Three Kdrama men with great husband potential
1. Choi Han Gyul, Coffee Prince. Even if he wasn’t smoking hot and filthy rich, Han Gyul
would still be a keeper. Funny, sweet, and supportive of his girlfriend’s
independence? Sign me up.
2. Lee Sun Joon, Sungkyunkwan Scandal. He’s smart, earnest, and fiercely principled, and even as a
man of the Joseon Dynasty is willing to share the household duties with his
wife. (I’m lousy at dusting, too, Sun Joon!)
3. Yoon Ji Hoo, Boys Over Flowers. Because I,
too, believe a perfect date involves reading together and then napping in a sunny
place.
Three Kdrama men who don’t deserve their women
1. Kim Seung Yoo, Princess’ Man. He started a shallow playboy, turned into a psycho
hell-bent on revenge, and ended up abandoning his nation for his personal safety.
And she took an arrow for this?
2. Baek Seung Jo, Playful Kiss. It was fun to see a Kdrama girl pursuing her man,
when it’s so often the other way around. But Oh Ha Ni? You could do so much
better than this distant, hypercritical bag of neuroses. I hoped you would
break his heart in the end, I really did.
3. Lee Kung Min, Attic Cat. A giant (admittedly handsome) man child who expects women to take care
of him. The show's ending hinted that he might have reformed, but I didn't buy it.
Three not-so-great moments in Kdrama relationships
1. The vicious, this-is-secretly-for-your-own-good breakup.
Couldn’t these characters just be up-front about why they think it’s necessary
to break up, and trust that their significant other will listen? See, for
example, the cockamamie final two episodes of Heartstrings.
2. The wrist grab. The difference between a wrist grab and a
hand-hold is more profound than four or five inches: It’s the difference
between treating someone like a thing and treating them like a person; between forcefully taking control and working together; between acting like someone’s parent and being their lover.
3. The brush pass, that not-quite-meeting most dramas throw
in before their romantic leads are introduced to each other. I suppose it’s
meant to show that they’re destined to be together, but mostly it just conveys
that people who live in the same city are bound to cross paths at some point.
(Note, however, that this can be well done—several Coffee Prince scenes involve brush passes, but they’re so naturally
worked into the story that they’re more of a transition between characters than
some Deeply Magical Moment of Destiny.)
Three Kdrama villains who deserved worse than they got
1. Prince Suyan, Princess’ Man. Good thing everyone fought so hard and sacrificed so
much to keep him from the throne. (That’s all I can say without spoiling the
ending, so you may need to trust me on this front.)
2. Oh Yoon Joo, My Princes. She’s cruel, manipulative, and a downright evil bitch, yet her just rewards
involve ending up with the handsome and kind second male lead. Just one more
reason to dislike this middling show.
3. Eun Chae
Young, What’s Up. Based on the
edited-down version of the drama that aired, her character had no closure
whatsoever. She deserved so much
more—and so much worse.
Three words and/or phrases describing how much I’m
enjoying Family’s Honor
1. Very much
2. Enormously
3. To a ridiculous extent
1. Big. Scheduled to
air this summer. If this show isn’t completely awesome, I’m going to need
antidepressants. The first reason to be excited is that it’s written by the Hong
sisters, capable screenwriters of such gems as My Girlfriend is a
Gumiho and Greatest Love. Their work isn’t always perfect—they tend to be
better at little details than constructing an overarching plot, for example—but
it’s always charming, riddled with amusing pop culture references, and full of
likeable characters. The cast is the second reason to be excited: Gong Yoo, of
my fevered Coffee Prince dreams;
Lee Min-jung, the one Jun Pyo should have ended up with in Boys over
Flowers; and Suzy, whose limited acting
abilities made her all the more amusing in Dream High. Oh. And it may or may not be based on Tom Hanks’s outlandishly
wonderful 80s movie Big. (P.S. to
the Hong sisters: if you’re going to continue pillaging movies beloved during
my American childhood, may I suggest a Korean spin on Labyrinth?)
2. King 2 Hearts. Currently airing. My drama watching policy is not to start anything that isn’t completely subbed and available for streaming, so it’s going to be a while before I see this one. Based on everything I’ve read, though, it’s totally wonderful—and I’ll know if it manages to keep being totally wonderful right up to the end before I even see episode 1, which is somehow comforting.
3. Twelve Men in a Year. Finished airing in Korea as of April 5. A romantic comedy revolving
around a magazine writer who decides to date one man from each of the Chinese
zodiac signs? Yes please. Cable shows like this one are
generally overlooked on English-language Kdrama news sources, so Twelve
Men has been flying a bit under the radar.
I haven’t even been able to find a listing for it on Drama Fever, but plan to hunt it out
somewhere.
Three things I’m totally desensitized to in Korean Dramas
1. Drunkenness. American movies and TV shows may show
drinking, but their characters only get drunk when the plot is about frat boys
or didactic struggles with alcoholism. Nowadays, even a grandmother staggering
drunken down the street wouldn’t cause me to bat an eyelash.
2. Men in pink. Western men often have masculinity issues
when it comes to wearing the color pink. They do it sometimes, especially
fashion forward or preppy types, but it’s hard to imagine Christian Bale being
dressed in pink oxfords throughout the new Batman movie. On the other hand,
raspberry jeggings were pretty much formal wear for Lee Min Ho in City
Hunter (by contrast, he wore stretch pants
in a stylish zebra print when kicking back at home, if I recall correctly.)
3. Multigenerational households. Moving out of the family
home is item number one on the post-graduation to-do list of most Americans.
Sometimes financial or practical concerns drive us back, but it’s pretty much
wired into our hardware that making a home for ourselves is a key sign of
adulthood and success. Based on dramaland, however, traditional Korean values
lean in the other direction—it’s accepted for girls to stay at home until they’re
married, and for boys to stay at home even after that. (I had to pick my jaw up
off the floor when the leads in Playful Kiss came back to his parents’ house after their honeymoon, moved her things
across the hall to his bedroom, and called it a done deal.)
Three things I’ll never be desensitized to, no matter how
much Kdrama I watch
1. Closed-mouth, passionless kisses. Up until the past year
or two, these seemed to be the most anyone could ever expect from Korean
television. This is all well and good—Korean culture just isn’t as interested
in physical displays of affection as Western culture is. But from American
perspective, the big culmination of a powerfully epic 16-episode love story
deserves some tongue, at least. It feels false and cold when the best kiss the
grown-up leads can work up to is reminiscent of ones stolen before we hit puberty. Thanks to today’s youth-oriented cable shows like Flower
Boy Ramen Shop and I Need Romance, though, more realistic physical relationships seem
to be on the upswing.
2. Sleeping on the floor. I try not to be one of those “My
country, right or wrong” types, but I can tell you one thing America has all
over Korea: huge, pillow-topped mattresses on nice high bed frames. I’m sure
that people prefer whatever they’re used to, but it’s hard to imagine that
sleeping on what boils down to a padded comforter is as comfortable as sleeping
on my plush, cozy queen mattress. (I do
envy, though, how easy moving must be without all the bulky furniture.)
3. Lack of commercial breaks. For someone who has spent the
last few years watching American TV on DVD, it’s weird that there are no
placeholder cuts intended for commercial placement in Korean dramas. But
there’s a good reason for this: Korean law doesn’t allow commercials to
interrupt broadcast television; instead they run before or after the show on
air. (This doesn’t apply to cable networks, which explains the painfully
obvious editing jumps for commercial breaks in dramas like the What’s Up.) Just like in America, though, everyone gets around
this by implanting ads right into the script of the show—“Smart phones aren’t
hard to use after all!” “Look at how my amazing car does the parallel parking
for me!” “This iPad app allows me to play the gayageum without lugging that
heavy old instrument around all the time!”
Three things I thought I’d always dislike about Korean drama, but have grown to love
1. Relationship terms. At first, all this oppa-ing seemed designed to keep people in their place—a constant reminder of the totem pole of social worth and the inequalities in their relationships. I can now see the flip side of this coin, though: relationship terms can be a celebration of the ties between people and all the many viewpoints they have to share, whether they’re hubaes or seonbaes, dongsaengs or hyungs.
2. Melodramatic chipmunk-esque camera work (see video, below). Painfully old-fashioned and deserving of an eye-roll as it is, there’s something to be said about the visceral power of a quick zoom in dramatic scene: it punctuates whatever crazy thing has just happened and pulls you directly into the action. I was stunned the first time this technique popped up in my drama watching, but now it inevitably leaves me hungry for more.
Three things I thought I’d always dislike about Korean drama, but have grown to love
1. Relationship terms. At first, all this oppa-ing seemed designed to keep people in their place—a constant reminder of the totem pole of social worth and the inequalities in their relationships. I can now see the flip side of this coin, though: relationship terms can be a celebration of the ties between people and all the many viewpoints they have to share, whether they’re hubaes or seonbaes, dongsaengs or hyungs.
2. Melodramatic chipmunk-esque camera work (see video, below). Painfully old-fashioned and deserving of an eye-roll as it is, there’s something to be said about the visceral power of a quick zoom in dramatic scene: it punctuates whatever crazy thing has just happened and pulls you directly into the action. I was stunned the first time this technique popped up in my drama watching, but now it inevitably leaves me hungry for more.
3. Sageuk garb. Before I even saw my first show set during the Joseon Dynasty, I watched Sweet 18. This 2004 drama featured an everyday girl marrying the first son of a main family, which is harder than it might sound: it involves running a big traditional household and acting as clan matriarch. And the thing that initially sold the (not-too-bright) female lead on her fiance was seeing him all decked out in traditional clothes. I couldn’t quite wrap my mind around this. What was so great about a man carrying a paper fan and wearing dusty-rose pajamas and a weird hat? Having seen a few historical dramas since then, I get it now: the look is dashing and flamboyant and smacks of deliciously over-the-top sageuk romance. I would probably stop traffic to gaze adoringly at a handsome man in a hanbok, too, and I haven’t even had a lifetime of cultural conditioning to find the look appealing.