2 K-drama Reviews: One's Set in Joseon, While the Other Offers a Dystopian Future
“Joseon Attorney: A Morality” & "Black Knight"
It’s summer vacation in our household, which means I get to wake up later since I don’t have to drive my son to school at the crack of dawn. Our garden is in full bloom, we’re eating out on our back deck and, yes, we’re enjoying lots of K-dramas. Some I watch alone. Others my family joins. I’m sharing reviews here of two Korean shows. I watched “Joseon Attorney: A Morality” by myself, while we watched “Black Knight” together as a family.
You may read the entire post, or just skip to the sections you prefer by clicking on the specific review:
Black Knight ☆☆☆
Joseon Attorney: A Morality ☆☆☆
As always, the ratings are based on a ☆☆☆☆ system and are based on my own personal tastes. So without further ado, here are my thoughts on these Korean shows that are set thousands of years apart.
"Joseon Attorney: A Morality" ☆☆☆
There has been an uptick in engaging K-dramas where the protagonist becomes a lawyer to avenge the wrongs committed against his family. "The Good Bad Mother" and "Divorce Attorney Shin" are set in the modern day era. "Joseon Attorney: A Morality" adds a twist to this conceit by taking us way back to the Joseon era (1392 to 1897), before Korea was called Korea and there was no Seoul — the city was known as Hanyang.
A fast-paced series that has a little bit of everything — legal procedural, stirring saeguk, a handsome second male lead who's too good to be true, lots of slapstick humor and, finally, my favorite genre: revenge.
Orphaned at a young age, Han-soo (Woo Do-hwan) defies death to become an attorney. He appears to be a money-grabbing lawyer who lacks morals. But as the show progresses, we see that there is something bigger he is after. He wants to prove that his parents were murdered by the political elite. Though he grew up with no money and had no backing from anyone prominent, his photographic memory and determination eventually makes him the most successful lawyer in Joseon, a fact that he repeats to anyone who'll listen.
His life intersects with Yeon-joo (Bona). She runs a guest house where the rooms are affordable and anyone can buy a delicious meal. But the biggest draw is that ordinary citizens can procure loans that banks won't offer them. And if they can't pay the loan back, there is little to no punishment. Yeon-joo is a princess in disguise, who is betrothed to marry Ji-sun (Cha Hak-yeon). Ji-sun is also the son of the manipulative and powerful royal court member Councilor Yoo Je-se (Cheon Ho-jin), who is responsible for most of the misery that Han-soo's family faced.
When Ji-sun tells the princess, and then later Han-soo, to use him for their own benefit, we're not sure if he's merely offering platitudes or is truly speaking his truth.
In his first post-military starring role. Woo Do-hwan is charmingly in command of the series. In many ways, the show's direction is dependent on his facial expressions as much as the taut direction of Kim Seung-ho and Lee Han-joon. Bona — who was so good as Kim Tae-ri's frenemy in "Twenty-Five Twenty-One" — is poignantly believable as a princess who sees the good that her brother, the King, can do for their country. But she's also fully aware that until Councilor Yoo and his cronies are stripped of their power, true change can't occur.
Airdates: Sixteen hour-long episodes aired from March 31, 2023 through May 20, 2023 on MBC. I watched this K-drama on KOCOWA.
Spoiler Alert: Han-soo's father was set up and killed by Councilor Yoo and his crew. Later, they also killed Han-soo's mother and made it appear that she had died by suicide.
In order to make sure that Councilor Yoo is punished for all his previous crimes, the princess willingly ingests poison in order to frame him. Merely pretending to be poisoned won't work, she says, because the crafty old man will see through her act.
In the finale, Councilor Yoo doesn't get the death penalty. Rather, he is allowed to live, but he is exiled (after receiving 100 lashes). Honestly? That wasn't enough punishment for all the evil he created.
Han-soo is elevated to a governor, but he is inconsolable about the very real possibility that Yeon-joo has perished. Not having seen her body at the royal funeral, he hangs onto the hope that she is still alive somewhere.
Ji-sun, who has been Han-soo's ally all along, works with him and the king to ensure that the country's law is revised so that it's equitable for all of Joseon and doesn't favor the elite. Han-soo is later reunited with Yeon-joo, who survived and is thriving as a attorney. But once again, she's working in disguise again — this time as a man.
"Black Knight" ☆☆☆
"Black Knight" takes place 40 years after a comet crashed into Earth, nearly destroying the entire population. The Korean series is clearly a parable for what could happen to our world if we don't take better care of the most vulnerable among us.
Climate change and man-made toxins have made oxygen and food an expensive commodity that the rich try to horde for themselves. Divided into caste systems, the elite live in domed cities with access to food, fresh air and vegetation. The middle class live in a concrete jungle. Both groups have QR codes embedded on their hands that give them access to food and oxygen. But the ultra poor — known as refugees — have no QR codes and little means to survive. Which is what the rich want.
In this world, children don't want to grow up to be sports stars. Rather, they want to be Deliverymen like 5-8 (Kim Woo-bin) — the most famous of all the couriers who deliver the necessities people need to survive.
5-8 is more than just a Deliveryman. He's also a freedom fighter who wants equal rights for everyone. When a scrappy refugee named Sa-wol (Kang You-seok) encounters 5-8, he tells the hero that he wants to be a courier, too. Sa-wol isn't thinking about altruism so much as survival. Becoming a Deliveryman means that his social status will be elevated and that he won't have to scramble for food and fresh air.
Deliverymen are lauded because they literally provide life by bringing oxygen and food into homes. But they also are ace fighters who ward off thieves who try to steal the precious commodity to sell for an outrageous profit. But the bandits are still better than the chaebols, who believe that genocide is the best way to save earth. Annihilate all the refugees and save all the resources for the elite few.
The overly entitled Chunmyung heir Ryu-seok (Song Seung-heon) has no interest in following his father's orders or establishing an equal world where no one is segregated between the haves and the have nots. Ryu-seok's method of dealing with the lower class is to simply kill them all. His vision of paradise doesn't include people who he views as less than.
In the pentiultimate episode, the chaebol sends trucks into the slums, telling residents they are purifying the polluted air. In reality, they're spraying toxic chemicals meant to kill.
I watched "Black Knight" during the days when the United States was "trapped under a thick, orange blanket of smog ... as the Canadian wildfires spewing noxious fumes across the border."
CNN reported:
The oppressive smoke this week has postponed professional sports games, grounded flights due to poor visibility, shuttered zoos and beaches and forced many to mask up outdoors. Climate experts have warned such events are becoming more frequent due to human-induced climate change.
And I thought, how long before fiction becomes reality? And when will reality take a turn for the better?
Airdates: Netflix released all six episodes — each about 44- to 50-minutes long — on May 12, 2023.
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