I didn't really understand the random (strong) hate from the ML towards the FL ?I know he saw something strange…
I think I'd be quite repulsed and outraged if I walked in on someone who seemed otherwise sane and functional hugging the corpse of a stranger and talking to it. And then trying to explain to me that they're not doing anything bad, but I should keep it a secret and leave them alone? Yeah, I'd be freaking out if I had to live in the same house as that person too. Physical intimacy with a corpse, which is what that scene looked like from KTH's perspective, is not just "something strange" but deeply taboo.
His reaction did not seem off to me at all and playing it for laughs or having him shrug it off without confronting BDJ would have been super weird. In fact, what's most unrealistic about it is how quickly he started to doubt his initial response just because BDJ mentioned the bridge where the dead woman's husband went.
What is Haemi trying to achieve by following Youngyi and Kyungjoon everywhere to make sure they're never alone together lmao. This isn't high school; you're their boss! You just look weird and are making other people uncomfortable. Get your act together.
I’m really liking the main characters’ interactions so far. Every scene they share together is charged. Also it’s good IMO there’s not too much fantasy, action, CGI, buddy comedy, etc. in favour of a focus on quieter human stories, including the protagonists’ lives.
Can someone tell me about it ??? Is it like a fight for throne except they’re still kids and their mom( the…
Yes. The current crown prince is her son and she has four more sons (grand princes, i.e. sons of the queen as opposed to princes, who are sons of concubines).
Because of certain developments, it becomes clear to the queen that the crown prince's position is precarious and if he loses his title, not only will she be pushed out of the palace by the king's mother, but also her other children will probably be in danger. The various concubines in the palace are now trying to put their sons forward as potential successors to the crown prince.
(In historical reality, however, a queen with five healthy legitimate sons would have been undefeatable in the palace and not even the queen dowager could have touched her because of the strong preference for legitimate princes in the line of succession. In this drama, the position of the queen and her sons is weaker than it would have been in reality.)
I'm not familiar with the original webtoon, so could someone who is please tell me whether Shin Hyun-bin's character is supposed to be good or one of the villains (or somewhere in between)? Also, is there any romance in the webtoon?
Its quite a refreshing historical drama. The plague and LGBTQ+ elements, I'm excited to see where the story goes.The…
I'm pretty sure she realises the grandmother is capable of anything. It was implied in her conversation with the deposed queen that the queen dowager was the one who killed the previous crown prince (Taeil? Taein? anyway).
She just hasn't said it out loud that she's afraid her eldest son will also be killed because it won't help. She'll just be treated as someone who's stirring trouble for no reason and it may give the queen dowager the ammunition she needs to push her out of the palace.
The results of the cohort to the CP seem not really fair, Prince SN is legit voicing out a lot of objections and…
Bogeom won because he's the best student among the three, and also because he was most balanced during the debate.
The examiners were not huge fans of Seongnam's outspoken advocacy for commoners. Some of them also disapproved of his answers in the first examination, though he found champions for both his solution to the half-moon problem (the king liked it) and his construction planning response that went beyond the required material to talk about the workers' lives and needs (one of the tutors whose identity I'm forgetting happened to see that one after another examiner had already given it the worst possible grade). Clearly Seongnam's opinions, although they seem well-argued and principled to us, are too radical for many of the stuffy statesmen involved in the selection process.
Uiseong, on the other hand, may be just a bit too stupid/bloodthirsty to impress them. He has the political backing to do well, but I think Seongnam's verbal smackdown of his idea to burn the quarantined village with the villagers still inside it succeeded in making Uiseong look unsuitable in the eyes of undecided voters.
Which left Bogeom, who didn't take a one-sided position either way, which would have alienated some of the examiners, and is very good at academics. He was a good consensus candidate and it makes sense that a conservative body put off by princes with strong opinions would go for him.
All that said, there have been some signs already that the king is impressed by Seongnam, so I expect him to become Seongnam's backer in the future.
I really hope that the crown prince doesn't die, he'd be a great king.
He's a great person and I also hope he doesn't die, but I think the drama is setting up Seongnam as the person who actually has what it takes to become king. Not only does he have regard for the common people, as a couple of his confrontations with Prince Uiseong have shown—like when he told Uiseong not to insult the palace servants and when he said you can't just burn sick people to end a plague—but also he has a streak of determination and resourcefulness that none of his gentle siblings possess, presumably because he had to lead a pretty harsh life outside the palace at some point.
That said, I agree the crown prince is a nice, smart and upstanding guy! In Korean historical dramas, however, the flawless crown prince always ends up dead.
Indifferent. He cares about his duties and is well-intentioned, but he doesn't see what's in front of him and has no interest in his wife, concubines or for the most part his children.
I just started ep. 3 and I'm loving the drama so far. I have to say I'm kind of surprised a woman as sharp as the queen doesn't realise Grand Prince Seongnam is the most capable child she has among the four when even the Crown Prince, who lives apart from them, can see it.
lmao you're upset because the queen and king aren't part of a happy nuclear family? They didn't choose each other, so why do they need to be in love? They're co-workers, not spouses in the modern sense. The queen's life has plenty of meaning without her sleeping in the same bed as him every night.
Especially Aoba making it clear that she loves Minato, and considering how rational and logical the story and…
Yeah, she has real feelings for Minato, as she should! But people sometimes develop feelings for someone while loving another person. Life can be very messy!
To everyone saying "ooh, Tsumugi said she loves Minato, I guess she's moved on and won't get together with Sou," please look at the official poster for the drama at the top of this page and tell me honestly if it looks like she won't fall in love with Sou again.
His reaction did not seem off to me at all and playing it for laughs or having him shrug it off without confronting BDJ would have been super weird. In fact, what's most unrealistic about it is how quickly he started to doubt his initial response just because BDJ mentioned the bridge where the dead woman's husband went.
Because of certain developments, it becomes clear to the queen that the crown prince's position is precarious and if he loses his title, not only will she be pushed out of the palace by the king's mother, but also her other children will probably be in danger. The various concubines in the palace are now trying to put their sons forward as potential successors to the crown prince.
(In historical reality, however, a queen with five healthy legitimate sons would have been undefeatable in the palace and not even the queen dowager could have touched her because of the strong preference for legitimate princes in the line of succession. In this drama, the position of the queen and her sons is weaker than it would have been in reality.)
She just hasn't said it out loud that she's afraid her eldest son will also be killed because it won't help. She'll just be treated as someone who's stirring trouble for no reason and it may give the queen dowager the ammunition she needs to push her out of the palace.
The examiners were not huge fans of Seongnam's outspoken advocacy for commoners. Some of them also disapproved of his answers in the first examination, though he found champions for both his solution to the half-moon problem (the king liked it) and his construction planning response that went beyond the required material to talk about the workers' lives and needs (one of the tutors whose identity I'm forgetting happened to see that one after another examiner had already given it the worst possible grade). Clearly Seongnam's opinions, although they seem well-argued and principled to us, are too radical for many of the stuffy statesmen involved in the selection process.
Uiseong, on the other hand, may be just a bit too stupid/bloodthirsty to impress them. He has the political backing to do well, but I think Seongnam's verbal smackdown of his idea to burn the quarantined village with the villagers still inside it succeeded in making Uiseong look unsuitable in the eyes of undecided voters.
Which left Bogeom, who didn't take a one-sided position either way, which would have alienated some of the examiners, and is very good at academics. He was a good consensus candidate and it makes sense that a conservative body put off by princes with strong opinions would go for him.
All that said, there have been some signs already that the king is impressed by Seongnam, so I expect him to become Seongnam's backer in the future.
That said, I agree the crown prince is a nice, smart and upstanding guy! In Korean historical dramas, however, the flawless crown prince always ends up dead.
It's like this is your first drama or something!