Spoilers, spoilers, everywhere...
Moon Lovers has an unpleasant habit of
showing hard-earned progression in the relationship between Su and So and
undermining it in the next instance. As a self-confessed fan of the pairing
it’s an exercise in frustration but narratively I can see its design. On
hindsight it seems like these are hints and markers indicating that the entity
often referred to as Heaven’s Will in these dramas has no interest in
accommodating the couple in question and seeing them romance in a hurry. The
road they travel on is a path of much resistance, accompanied by seemingly insurmountable odds, possibly providing omens of the grief that is to come. Just when either one is
able to savour a moment of personal triumph, another obstacle presents itself. Like
an unwelcomed interloper, Heaven's Will/Fate rears its cold, ugly head interfering like a pot
plant falling from the top of ten-storey building and landing on top of the old
noggin.
I wanted to include the discussion of the birthday unmasking here because of its contrastive juxtaposition with the next unmasking event in this episode. The earlier unmasking
is concerned with shame and pride while the one that comes before the rain
offering speaks to liberty and triumph.
Yo is a right royal scumbag and that’s
hardly news at this point. He nudges, needles and pokes at peoples weaknesses
until he gets the reaction that he sadistically finds pleasure in. Manipulating
Eun to manipulate Su may seem like a petty sort of manoeuver for a man who
aspires for the throne but it has the effect of a wrecking ball running right
through a newly built but shaky structure of fraternal goodwill among other
things. It's also his way of creating a roadblock to So's attempts to belong. The scar is not the main thing here but So’s pride: A defence mechanism
against being mercilessly insulted over the years. Yo knows what the mask and
the scar means… it’s an open sore festering away… Making that his target, it’s
a declaration of war and So is not someone who can back down from a fight even
if it kills him.
Nevertheless psychological warfare is not
something So is quite adept at yet. There’s far too much emotional baggage that
needs unpacking first. Before the swords are drawn, the game of thrones is firstly
a battle of minds. So has proven that he is indeed mighty with the sword but
for a man who would be King, he would have to overcome his personal pain and be
free of them. Moreover perception of the entire situation is complicated by the
realization that he’s in love with Su and his pride born out of the need to
hide his wounds cannot stand the thought that she of all people would look on
him with pity. It turns out later that So is more hard hit by what he
thinks of as Su’s reaction than he is with the humiliation of having his scar
exposed. Or maybe it’s a reaction to the humiliation of being humiliated in
front of the girl he likes.
For about half the episode So throws an
extended temper tantrum and gives Su the silent treatment. It’s rather
endearing not just because I don’t have to deal with an angry man-child living
in my house but because he’s a someone who doesn’t quite have the tools to
process all his newfound emotions. I can only imagine that he last thing he
wants most probably is for the girl he likes to treat him like a pathetic lost
puppy. For a guy who really wanted to impressed I’m sure he was looking for
pity like a hole in the head.
Equally endearing is Su doing her best to
mollify an angry 4th Prince. To get back into his good books, she’s
cooked up an elaborate scheme with Baek-A. The idea that she’s trying very hard
to the point of frustration appeals to me because it tells me that she cares
more than a little about her relationship with So and by extension the man
himself. Of course it could purely be egotism on her part but I have a much better
view of Su than that. In fact, I am someone who thinks that Su already has
growing feelings for So and that she revels in this friendly-adversarial
relationship with him although she hasn’t worked out the entire mechanics of it
yet. Her infatuation of Uk doesn’t, in my opinion, preclude that possibility, as
her relationships with these two men aren’t that neat and tidy whatever she
herself might think. At the end of the day, she is navigating around some manifestly
extraordinary circumstances.
All of Goryeo is in grip of a drought so
Damiwon is closed for business. After all, having nice baths and drinking nice
tea is a luxury when most of the country are hard pressed trying to get clean
water to cook and drink with. This means that Su isn’t as readily accessible for
chats and touchy-feelies. They end up meeting, with some help from Chae Ryeong,
in the bath cave that leads directly to Damiwon. As far as they’re concerned
it’s a nifty idea but for me it’s a perfect metaphor for the kind of relationship
that they’re conducting. Su fancies herself in love with Uk and he with her but
their conversation in the cave shows a nebulous awareness that she’s treading
on thin ice. It isn’t just about precariousness of what they’re engaged in
(meeting in secret) but that the notion of waiting is a sensitive one. Note how
she tries to comfort him, to make him feel better when she’s the one who’s
taken a hit and been demoted to being a palace maid. Obviously she knows he
feels a certain measure of guilt over her present condition and so feels guilty
about him feeling guilty.
But why should she feel obliged to try so
hard? Apart from tying a pretty little bracelet and asking her to never take it
off, what has he offered her in return for taking such a large risk? He hasn’t
mentioned marriage, only the prospect of things returning to what they were.
Which is what? Going back to his residence? To do what? Make soap? To what end?
Back to being his late wife’s cousin that he was secretly romancing on the
side?
Uk is hedging his bets on the eventual
success of the rain offering. When the rain comes pouring down, the King will
take the opportunity to perform special acts and one of them involves releasing
a maid from service into civilian life. He promises to speak to the King about
the matter and obtain special dispensation on her behalf.
All of this, of course, depends entirely on
what transpires at the rain offering and the King’s will, variables that Uk has
absolutely no control over. But he gives the impression that it’s a done deal because
he then promises that he’ll have all the necessary ingredients prepared for her
to start making soap again. He’s talking up their little utopia fantasy in part
to give her hope but without much substance, it may turn out to be a false
hope.
This, I think, is the problem with Su being
a 21st century girl. She’s exercising her liberty to have a romance
like she would in 21st century Korea except that the guy she’s with
isn’t just any kind of guy. He isn’t even just any kind of rich guy or even a
chaebol level rich guy. It could be that she’d been watching too many dramas.
For a palace maid to be having cave assignations with a prince is highly,
highly illegal. The kind of “illegal” that leads to death. It’s not as if she’s
merely faced with parental objections along a status divide, the fact is she’s
really not in any position to be romancing anyone in particular. She’s not just
a nobody at the lower end of the food chain, she’s a nobody that belongs to the
King. This entire scenario fits under the category of "palace indiscretion."
Still I can understand how it’s so easy to
get suck into their little romance especially when looking at it from 21st
century lenses. What’s the harm in a little romance? They both glow from being with one another.
I know I’ve done my fair share of Uk bashing
in these retrospectives but honestly, what to do, he’s a soft target. While he’s
ridiculously handsome, supposedly the cleverest prince of them all, yet he
keeps saying and doing things that give me pause. I don’t necessarily question
his intelligence but his judgment. He’s ripe for mockery. There’s Eun of
course, but he’s very low hanging fruit and more often than not, a plot device
in these early days.
However, it isn’t just Uk bashing for its
own pleasure but to show the progression of his “greed”… that it began quite
early on with his propensity to make empty promises due in part to his own
awareness of his powerlessness and in part due to his desperation to cling on
to a romance that is fraught with difficulties.
Ji Mong continues to intrigue as he shows a
little of his hand in the chess game that is the sovereignty of fate and the
free will/machinations of man. It’s clear that he’s pushing for So to be the
man of the hour at the rain offering so what does he know that no one else
does? He calls himself the set up guy. He has all the pieces in place but for
some reason he either respects the freedom of the individual to act or he knows
that they will act according to predictable lines. Hence, does he (and by
default, the show) subscribe to the belief that character is destiny?
The rain offering is central to this
discussion of how free is man in making his own choices and how much of it is
fate or some divine hand at work. Are people truly free in their choices? Or do
they choose merely according to who they are? The audience knows already that
Wang So is to become the fourth ruler of Goryeo. However, how much of that is a
fixed point in history and can that be altered? In his present state encumbered
by his personal impediments, Wang So seems far removed from the prospect of
becoming King. His deep emotional
wounds, his facial scar, an outsider in the family dynamics clinging to for
dear life to belong, all these are serious challenges that obviously need to be
overcome before the throne can be his.
Ji Mong obviously knows this and we have an
inkling that it’s the reason why, in science fiction terms, he’s teleported Go
Ha Jin, a 21st century woman with her own emotional baggage back a
thousand years. The mechanics of how he brings her back with him is never
disclosed in detail except it’s somehow related to a solar eclipse. Her
personality, her background and even her occupation evidently makes her
eminently suited for what Ji Mong is trying to achieve in the long run but the
devil, as they say, is in the details.
It becomes clearer from this incident that his endgame is to see Wang So
fulfill his destiny… ie. to eventually become King. On his own and in the state
he is in, he is far from being able to do so. Therefore it seems he needs a
nudge in the right direction. Go Ha Jin aka Hae Su is that nudge. She will be
that instrument/vehicle to get him there. As to how, that’s the part that’s
much more complex, fraught with human foibles. It isn’t just her skills that
are required but her the core of who she is. Her empathy, her kindness, her
falling in love with him are all means to that end. On a certain level it is
irrelevant to Ji Mong whether they live happily ever after although if that
looks to come between So and the throne, he will intervene.
“But I am only somebody who sets it up, I
cannot force anyone.”
Looking at this from a time travelling-science
fiction perspective, this is how I understand the main storyline. In this
universe, Wang So has got an impediment and other psychological baggage that
prevents him from fulfilling his destiny of becoming King but it cannot be
rectified by anything in 1st century Goryeo. Enter Ji Mong, either
working for a higher authority or a cosmic busybody who fancies himself a fixit time traveller,
goes to the 21st century to find the right element to get the ball
rolling: A woman, more specifically a good-hearted
makeup artist with simple notions of human equality and personal freedom that
will help get Wang So back on the path that he was meant to tread. It could be
love, it could be friendship or just a relationship of mutual self-interest. Love,
of course would be best because it’s what the shrink ordered for So. That
aside, it would create a deep, lifelong bond that would have influence that
extend beyond the grave. Nonetheless, Ji Mong’s priority is not to create a
fairytale ending but to ensure that history gets back on track.
Ji Mong is undoubtedly embroiling Go Ha Jin
in a Machiavellian game in which there’s no guarantee that things will end well
for her in Goryeo. How she achieves it, he’s not too concerned but he is
confident that she will be able to do it in her own indomitable style. Love
will come with its complications – people will get hurt, people will die, some
will leave, anomalies will emerge -- but in his calculations, it will
effectively take a gifted prince with zero self-esteem to the throne and he
will become a great king… certainly one of the greatest in the Goryeo dynasty
because he fell in love with a woman with anachronistic notions of freedom and
equality.
It may be that I’m simplifying the
situation somewhat but I believe this is the best way to think about the
journey and the destination. Prince Wang So who hides behind the scar needs a
boost to his morale but he won’t get it from anyone in Goryeo where he’s
shunned, despised and mocked. Only an outsider who still believes in his
humanity and him deserving a second chance can hold his hand through this
hurdle... and give him a reason to be King.
Whatever kind of hand the divine component
has in all of this, the human instrumentality is never far away. Ji Mong is not
the only person plotting and instigating, Queen Yu and Prince Yo are also
working behind the scenes to make the rain ritual work in their interest. It is
the Queen and So who realize that far from being an act that invokes the
supernatural for aid, the rain ritual is a political stunt to appease the
superstitious commoners that their aristocratic leaders are doing something to
deal with the drought. On a certain level the one who leads the ritual is
something of a show pony but if rain does come as a result of his exertions, it
will empower him and boost his chances of ascending the throne. It’s political
theatre at its most egregious. A wonderfully constructed three-ring spectacle:
The scheming, the seeming and the doing.
The madness of course does have method that
runs deep as seen in the conversation between Ji Mong and So in the observatory.
A little pep talk as it were but it also gives insight into So’s open wound
lurking beneath the mask. He’s been living with the pain of being abandoned, living
worse than a butcher’s son. Born as a prince whose birthright has been cast aside
and disdained, a prince who is grappling with his own existence while being marginalized
by his own family. Ji Mong knows So is destined for greater things but this is
a major hurdle that he needs to overcome to become the man he is capable of
being. The beauty of it is that he won’t have to do it alone.
The four times we see So unmasked, Su is
present. In the first, he’s preparing for a ritual soak in Damiwon when she
emerges from out of the water. The second, at Eun’s birthday celebration and
the third, she proactively comes to him with the promise that she will unmask
him. The pattern is that she is integral to his healing. I won’t say that she
changes him because at his core he doesn’t change but she’s definitely the
primary agent of healing in his life.
This third unmasking is a crucial moment
not just in So’s journey to the throne but also in their relationship. So, who
had been craving for some kind of affection most of his life is now receiving
genuine care. It may not be romantic love but for a man dying of thirst, it’s
pouring rain to a parched soul. Su might think she’s doing a good deed to
restore dignity and boost the confidence of someone she cares about but So feels
loved and with characteristic intensity he knows he’s found something to be
passionate about, something to give his life to.
To some degree he is right. It signals a
change in the dynamic of their relationship. It has gone beyond trust. The
moment she laid her hands on his face, there was intimacy too. She encroached
his personal space and touched his wound, not to rub into mercilessly but to
cover it up and bring healing. When he leans over into her space for a kiss, it
is a response to their newfound intimacy but he knows from the way her body
stiffens that she’s not ready yet.
However, she is not untouched by this
gesture. Aside from being overwhelmed, she is deeply affected to the point she
wavers as evidenced by her clutching of her wrist and then moving to the bracelet... as if to remind herself that she's spoken for. From a type of bickering
empathy their relationship has advanced into something quite intimate.
This is why their conversations always come
across as being substantive and meaningful. There's an empathetic bond that runs deep. When she visits him in his boat,
they talk about the meaning of life as is often their habit. She is his willing
confidante even when he snaps behind a gruff façade. In return he offers her a
healthy dose of reality. So understands that life is hard in a way none of the
other princes do or have. Uk may have experienced a major setback but nothing
to the point where he is denigrated as something less than human. So, on the
other hand, has had to wrestle with life on an ontological level as exemplified
by the bestial tags that’s dogged him his entire life. To her credit Su understands and brings empathy to the table. She realizes the masked scar is
the symbol of his lack of confidence in his own existence that has kept him in
darkness and in the periphery of the world he wants to be a part of.
When So says that she’s his person. It’s an
all-encompassing term. We moderns may balk at it because it smacks of obsession
and/or possession but for him, as we’ll come to see, it means trust, steadfastness,
responsibility, care and even self-sacrifice.
However, Heaven/Fate acts in other
mysterious ways to intervene in this blossoming relationship. Perhaps it’s not
time yet. Perhaps they are not meant to be. Perhaps there is a long journey
ahead that needs to be undertaken before consummation can occur. In that moment
of triumph when their eyes meet across the courtyard, Su sees a vision of So as the bloody monarch, Gwangjong and it shakes her to the core.
This retrospective is based on the SBS broadcast version. Subtitles for this episode can be found at Darksmurf Subs.
This retrospective is based on the SBS broadcast version. Subtitles for this episode can be found at Darksmurf Subs.
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