Arang and the Magistrate
Genre: Episodes:
20 Year:
2012
Historical
Supernatural
Romance
Synopsis:
Kim Eun Oh is
the son of a nobleman and a slave-woman, and has a strange ability to see and
hear ghosts. Eun Oh’s mother leaves him with his father and disappears, and Eun
Oh begins to roam the country in search of her. By chance, Eun Oh becomes the
Magistrate of Miryang and crosses paths with a ghost who is in possession of
the last gift he ever gave to his mother- a hairpin. However the ghost, a young
woman named Arang, has no recollection of how she came to posses the hairpin,
or any memories of her life before she died. The two agree that the Magistrate
will help investigate Arang’s death and bring the murderer to justice, and
Arang will work to recover her lost memories to assist in locating the
Magistrate’s mother.
Cast:
Lee Joon Ki (Magistrate Kim Eun Oh) |
Shin Min Ah (Arang/Lee Seo Rim) |
Yeon Woo Jin (Choi Ju Wal) |
Kwon Oh Joong (Dol Soe) |
Hwang Bo Ra (Bang Wool) |
Kang Moon Young (Moo Yeon/Lady Seo/Hong Ryun) |
Yoo Seung Ho (Jade Emperor) |
General Thoughts:
Adorable
characters and a compelling plot- off to a good start. The cast was wonderful. We get further confirmation that Shin
Min Ah is the most gorgeous woman to walk the face of the earth, as she returns
to take on another supernatural/fantasy heroine.
While the drama did run the
risk of coming across similar to ‘My Girlfriend is a Gumiho’, with a similar
fantasy element and the same main actress, thankfully Shin Min Ah was able to
deliver a completely different (yet still completely adorable) character. Lee
Joon Ki was a perfect fit for the Magistrate, and I instantly wanted to watch
more historical dramas that he stared in, not only for his excellent acting- but he also looks killer in a hanbok. The supporting cast were as equally delightful as the
main leads, playing their roles with nothing held back. Even at times when it
was a tad overacted, it always fit in well with the tone of the scene. The writers really left nothing out with the well crafted universe they
created. The mythology was extremely well thought through, and followed its own
rules to perfection- allowing the drama to make perfect sense, and saving us
poor viewers much frustration. Sadly, the plot does start to drag towards the
end when it really should have been ramping up for a final showdown, but is
bearable enough if only for that glorious ending the viewers and
characters deserved.
And thus was born my love of Lee Joon Ki |
Ace leading couple |
What Was Great:
The constructed
world was so perfectly detailed. At no point did the writers leave it up to
viewers to infer what was happening based on their own knowledge, but instead
spelled it out simply for us. This is a giant bonus for people like myself who
are not well-versed in the details of Korean mythology, and allow us to watch
at our leisure without scrambling to figure out who’s who and what’s going on
(unlike some dramas). Similarly, it also doesn’t insult the viewers’
intelligence by constantly reminding us what the rules and limitations of this
mythological world are, but simply presents a fact once and continues to stick
with it for the duration of the series (again, unlike some dramas).
Ju Wal slayed my emotions like he slayed those girls |
Different
Girls:
It was an
unusual, but altogether successful idea to present Arang and Lee Seo Rim as two
separate people. Having Arang talk to Seo Rim in her reflection was an easy,
yet not obvious, way for the character to monologue and let the viewers in on
what she was thinking. It also made the romantic switch from Young Lord Ju Wal to
the Magistrate flow smoothly- because Arang had never loved Ju Wal, Seo Rim
had. That whole balace of romance was handled deftly- well done writers. You
succeeded in having Ju Wal destroy my emotions.
Solid
Chemistry:
Yeah sure Magistrate- 'sharing breath' so she can recover faster. We'll pretend to believe you |
Lee Jun Ki and
Shin Min Ah were just slaying it. They were so delightful together, and all
their interactions were unbearably sweet. And that’s it. They’re perfect.
Always. Forever.
Fight:
The fight
scenes were splendid to watch. They were executed perfectly every time, and
added a real sense of excitement to the drama. The movements were choreographed
excellently, and there was always a great use of props and scenery. It was
filmed well- it was easy to keep up with the awesome, kick-ass movements.
Fight, fight, fight |
Perfect Finish:
K-Dramas are
notorious for their rather weak endings in their good dramas. However, ‘Arang
and the Magistrate’ manage to nail it. At first, it was looking
sceptical- but it was all saved by one simple plot-point. They remember.
Hoorah! The whole drama could have been completely ruined had they simply
written off our main couple’s relationship as ‘destiny’ and have them start
again from childhood. The fact that they remembered their previous lives made
all the struggle and dying worthwhile, and let our main couple reap the rewards
of their fight. Young Arang was just golden and her inner Shin Min Ah was on
point. The wrap up for the rest of our characters was also delightful.
Dol Soe
and Bang Wool are wrapped up nice and happy and the bad guys are getting what
was coming to them. The end mapped out for Ju Wal was painfully poetic. After
watching him struggle so much with his feelings about himself and seeing his
resentment towards Lady Seo- but being unable to break away from her really
beefed up his character and gave him a lot of depth. I’m glad he had more of an
ending than just disappearing to live his life elsewhere- even if his end was a tad
sad.
Best reincarnations ever |
What Wasn’t:
Our
villain…wasn’t that threatening. Sure, she was creepy as all hell and really
mean, but she couldn’t really do much. She relied on humans for souls to keep
her sustained. She relied on willing
humans to provide her with new host bodies. Okay, she did make scary evil
grim-reapers- but that was really all she did. The simple fact is, without
Arang giving the all-clear ‘please take over my body’, the evil fairy lady was
absolutely no threat. And once her handsome minion fell for Arang it was pretty
obvious that the fairy-demon wouldn’t be getting inside Arang’s body. Frankly,
pretty-boy Ju Wal posed more of a danger- what with killing her multiple times
and all. His ninja break-ins and countless murders made him spine-chillingly
creepy (you know, before the sympathy card was played). But then he fell for
Arang so we knew he wouldn’t kill her again. Oh yeah- she also couldn’t
actually die. When the body is immortal it takes away a lot of the scary. Sure
it might suck dying repeatedly and be terrifying- but at the end of the day, at
least you’re not really dead. So all in all, it was never convincing that our
ghost girl was ever in any real danger.
How many times does this poor girl have to die? |
No Surprises
Here:
80% of this drama takes place in the dark |
The first…let’s
say 3/4 of the drama was ripe with mysteries. Who killed Arang? Why’s Magistrate’s
mumma gone evil? What up with Ju Wal? Delicious story that kept you on your
toes wanting more. However, once our characters had more or less unravelled all
the mysteries that needed unravelling, there wasn’t a lot of new information
given to us. Watching our characters learn a bunch of information isn’t nearly
as riveting as learning the new information ourselves. Given that we’d had so
many brilliant episodes and so many brilliant reveals, it felt a little disappointing
to know pretty much the whole story a good four episodes before the finale. It
would have been nice to keep some mysteries going right up to the end.
Re-watch?
As much as I
enjoyed this drama and its cast, I probably wouldn’t watch it again in a hurry.
Much of the excitement comes from the mysteries surrounding our main couple, so
knowing the outcome would definitely impact the enjoyment of the series.
Shin Min Ah and Lee Joon Ki earned 10 out of 10 adorable points though |
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