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

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

Thursday, March 03, 2011

식객 (食客) / Shikgaek

Gourmet

Well-deserved 5 hearts for this 2008, 24-episode Korean drama that starred Kim Rae won as Lee Sung chan, the unassuming and reserved, young man who is the rightful heir of a famous, traditional Korean restaurant started by his great-grandfather; the last, royal chef of the Joseon Dynasty.

He is born into poverty, though, and lives in the forest with his humble appahji, who collects wild herbs and sells them for a way to take care of adorably chubby, little Sung chan.

The current owner/proprietor of the famous restaurant attends teenaged Sung chan's father's funeral and then offers to take in the orphaned boy, luring him effortlessly with the promise of a hyung in the bargain.

Years pass and the restaurant still thrives, with high-rollers from around the world stopping in for world-class yet authentic, Korean fare.

The old man and his two, good buddies decide its time for Sung chan to realize his destiny, so they announce to the kitchen staff that a contest will be held to decide the rightful heir to the throne, and Sung chan, his older step-brother, (Kwon Oh joong as Oh Bong joo), and a miscreant of a sous chef, (Won Ki joon as Min woo) end up as the three finalists.


They are expected to participate in and win 3 challenges made up by the current owner of the restaurant, their appahji and mentor, and the last one standing gains the coveted 'ownership' prize.


From start to finish, I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of Gourmet, and though I wished I hadn't first watched Le Grand Chef (the movie version of this drama), it didn't detract from the show or my viewing pleasure at all.

In fact, I completely forgot a majority of the movie and learned much, more about Lee Sung chan than I ever did from the movie.

NOT that Le Grand Chef was bad or a waste of time, of course, because I remember enjoying that movie - I just wish I had watched this first, but now it doesn't, really matter.

Another surprising aspect about this drama was that I liked BOTH, female leads and thought that they were gorgeous in their own, appealing way, too.

Nam Sang mi as Kim Jin soo, the feisty reporter who ends up working at the world-class restaurant and becoming romantically entangled with our handsome Sung chan-shi, and Kim So yun as Yoon Joo hee, the restaurant's manager who is expected to be in love with and eventually marry Bong ju.

Sang mi has that girl-next-door appeal without being too snooty about her supposed virginity while the polar opposite, So yun, is every white man's dream of a mail-order bride.

Jin su walked around in the hooker apparel while Ju hee wore stylish and painted-on garments befitting her high-brow position in uppity, Asian society (not to sound gay or anything, but she's got a really nice ass - envy, I suppose).

Still, I laughed every time they showed one or both females traipsing about a sandy beach or through the rugged woods in spike heels.

I mean, c'mon now ... it's virtually impossible to walk straight in the sand bare feet or sandals, much less high heels - and you can SO forget about hiking through the woods in them, too.

Get real for once in the continuity department, PLEASE!

115,036 total views at aznv.tv, and a majority of the comments were favorable, with most agreeing that the food was what drew them in and kept them watching for the duration while I, as always, had to disagree.

For the first half of this drama, it grossed me out completely to have to watch Sung chan consume copious amounts of RAW BEEF ...

gag

While it seemed, to me, like the main theme of this story was to present and then promote Korean 'cuisine' to the rest of the world, I can tell you right now they went about it all wrong, and using Japanese sushi as an excuse won't fly, either.

E.coli is a particularly harmful bacterial found in some raw beef; salmonella poisoning is a danger in raw fish and in raw eggs.

Intestinal parasites, in other words.

Sure, it was a high-brow establishment with, no-doubt, the country's best meat selection at their fingertips - but, it really doesn't matter when you take into account the number of fingers touching the food, the air quality, transportation, and so-on.

YUCK plain and simple, and no-thanks, but I'll pass on the Korean version of fine dining, thank you very much.

I love my steaks medium-rare, but not my burgers, and while sushi ranks high on my list of must-eats at least once a week, I stick with tuna or salmon unless I'm eating at an authentic, Japanese restaurant where ordering eel, squid, and other raw materials don't scare me or make me sick.

Putting a raw egg on top of raw, ground beef - to me - is the epitome of courting disaster, and I, for one, won't take such a chance regardless of the adventure-seeker in me goading me to at least give it a try.

The sea food and veggies are enough to satisfy me, and the way they prepare the mother-earth ingredients blows my mind - but again, why must they boil the crap out of it?

Every, single Korean drama or movie I've ever watched that had even the slightest amount of food in it has always been a heaping, stone pot of bubbling over stew of some sort that sounded oh, so delicious until the final presentation, when it's bubbling like a witches brew, and then it turns me off completely.

While everyone else is enjoying their meal, I'd return a half-hour later to consume what was left (if anything) - at a more palatable room temperature, thank you very much.

Grilled meat on a hibachi attached to your table is BEYOND cool and something I know would take off like wildfire here in the states, and every time I watch the actors wrap that slice of bacon or rib in leafy greens, it makes my mouth water.

Dipping rice in that red hot sauce, too - YUM!

Bulgogi has GOT to taste as ab-fab as it looks, and their version of curry rice has its appeal as well.

See, there are plenty of menu items from that country that would appeal to our 'so-called' uppity palate, yet this drama failed to fully return to its roots, so to speak, in the form of natural, basic, and what we might deem to be 'poor man's' or peasant food.

Gotta take the heads, legs, and 'whisker' like things off the animals, too - sorry.

No one loves shrimp as much as me, but I'd be hard-pressed to dine on them like potato chips if I had to first pick off the whiskers and decapitate every one of them, though.

Americans were never proponents of having their meal stare back at them, I guess.

This drama brought to mind the shameful and unnecessary behavior of tourists to that part of the world, who are thoughtless enough to voice their opinions in the direction of those trying to cater to their needs.

I can't imagine anyone in their right mind making a sour face at or actually spitting out food presented to them by a street vendor, but it has happened enough to the point where most Asian vendors won't, even serve the white man their offerings anymore.

There was a poignant yet humiliating scene in an episode of No Reservations on The Travel Channel where Anthony Bordain (the show's host) went to Hong Kong with a native buddy of his, and Anthony had to stand away from the street vendors cart or the proprietor wouldn't serve even the native Hong Konger any food.

Makes the rest of us look bad, more's the pity.

In another episode, he traveled to South Korea with an intern from the show, and for a majority of the episode, he complained about not wanting to be there since he wasn't sure that Korea had anything to offer in the way of interesting, if not palatable, native fare.

I thought he behaved a tad, too smug, but then at the end of the show, she took him to the coolest, cave-like place that served real, home-grown, ancient recipe stuff that made him take back everything he had previously said about Korean food.

I hesitate to use the word cuisine, because, to me, this stands for high-class, high-price, minimal portion food not even a sparrow would fill up on - with presentation being 99% of the meal's actual worth - and that DOESN'T spell Korean food in any way, shape, or form - nor should it, if you ask me.

BACK TO THE SHOW

So, this is about a young man whose lineage is pretty high-class, though he isn't aware right away of his birth-right: the keys to the kingdom - until the old man lets the cat out of the bag and suddenly things begin to spiral out of control until all hell breaks loose, words that can't be taken back are fired off one after the other, friend turns against friend, hyung against bro, and son against father.

Sung chan walks away from it all, roaming the countryside in a pick-up truck designed to house a host of delicious, fresh-picked veggies, fresh and dried fish, and the like, which he sells on street corners to all the gushing ajummas who want him to meet their eligible daughters.

Since hyung is the most important person in the world to him, Sung chan thinks he's doing the right thing by walking away from his rightful position as head chef and owner of the ancient restaurant.

Bong ju resents the fact that he's been kept in the dark all this time, and since he knows for sure his father wants Sung chan to succeed, he sets out to take over the restaurant and change everything on the menu - but, his ultimate goal is to bring Korean fare to the world market.

He's also pretty certain that Sung chan has a thing for his girl, and that she is in love with Sung chan and not him, which only adds fuel to the fire.

Another thing about this drama that I found refreshing as well as delightful was the fact that the supporting actors did as much to help this succeed as did the key players.

Everyone from the mysterious butcher, his angry daughter and her abiding fiance, the goofy lady in charge of all the crocks of soy sauce, pastes, and hot sauce at the restaurant, the editor of the magazine where Jin su worked, her friend at the magazine, the angry meat man who had a decidedly European-looking face, to the gay-or-was-he replacement and silly but loyal Rock Head all did terrific, convincing, and memorable jobs as supporting players.

The two, old men and the ornery, old lady chef who makes a mean fish stew had as much appeal for me as did Sung chan and Bong ju combined.

Every story within a story was entertaining, thought-provoking, tear-jerking, and believable.

Their appahji (Choi Bool am as Oh Seung geun) brought tears to my eyes even when he wasn't being attacked by his son, forced out of business, or even when he was dying.

He's got that lovable, likable, and adorable face that makes you want to reach out and pinch his chubby cheeks - with a laugh that can't help but be returned measure for measure.

How dare anyone think to upset a guy like him!

Bong ju needed a spank, or at least a good punch in the face to wake him from his delusional state of mind, and I was ready to deliver at least twice an episode, too.

The history of Kimchi proved fascinating as well - having always known it was simple peasant food concocted to stave off hunger during the long dead of winter, but the tradition of making it for others was an amazing discovery and one that I hope never goes out of style.

See, even that old, senile lady was adorable and memorable.

It also brings to mind a characteristic of Kim Rae won, the man, and not so much his character, Sung chan.

She insisted he not refer to her as halmoni, so chuckling, he called her noona, and with a bright, beaming smile on her still pretty face, she said yes, that's who she was, and he is her hyung.

The way he chuckled during that encounter says a lot about his personality, and I can only imagine the fun they had while making that drama together.

He seems genuine, considerate of others, yet laid-back enough to know he's as human as the rest of us and no, big deal except that he's got a great face, a nice bod, and mega-talent in the acting department.

Ah, and as for continuity ... well, y'all know how I am about things like this, and I wish I had written down the episodes for you, but there were 3, different scenes when you can clearly see the 'crew' working behind the scenes - but in front of the camera.

One is in the kitchen, one is while Sung chan is driving along a road, and another is during one of many forest scenes.

You'll see a boom operator, a cameraman, and a female staff member standing where they shouldn't be standing.

Funny stuff.

Speaking of driving scenes ... ever notice how Koreans tend NOT to pay attention to the road; even when it's a winding mountain pass, raining like hell, or on a bridge a couple, hundred feet above the water?

Scary stuff.

I know - they're sitting inside a vehicle propped way, too high above the road being towed on a flat-bed ... I KNOW!

Still ... continuity and common sense would dictate that ... well, that the person behind the wheel keep his eyes facing forward regardless of the conversation taking place in the vehicle, or the exposed leg of some gorgeous female at his side, or whatever.

Always a nail-biting experience for me to have to watch an inattentive hot dude driving a car in a Korean drama or movie.

Kim Rae won impressed me with this one, and now I'm anxious to see more of what he has to offer, even if it will be going back in time to do so - I don't care.

WINNER
2

Le Grand Chef 2: Kimchi Battle / Kim-chi-jeon-jaeng



2010 Korean movie that once-again pits our hero, Sung Chan, against a rival chef in another cook-off - this time, Kimchi.

It's a new actor portraying the descendant of a royal chef, but strangely he somehow resembles Kim Rae won in that he could definitely pass for a younger brother.

The guy from Le Grand Chef reminded me of Kwon Sang woo.

Anyhow - in this version of the saga (based on Korean manga) "Sik Gaek", our humble chef still sells staples from the back of his truck on street corners, traveling around the countryside learning more and more about his natural talent.

He's returned 'home', however - to an adopted mother who runs a traditional but popular restaurant from her home.

She's ill and there are creditors hounding her to relinquish the land and restaurant when her world-famous chef daughter decides to leave her posh job and return to Gwangju, to do-in her omanee for all the shame she suffered as the child of a husband-less mother.

Her intent is to destroy the restaurant, but it is already closed - and since Sung chan intends to do whatever it takes to keep the place running, Jang Eun decides to challenge her in-a-round-about-kind-of-way adopted brother to a Kimchi cook-off.

If she wins, he has to turn-tail and leave so she can dismantle the restaurant/house piece by piece - but if she loses to him, she has to forget about her plans for revenge.

I was very confused throughout this movie since the writers decided to stray from the original plot - and suddenly our Sung chan had a mother; his father isn't mentioned at all, and I have no idea if it's the same Sung chan from the first movie who is the descendant of a royal chef, or if he's just some kid off the street with mad culinary skills.

To be honest, I've only had kimchi once in my life, and it came from a jar sold at a Chinese outlet store somewhere in Ann Arbor - and when I opened the jar, the smell hit me in a way that was less than pleasant - which may have ruined it for me, but the taste was beyond disappointing and I never finished my meal.

That incident is being removed from memory, and I have every intention of trying again, but at an official, Korean restaurant this time - where I will insist that they serve me traditional, Korean food and not their idea of what I, an American, would like to eat.

I want the real thing, and since there isn't likely to be a chance for me to fly to Korea and eat the real thing, I'll settle for places like Goram, Hana, and Korea House for my dining pleasure.

In this movie, they again used Russians, Germans, and Australians to represent Americans - something I'm growing to resent now - and regardless of where they find these 'white' people to represent 'me' - they are NOT me, and I don't appreciate being lumped into a generic category of stuffy fools with no taste buds or sense of adventure.

Okay, so Kimchi Battle was interesting, and the characters our Sung chan encountered in order to gain more life experience were touching - enough to bring tears to my eyes on occasion - but, the confusion about just, who was Sung chan supposed to be this time took away from any amount of true enjoyment for me.

... hence the three flowers out of five.
0

Futari ~ Watashitachi ga Eranda Michi / ふたり ~私たちが選んだ道~



2003 Japanese movie about a young couple who fall in love, get married, and start out their expectant lives together when tragedy strikes and they, along with their closest relatives, are left to face some interesting if not predictable and oft-times unrealistic decisions about the future.

Futari stars Nagase Tomoya as Kamagata Yoshiyuki, the husband, and Fukada Kyoko as Kamagata Mutsumi, the wife.

He's got an office job and she is a nurse at a hospital, and they live in a nice apartment.

On the eve of a much-anticipated weekend get-away in the country, Kamagata-kun gets into an accident on his motorcycle and ends up in a hospital other than the one where his wife works.

He's paralyzed from the waist down and will never walk again, and so our story begins here, where for about two hours we walk along at baby steps pace with our newlyweds as they struggle to come to terms with the twist fate handed them in a split second.

The only reason I chose to watch Futari is because of Nagase-san.

He may be old to a lot of you, but to me, he's fine as wine and oh, so easy on the eyes - even if he does remind me of Johnny Depp.

He's been around awhile, with an impressive list of film & drama credits to his name, along with the fact he's the lead singer of a group I have yet to listen to, so shame on me in the slacker department - gotta get my hands on some of their music and make a judgment call about his talent in Tokio.

I was wrong to pre-judge this film, and I appreciated the fact that the writers chose to remain realistic while also capturing just a tad of the sappy silliness no-doubt meant to take away some of the heaviness from the serious content of the storyline.

It's been around for awhile now, but if you haven't seen Futari yet, I recommend you give it a go and find out for yourself how simple yet complex, entertaining yet serious a Japanese movie can be.

Mr. Socrates



2005 Korean movie that stars Kim Rae won as Ku Dong hyuk, a street dog with mad fight skills and no conscience who even has no issue with his begging money off his old man, a wastrel behind bars for a string of petty theft crimes.

Oppa Kim is great, though, and despite the feral character he portrays, one can't help but smile and insist it can't be true of a guy like him - because he's got that kind of a face.

You know, the eyes with a hint of a smile behind them, clean-shaven handsome mug, and even in scruffy garb, you can't help but get the feeling that he reeks of suave sophistication.

Early in this movie, and after he's beaten down a number of no-accounts, Ku is kidnapped in the same, abrupt and violent fashion as he's been living since they put away his father.

This is where the title comes into play.

Guys at the top with lots of money and little in the way of brains are doing shady things, like recruiting thugs and transforming them into upstanding citizens who will work for them or suffer the consequences.

They've chosen Ku as their latest disciple.

Being stubborn, he refuses at first and is beaten horrendously while also being made to suffer some pretty intense forms of torture until at last he acquiesces, studying daily to pass a high-school equivalency exam before going on to become a street cop.

This was actually kind of funny in places, and like I mentioned earlier, Kim's eyes make you want to giggle anyhow.

After studying his profile, it surprised me to note that this was the first time I ever saw him act - but that ...ing, Love Story at Harvard, Say You Love Me, Attic Cat, What Star Did You Come From, and My Love Patzzi are and have been on my list of 'watch' for awhile now at aznv.tv.

I like him, too, because for one thing, he's no Ken doll, and for another, I think he'd be the type of guy to make me laugh for no, other reason than to see me smile.

I worried, too, that Mr. Socrates was going to be one of them bloody messes filled with violent gore that turn my stomach and make me regret having watched, but it wasn't - despite the violence, torture, and seemingly mindless death scenes interspersed throughout this interesting movie.

No random sex scenes or the down-n-out hot chick for our leading man to mess around with, either!

The ending didn't come as much of a surprise, but it was still a good one.

I recommend Mr. Socrates to anyone with a few hours to kill who has the time to concentrate on the movie and nothing else, or you're liable to miss the whole point.
0

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Dream High / 드림하이

Kinda sorta looks like a winner to me!

Have to wait for it to be uploaded, though ...

0

Friday, February 18, 2011

ブラザー☆ビート / Brother Beat




Even with Hayami Mokomichi as Sakurai Riku in this one, I couldn't, quite bring myself to give this 2005 JDorama a fourth flower.

Tamayama Tetsuji as Sakurai Tatsuya became a bigger draw for me, too, and I think he's really fine, but still, no, fourth flower for Brother Beat.

The story was great and believable, about a feisty widow of three, grown boys who happens to be a tad on the shiftless side when it comes to domestic ability.

The eldest boy (Tamayama) is a handsome, upstanding office worker taking fiscal responsibility for the clan, the middle bro, (Hayami) is a bad-ass slacker more interested in looking fly than accomplishing anything, and the baby boy, Nakao Akiyoshi as Sakurai Junpei, who oddly but succinctly takes on the maternal role in the household - cooking, cleaning, doing laundry and making sure that everyone has a healthy lunch before they exit the tiny house they call home.

Tatsuya bumps into his destined love in the first episode, breaking her glasses and feeling obliged to buy her a new pair.

She's not homely, but I think we were supposed to believe that she was, and it took Tatsuya about eight of the ten episodes to realize she was meant to be his for life, too.

She ends up working in management at the same super market as Tatsuya's mother, and the two hit it off right away, with silliness ensuing up to the point where they both realize that she has been talking intimately with her lover's mother about her romance.

Tatsuya and Riku fight a lot, getting into knock-down, drag-outs right there in the tiny livingroom/dining area of the house, upsetting furniture and destroying almost every meal their little brother had lovingly prepared.

Riku eventually decides to open the dry cleaning business their late father once operated inside the house, and for a time, things seem to be going in an upward motion for the Sakurai clan - but, we all know stability isn't something you're likely to witness in a drama from any country.

Little bro ends up being ensnared by a pretty, older girl pregnant with another man's child, and despite the warning signs and stern admonishment of his elders, Junpei chooses to follow his heart (and maybe his crotch, but he was such a sweety in Brother Beat, it's really hard to tell).

Like most Japanese dramas, this one starts off at a fast pace, slows down a bit in the middle, and then picks up again toward the end - and because the topic is rather typical of most humans on the verge of falling in love or getting married, the writers had to devise some interesting filler to add to the mayhem and not let things go stale.

Brother Beat didn't go stale, but it seemed like a played-out story to me, and while the actors managed to pull off their character roles nicely, it still wasn't something I'd rate highly, but would definitely recommend it to you to see and judge for yourself.

My Girl (JP) / マイガール



2009, 10-episode JDorama that stars Arashi's Aiba Masaki as 23 yr old Kazama Masamune, a guy who fell in love with an older woman while still in high school, and then she left the country and he folded.

Six years later, and living in the upstairs room of a charming, European-style house outside Tokyo, but with oddball homeowners for his landlord, Masaki-kun finds out that his old flame is dead, and that she has a five-year-old daughter he is now expected to raise as his own child.

The cute, little girl misses her mother terribly and has a few trinkets in her possession to help remember the good times - while she is also politely accommodating to the strange man she must now live with.

He's worried that the crotchety, old man landlord will kick him out if he finds out about the girl, and then he worries that he'll lose his job if he keeps having to leave work to fetch her from school or leave early on account of her being sick or something implausible but necessary to the storyline like that.

He's worried, too, that his mother will be upset once she finds out that the little girl is her grandchild - for reals - and as the episodes progress, so does his level of maturity, understanding, and acceptance for everything from the past to his inevitable future as a father.

This is based on the Manga My Girl Sahara Mizu, and almost everyone at aznv.tv agreed that the Manga was better, more tearful than the drama, but that Aiba did a terrific job.

I didn't like him, and then I did like him, and then I quirked a curious brow at him, and then I smiled at him.

Aiba is peculiar in a number of ways, and not at all like the stereotypical pop-band boy image in my head, either.

My impression of him and his acting skills aside, this was a nice movie that unfolded seamlessly, telling a story of interest and acted out with ease by all the characters.
0

Humming / 허밍




2007 Korean movie that starred Lee Chun hee and Han Ji hye; lovers gone complacent in their long relationship, and while she is anticipating a marriage proposal, he is contemplating an extended stay at the South Pole for work research - and, we're meant to believe that he likes the idea because he wants to get away from the relationship.

He's irritable around her, and her quirky ways annoy him until the day she enters his apartment behaving normal when his cell phone rings and her sister is tearfully trying to explain to him about an accident his girlfriend just experienced; landing her in the hospital.

It makes no sense to him, and even after he arrives at the hospital and sees his girl lying comatose in bed, he can't believe what just occurred.

For the duration of this film, we watch as he retraces the last steps of his dying girlfriend - everything from his desperately trying to find the yellow bike he saw her ride up to the complex on to his thinking about every, little nuance of her personality as it unfolds from memory (now pleasant) in the quiet, lonely apartment.

Lee Min ki made a subtle appearance in this, playing the lead man's buddy from work, and once in awhile he's there to offer advice or support to his slowly going mad friend.

We're supposed to take away from this one the idea that 'you never know what you've got til you lose it' ... but, for me, it was more like 'be honest and stop messing with the feelings of others'

It was poignant at best, and highly predictable, but still artsy enough to be enjoyable.
0

Thursday, February 17, 2011

매리는 외박중 / Maerineun Oebakjoong

Marry Me, Mary!






That's right!
FIVE stars for this one :-)

Beyond awesome, interesting, believable, and entertaining was this 16-episode, Nov through Dec of 2010, Korean drama.

Loved it to BITS!

Especially ...

Jang Geun suk as Kang Moo kyul


An added bonus, and the reason I tuned in to begin with ...

Kim Jae wook as Byun Jung in


But, believe it or not, that isn't even HALF the story this time!

I went into this one with just, one eye open and expected for it to be mildly sappy at the least - horrifically mundane at most.

WRONG!

Oh, so wrong on both counts and THANK THE HEAVENS for that, too.

The second that I saw the leading man beside MY leading man, Jae wook, and that they were both interested in the leading lady (Moon Geun young as Wi Mae ri), I thought to myself, "Aw no! Not another of them stupid, unrealistic Cinderella stories like the ones from Taiwan that they crank out every, other month?"

WRONG again!

Well, let's just say it wasn't EXACTLY like the far-fetched, worn-out, boring and lame 'ugly girl meets prince charming and he falls in love with her' scenario I am fed up with watching.

(I'm seriously going to re-read all my blogs and then make a new blog that lists every, single drama from Japan, China, and Korea that has that theme as a basis for the story - there have GOT to be at least ten I can list, I'm sure, considering I can already think of five right off the top of my head!)

Anyway, MMM is about a poor, unattractive girl with a dead-beat father and no mother who starts off the story by hiding from creditors AND the goons chasing down her old man in order to 'extract' the money he owes them.

It was hard NOT to like Wi Mae ri from the get-go, and her childish antics could not be misconstrued regardless of their ... well, childishness!

Take, for example, the scene where she is trying to get our sex-laden god of a musician, Kang Moo kyul, to sign a release form that assures he won't turn around and sue her for hitting him with her friend's car.

When he said she resembled the cat from Shrek II, he was dead-on!

omg ... I just realized something!

Now I can put a name to this guy's heavenly face!

I saw this dude in a video last year, and I melted in my chair!

Then, and after stealing this image from the video and using it as a profile pic for EVER, I begged my Korean friend to help me find out who he is, and she didn't have a clue.

IT'S HIM! Yay!

Okay, back to the show ...

Mu kyul is a street musician (I think they toss about the Indie label a bit, too freely in Asia, and its gotten to the point where one can't distinguish between that and POP anymore, so I won't do that here) who shuffles around town with his guitar strapped to his back looking oh, so fly in the latest, trendy attire, and our leading lady, Mae ri, drives her two, intoxicated friends to a happening area of Seoul when Mu kyul, headphones attached and bobbing his head to the sound, steps out, in front of traffic, scaring the girls half to death in the process.

When Mu kyul opens his eyes and he sees the wide-eyed girl with thick, fluffy hair staring at him with concern for his health, I KNOW FOR SURE he is instantly taken by her, but that isn't revealed until way, later in the game.

He says he's fine and saunters off, but her goofy friends convince her that he'll return to haunt her with a lawsuit for damages - so the already wary-of-creditors Mae ri scampers around the bustling streets in search of the 'omg' musician with amazingly AMAZING hair, long, limber legs, and a face that could stop a clock, it's that gorgeous.

She ends up inside an underground club filled with bobbing heads and loud music, but she soon recognizes the electrifying presence on stage and sticks around for the show.


By INDIEs, I guess you could say its true this time, since Mu kyul is against pop music of any kind, and he even has the wherewithal to know when his 'agent' is trying to rope him into a 'pop boy band' deal and ends up telling her to hit the road, displaying a wonderful sense of integrity.

After the show, Mae ri is mortified (in an obvious, Asian sense) to see the handsome musician physically hugging his fans - and then she proceeds to follow him to a nearby bar, where he meets up with his band buddies to get drunk.

Mae ri interrupts the party to beg him to sign the release form, and she ends up having to knock back a few instead, which leads to their both getting shloshed, which in turn leads to some funny dialogue and 'drunk' antics.

Mu kyul doesn't sign the paper, but he does end up spending the night at her apartment - which Mae ri can't remember letting happen since she isn't one to handle the spirits all that well.


MEANWHILE, her old man is running from creditors when he ends up at his wife's grave, where he also just happens to bump into his old Sunbae from college, who has been in Japan for years but has returned to Korea on business - with his adult son who is in the drama-producing business and wants to make it big in his native country.

Byun Jung in is the 'typical' tortured soul in search of an identity as well as a purpose in life while also dutifully fulfilling the demanded-of-him obligations of his father - an overbearing, heartless man with just, one thing on his mind - to marry off his only child to the daughter of the woman of his dreams.

Yea ... that'd be our Wi Mae ri-shi.

Her father and Sunbae (Jung in's father) become fast-friends again and almost instantly discuss plans to follow through with their twenty + years' agreement to have their children wed.

When Mae ri gets wind of the news, panic ensues and she decides on something stupid since its spur-of-the-moment stuff - like asking Mu kyul to 'stand in' as a fake husband so her father will back off.

They and their friends go to a photography studio and dress up in wedding attire, take a bunch of pictures, and then Mae ri proceeds to show them to her appahji in the hopes that he will forget about the 'arranged' thing.


It doesn't work - but the relationship between Mae ri and Mu kyul has nowhere else to go but UP since they must continue to pretend they are hitched as her father still insists that she marry money instead of looks - I mean for love.

The two, old men arrange to have Mae ri and Jung in meet, and since this is modern-day Korea with pre-historic notions about love & marriage, the fathers want Mae ri and Jung in to live together.

I had no idea that just 'saying' you are engaged makes you legally married.

It's as if the engagement ceremony is bigger and more important than the actual wedding - and this, obviously, doesn't sit too well with a westerner like me.

Another thing I can't wrap my head around is the fact that the woman takes the man with her to buy her dress, and that they take pictures PRIOR to the big day (BIG no-no jinxy thing from a Western perspective, eh?) - which I guess isn't such a big day after all, if all the pomp & circumstance occurs months BEFORE the big day ... I mean wedding.

OUCH, my head hurts.

Okay, so for the next, ten episodes we watch as Mae ri and Mu kyul play house without the benefit of sex or lovey-dovey stuff, and she also has to divide her time between him and Jung in, whom she just, doesn't like for whatever reason, even though he's the sweetest, most considerate man on the PLANET for crying out loud!

She ends up getting a job at the studio where Jung in works, and the more that they are together, the more jealous and suspicious of Mae ri that Mu kyul becomes until the fireworks erupt.


Ah yes, there is the unrequited love thing in this one - where Mu kyul's old flame returns to agitate and annoy until the bitter end, when she has to relinquish everything for the sake of her love.

She first takes a job as an actress for Jung in's drama, and then Mu kyul is asked to record the music for the OST - so all, four players must converge every now and again - to add spice to the drama.


Right - so, Jung in AND Mu kyul end up falling in love with Mae ri, and Mae ri remains Asian good-girl faithful to her heart: sticking to Mu kyul like glue.

I'll have to end the explanations here so as not to give anything away for the few of you out there who have yet to watch this awesome drama.

Here are the rest of my pictures - but, before I go, I must insist that you WATCH THIS ONE!

Marry Me, Mary - Mary Stayed Out All Night is a definite winner.







LOVE this song to death ... enjoy!