Spoilers and all the rest... as usual
It has taken far longer to this point than
what I had intended. With this, I feel that my journey with Moon Lovers has
properly come to an end. This piece turned out to be a lot shorter than I had originally intended it to be but it's the downside of having left it to hibernate for too long.
No doubt this piece will end up sounding
like an apologia for Hae Su and perhaps one is desperately needed, as she’s
become the most derided character for her apparently inexplicable/inconsistent
actions towards the end. For that I suppose the drama needs to take some
responsibility but I think all the elements are there for us to piece everything
together in some cogent fashion.
I found that taking sides in the matter of
So and Su very unhelpful because it obfuscated the big picture. This tug-of-war
wasn’t helped by the rapidity of Episode 19 and how rushed everything felt in the
build up to Su’s exit from the palace.
When Su left the palace, all the scheming
and plotting against So more or less came to an end. His adversaries had very
little ammunition left and he was freer to act against them because he didn’t
have “extraneous” baggage to hold him back. She was his weakness because he
wanted to protect this beautiful thing in his life that gave him a reason to be
something than what he had been labeled to be.
At the end of the day I am convinced that
she’s much more courageous than she’s been acknowledged to be. Contrary to what
popular opinion (and what I myself had initially thought), I don’t believe she
left to save herself but to save the man she loved the most and their child.
She understood that she had become a political liability, a pawn in the chess
game for the throne. To his credit he had become too obstinate to let her go as
once he promised he would never do.
I also tend to think (from what we saw in
her final letter to him) that she was afraid that they would end up hating each
other and leaving was her way to protect what vestige affection she thought he
had left for her. Sadly she left thinking that he had grown to hate her.
It’s become clearer to me with each viewing
that Su loved So as much as he loved her. While she may have physically left
the palace via a fake marriage, giving the appearance of departure, in actual
fact, her hallucinations reveal the true nature of her heart. In her mind she
creates a kind of bubble or capsule in which time never passes for them. A
place of respite from the hostile world that would never allow them to be happy
together, as well as cocooning them from the political machinations that was
threatening to tear them apart.
Su left the palace for three reasons: First
and foremost, to protect their child. Secondly, to protect So’s kingship and
thirdly, to protect their larger than life love.
It is easy to see how lonely So was at the
end. After all, the last we see of him in standing in the courtyard of the
palace starring alone into the distance. He stuck to his guns right to the end
in the way he held on to his memories of Su and not trusting very many people,
if any. Su was forever a fixed notion in his existence that drove every part of
him including his political formulations.
It’s equally easy to forget that Su was
rather incredibly lonely in the palace. She wasn’t allowed to continue at
Damiwon and became the trophy mistress that she had been vehemently decrying
about. She had been prevented by the political machinery from marrying the man
she loved and become caught in a polygamous situation which she swore she’d
never get into in order to help him strengthen his position in the court. What’s
worse, to protect the man she loved and their child, she married someone else
to get out of the palace something she also said she’d never do. She ended up
sitting around all day waiting for him. She had no friends in the palace and
things were fasting deteriorating between them. Bit by bit, everything that was
GHJ disappeared.
This is why I have come to admire Su quite
a bit after this retrospective. She demonstrated so much strength and practical
sense in what she did. Like Lady O, she gave up what life she had so that the
man she loved and their child could live on in relative safety. Remember what
she said after she slashed her wrist? Remember what Lady O said in the cave? “I
protected what I wanted to protect. It’s right that I should pay the price.” Whatever
her flaws, she died as she had lived.
I think she understood all that better than
he did and at the end of the day she understood his character much better than
he understood hers. So’s loneliness is in part of his own making. If he hadn’t
been so pigheaded and opened the first letter he had received, he would have
been able to spend time with her in her final moments. But at the end of the
day, he is his mother’s son… overwhelming in love and extreme in anger. He had
to take some of the responsibility for how things deteriorated at the end. We
can see that too with his own son with Yeon Hwa… the mistrust, the
unwillingness to have a relationship with the boy, the lack of desire to even
try.
In that scene where Yeon Hwa says she knows
why Su left So was undoubtedly her way of getting a rise out of So while
showing deep resentment against her bitterest rival. In her eyes, Su was an
upstart who broke all the rules while managing to capture the heart of a future
King in such a way that he could never let her go, that he could never love
anyone else even when she had long left. Her death did not diminish his love
for her in the slightest.
This scene positions YH as the woman who
may on the outside seem appeared to have everything she had craved, plotted and
schemed for but even though everything was finally in her grasp, she still came
up empty. Thinking that if she took possession of the queen’s seat and bore the
King a son, she would finally have full control of his heart but no, So doubles
down and keeps his distance.
In and amongst all that must be a tale
about greed and possession. One may get everything they want but still feel
empty at the end of the day because what we think we want isn’t necessarily
what satisfies.
I get some satisfaction from knowing that YH
couldn’t get everything she wanted either because the only man she genuinely
cared about despises her and her son so it a nice bit of poetic justice there.
It’s also true, however, that YH couldn’t possibly know why HS left because she
didn’t know about the daughter.
However, I think there’ s kernel of truth
to what she says. There’s a streak of pride and stubbornness about So that can
be frustrating. He is immoveable. On the positive side, he is extremely loyal
but on the downside, he can’t understand how anyone can express different types
of love to a whole lot of men but still choose to love one more with greater
passion. He just doesn’t have this ability to compartmentalize or compromise.
In the end Su had to walk away so that he could consolidate his position among
the clans. Even if he doesn’t care about YH, Yu is still his son.
This, I think is So’s fatal flaw. His
rigidity, pride. If he had let Su go on his terms, he could have been there
when she breathed her last. On some
level his behaviour was understandable especially knowing his journey and what
he had to go through to get to where he finally was. But yes, his mother’s son.
YH whatever her many faults did understand
this point. Even if she was not wrong about why Su left the palace, she wasn’t
wrong about So’s inherent talent for not making friends.
The bittersweet ending exemplifies to me
the greatness of ML. For a show to be so consistent in its characterization is
so rare. People don’t change people.
People don’t change easily or at all. They may adapt to circumstances
but the core of who they are never changes. Love doesn’t conquer all but love
can bring hope and new life.
So thought that Su had betrayed him in
defending Uk and ultimately for leaving him through marriage with Jeong. For
him love meant that she would go along with whatever he did but for her love
was about the truth about what was right even if that meant standing up to So
in order to protect him from himself. She loved him too much to overlook his
flaws for fear that they would eventually destroy him.
What of Jeong? Did he get the girl? I
suppose he got to have her as she lived out her remaining days and had the
privilege of having her die in her arms. Even while he couldn’t keep the ashes,
he got to keep the little girl and raise her. In that regard, his love and
loyalty to Su was genuine even if she didn’t care for him in that way. Much as
I disliked Jeong earlier on, it occurred to me that he was the right person to
send her off. With no agenda and utterly loyal, he would do what she wanted
unencumbered by any emotional baggage. The great irony of this situation is
that son who was preferred and greatly by the mother "lost" in the love stakes to the brother who was hated and despised by said mother.
History is full of ironies as exemplified
by Moon Lovers. The son which was least likely to be king became one of the
longest serving kings in the Goryeo era. He struck his enemies ruthlessly, yet
he emancipated slaves. The woman he loved left him because she loved him too
much to see him destroy himself. Though he was brokenhearted when she left, he
gained some measure of strength in holding on to her ideals.
The scene where So finally reads Su's letter is for me the single most powerful scene in the finale. Not far behind is the one where So finally meets his daughter who bears a strong resemblance to her mother. Those two scenes become as it were, post-mortem evidence of Su's love for So. To finally be certain that the woman you loved so desperately, never stopped thinking and wondering about you until the day she died, while preserving a means of protecting the fruit of that love. If only he knew that she was still dreaming of him even having returned to where she came from.
The scene where So finally reads Su's letter is for me the single most powerful scene in the finale. Not far behind is the one where So finally meets his daughter who bears a strong resemblance to her mother. Those two scenes become as it were, post-mortem evidence of Su's love for So. To finally be certain that the woman you loved so desperately, never stopped thinking and wondering about you until the day she died, while preserving a means of protecting the fruit of that love. If only he knew that she was still dreaming of him even having returned to where she came from.
Whatever flaws it may have had, there was something
inherently powerful at the core of Moon Lovers. An unfulfilled longing for a love that
goes beyond the grave, traversing across time and space. A forbidden love perpetually looking to find a safe place. A home. This was truly a drama meant to grab you by the throat, stab
you in the heart, twist the knife in and rip your guts out. On that front, I
believe the show succeeded.
This retrospective is based on the SBS broadcast version. Subtitles for this episode can be found at Darksmurf Subs.