So awesome. So hot. So sexy. And most importantly for someone in his line of work, so REAL.


envy the hand, people


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Saturday, June 26, 2010

로드 넘버원 / Road No. 1



The synopsis at Wikipedia states:

"Based on the events occurring around "Route 1", which lies between Seoul and Pyongyang.
The story about Officer Lee Jang Woo who finds himself in a war that he is not prepared for in order to protect Soo Yeon, the woman he has known and loved since youth.
However, he is able to put it past him and he displays extraordinary survival skills, friendship, cooperation and ideology under brutal war conditions.
Soo Yeon awaits Jang Woo's return, but eventually gets engaged to Tae Ho.
When Jang Woo returns alive, however, Tae Ho discovers Jang Woo and Soo Yeon's unbreakable bond and feels betrayed. "

20 episodes.

The budget for this drama is estimated to be around 10 billion won, and filming began in January, 2010, completing on the broadcast date of June 12th, 2010.

Here are some funny translations about this new drama:

"100 eokwondae production costs are put into blockbuster drama 'Road Number One' in the background of war in Korea friendship of two men and a woman's closet between these two sad and beautiful love story that draws a war epic melodrama.

Especially the poor and lived on a farm servant born former sergeant in the Partisan tobeoldae achieved brilliant job, but to kill people feel meetings are returning home to be with the woman you love 6.

25, is caught in the vortex of the war, Jung Woo Lee stations considered for the prayers of several Korean pop stars, but these are possibilities sojiseop.


'로드 넘버원'은 소지섭 등 주요 배우 캐스팅이 마무리 되는대로 2010년 1월부터 5월까지 본격적인 촬영에 돌입할 예졍이다. 'Road Number One' is the main actor So Ji-sub and finish as soon as the cast is January to May 2010 yejyeongyida rush into an authentic recording."

I will assume this is about the Korean-American war, and that So-fine is on our side.

He's so, freakin' hot it doesn't, really matter.

I'm even watching the out-of-sync first episode at Viikii because I can't wait until it is eventually submitted properly to aznv.tv

The subtitles are in Japanese as well, but who cares!

Here is the 'official' trailer:



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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Glass Slippers - 유리구두 - Yuri Gudu



A March to July, 2002 Korean drama that starred SO JI-SUB as Park Chul-woong, the muscle-bound son of a chauffeur, who's boss is the president of a media conglomerate.

The story revolves around two, young sisters living with a single father who is not only dying of leukemia, he gets hit by a car and dies, leaving them stranded & alone in a poor, seaside hamlet away from Seoul.
A boy and a gang mess with the girls, causing them to get separated, and while Jang Jae-hyuk (Han Jae-seok) seems like a nice guy, his intentions are anything but honorable.

And as MOST Korean dramas go, surprise-surprise! the girls are actually blood-relatives of one of the richest men in all of Korea.
And yes, he's the media mogul So-fine's character's old man chauffeurs.

Kim Tae-hee (Kim Ji-ho) and Kim Yun-hee (Kim Hyun-joo) become separated when the street gang messes with Tae-hee, and Yun-hee runs in front of a pick-up truck, gets conked on the head, and ends up with amnesia.
Naturally, the trucker is a no-account gambler not interested in going to jail, so he takes Yun-hee home, where she ends up being enslaved by the guys caustic girlfriend and verbally abused by her young daughter, Woo Seung-hee (Kim Min-sun).

Yun-hee is wearing her mother's wedding ring about her neck, so she figures her name is Lee Sun-woo, and that's who she grows up to become.
She's an adorable, little girl with a pleasant nature and overly optimistic yet entirely unrealistic outlook on life based solely on the way she ends up being raised.

The beginning of this drama could have been explained in 2 episodes and not 7, but whatever.
Tae-hee is helped out by Jae-hyuk, who takes her to her grandfather, the rich guy from Seoul.
Then, they spend the next, several episodes worrying about, wondering about, crying, and trying to find Yun-hee.

Naturally, Yun-hee grows up in a deplorable environment while her older sister is thriving in the lap of luxury.

sigh

BUT THEN PARK CHUL-WOONG APPEARS AND MY INTEREST SUDDENLY GROWS!

He's a hot guy punking at a billiard hall, and a local gang of thugs shows up to give him a hard time when Yun-hee's character happens upon them, looking to collect the dishes she delivered.
Chul-woong proceeds to kick everyone's ass with his 'I'm a Bruce Lee wannabe' persona, and some damn, sweet moves ~ and then Yun-hee conks him on the head with a tray, demanding that he reimburse her for the dishes he broke in the melee.

Chul-woong & Su-tak

I'll bet you can see where THIS is going, eh?

Meanwhile, in 'every Korean's dream-land', rich Tae-hee is excited that her long-time crush and first love, Jae-hyuk, is returned from the USA, where her grandfather sent him after he delivered Tae-hee to the manse in Seoul.

The caustic bitch stepsister, Seung-hee, intercepts a letter to Yun-hee, asking about her lineage, so Seung-hee does what ANY person would do - she pretends SHE'S the long, lost sister to that wealthy, pie-in-the-sky dreamland otherwise implied as Korean nirvana.
Seung-hee steals the wedding ring from Yun-hee and arrives at the doorstep of the manse, where she proceeds to fit in surprisingly well - which made me laugh since she didn't, actually show her true colors until WAY later in the game.

Seung-hee pretending to be Yun-hee

I thought she was pretty, then ugly, then pretty again - I never, quite knew WHAT to think.
At least she got to wear a lot of totally cool clothing instead of the dowdy, frump attire MOST actresses wear in these dramas.

Ok ~ this is where things get Korean-tricky, so try and keep up ~

Bitch, Seung-hee is crazy about hot-ass Chul-woong, who falls in love with poor, pathetic Yun-hee, who's rich sister, Tae-hee, is in love with supposedly good-guy Jae-hyuk, who bumps into and falls desperately in love with Yun-hee, who gets a job working at the media empire first as a maid, and then as an office assistant because Jae-hyuk can't control himself.

MEANWHILE, Chul-woong's gorgeous, younger sister, Yeong-woong (Kim Jung-hwa), meets Tae-hee's equally gorgeous cousin, Yun Soo-jun (Kim Chung ryeol - no data), who owns an America-style bar, but Chul-woong's adorable friend, Su-tak (whom I'll assume here was Seo Hyun-ki since there's NO info on the guy), has a mad-on for Yeong-woong.

Su-tak and Yeong-woong

And since stereotypical nonsense MUST abound, we have the ubiquitous and worn-out adages re: social status thrown in the mix.
Rich stay rich or die trying whilst the poor stay poor AND die.

sigh again!

The point of Glass Slipper was supposed to be (at least I think it was) that Yun-hee was meant to suffer since she's got such an awesomely UNrealistic personality.
The same for poor, sweet Chul-woong, who though a gangsta, remained trustworthy, honest, upright, and grounded while still ending up at the wrong end of life's unpredictable club despite his best efforts.

However, rather late in this 40-episode drama, it was revealed to us that Seung-hee's character was the actual star of the story - in a pretentious, quirky sort of way at any rate.


Everyone was in love with someone else, and no one (save Park's beautiful sister and the rich, hot cousin) ended up finding true happiness.

This is probably going to be the LAST Korean drama I watch this summer.
Maybe for the rest of this year, unless something spectacular comes along online to change my mind.

I know they're old, and that the world of Hallyu may have changed since 2002, but the feeling I get after watching stuff like Glass Slippers is too haunting, too dreary to make me want to do it again any time soon.

This was an intense drama, and old in that they used a lot of the whirlwind, make-you-wonna-vom camera spins, the slow-paced start that made me want to drop out after the 4th episode, and that annoying recap/repeat at the beginning of each episode.

It became SO repetitive in fact, that by episode 12, I gave it a two-day break.
When I went back to it at aznv.tv, I was SHOCKED to discover that it wasn't a 20, but a freakin' 40 episode drama!
Thank the Lord it starred So-fine, because there's NO WAY I'd have given Glass Slippers that much of a chance to impress me.

Again, I understand that they air these things once a morning or night over there, so 40 episodes would be good in that instance.
The anticipation factor alone would make a drama of this caliber worth tuning in to see what happens next.
Undisciplined in the art of moderation, however, it's practically impossible for someone like me to 'watch just one' a day.


and now for my personal observations ~

I never, quite got into Han Jae-hyuk -
he reminded me a lot of Judd Nelson from
The Breakfast Club



really loved his apartment though!
neon-blue everywhere.
Isn't that dangerous, or lethal or something?


his assistant, Oh Hwan Young (Son Young Joon) made me nervous.
Was he in love with Jang-hyuk, or what?
He was a hotty, though!


Makes me wonder if and WHY guys like him, Kim Chung ryeol, and Seo Hyun-ki faded into acting oblivion after making a drama.
Why isn't there any, further info on these two?

Isn't this gorgeous?
I want to walk down this street at night when I visit Korea



She was pretty in a Liv Tyler kind a way


you always know THIS'll never happen when it's said or even implied


for a guy with no job, yea?
I mean, where did Chul-woong get the $$ for this awesome bouquet?
It's beautiful, though.


I'm in love cuz you remind me of my 38-yr-old aunty from Queens


what would a Korean drama be if it didn't have
the prerequisite, middle-age BITCH whose only job it is
to make everyone else miserable?
This one needed a good lay ~ BADly


and here it is again!
the dead sea-slug hug!



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