Wednesday, 20 April 2016

Master's Sun

Master’s Sun

7/10
Master's Sun
Genre:                          Episodes: 17                      Year: 2013
Romance
Comedy
Supernatural 

Synopsis:

Tae Gong Shil has the ability to see spirits and ghosts. The ghosts do whatever they can to get her attention so that she can fulfil their requests, and often resort to terrifying her until she obliges. Due to her fear of ghosts, Gong Shil stays away from crowded places and struggles to live a normal life. By coincidence she runs into the CEO of a shopping mall, Joo Joong Won. Gong Shil soon discovers that when she touches Joong Won, she looses her ability to see the dead and decides to stay by him at all costs.

Cast:
Gong Hyo Jin (Tae Gong Shil/Tae Yang)
So Ji Sub (Joo Joong Won)
Seo In Guk (Kang Woo)
Kim Yoo Ri (Tae Yi Ryung)
Choi Jung Woo (Kim Gwi Do)
Han Bo Reum (Cha Hee Joo/Han Na Brown)
Hwang Sun Hee (Han Na Brown)
L (Joon Joong Won)
General Thoughts:
It’s generally a sweet drama that zips along quite nicely. There are definitely some plot points that aren’t quite A-Grade material, but the ridiculous amounts of cute from our leading couple does a pretty great job at covering any other weaknesses that the series develops. Also this set-up is the best excuse for skinship I’ve ever seen. Yes. Wonderful.
More Please
That being said, the downside of the leading couple carrying most of the interest meant that any time they weren’t together (and this is a Hong Sisters drama- so there’s going to be a time they’re not together) the drama was stripped of most of its entertainment. A lot of credit for this drama has to go to its leading actors- they really sold the romance, and the romance was at the heart of the show. Gong Hyo Jin is delightful (of course).
Everyone loves Gong Hyo Jin. Everyone loves So Ji Sub
I wouldn’t go as far as saying she’s the best actress out there, but there’s just something about her that draws you in and makes you love her, and whatever character she’s playing. So Ji Sub was wonderful as CEO Joo Joong Won- which is a huge feat in a world so full of K-Dramas staring abrasive CEOs. What I loved most about the character of Joong Won is that he wasn’t a hard-exterior-soft-interior type of CEO lead. He was kind of an ass…all the time. Meeting this ghost-seeing heroine didn’t magically melt away his prickly personality- he simply liked her in spite of his prickly personality. Which is adorable and hilarious, and So Ji Sub could deliver it so, so well. Unfortunately there’s not a lot to say about the other cast members as the leading couple definitely dominated, and thus reduced the screen time, plot time and interest levels of the other characters. Seo In Guk has a similar quality to Gong Hyo Jin- you just adore him in whatever role he’s playing, and he was cute as the bodyguard with a fear of ghosts. Even if his character did get little development and was booted out of the love-triangle pretty darn quick. Which is a shame, I would have liked to see Kang Candy get a little more development- he was too interesting a character to have fall by the wayside.
Plus their dates getting crashed by ghosts was always hilarious
Kang Candy’s final love interest almost bored me to tears. I’m not a huge fan of stroppy, entitled female characters- so Tae Yi Ryung didn’t do a lot for me. Sure, there were times when I thought she was a little bit cute, and the ending between her and Kang Woo was super adorable (that red carpet walk), but all in all I thought Kang Woo could do a lot better. Again, a little character development probably would have done that pairing the world of good. Plot-wise the drama was well played out.
More kissing, less conflict
Small ghost conflicts helped out our main couple development until our characters were at the point that they could handle the main ghost conflict. Which actually turned out to be a little lacking. I pegged the twin bait-and-switch pretty early on (and I know a lot of other viewers did too). Predictability isn’t necessarily a huge problem if you’ve got the substance to pull of the story believably. However, the drama seemed to be relying on no one clicking on to the fact that the girls were twins, or that it was the good twin that died. Which is unfortunate, because that twist isn’t even that huge- the only real difference it made was how our hero viewed his dead first love- is she the sweet angel he initially thought, or the bad b*tch he came to know her as? Once again, I wish just a tad more effort had been spent developing the twin characters in order to give the final reveal a bit more of an emotional blow. Even better, I wish that both twins had perhaps been a little bit dark and Han Na actually wanted to take over Tae Yang’s body- at least then the stakes would have been higher. As it was, the two girls were rather flat, two-dimensional characters with not a lot going on under the surface. If indeed we had one evil twin and one good twin (egghhh the cliche), why didn’t the good dead twin just tell Tae Yang what the deal was? You’re telling me she actually placed the sister she’d known very briefly (who then killed her) over the man she completely loved? Yeaaaahhh…not buying that.
And in case you needed help, the twins were conveniently colour-coded. White = Good. Dark = Bad.
It did feel a little like the writers were grasping at whatever they could think of to explain why Joong Won saw his first love at his kidnapping, and then why her ghost stuck around. Ah well- it wasn't great, but it didn't suck either. Also, I won’t lie- I remember nothing from the soundtrack, so I think it’s safe to say it was pretty unexceptional. 

What Was Great:

Ghost of the Hour:
The ghosts were scary as f*ck. No joke. They were terrifying. Which was awesome. Having the ghosts be as scary as they were actually did an excellent job of highlighting our heroine’s main conflict. She sees dead people. They’re scary.
NOPE NOPE NOPE NOPE NOPE
She doesn’t like seeing dead people. It made her instantaneous clinging to Joong Won so much more understandable than if the ghosts had simply been slightly translucent people with pale faces. I would cling to whatever man came my way if I saw stuff like that and he could make it disappear. Freakiness aside, the ghost stories that ran over one or two episodes did a great job at not only keeping interest while the main conflict was building, but also impacted on our main characters and their relationship. Unlike in some other supernatural dramas (cough, ‘Who Are You’, cough), the small ghost plots helped to shape the way our characters viewed each other, and were a nice way to bring them closer- rather than simply providing filler episodes. Each ghost story caused something new to be revealed about either Tae Yang or Joong Won, which of course furthered the romance. And we love it when the romance is furthered. 
This is okay though, I can deal with this
Is He Dead?:
I give full props to the show for making me believe that there was the possibility of them killing off the male lead 3/4 of the way in. In most rom-coms this is an inconceivable event- but with the whole ghost premise, it’s actually fairly plausible in this setting. Sure, it was only left as a cliffhanger for one episode- BUT I WAS HANGING OFF THAT CLIFF. There were various upsides and downsides to killing of the hero midway through- all which would have been consistent with the rules the show set up. Which is another thing this drama did rather brilliantly. It followed its own rules in regards to the supernatural elements. We’d seen previously that Tae Yang could see the spirits of ghosts in comas, so it wasn’t a bolt out of the blue or an easy pass that the writers used when Joong Won was just in a coma, or had died momentarily, or whatever nightmare that was.
Scarier than ghosts- nearly having Joong Won killed off
It would have just been seen as a get-out-of-jail-free card if the idea hadn’t been explored previously (again- cough, ‘Who Are You’, cough). Don’t get me wrong- I’m super stoked that Joong Won didn’t cark it before the completion of this drama. Because I love him. But it was a nice to change to actually genuinely worry about the safety of our hero. Because in a drama all about a ghost-whisperer- your hero is far from immortal. 

Happy characters, happy viewers
Conclusion:
Everything was tied in a nice pretty bow, which is exactly what I want in a rom-com. People got hitched, babies got conceived, and everyone earned their happily ever after. Yay! Some of the happy ever afters were a bit random as we’d had very little to do with some of the characters, so we didn’t actually know what their deal was- but it was still nice. I’m so glad the show ultimately decided to go with Tae Yang keeping her ability to see ghosts, as that was kind of the whole point. It would have felt like too much of a cop-out to have her magically ‘cured’ of her ailment in the last episode. That being said, I do wish we’d been taken on Tae Yang’s journey of self discovery rather than hearing about it as she was telling Joong Won. Because it was a really nice tie-up for where her ability came from and how she could now live on with it. 

What Wasn’t:

Support Character Immobility:
Our support characters kind of became a bit of a waste. Kang Candy fell away pretty swiftly after he was exiled from the love-triangle, and you never really saw him fall hard for that second chick. His end tie-up with her was nice, but we didn’t really get a sense of how he got there.
So not on board for this love-line. Go get a different fish for your aquarium, Kang Candy
Joong Won’s father seemed to be a big plot-point that we sort of darted around completely- so much so that I wonder why they bothered including him in the drama at all. Lee Chun Hee was brought in far too late to really matter- which is a shame, as his presence would have added a whole heap more conflict to the series. The idea of staying comfortable with someone from your own world (Lee Chun Hee) or stepping out for someone different (Joong Won) was an interesting dilemma. But it became far less interesting as Tae Yang had already fallen for Joong Won. Hard. I really wish Lee Chun Hee’s role had a bigger part to play in the series. I don’t even know what his character was supposed to be called- he was just Lee Chun Hee for the two or three episodes he was in.
Unexpected (but far from unwanted) bromance
All in all, the characters that weren’t our main leads seemed to fall into two distinct, two-dimensional categories: Cheering for Main Couple, and Trying to Split Up Main Couple. Except for maybe Secretary Kim. Who was delightful and surprisingly substantial. Who else was glad that he didn’t turn out to be a bad guy? I sure was. 

Push and Pull:
My least liked type of romances are push-and-pull romances. Thankfully this drama did have very little, but the episodes where this type of romance came into play were downright irritating. I prefer when our characters both try and pull away from each other, both try to pull closer to each other, or one pulls closer while the other stays stationary.
Looks like it's time for all that unnecessary angst to kick in
It becomes a tad too angsty for my taste when for every step our hero makes forward, our heroine is taking a step back. Particularly when they’ve both expressed their interest. Not to mention that characters born from the Hong Sisters’ creation tend to stand around and talk about their feelings a lot. Which is okay if it were pure and honest- but half the time it’s the characters trying to convince each other (and sometimes themselves) that they don’t need each other and they’ll be fine on their own. Hoo boy. I’d much rather see them acting on their feelings rather than chitty-chatting about them, especially when the chitty-chat doesn’t actually result in anything. With the lack of action and all the not-quite-true statements, it can get a little confusing with subtitles and things getting left out in translation. Granted, most of the talk was logical, and at least it was easy to see where the characters were coming from. But at the end of the day, if you’re sad with them but miserable without them, isn’t sadness the slightly better option? I don’t know, I feel like they were trying so hard to make Tae Yang different from a Candy Girl- but that’s kind of how she ended up anyway. Sure, her reasoning for disappearing off was for herself and not some sort of misguided sense of ‘he’s better off without me’- but she still ended up disappearing off.

Classic Hong Sisters Finale Wind-Up (Or Wind-Down):
Of course, of course, the Hong Sisters have to chuck in some of my most hates K-Drama tropes. Right at the end too. Amnesia- check. Separation of leads- check. Time skip- check. Oof. Not what I was wanting in a drama that was managing to balance its momentum quite nicely.
Who are you? Who am I? Where'd my girlfriend go?
Okay, Joong Won’s amnesia wasn’t the worst case of memory loss I’ve ever seen (who could forget the Hong Sister’s last fiasco?), but it still felt like it was simply trying to draaaaaaw out the last couple of episodes. I’ve already seen him fall for our heroine despite her creepy ghost vision, do I really have to watch him figure all that out again? Then the time skip where our main leads are separated. Seriously, does anyone actually enjoy this?
Please. Just make out and be done with it.
Why do K-Dramas insist on doing this in attempts to add dramatic tension in the final hour? IT’S JUST ANNOYING GUYS, STOP IT. While I’ll admit there was some reasoning behind the separation of our characters, I still didn’t love the idea. If perhaps we’d journeyed with Tae Yang on her brilliant self-discovery trip I’d be singing a different tune- but no. I was back here watching Joong Won be sad and lonely while Tae Yang went and ‘found herself’. And then we get some bull about her wanting to appear like a normal girl before telling him that, yes- she can in fact still see ghosts. Sorry, I’m firmly in Joong Won’s camp for this one. If the result is the same, why does the order matter? Not to mention we’ve just spent the last 16 episodes watching how he loves her in spite of her ability. If not more so because of it, as he sees how warm and caring she is through it. 

Re-watch?
Probably not. While I did enjoy the drama overall, much of this enjoyment came from the chemistry between our two leads. The main plot was a tad weak, and our support characters were a little flat. Gong Hyo Jin and So Ji Sub were dynamic- but not enough to warrant a re-watch.
♫ Can you feel my heartbeat? It's beating for you 

No comments:

Post a Comment