Wednesday, January 05, 2022

“The Red Sleeve” synopsis by episode (Eps. 1-17, no spoilers) with analysis of its cinematography


Jump to synopsis of Episode 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 8; 9; 10; 11; 12; 13; 14; 15; 16; 17 (Finale); How I wrote these episode summaries with no spoilers; Historical / cultural backgrounders and other information; Lessons in photography from “The Red Sleeve” with analysis of its cinematography

From Wikipedia: “The Red Sleeve” (lit. “The Red Sleeve Cuff”) is a South Korean television series starring Lee Jun-ho, Lee Se-young, and Kang Hoon. It premiered on November 12, 2021, on MBC’s newly established Fridays and Saturdays at 22:00 (KST) time slot. The drama is based on the novel “The Red Sleeve Cuff” by Kang Mi-kang. Genre: romance, historical drama.

The drama’s average audience share according to Nielsen Korea was 11.0% (Nationwide) and 10.7% (Seoul). Nationwide, nine of its episodes were ranked 2nd in its time slot.

In the MBC Drama Awards, “The Red Sleeve” and its cast won the following awards: Drama of the Year; Best Writer Award; Best New Actor, Kang Hoon; Best Supporting Actress, Jang Hye-jin; Top Excellence Award, Actor in a Miniseries, Lee Jun-ho; and Top Excellence Award, Actress in a Miniseries, Lee Se-young.

How I wrote these episode summaries with no spoilers


1. I assumed that you will be reading these summaries and watching the videos chronologically.

2. I narrated some of the main actions in each episode without revealing the plot’s twists and turns.

3. At the beginning of each summary starting with Episode 2, I placed in a table a recap of the major twists and turns of the previous episode. But because you have already watched the video of the previous episode, they aren’t spoilers anymore.

4. I followed this structure all throughout, except for Ep. 17 (Finale) where I included spoilers. Reason — most people want to know if the drama has a good/happy ending or a sad ending before they invest the time in watching it. “The Red Sleeve” follows what actually happened in history, and thus, it has a bittersweet ending.

Episode 1


Sung Deok-im is a young court maid who reads stories to her fellow court maids in exchange for valuable items that she can sell later on. After one storytelling session and as she’s arguing with her friends — Kyung-hee, Young-hee, and Bok-yeon — about why she needs the money, they’re caught by Head Court Lady Jo.

Head Court Lady Jo orders Deok-im to pay respects, on behalf of the court ladies, to the late Royal Noble Consort Yeong — Crown Prince Yi-san’s biological grandmother and King Yeongjo’s beloved concubine. Late at night, Deok-im gets lost on the way to Royal Noble Consort Yeong’s residence; on a river bank, she comes across Yi San, who has sneaked away from the palace to pay his respects to his grandmother.

Yi San doesn’t tell Deok-im that he’s the Crown Prince. As they kneel before Royal Noble Consort Yeong’s remains, King Yeongjo arrives. Yi San escapes, but Deok-im stays inside the room.

Days later, Yi San faces punishment and possible dethronement as Crown Prince for reading a book that has been forbidden because it mentions the lowborn status of King Yeongjo’s mother.

Episode 2


Ep. 1 recap:

King Yeongjo gives Deok-im the book “Moral Education for Women,” written by Royal Noble Consort Yeong.

Head Court Lady Jo tells Deok-im that she can stay a long time in the palace and die there if she becomes the king’s woman.

Deok-im rescues Yi San by finding the forbidden book and tearing off the pages that mention the lowly status of King Yeongjo’s mother. But later, Yi San’s tutor Hong Deok-ro claims the credit for saving him.

Years later ... While rushing to her duties, Deok-im trips and slides down a small hill and then crashes into Yi San.


Flashback ... Yi San, his bodyguard Kang Tae-ho, and his royal guards chase after the tiger that has already killed a dozen people.

On the pondside, as Yi San argues with his bodyguard Kang Tae-ho about how to deal with the tiger, Deok-im crashes into him after she trips and slides down the small hill.

Yi San orders that Deok-im be punished for causing the incident on the pond. At the pavilion, Deok-im meets Princess Cheongyeon and Princess Cheongseon, who become concerned after they find out that she’s being punished.

Someone shoots an arrow into a post of Yi-san’s quarters, alarming the court attendants and the royal guards. After reading the note attached to the arrow, Yi San wants to meet the “Dongdukhoe” (his allies) immediately, but Hong Dok-reo pleads with him not to be rash, promising to catch the perpetrator.

Deok-im meets Yi San in the Crown Prince’s library, but Yi San doesn’t reveal who he is; instead, he pretends to be Hong Deok-ro, the Crown Prince’s lecturer.

Yi-san watches from afar the preparations for the festival of the court maids. While listening to Deok-im read a story for the court maids, he remembers his father Crown Prince Sado.

In the presence of Yi San’s mother Hong Hye-bin, Royal Noble Consort Moon Suk-ui, and Queen Jungsoon, King Yeongjo orders Hong Deok-ro to tell Yi San to stop submitting petitions asking for permission to use the royal guards in hunting down the tiger. With Royal Consort Moon Suk-ui’s reminder, he also asks Hong Deok-ro what happened several nights ago when the lights in Yi-san’s quarters were on throughout the night.

Episode 3


Ep. 2 recap:

Deok-im becomes exasperated when Yi San orders her to rewrite her letter of apology over and over again.

After studying the tiger hunters’ map that Deok-im found in the library, Yi San and his royal guards set out to hunt down the tiger, even without King Yeongjo’s permission. Finding out that the tiger has gone into the palace (where the court maids are celebrating their festival), Yi San rushes to the library and takes Deok-im with him.


The ministers petition King Yeongjo to punish Yi San for mobilizing the royal guards without permission and killing the tiger; later, Princess Hwahan orders her adopted son Royal Secretary Jung Baek-ik to pressure Second State Councilor Hong Jung-yeo into petitioning King Yeongjo to depose Yi San as Crown Prince.

Deok-im finds out from Princess Cheongyeon and Princess Cheongseon that if King Yeongjo forgives the Crown Prince, he will also forgive all those who joined in the tiger hunt (which includes the man she has come to know as the Crown Prince’s lecturer and who saved her and the court maids from the tiger). Thus, she works through the night transcribing the novel that Princess Cheongyeon and Princess Cheongseon will use as an excuse to see King Yeongjo and ask for forgiveness on Yi San’s behalf.

When King Yeongjo refuses to see them, Princess Cheongyeon and Princess Cheongsun beg Queen Jungsoon to help them. But Queen Jungsoon says that she can’t disobey King Yeongjo’s command; after hearing Deok-im’s gratitude for Crown Prince Yi San saving her life and those of the court maids, she says that, on the princesses’ behalf, Deok-im should seek an audience with King Yeongjo.

On her way to King Yeongjo’s quarters, Deok-im passes by the main courtyard where she sees Crown Prince Yi San.

Episode 4


Ep. 3 recap:

Deok-im moves King Yeongjo’s heart and mind by telling him about her family’s life and why she has been trying to save 100 yang for the last ten years for her brother’s sake.

King Yeongjo forgives Yi San.

Hong Deok-ro refuses to ally himself with Second State Councilor Hong Jung-yeo; he says that by the time Yi San becomes the king, his sister will be a Royal Concubine.

Head Court Lady Jo secretly works with Second State Councilor Hong Jung-yeo to prevent Yi San from becoming the next king.

Princess Cheongyeon brings Deok-im along with her as she meets Yi-san on the bridge. There, Deok-im finally finds out that the man whom she knows as the Crown Prince’s lecturer is actually the Crown Prince.


Deok-im becomes angry that Yi San deceived her by pretending that he’s the Crown Prince’s lecturer. As she packs up her things at the library, she badmouths Yi San, not knowing that he’s in the library. Later, despite her pleas with Court Lady Seo, she’s assigned to be Yi San’s personal handmaid.

During a meeting of the “Dongdukhoe” (Yi San’s allies), Yi San revealed that a royal guard tried to kill him during the tiger hunt. So that he can speak in private with Yi San, Hong Deok-ro sends Deok-im on an errand. He tells Yi San that they have identified the royal guard, but Wol-hye, a court maid, listens in on their conversation.

On the court maids’ day off before the coming-of-age ceremony, Deok-im visits her benefactor Hong Hye-bin, Yi San’s mother. Later, after returning to the palace, she gets into trouble with Princess Hwahan, who orders her punished with 100 lashes.

Episode 5


Ep. 4 recap:

Hong Hye-bin orders Deok-im to report to her everything that Yi San does.

After Queen Jungsoon and King Yeongjo intervene, Deok-im is saved from the punishment of 100 lashes that Princess Hwahan wants.

Hong Hye-bin becomes concerned that Yi San is visiting a courtesan house and orders Deok-im to follow him. Deok-im climbs over a wall in the courtesan house, but she’s accosted by several warriors. Hong Deok-ro orders the warriors to kill her.


After Deok-im confesses that she was following Hong Hye-bin’s order, Yi San brings her to the Dongdukhoe meeting. But Hong Dok-reo questions her allegiance. Later on, Yi San buys books for her and asks her if she was captivated by him during their encounters in the library.

King Yeongjo’s words to Yi San’s lecturers cause grave concern among his enemies — Princess Hwawan fears that King Yeongjo will appoint Yi San as regent, while Head Court Lady Jo warns Second State Councilor Hong Jung-yeo that King Yeongjo might abdicate the throne.

As part of the coming-of-age ceremony, the new court ladies prepare and serve ceremonial tables for Yi-san. While Deok-im is waiting for her turn, Hong Hye-bin arrives.

In the presence of Queen Jungsoon, Princess Hwawan reports to King Yeongjo that, together with the husbands of Princess Cheongyeon and Princess Cheongseon, Yi San has been frequenting houses of ill refute. King Yeongjo thus orders that Yi San be confined to his quarters.

Episode 6


Ep. 5 recap:

Deok-im becomes confused when Yi San wonders aloud if he has become captivated by her. Later, Yi San sees Deok-im, who’s dressed in her costume for the coming-of-age ceremony. He embarrasses himself before everyone by thinking that Deok-im has been graced by King Yeongjo.

Hong Hye-bin manipulates Yi San into saying that he will not be involved with a court lady; from behind the screen, Deok-im hears everything.

Despite King Yeongjo’s order to take all of Yi San’s books away, Deok-im brings the Book of Odes with her to Yi San’s quarters and reads selections from it.

After reading Royal Secretary Jung Baek’s detailed evidence of Yi San leaving the palace with his royal guards, King Yeongjo goes to Yi-san’s quarters and slaps him repeatedly.


Deok-im tells Hong Deok-ro that Dongdukhoe should consider approaching Queen Jungsoon for help in lifting Yi San’s confinement. Later, she gets Yi San’s permission to approach Queen Jungsoon. But she fails to answer correctly the riddles that Queen Jungsoon uses to test her.

During the preparations for the Silk Cocoon Ceremony, Deok-im and her friends secretly watch as Head Court Lady Jo comforts Princess Hwawan, who’s complaining about Hong Hye-bin’s place in the ceremony; she reassures Princess Hwahan that Hong Hye-bin and Queen Jungsoon are mere noblewomen who were lucky to marry into the royal family.

After the ceremony, Queen Jungsoon shocks everyone by forcing Princess Hwahan to kneel down and then slapping her.

Episode 7


Ep. 6 recap:

Through Deok-im’s tip, Queen Jungsoon embarrasses Princess Hwahan before the court ladies and the noblewomen for wearing a dress that’s made of silk from Qing.

Because of Queen Jungsoon’s plea, King Yeongjo lifts Yi San’s confinement.

Deok-im meets and helps Hong Deok-ro’s sister to get into the palace. Later, Hong Deok-ro warns Deok-im not to be friendly with his sister. He comes close to Deok-im and says that he fears she could replace him as Yi San’s closest confidant. From afar, Yi San sees them.

The other court ladies force Deok-im to attend to Yi San as he soaks in his luxurious bath tub. But in her nervousness, Deok-im falls into the tub.


Queen Jungsoon sends Deok-im back to Crown Prince Yi San’s East Palace but cautions her that he can’t protect her the way that she can. There, Court Lady Seo takes Deok-im to her new assignment — tending Yi San’s garden.

During a meeting of the royal court, the ministers notice that King Yeongjo has become noticeably forgetful. Later, Hong Deok-ro urges Yi San to recruit the Royal Physician into their group.

During their night off, Deok-im and Wol-hye stroll through the market. When Wol-hye notices that a man has been trailing them and staring at Deok-im, she tells Deok-im to go back to the palace. She walks off on her own, but on a deserted street, four men block her way.

Head Court Lady Jo tells Deok-im that she wants her to be Yi San’s royal concubine.

Episode 8


Ep. 7 recap:

Deok-im reunites with her long-lost brother.

Head Court Lady Jo’s niece, Wol-hye, poisoned the royal guard who tried to assassinate Yi San during the tiger hunt. She kills the guard’s brother and the men who blocked her way.

Head Court Lady Jo confirms that King Yeongjo is starting to suffer from dementia. Later, she orders the confiscation and burning of books in the palace.

Deok-im rejects Yi San’s expression of affection for her. Later, after seeing Deok-im receiving some apparel as a gift from a man (whom he doesn’t know is her brother), Yi San becomes jealous and confronts her at the library.


On their way to see Yi San, Court Lady Park and Deok-im are blocked by Head Court Lady Jo and her assistant. The assistant takes the bundle that Court Lady Park wants to give Yi San, and Head Court Lady Jo dismisses Deok-im.

Despite Yi San’s explicit order, Hong Deok-ro brings the Royal Physician to the next meeting of Dongdukhoe.

Under orders from Head Court Lady Jo, the lady inspectors search the quarters of Deok-im and the new court ladles. After finding the book “Moral Education for Women” written by the late Royal Noble Consort Yeong, they report to Queen Jungsoon that Deok-im stole the book.

With no witness to prove that King Yeongjo actually gave the book to Deok-im when she was a young court maid, Yi San pleads with Queen Jungsoon not to execute Deok-im but to exile her.

Late at night, King Yeongjo summons several people for a secret meeting; meanwhile, Court Lady Seo is snatched from her quarters.

Episode 9


Ep. 8 recap:

Because of Deok-im’s storytelling skills, King Yeongjo remembers the night he met Deok-im and why he gave the book to her.

Gwanghang Palace is the group of court ladies headed by Head Court Lady Jo and dedicated to protecting the court ladies from the whims and abuses of the Joseon kings. She forces Court Lady Seo to join the group in order to pressure Deok-im into agreeing to become Yi San’s concubine.

Court Lady Park accuses Head Court Lady Jo of having conspired against Crown Prince Sado because of her jealousy towards Royal Noble Consort Yeong.

When the court ministers protest King Yeongjo’s order appointing him as regent, Yi San orders his allies to have Second State Councilor Hong Jung-yeo removed from his position and the other ministers punished.

Deok-im and Yi San finally realize that they met each other as young children when they visited Royal Noble Consort Yeong.


When Yi San takes King Yeongjo’s place in the procession to the ancestral graves, Head Court Lady Jo sees it as an opportunity to kill him.

At the Royal Temporary Palace, Yi San receives a petition from some village folks about the 100 or more young girls who have disappeared for the last 20 years. But Hong Dok-reo cautions him to set aside the petition, saying that, as regent, he does not yet have military or judiciary powers.

On their way to the royal administrative office that’s four hours away, Court Lady Seo tells Deok-im about Gwanghang Palace.

Wol-hye and another court lady sabotage the bows and steal the rifles and gunpowder of Yi San’s royal guards. Later that night, Wol-hye and other assassins attack Yi San and his men.

Episode 10


Ep. 9 recap:

Through a signal kite, Deok-im warns Yi San about the impending danger.

Just when Yi San and his men are about to be overwhelmed, Hong Deok-ro arrives with the soldiers from the military camp.


Head Court Lady Jo connives with the former Second State Councilor Hong Jung-yeo to mislead King Yeongjo that the assassination attempt against Yi San was merely a ploy for Yi San to take control of the Capital Defense Command. King Yeongjo thus appoints a “temporary envoy” and gives him 10 days to investigate what really happened.

Head Court Lady Jo visits King Yeongjo in his quarters. After King Yeongjo orders Royal Secretary Jung to record his bequest to her, she candidly asks him why he chose Royal Noble Consort Yeong instead of her. Later, she tells Royal Secretary Jung that Princess Hwahan will be kicked out of the palace once Yi San becomes king.

After overhearing Wol-hye threaten Court Lady Seo, Deok-im tells her friends that Gwanghang Palace is real. That night, she takes Court Lady Seo with her to sneak into Head Court Lady Jo’s quarters and to search for the list of Gwanghang Palace members.

Episode 11


Ep. 10 recap:

Deok-im and Court Lady Seo stumble upon the secret passageway that leads to the Gwanghang Palace headquarters. There, they find Court Lady Park.

Head Court Lady Jo seeks to turn King Yeongjo against Yi San by preparing raw persimmons and marinated crabs during the banquet. According to the rumors, these were the food that King Yeongjo used to poison his brother King Gyeongjong.


King Yeongjo storms out of the banquet after Yi San stops him from striking his mother Hong Hye-bin. Later, he tells Yi San that he will forgive him if he puts all the blame on his mother. When Yi San refuses, he orders him to be confined in the East Palace.

At their hideaway, Deok-im and Court Lady Seo find out from Court Lady Park that, in exchange for Crown Prince Sado’s life, King Yeongjo wrote and sealed a document where he promised to enthrone Yi San as king.

Deok-im rushes to see Hong Hye-bin and tells her about the “Document of Truth.” But despite having all the clues, Hong Hye-bin says that she doesn’t know what the clues mean and thus where the “Document of Truth” has been hidden.

At the East Palace, Hong Deok-ro leads the other members of Dongdukhoe in urging Yi San to force King Yeongjo to abdicate.

In the morning, after finding out about the emergency meeting of the royal court that King Yeongjo has convened, Head Court Lady Jo gives to the Central Council Supervisor the complete list of Dongdukhoe members.

Episode 12


Ep. 11 recap:

Through the clues, Deok-im learns where King Yeongjo hid the “Document of Truth.”

Deok-im convinces Queen Jungsoon to help Yi San by going to the emergency meeting of the royal court and to ask forgiveness on Yi San’s behalf; she also tells her about the “Document of Truth.”


King Yeongjo finds the “Document of Truth” hidden in the “Irworobongdo” (the sun/moon/five peaks screen behind the throne).

Head Court Lady Jo transfers the leadership of Gwanghang Palace to Wol-hye. Later on, she’s arrested after King Yeongjo receives the investigative report of the temporary envoy.

Royal Secretary Jung prostrates himself before Yi San and asks him to spare his mother Princess Hwahan.

Episode 13


Ep. 12 recap:

With the royal court witnessing everything, King Yeongjo pressures Princess Hwahan to give the royal seal to Yi San.

King Yeongjo tells Head Court Lady Jo that she can leave the palace, but using a “eunjangdo” (small silver knife), she takes her own life.

King Yeongjo dies.


Wol-hye is arrested for trying to assassinate King Jeongjo (Yi San).

Royal Secretary Hong Deok-ro urges King Jeongjo (Yi San) to execute his half-brother Prince Eunjeon. The former Central Council Supervisor Hong Jung-yeo is executed by poison, while former Royal Secretary Jung dies in exile.

Dowager Queen Jungsoon insists that a new Royal Concubine be appointed. When King Jeongjo protests, she reminds him that she’s the head of the Inner Court and that he didn’t consult her when he sent his brother into exile.

Episode 14


Ep. 13 recap:

Bok-yeon returns to the palace.

Together with Royal Secretary Hong Deok-ro and Lady Hyegyeong, Dowager Queen Jungsoon decides to appoint the sister of Royal Secretary Hong Deok-ro as the Royal Concubine.


When his sister dies unexpectedly, Royal Secretary Hong Deok-ro thinks that she was poisoned on Queen Kim’s order.

Court ladies start to disappear, including Deok-im’s friend, Kyung-hee. King Jeongjo thus orders Royal Secretary Hong Deok-ro (who’s also head of the royal guards) to investigate what happened to the missing court ladies. He also orders Court Lady Seo to secretly monitor Deok-im wherever she goes and whoever she meets.

As Deok-im and her friends continue to search for Kyung-hee, they come upon a palace slave who tried to hang herself. The slave confesses to them that Royal Secretary Hong Deok-ro ordered her to plant a packet of poison in Queen Kim’s quarters.

Episode 15


Ep. 14 recap:

At the former secret meeting place of Gwanghang Palace, King Jeongjo and his royal guards rescue Deok-im and the missing court ladies from Royal Secretary Hong Deok-ro.

Because of the pleas by the former Dongdukhoe members, King Jeongjo does not execute Royal Secretary Hong Deok-ro but removes him from office.

King Jeongjo becomes angry at Deok-im for trying to ask Dowager Queen Jungsoon for help about the missing court ladies by sending a letter to her about the involvement of Royal Secretary Hong Deok-ro.

When Deok-im says that she never loved him, King Jeongjo embraces and kisses her.


Deok-im leaves the palace after King Jeongjo dismisses her as a court lady. Later, in her quarters, King Jeongjo finds the pages that she tore from the book that got him into trouble with King Yeongjo when he was still a young Crown Prince.

At the market, Deok-im meets Hong Deok-ro, who tells her that a new Royal Concubine will soon be appointed. Later on, she meets King Jeongjo in Princess Cheongyeon’s residence.

To Deok-im’s surprise, she is recalled to the palace. She visits Hong Deok-ro, who tells her not to go back to the palace but to run away with him to faraway places like Mount Geumgang and Namra. When she refuses, he says that when she hears that he’s dead, it’s because of her.

Episode 16


Ep. 15 recap:

Lady Hyegyeong recalls Deok-im to the palace. But the new Royal Noble Consort becomes jealous of Deok-im and whips her.

In his last letter, Hong Deok-ro confesses to King Jeongjo that it wasn’t him who tore off the pages from the forbidden book.


King Jeongjo refuses Dowager Queen Jungsoon’s plea for her sick brother to be released from his exile and to be brought back to the capital.

Before King Jeongjo and Dowager Queen Jungsoon, Royal Noble Consort Hwa-bin accuses Deuk-im of having relations with a newly appointed royal guard.

To protect Deuk-im, King Jeongjo orders Court Lady Seo to prepare Deuk-im and bring her to his bedchambers. The next day, however, Queen Dowager Jungsoon warns him that he has made Deuk-im a target for his enemies.

Episode 17, Finale (with spoilers)


Ep. 16 recap:

Lady Hyegyeong reveals to King Jeongjo, Queen Dowager Jungsoon, and Royal Noble Consort Hwa-bin that the newly appointed royal guard is Deuk-im’s brother. When Royal Noble Consort Hwa-bin insists that Deok-im’s brother is a traitor because Crown Prince Sado was a traitor, King Jeongjo becomes angry and exclaims, “I am the son of Crown Prince Sado!”

Deuk-im becomes pregnant.


Deok-im and King Jeongjo’s son, the young Crown Prince, dies because of a measles outbreak.

Deok-im’s friend Young-hee is sentenced to death for having sexual relations with a man.

While in the late stage of her pregnancy, Deuk-im dies.

Years later ... weeks before Deuk-im’s death anniversary, King Jeongjo looks over her keepsakes that have been kept in the East Palace.

Historical / cultural backgrounders and other information


Backgrounders for those who have not yet seen “The Red Sleeve” (2021) and “Yi San” (2007), with parallels and differences between the two dramas

A. “The Red Sleeve” (2021; 17 episodes) and “Yi San” aka “Lee San, Wind of the Palace” (2007; 77 episodes) are MBC dramas based on the lives and love story of historical figures Yi San aka King Jeongjo (1752-1800) and Royal Noble Consort Uibin Seong (1753-1786).

Yi San (King Jeongjo) has been depicted in numerous K-dramas and movies as you can read in “King Jeongjo an idol of Korean modern media” from Korea JoongAng Daily. For fans of “Crash Landing On You,” Hyun Bin portrayed King Jeongjo in the action-packed 2014 movie “The Fatal Encounter.”

For more detailed information about Royal Noble Consort Uibin Seong, please read “The Red Sleeve – History, Her Story, and Their Love Story” (The Talking Cupboard). This article is based on a Korean-language article from Naver.

A-1. “Yi San” aka “Lee San, Wind of the Palace” (77 episodes) was directed by Lee Byung-hoon, who’s known as the “King of sageuks” for having directed blockbuster dramas such as “Hur Jun,” “A Jewel in the Palace,” “Dong Yi,” “The King’s Doctor,” and “The Flower in Prison.” The cast was led by Lee Seo-jin in the title role and Han Ji-min as “Sung Song-yeon” (fictional character based on Royal Noble Consort Uibin Seong).

From Wikipedia:“Yi San” was popular and recorded a solid viewership rate (average) of 26.4% (Nationwide) and 28.6% (Seoul) and a peak of 35.3% (Nationwide) and 38.6% (Seoul).

In the 2008 Baeksang Arts Awards, Lee Byung-hoon won the “Best Director (TV)” award while Lee Seo-jin was nominated for “Best Actor (TV).” In the 2007 MBC Drama Awards, Kim Yi-young won the “Best Writer” award; Lee Seo-jin won the “Top Excellence Award, Actor,” and Han Ji-min won the “Top Excellence Award, Actress.”

Note: Kim Yi-young wrote three dramas with King Yeongjo as a major character — “Yi San” (2007), “Dong Yi” (2010), and “Haechi” (2019).


A-2. “The Red Sleeve” (17 episodes) aired from November 12, 2021 to January 1, 2022; leading the cast are Lee Jun-ho (as “Yi San” later “King Jeongjo”) and Lee Se-young (as “Deok-im” later “Royal Noble Consort Uibin Seong”). The drama is based on the novel “The Red Sleeve Cuff” by Kang Mi-kang. Genre: romance, historical drama.

The drama’s average audience share according to Nielsen Korea was 11.0% (Nationwide) and 10.7% (Seoul). Nationwide, nine of its episodes were ranked 2nd in its time slot.

In the 2021 MBC Drama Awards, “The Red Sleeve” and its cast won the following awards: Drama of the Year; Best Writer Award; Best New Actor, Kang Hoon; Best Supporting Actress, Jang Hye-jin; Top Excellence Award, Actor in a Miniseries, Lee Jun-ho; and Top Excellence Award, Actress in a Miniseries, Lee Se-young.

Related discussion: “Fans are angry at ’The Red Sleeve’ as it ruined the original novel its original romance genre”

Note: The actor who played “King Yeongjo” in “Yi San” is Lee Soon-jae. In Ep. 17 of “The Red Sleeve,” he makes a brief cameo appearance at around the 1:04:18 mark as an old man who speaks to Yi San/King Jeongjo on a mountain that’s part of the Jukjusanseong Fortress.

B. Historical figures in “The Red Sleeve” and “Yi San”

Yi San (aka King Jeongjo, 1752-1800): He was Joseon’s 22nd king, ruling from 1776 to 1800. He succeeded his grandfather King Yeongjo; in turn, he was succeeded by his son King Sunjo. His father, Crown Prince Sado, died after being locked inside a rice chest for several days on King Yeongjo’s order.

Among King Jeongjo’s major accomplishments are establishing the Kyujanggjak library and constructing the Hwaseong Fortress, which is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

From “Reformative King Jeongjo Was Not Fatally Poisoned” (The Korea Times, 2009): “Was King Jeongjo Machiavellian? A bundle of 299 letters written by the 22nd ruler of the Joseon Kingdom (1392-1910) showed that he was not fatally poisoned, as widely believed, and that the king was a reformative leader who knew the art of behind-the-scenes politics.”

Relevant resources:

“Rediscovering Joseon’s royal library” (The Korea Herald)

“King Jeongjo’s visit to royal tomb perfectly reenacted in 222 years”(Arirang News, 2017)

“EP 10. To King Jeongjo’s Tomb at Hwaseong Fortress / Cultural Heritage” (EBSCulture)

“Suwon Hwaseong Fortress....grand beauty that stood the test of time” (Arirang)

Royal Noble Consort Uibin Seong (1753-1786): Known as the beloved concubine of King Jeongjo, she was the mother of Crown Prince Munhyo, who died at age three. During her third pregnancy, she died of liver cancer. (Wikipedia)

She is fictionalized in “Yi San” as Sung Song-yeon, a “damo” in the Dohwaseo (Bureau of Paintings). In “The Red Sleeve,” she is fictionalized as Deok-im, a court maid, who’s proficient in storytelling and calligraphy. “The Red Sleeve” follows the basic historical facts about Royal Noble Consort Uibin Seong more closely than "Yi San."

King Yeongjo (1694-1776): The longest reigning monarch in Joseon history, he ruled for 52 years from 1724 to 1776. In history, he’s probably best known for having killed his son Crown Prince Sado. Among K-drama fans, he’s known as the young son of King Sukjong and Dong Yi in “Dong Yi” (2010), the adult Prince Yeoning in “Haechi” (2019), and the old King Yeongjo in “Yi San.” (As I stated earlier, these three dramas were written by Kim Yi-young.)

Relevant discussion: “Fearsome Facts About King Yeongjo, Father Of The Mad Prince”

Queen Jungsoon (1745-1805): The wife and second queen consort of King Yeongjo, she was only 15 when she got married. She was also 10 years younger than her husband’s son and heir, Crown Prince Sado, and his daughter-in-law, Lady Hyegyeong. (Wikipedia) As the most senior-generation member of the royal family, she served as regent for King Sunjo (Yi San’s successor).

Princess Hwahan (1738-1808): The beloved daughter of King Yeongjo, she was demoted to commoner status after Yi San became king. Her adopted son, Jeong Hu-gyeom, was exiled.

From “The annals of the Joseon princesses” (The Gachon Herald):
Princess Hwawan: daughter of King Youngjo (1737~1808)

Unlike other princesses, Princess Hwawan was greedy for political power—-she was exiled when her adopted son Hukyum was executed for being a rebel. She returned to her nephew King Jungjo after 23 years, but she was against her nephew’s political order and partnered up with Younjo’s wife, Queen Mother Jungsoon to bring down the King. The drama ‘Isan’ depicts Queen Mother Jungsoon as a villain, but truth be told, Princess Hwawan was the worst. Despite his aunt’s actions against him, Jungjo forgave her numerous times and didn’t listen to his legislator’s advice. She will always be remembered as the princess who opposed her family.

Lady Hyegyeong (Hong Hye-bin; 1735-1816): The wife of Crown Prince Sado and the mother of Yi San, she wrote “The Memoirs of Lady Hyegyeong.” From Wikipedia: “Perhaps most famously, the memoirs discuss Crown Prince Sado’s descent into violent madness until his execution was ordered by his father, King Yeongjo. Although Lady Hyegyong’s descriptions of her husband’s madness and execution are the most famous parts of her collection, each of Lady Hyegyong’s four memoirs center around a different aspect of her life and have a different political purpose.”

Hong Gook-young (Hong Dok-reo in “The Red Sleeve”): “A noted Korean scholar and politician of Joseon dynasty who first strongly supported King Jeongjo’s accession and toiled to improve the king’s power, he ended up being expelled because of his desire for power.” (Wikipedia, citing Korea Focus, June 2012)

Queen Hyo-eui (Queen Hyoui; 1754-1821): From the Cheongpung Kim clan, she got married when she was 9 years old and Yi San was 10. From Wikipedia: “Queen Hyoui did not bear King Jeongjo any children, but she adopted the sons of two of her husband’s concubines, Royal Noble Consort Ui and Royal Noble Consort Su, as her own. The son of Royal Noble Consort Ui died young, but the son of Royal Noble Consort Su would eventually succeed King Jeongjo on the throne as King Sunjo.”

C. Parallels and differences between “Yi San” and “The Red Sleeve”

1. “The Red Sleeve” focuses mainly on the love story between Yi San and Royal Noble Consort Uibin Seong.

“Yi San” also focuses mainly on the love story between Yi San and Royal Noble Consort Uibin Seong, but because it has 77 episodes, it also focuses on:

  • the lifelong friendship between Yi San, Dae-su, and Sung Song-yeon;
  • Yi San’s struggles as a Crown Prince with political intrigues and several assassination attempts against him orchestrated by the Noron faction, Princess Hwawan, and Queen Jungsoon;
  • Yi San’s reign as Crown Prince, as regent, and as King; his political achievements such as establishing the Kyujanggjak library and the construction of Hwaseong Fortress;
  • Yi San’s relationships with politicians such as Hong Gook-young and Confucian scholars such as Jeong Yag-jong (1760–1801);
  • The persecution of Catholics during King Jeongjo’s reign.

2. Crown Princess (later Queen) Hyo-eui, Yi San’s wife, is a major character in “Yi San.” She supports and encourages Song-yeon into becoming Yi San’s concubine, despite the opposition of Yi San’s mother, Lady Hyegyeong.

In “The Red Sleeve,” Queen Hyo-eui is not depicted at all, being mentioned only twice or thrice as “Queen Kim” or simply “the Queen.”

3. In “The Red Sleeve,” Queen Jungsoon is depicted as being supportive of Yi San whenever it’s beneficial to her; she’s primarily in conflict with Princess Hwawan.

In “Yi San,” Queen Jungsoon is depicted as leading the Noron faction and Princess Hwawan in trying to kill Yi San or to depose him as Crown Prince.

In “The Red Sleeve,” conflict arises between Yi San and Queen Jungsoon over her brother Kim Gui-joo; he doesn’t appear in the drama but is mentioned in passing.

In “Yi San,” Kim Gui-joo appears in several episodes, starting in Ep. 23, where he’s shown as the mastermind of an assassination attempt against Yi San. (Hong Gook-young discovers the attempt and, with Dae-su’s help, saves Yi San.)

4. In the “The Red Sleeve,” Hong Deok-ro (aka Hong Gook-young) is depicted as having been assigned during his childhood by King Yeongjo to be Yi San’s tutor. In “Yi San,” Hong Gook-young first appears in Ep. 10 as a tutor with the Office of the Crown Prince, with a side business of teaching people how to pass the civil service and military exams. In Ep. 14, he meets and talks with Yi San for the first time.

5. In Ep. 14 of “The Red Sleeve,” Yi San does not go to Sookchang Palace to consummate relations with Hong Deok-ro’s young sister, who has become a Royal Noble Consort. After creating trouble in the royal observatory, he goes back to his quarters where he finds Deuk-im.

In Ep. 52 of “Yi San,” Yi San does not go to the bedchambers of Royal Concubine Hong (sister of Hong Gook-young) on their wedding night. Instead, he visits Song-yeon in the Bureau of Paintings office in the palace.

6. In “Yi San,” Hong Gook-young’s sister fakes her pregnancy and later dies. Hong Gook-young then blames Queen Hyo-eui for her death and attempts to assassinate her by poison, leading to his dismissal and exile.

In “The Red Sleeve,” Hong Deok-ro thinks his sister was poisoned by the court ladies upon orders of “Queen Kim” and thus begins to kidnap the court ladies and pressure them to testify against “Queen Kim.”

7. In “The Red Sleeve,” Deuk-im saves Yi San by decoding the symbols provided by Court Lady Park, the double rings of Lady Hyegyeong, and the tattoo on her back; she finds out that the “Document of Truth” is hidden in the “Irworobongdo” screen behind the King’s throne.

In “Yi San,” Song-yeon saves Yi-san by finding the letter written by Crown Prince Sado hidden in the painting.

8. Both “The Red Sleeve” and “Yi San” depict in several episodes King Yeongjo as he suffers from dementia.

“Did King Yeongjo (1694–1776) of Joseon Dynasty Korea suffer dementia during the last decade of his reign?” from Journal of the History of the Neurosciences, Basic and Clinical Perspectives, Volume 30, 2021 - Issue 4:
“King Yeongjo, the 21st king of Joseon (18th Century Korea), reigned during the prime years of the dynasty and was its oldest king. Despite his many accomplishments, debate surrounds his reputed display of the symptoms of dementia during the last years of his life. The King showed signs of dementia after 40 years of his regency in 1762 at the age of 69 years, including disorientation, cognitive impairment, amnestic disorder and so on.”

9. In Ep. 17 of “The Red Sleeve,” Yi San (King Jeongjo) tells his royal bodyguard that he’s dissatisfied with the way the royal guards shoot the arrow.

In “Yi San” Ep. 10, King Yeongjo scolds Yi San for the poor performance of his royal guards and challenges him to show leadership. Almost half of the episode shows Yi San pressuring his guards to learn how to use the bow and arrow, assigning more arrows to be shot each training session. His guards resent the hard training so much that one of them burns their quarters.

Miscellaneous backgrounders:

1. In Ep. 7, Court Lady Seo is stunned when she sees through a peep hole that Deok-im is changing her clothes in the room where Yi San is taking a bath. (We know that she’s thinking that Deok-im and Yi San had sex.) After Deok-im leaves the room, she holds her by the shoulders, looks at her, and then looks down. After turning her eyes again at Deok-im, she asks if everything’s all right.

Why did Court Lady Seo look downwards before questioning Deok-im? Well, she could just simply be checking if Deok-im is really all right. IMO, however, Court Lady Seo looks downwards to see if Deok-im has “flipped” her skirt, a sign that she had “received Yi San’s grace” (in simple terms, they had sex).

In Ep. 7, 38:58 mark of “Jang Ok Jung, Live in Love” (a 2013 historical drama starring Kim Tae-hee and Yoo Ah-in), Jang Ok Jung overhears two court maids gossiping about a court maid who ’received the king’s grace" the night before; they say that a court maid “flips” her skirt as a sign that she “received the king’s grace.”

2. “I am the son of Crown Prince Sado!”

In Ep. 45 of “Yi San,” Yi San is now King Jeongjo; he strikes fear among the court ministers who plotted against him when, upon sitting on the throne for the first time, he exclaims, “I am the son of Crown Prince Sado!” (These words are supposedly recorded in the “Annals of the Joseon Dynasty.”)

I was disappointed when “The Red Sleeve” didn’t have this iconic scene when Yi San became king in Ep. 13. I was thus pleasantly surprised by Ep. 16 when Yi San exclaimed these words after Royal Noble Consort Hwa-bin insisted to Queen Dowager Jungsoon that since Crown Prince Sado was a traitor, Deok-im’s father was, by association, also a traitor.

Relevant resource about Crown Prince Sado: [FICTION VS. HISTORY] Crown Prince Sado’s difficult history: While ‘The Throne’ is accurate, it misses complexities of a complicated relationship (Korean JoongAng Daily)

3. In Ep. 3 when Deok-im wants to know if King Yeongjo’s mood is good or bad, Bok-yeon tells her that he’s in a bad mood because he washed his ears. The 2015 movie “The Throne” starring Song Kang-ho and Yoo Ah-in explains at the 22:42 mark what it means for the king to wash his ears; if he has heard ominous words, he rinses out his mouth and washes his ears before going to bed in order to dispel the bad luck.

4. Several scenes show King Yeongjo and King Jeongjo (Yi San) wearing eyeglasses; in several scenes, Head Court Lady Jo also wears eyeglasses.

This is historically inaccurate because Robert Neff, a well respected scholar on Korean history says in his article “Ensuring to be seen” that King Jeongjo (Yi San) was the first Joseon king to wear eyeglasses: “King Jeongjo (r. 1776-1800), who may have been the first Joseon monarch to wear glasses, was faced with the dilemma of choosing whether to wear his glasses in front of his council or forego them and basically be unable to read the documents before him. He apparently chose to wear them.”

Neff also says: “When the American newspaperman, Frank Carpenter, had an audience with the king in December 1888, he was gently reminded that if he did not want to appear impertinent before the monarch then he should remove his spectacles as they were seen as an emblem of rank.”

5. In several scenes such as in Ep 2, Yi San uses a yellow fan so that Deok-im won’t recognize him.

If you have seen “Saimdang,” you will remember that in Ep. 11 while fighting off Hwieumdang’s men, Yi-gyeom stops the men from continuing to attack him by opening his fan. The men recognize that he is a member of the royal family because of his fan.

From “Traditional fans do more than just help cool off during summer” (Korea.net): “The number of spokes showed the difference in class of Joseon society at the time. The highest number of 50 was reserved for fans of the royal family. Aristocrats had those with a maximum of 40 and the commoners less than that.”


6. In Ep. 3, Yi San gets into trouble with King Yeongjo when he and his men hunt down the tiger which has been killing people and which has gone into the palace where the court maids were having their festival. This episode may have been inspired by an 1893 incident. From “The tiger hunters” (The Korea Times, 2019) by Robert Neff:
“Some of Korea’s most dangerous and ferocious tigers were those that dwelt on the slopes of Inwangsan, just outside the Seoul city walls. These tigers often preyed on woodcutters and firewood merchants traveling to and from Goyang city ― especially at Muakjae Pass. In 1893, at least one tiger was reported to be prowling about Gyeongbok Palace ― probably hunting the tame little deer kept there. There are even claims (probably exaggerated) of tigers stalking Seoul’s gloomy, unlit streets ― the silence shattered by the screams of their unwary victims fighting a losing battle for their lives.”

7. In Ep. 2, Deok-im begins working at the Crown Prince’s library. There, she sees a painting on the wall of a yellow cat playing with a butterfly. That painting is based on the famous painting “Yellow cat romps with a butterfly” by Kim Hong-do (1745-1806), a famous painter during the Joseon Dynasty. His most famous painting is “The Nineteen Taoist Immortals.”

From “Finding the meaning in whimsical traditional art” (Korea JoongAng Daily): “In ancient Korea, cats represented the age of 70 while butterflies stood for the age of 80.”

8. Ep. 8 of “The Red Sleeve” introduces “Gwanghang Palace,” a secret organization of court ladies led by Head Court Lady Jo.

From Fans are angry at “The Red Sleeve” as it ruined the original novel its original romance genre:
... as the series is reaching its second half, when the romance between the two main characters, Lee San who finally realizes his love for Seong Deok-im and decided to pursue her and Seong Deok-im who tries to push him away even though she knows his feelings, is supposed to be built up, “The Red Sleeve” poured cold water on the audience by bringing out the court ladies’ secret organization “Gwanghang Palace.”

This detail was not even in the original novel ...

The writer of “The Red Sleeve” may have based “Gwanghang Palace” on the 2007 movie “Shadows in the Palace” directed by Kim Mee-jung. The mystery thriller is a fictionalized account of “gungnyeo” (court maids) during South Korea’s Joseon era. The movie (with Yoon Se-ah of “SKY Castle” in the cast) won awards and garnered numerous nominations from Blue Dragon Film Awards, Korean Film Awards, Grand Bell Awards, Baeksang Arts Awards, etc.

9. “Did King Yeongjo (1694–1776) of Joseon Dynasty Korea suffer dementia during the last decade of his reign?” (Journal of the History of the Neurosciences, Basic and Clinical Perspectives, Volume 30, 2021 - Issue 4)
King Yeongjo, the 21st king of Joseon (18th Century Korea), reigned during the prime years of the dynasty and was its oldest king. Despite his many accomplishments, debate surrounds his reputed display of the symptoms of dementia during the last years of his life. The King showed signs of dementia after 40 years of his regency in 1762 at the age of 69 years, including disorientation, cognitive impairment, amnestic disorder and so on. We examined evidence from the Annals of the Joseon Dynasty and related research papers.

Additionally, dementia specialists were asked to undertake a survey to provide objectivity to the literary findings. Prior to his death in 1776, 25 meaningful dementia symptoms were recorded in the Annals across a 10-year period. However, despite indications of dementia, the Joseon dynasty supported him as a king and helped him retain his dignity until the end. This suggests that historical perception changes regarding dementia may also inform current-day attitudes to improve the living standards of patients suffering from dementia and related neuropsychiatric disorders.

10. In Ep. 11 of “The Red Sleeve,” King Yeongjo becomes outraged when somebody serves him persimmons and marinated crabs, foods which he supposedly used to poison his brother King Gyeongjong. In his anger, he tries to strike Hong Hye-bin (Lady Hyegyeong) with a hot poker.

From Wikipedia: In 1728, the “Musin Rebellion” was launched against King Yeongjo, with his enemies using as their justification the alleged death by poisoning of King Gyeongjong. The unsuccessful seventeen-day revolt took place in the third month of 1728. At that time, anonymous posters appeared in Jeonju and Namwon claiming that King Gyeongjong’s death in early October 1724 was due to poisoning by the man who had become King Yeongjo. Two men, Sim Yu-hyeon and Bak Mi-gwi, stole gunpowder from a magazine with the intent of blowing up the Hong-hua and Don-hua gates. The original fomentation of the revolt was concentrated in Jeolla province. “During three weeks of fighting the government lost control of thirteen county seats, and the rebels drew great support from people in Kyŏnggi, North Ch’ungch’ŏng, South Ch’ungch’ŏng and South Kyŏngsang Provinces.”

11. In Ep. 16, Hong Dok-reo tries to convince Deok-im to run away with him and visit places such as Namra (Jeju Island) and Mount Geumgang.

From Wikipedia article citing “100 Cultural Symbols of Korea” by Yoo Myeonng-jong, 2008): “Koreans have perceived Geumgansan as their muse since well before the Middle Ages. Practically every poet and artist who lived during the Joseon dynasty (1392-1910) made a pilgrimage to Mt. Geumgangsan.”

Wikipedia further describes Mount Geumgang: “Mount Geumgang is a 5,374 feet-high mountain located in Kangwondo, North Korea and is about 31 miles from the South Korean city of Sokcho in Gangwon-do.”

From “Diamond Mountains of North Korea” by Roger Shepherd, One Korea Photography: “Kumgang-san has long been a place that stirred the imaginations of many famous Korean artists, writers, and wanderers. During the Goryeo Dynasty (918-1392), Kumgang-san was seen as the ideal Buddhist world, which influenced Indian monk Ji Jong Sunim to cultivate his mind there. In the Joseon Dynasty, Kumgang-san received acclaim by numerous Kings, writers, artists, and scholars. One of those writers was Kim Yang Su (1820-1882) who wrote travelogues on Kumgang-san. He strongly believed that Kumgang-san was more beautiful than any mountain in China.”

12. Wrong costume for Queen Jungsoon in the silk cocoon ceremony in Ep. 6?

In Ep. 6, Queen Jungsoon leads the Silk Cocoon ceremony; notice that she’s wearing a red gown. But “Joseon’s Court Attire: Kdrama Style (Part 2)” from The Talking Cupboard states:
Guk-ui was an attire worn by the queen during a ceremony known as Chimjamrye or Sericulture Ceremony.

The queen, donning a long yellow robe, would encourage the women of the nation to get involved in the silk production as a mean to promote the economy of the nation.

Lessons in photography from “The Red Sleeve” with analysis of its cinematography


Unlike some recent dramas that I watched for which I then posted in-depth analyses of their visuals, cinematography, and editing, I will just be posting this brief analysis of the visuals, cinematography, and editing of “The Red Sleeve.” Why? Because in a lot of instances, “The Red Sleeve” uses (a) short siding and (b) overly dramatic Dutch angle shots, which are things I’ve ranted against in my previous analyses.

Things I liked about the visuals, cinematography, and editing of “The Red Sleeve”

1. The sequence of shots that I like the most in this drama is in Ep. 9. Court Lady Seo tells Deok-im to lie down on Yi San’s bed so that it will be warm when Yi San arrives later on; she warns Deok-im, however, not to fall asleep on the bed.

But Deok-im does fall asleep on the bed, and Yi San finds her there. When she wakes up later on, she’s shot from a high angle, with the camera slowly pulling out and doing an almost unnoticeable camera roll. At the end of the shot, she begins to sit up as she realizes what she has done. In the next shot (medium, low angle), she suddenly sits up; the camera crash zooms on her, and then she quickly stifles her screams with her hand on her mouth. This is great directing, acting, cinematography, and editing.


Relevant resource: “Tarantino and the Crash Zoom” (YouTube video)

(Note: Court Lady Seo told Deok-im that the Temporary Palace’s heating system was broken. She’s referring to the furnace in the basement, which is called “ondol” or the traditional way of heating houses during the Joseon Dynasty. This system is still used in modern-day Korea. For more information about this heating system that’s uniquely Korean, surf to “Ondol (Korean Home Heating System) an ancient heating system lasting millennia”).

2. There are some gorgeous looking shots in this drama, but as I have pointed out before, the choice of locations and the color schemes are not the work of the cinematographer. One concept we have to understand is “mise-en-scène.” From Wikipedia: “Mise-en-scène is the stage design and arrangement of actors in scenes for a theatre or film production, both in visual arts through storyboarding, visual theme, and cinematography, and in narrative storytelling through direction.”

From “What is Mise en Scene — How Directors Like Kubrick Master the Elements of Visual Storytelling”:
In French, mise-en-scène literally means “placing on stage,” or the process of how theater directors would decide what should go on the stage and how those elements should be arranged. This same concept was easily borrowed by film directors — everything you see on-screen is part of the “mise-en-scéne.”

This includes elements that fall under the umbrella term of production design (props, wardrobe, set design, movie props, etc.) as well as cinematography (cinematic lighting, frame rate, depth of field, camera framing, composition). In addition, the blocking and staging of the camera and actors, their performance, and even what we hear on the soundtrack (film music, sound design) counts as mise-en-scéne.

Relevant resource: How to read mise en scéne | Visual film analysis explained!

3. Recurring visual motifs of flowers in “The Red Sleeve” as homage to PD Lee Byung-hoon, “King of sageuks”?

In Ep. 7 of “The Red Sleeve,” Deok-im is assigned to work in the Crown Prince’s garden. There, Yi San shows her a tree on which flowers have recently began to blossom.


From that point on, several scenes feature flowers that are positioned in the foreground and sometimes used in rack focus shots.


Perhaps the most prominent use of flowers as visual motifs in “The Red Sleeve” is in Ep. 17 as you can see in these two GIFs.


A possible reason why “The Red Sleeve” uses flowers as visual motifs (or as part of the mise-en-scéne) could be to create artistic consistency. IMO, the director and cinematographer of “The Red Sleeve” are paying homage to PD Lee Byung-hoon, who is known as the “King of sageuks” for having directed blockbuster dramas such as “A Jewel in the Palace,” “Yi San,” “Dong Yi,” “The King’s Doctor,” and “The Flower in Prison.” As I pointed out in a reddit discussion more than a year ago, numerous shots in “Yi San” have foliage or flowers in the foreground area of the frame (either on the top, bottom, or any of the two sides) as you can see in the JPG and GIF below. Lee Byung-hoon also used this visual motif in his dramas “Dong Yi,” “The King’s Doctor,” and “The Flower in Prison” but to a lesser extent.


This shot from Ep. 17 of “The Red Sleeve” and this GIF from Ep. 62 of “Yi San” convince me that indeed these visual motifs of flowers are an homage to Lee Byung-hoon. In the JPG from “The Red Sleeve,” there’s a lens flare caused by the sunlight; in the GIF from “Yi San,” the scene ends with a cross dissolve of the flowering tree and a quarter moon.



4. Recurring compositional technique in “The Red Sleeve”: The frame is divided into quadrants, and the subject is placed in any of the quadrants.

Top right quadrant


Lower left quadrant


Lower right quadrant


Relevant resources: “Composition In Storytelling”; “Composition Techniques for Widescreen Aspect Ratios”; “Composition Tips for 16:9” (Videomaker); “Is the Rule of Thirds Right for 2.39:1?” (Neil Oseman).

5. “Visual cues” are explained in an excellent series of articles from “My Drama List” written by someone with the username “3GGG.”

Popular Visual Cues found in K-Dramas, Part 1: visual ways to establish a conflict, division, or fight between two or more characters

Popular Visual Cues in K-Dramas, Part 2: boxing to establish a character’s vulnerability, solitude, or fear; comfort and respite; change; danger; showdown

Popular Visual Cues in K-Dramas, Part 3: Dutch angle

Popular Visual Cues in K-Dramas, Part 4: Interpersonal cues (using cues simultaneously or one after another)

These MDL articles on visual cues will help you better “read” K-dramas. (I prefer, however, the term “framing” instead of “boxing.”)

Yi San confronts his mother Lady Hyegyeong about why she brought Deok-im back to the palace; notice the blurred foreground object that serves as a dividing line between them.


When two or more characters are within the same frame, it could mean either unity or division (conflict) depending on the context.

Deok-im and Yi San are in the detached house with the flower garden (unity).


In the library, Deok-im and Yi San are framed by the bookshelves (division/conflict).


Framed by the foreground structure to depict their division/conflict, Head Court Lady Jo tells Deok-im that she no longer needs her to be Yi San’s concubine:


Royal Noble Consort Hwa-bin orders her attendants to drag Deok-im to Queen Dowager Jungsoon’s quarters; she’s positioned in one frame while Deok-im and the attendants are in another frame.


Deok-im is being bathed and prepared to spend the night with Yi San; the scene’s emotional tension is reinforced by the frame that boxes her in.


In Ep. 17, Queen Jungsoon laments that the palace is her luxurious prison; the emotional tension is reinforced by the frame that boxes her in.


6. Influences by Wes Anderson and Bong Joon-ho in the cinematography of “The Red Sleeve”?

(a) Wes Anderson’s visual style is marked by, among other things, bird’s eyeview shots. “The Red Sleeve” has numerous bird’s eyeview shots, which are obviously drone shots.

(b) One of the most-talked about scenes in the 2019 Oscar-winning movie “Parasite” by Bong Joon-ho is that scene when Mrs. Park is stunned when Jessica tells her that her son has artistic talent. In that scene, Jessica is frame right while Mrs. Park is frame left. The cinematographer deliberately “crosses the line” or disregards the “180-degree rule” such that Jessica becomes frame left while Mrs. Park becomes frame right.


“The Red Sleeve” has a scene (involving Deok-im and Lady Hyegyeong) similar to this famous scene from "Parasite" although it’s shot from a different direction as you can see in this GIF.

Sunday, January 02, 2022

“Bossam: Steal The Fate” synopsis by episode (Eps. 1-20, no spoilers)

(Note: Click the picture above to view or download a bigger copy.)


“Bossam” refers to a customary remarriage procedure during the Joseon Dynasty where a widow is kidnapped for money; the kidnapping may be with the widow’s consent. During those times, it was considered immoral for a woman to remarry after her husband’s death. (Wikipedia)
Jump to synopsis of Episode 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 8; 9; 10; 11; 12; 13; 14; 15; 16; 17; 18; 19; 20 (Finale); How I wrote these episode summaries with no spoilers; Historical / cultural backgrounders and other information; Lessons in photography from “Bossam: Steal The Fate”

From Wikipedia: “Bossam: Steal the Fate” is a South Korean television series directed by Kwon Seok-jang and starring Jung Il-woo, Kwon Yuri, Shin Hyun-soo, and Kim Tae-woo. It’s set in the Joseon Dynasty under Gwanghae-gun and depicts the change of fate of a bossam-man Ba-woo, when he mistakenly kidnaps the widowed daughter of the King. MBN’s 10th anniversary special drama premiered on May 1, 2021.

Genre: historical drama, romance.

“Bossam: Steal the Fate” ended by recording an average viewership of 9.8% nationwide in its last episode, thus becoming the highest-rated drama in the network’s history.

According to Nielsen Korea, the 20th episode of “Bossam: Steal the Fate,” aired on July 4, 2021, scored an average nationwide rating of 9.8% with a peak of 11.2%, and has set a new record for the highest viewership ever achieved by any drama in MBN’s history.

How I wrote these episode summaries with no spoilers


1. I assumed that you will be reading these summaries and watching the videos chronologically.

2. I narrated some of the main actions in each episode without revealing the plot’s twists and turns.

3. At the beginning of each summary starting with Episode 2, I placed in a table a recap of the major twists and turns of the previous episode. But because you have already watched the video of the previous episode, they aren’t spoilers anymore.

4. I followed this structure all throughout, except for Ep. 20 (Finale) where I included spoilers. Reason — most people want to know if the drama has a good/happy ending or a sad ending before they invest the time in watching it.

Episode 1


Characters introduced in Ep. 1:

Ba-woo - a thug who offers his services for a fee in carrying out “bossam.” To support his son Cha-dol, sister, and mother, he’s also a gambler and a loan shark.

Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong} - daughter of King Gwanghae and Royal Consort So-ui Yoon; she’s a widow, who lives with her in-laws.

Lee Dae-yeob - youngest son of Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom; Princess Hwa-in’s brother-in-law.

Lee Yi-cheom - Left State Councilor; Lee Dae-yeob’s father and Princess Hwa-in’s father-in-law; leader of the Greater Northern faction

Chun-bae - Ba-woo’s accomplice

Court Lady Jo - Princess Hwa-in’s attendant

Court Lady Kim Gae-shi - a high ranking court lady who plays politics with the court ministers

Haeindang Lee - Lee Dae-yeob’s widowed aunt


After carrying out a bossam, Ba-woo and Chun-bae go to a gambling den. Later, when somebody from a "gibang" (gisaeng house) asks them for help because Sungkyungkwan scholars are fighting in one of the rooms, Ba-woo meets the scholars and becomes friends with Lee Dae-yeob.

On their way to the temple for her husband’s death anniversary, Princess Hwa-in and Court Lady Jo pass by the market. There, they see Ba-woo and Chun-bae fighting with other men over the non-payment of a loan.

In the temple, while Ba-woo meets the head monk, his young son Cha-dol sees Princess Hwa-in talking with a monk.

Ba-woo and Chun-bae get commissioned for another bossam. But Chun-bae is a bit drunk and becomes confused about where the widow lives.


Episode 2


Ep. 1 recap:

When the man who commissioned the bossam dies unexpectedly, Ba-woo brings the widow whom he kidnapped to his house. But to his shock, his son Cha-dol says that the widow is Princess Hwa-in.
After finding out that Princess Hwa-in has been kidnapped, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom orders Princess Hwa-in’s attendant to keep quiet about the kidnapping, saying that Princess Hwa-in’s purity will be questioned. But he also thinks that Princess Hwa-in’s disappearance could be a political vendetta against him. He orders his right hand man to continue searching for Princess Hwa-in; he also orders his eldest son (a police chief) to bring their private army into the capital.

Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom faces a dilemma when King Gwanghae tells him to bring Princess Hwa-in to the palace the next day. Later, he arouses the suspicion of Court Lady Kim Gae-shi when he asks her why King Gwanghae suddenly wants to see Princess Hwa-in.

Ba-woo and Chun-bae decide to secretly bring Princess Hwa-in back to Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s compound.


Episode 3


Ep. 2 recap:

Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom deceives King Gwanghae that Princess Hwa-in committed suicide.

Despite the threat against her family’s lives, Court Lady Jo reveals to Lee Dae-yeob that Princess Hwa-in is alive.

Ba-woo flips flops about getting rid of Princess Hwa-in. He finally decides to lead her back to the palace, but along the way, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s men spot them. They run away but are cornered by one of the men. Lee Dae-yeob arrives and rescues Princess Hwa-in; as Bawoo and Cha-dol start to leave, he threatens Ba-woo with his sword.
Lee Dae-yeob pleads with his father Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom to confess that Princess Hwa-in is still alive. But his father orders him to be locked up.

Princess Hwa-in enters the palace in disguise. She tries to contact her mother Royal Consort So-ui Yoon by pleading with one of the water maids (“musuri”) to give her letter to her mother’s attendant.

Having found out that Ba-woo is the man who kidnapped Princess Hwa-in in a bossam, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom orders his men to block all the gates in the capital to prevent Ba-woo and Princess Hwa-in from escaping.


Episode 4


Ep. 3 recap:

Court Lady Kim Gae-shi warns Princess Hwa-in that she will place her father King Gwanghae and the royal family in mortal danger if she turns up alive; she says that Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom and the Greater Northern faction might possibly launch a rebellion.

King Gwanghae recognizes Princess Hwa-in in her disguise as a water maid but pretends not to know her. Later, he orders his royal bodyguard to search for Princess Hwa-in.

Ba-woo, Cha-dol, and Princess Hwa-in escape from the capital. After separating from Ba-woo and Cha-dol, Princess Hwa-in goes to a cliff and jumps into the river below.


After Ba-woo rescues Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong), Cha-dol makes her promise not to try to take her life again; he also asks her if he could call her “mother.”

Ba-woo, Su-kyeong, and Cha-dol start living as if they’re a real family. But when Ba-woo finds it tough to get a job, he turns to gambling in order to put food on the table.

After Haeindang Lee pleads on Lee Dae-yeob’s behalf, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom allows him to return to the temple to resume his studies.

While washing clothes at the stream, Su-kyeong overhears the other women praising the man who brought misfortune upon a nobleman whom they despise.

At the village market, Jung-yeong (King Gwanghae’s bodyguard) spots Su-kyeong.

Led by Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom, the ministers oppose King Gwanghae’s property tax plan. After telling the other ministers to leave, King Gwanghae confronts Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom about the bribes that he has been taking.


Episode 5


Ep. 4 recap:

Ba-woo steals valuables from a nobleman’s house, with Cha-dol as his lookout. After refusing to eat the food that Ba-woo bought from what he stole, Su-kyeong later takes a job washing dishes in a tavern.

Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom admits to King Gwanghae that he has been accepting bribes but justifies himself by saying that he used the bribes to finance the construction of the new palaces.

King Gwanghae orders his bodyguard Jung-yeong to report Su-kyeong’s location to Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s men and to bring the evidence if Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) dies because of the Left State Councilor’s order.

As Ba-woo, Cha-dol, and Su-kyeong walk to the village market, Lee Dae-yeob suddenly appears and blocks their path; he strikes at Ba-woo with his sword, but Su-kyeong shields Ba-woo with her body.


While Ba-woo and Lee Dae-yeob are fighting on the cliff, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s men arrive and snatch Su-kyeong. In the ensuing chase and fight with the men in the woods, Lee Dae-yeob is slashed on the back with a sword.

Through Court Lady Kim Gae-shi, King Gwanghae meets Kim Ja-jeon, who’s a face reader and an ambitious minor official allied with the Western faction.

To avoid being tortured, Chun-bae reveals to Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom where Ba-woo and Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) could be hiding.

Ba-woo asks his blacksmith-friend to forge a “mapae” (seal used by royal inspectors) and to spread the rumor that Court Lady Kim Gae-shi is distributing “legal wife certificates.”

Episode 6


Ep. 5 recap:

On King Gwanghae’s order, Kim Ja-jeon reports to the royal court that Princess Hwa-in’s grave was placed in the worst of all possible locations. Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom panics that if Princess Hwa-in’s grave is moved, the truth will be revealed that she’s still alive.

In order to pay the physician for the wild ginseng that Lee Dae-yeob needs to recuperate, Ba-woo and Su-kyeong pretend to be a eunuch and a government official from the Bureau of Treasury; they trick the concubine and son of a despised nobleman into buying a “legal wife certificate.”

Despite Ba-woo’s protest, Su-kyeong pities the helpless patients at the health center and uses all the money from the despised nobleman’s concubine to pay for the patients’ medicine and food. She and Ba-woo then trick other concubines to buy their “legal wife certificates.”

While Su-kyeong and Ba-woo are tricking another concubine, the real eunuch from the Bureau of Treasury and his escorts arrive.


Su-kyeong tells Ba-woo that she will leave him and Cha-dol once Lee Dae-yeob recovers fully and leaves. But Lee Dae-yeob says that he won’t leave if she doesn’t come back with him.

To save Su-kyeong, Lee Dae-yeob asks Ba-woo to steal from his father’s house the “Myeong Sa Chol Gwon,” a medal that was given by King Gwanghae to a select group of ministers; the medal guarantees that the death penalty will not be imposed on a minister for any crime except for treason.

After Kim Ja-jeon tells him that King Gwanghae has scheduled the transfer of Princess Hwa-in’s grave in seven days, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom orders his right hand man to check up on Lee Dae-yeob at the temple.

While Ba-woo is outside Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s compound waiting for the right time to sneak in, a fire engulfs the storage shed and threatens the whole compound.

Episode 7


Ep. 6 recap:

Ba-woo is the son of a noble family that was killed on Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s orders.

Lee Dae-yeob presents the “Myeong Sa Chol Gwon” to King Gwanghae and tells him that Princess Hwa-in is alive and that he will take her to a faraway place.

King Gwanghae forces Court Lady Kim Gae-shi to confess that she talked with Princess Hwa-in in the palace. Later, upon receiving Lady Kim Gae-shi’s message, Kim Ja-jeon orders slave hunters to go after Princess Hwa-in.

King Gwanghae tells Court Lady Kim Gae-shi that he does not intend to forgive Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom and that Lee Dae-yeob will not be able to bring Princess Hwa-in back to the palace.


At the temple, Ba-woo tells the head monk of his conflicted emotions about wanting revenge for the deaths of his family, grandfather, and uncles and his actions towards Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong), the daughter-in-law of the man responsible for all their deaths. Later, he leaves the temple after telling Chun-bae to bring Cha-dol to Hanyang.

Lee Dae-yeob sees his father’s men approach Ba-woo’s house on the mountain. But the men don’t find Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) there. Unknown to them, the slave hunters sent by Kim Ja-jeon have captured her and Lady Jo. Lee Dae-yeob rushes off on his horse to search for Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) and Lady Jo; he comes upon a group of itinerant peddlers who tell him that the river is the only other way to Hanyang.

After Kim Ja-jeon reports that his men have captured Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong), King Gwanghae tells him to move the grave first before bringing her to the palace.

Episode 8


Ep. 7 recap:

From the boat, Ba-woo follows the slave hunters as they drag Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) and Court Lady Jo through the streets of Hanyang. But he loses track of them when Lee Dae-yeob blocks his way.

Through his contact at the gisaeng house, Ba-woo finds out where the slave hunters have taken Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) and Lady Jo. While he argues with Lee Dae-yeob about how to rescue them, Lee Dae-yeob reveals that he and Princess Hwa-in were supposed to have been married.

King Gwanghae tells Lady Kim Gae-shi that he can sidestep the protection guaranteed to Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom by the “Myeong Sa Chol Gwon” medal.

While Ba-woo is watching Kim Ja-jeon’s house, Lee Dae-yeob goes back to his father’s house.


Lee Dae-yeob confesses to his father, brother, and aunt that he made a deal with King Gwanghae by using the “Myeong Sa Chol Gwon” medal; he realizes however that, with Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) being held captive by Kim Ja-jeon, King Gwanghae has broken his promise to him.

Su-kyeong realizes why Kim Ja-jeon is holding her captive on King Gwanghae’s order; she tells Court Lady Jo that she will end everything to stop causing troubles for everyone. Meanwhile, when nightfall comes and Lee Dae-yeob has not arrived with his father’s personal army, Ba-woo decides to sneak into Kim Ja-jeon’s compound.

After King Gwanghae and Lord Nae Am leave his house, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom leads his personal army to Kim Ja-jeon’s compound. While he and some of his personal army are in a standoff with Kim Ja-jeon and his slaves at the compound’s gate, Lee Dae-yeob, his brother, and their men search the compound for Princess Hwa-in and Court Lady Jo.

Episode 9


Ep. 8 recap:

Ba-woo and Su-kyeong make it appear that she hanged herself. Later, Ba-woo makes a deal with Kim Ja-jeon, revealing that he is the grandson of King Sunjo’s father-in-law, Lord Kim Jae-nam. He asks Kim Ja-jeon to deliver Princess Hwa-in’s last will to King Gwanghae.

After Lee Dae-yeob finds out where she is hiding, Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) insists on leaving by symbolically cutting off her ties with him.


Ba-woo refuses to let Su-kyeong leave on her separate way, confessing that he wants to protect her. Later on, they settle to a new life in Jemulpo (present day Inchon).

In the palace, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom forces King Gwanghae to compromise by accusing the Minister of Defense of accepting bribes from merchant groups and Court Lady Kim Gae-shi of illegally selling government certificates. He also uses the Office of the Inspector General to intimidate Kim Ja-jeon.

Ba-woo works as a porter on the wharf, refusing the offer of help from a thug he knew from Hanyang; meanwhile, Chun-bae plans to make money with his elder brother by smuggling silk from Ming.

When Kim Ja-jeon pleads for help, Court Lady Kim Gae-shi tells him that he needs to get the new Ming emperor to recognize Royal Noble Consort Gong, the mother of King Gwanghae, so as to legitimize King Gwanghae’s reign. But she clarifies that King Gwanghae wants the recognition without Joseon being dragged into the war between the Ming Empire and the Latter Jin Dynasty.

Episode 10


Ep. 9 recap:

Chun-bae’s plan backfires when the boat carrying the smuggled silk sinks because of the heavy rains.

With Chun-bae’s brother threatening not only to evict them but also to sell all of them off as slaves, Su-kyeong is forced to paint a book of erotica.

The thug who survived the boat’s sinking tells Ba-woo that the boat is actually smuggling copper and sulfur that are meant for the manufacture of guns and gunpowder.

After Kim Ja-jeon reveals that Ba-woo is actually Kim Dae-seok, the grandson of King Sunjo’s father-in-law, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom orders his men to snatch Ba-woo’s mother and younger sister, who were sentenced to slavery.


Ba-woo sees his mother and sister taken hostage into Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s compound. Later, he finds out from the thug who survived the boat’s sinking that a very important person from Ming will be coming to Joseon.

After Su-kyeong finally finishes drawing and writing the book which she titled as “The Story of Won Yeong,” Chun-bae and Lady Jo help market it to various groups of people. But as Ba-woo returns to Jemulpo, he finds out what Su-kyeong, Lady Jo, and Chun-bae are doing and orders them to stop.

At the town center, Ba-woo turns away from the crowd who are gathered around a wanted poster with his portrait and name “Kim Dae-seok.” He sees Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s eldest son and right hand man escorting a Ming official and follows them. From a gisaeng, he finds out that Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom has bribed the Ming official with boxes of silver taels in exchange for delivering a letter to Eunuch Wei, the power behind the new Ming emperor.

Kim Ja-jeon gets hold of a copy of Su-kyeong’s book and, during a meeting of the royal court, uses it against Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s eldest son, the police chief.


Episode 11


Ep. 10 recap:

Ba-woo steals Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s letter from the Ming official; in the letter, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom asks Eunuch Wei for help in dethroning King Gwanghae, promising in return to send 10,000 Joseon soldiers to help Ming in its war with the Later Jin Dynasty.

Ba-woo sneaks into Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s quarters and tells him that he will give him the letter in exchange for his mother and sister’s freedom.

Lee Dae-yeob recognizes that Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) created the drawings in the book “The Story of Won Yeong.” But he arrests Ba-woo instead.

While Lee Dae-yeob is questioning Ba-woo, Su-kyeong learns about Ba-woo’s real identity and that his mother and sister are being held hostage by Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom.


Ba-woo and Su-kyeong confess their affection for each other But later at the gate, while she’s telling Chun-bae to give Ba-woo’s letter to the head monk, Lee Dae-yeob sees her.

When Ba-woo does not appear during the scheduled time and date, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom decides to test if King Gwanghae already has his letter to Eunuch Wei by going on the offensive against the rival Western faction. His son, the police chief, orders the bookstore owner to fabricate a ledger showing that the families of the Western faction bought copies of the book “The Story of Won Yeong.” During the meeting of the royal court, the police chief presents the ledger to King Gwanghae.

In anger and to protect the ministers from the Western faction, King Gwanghae orders his bodyguard to kill the bookseller and the artist (Ba-woo) responsible for the book. But Court Lady Kim Gae-shi cautions him to make their deaths look like suicides.

To save Ba-woo, Su-kyeong tells Chun-bae and Court Lady Jo that they must find the genuine ledger.

Episode 12


Ep. 11 recap:

Lee Dae-yeob has not told his father and brother that he has arrested Ba-woo; he also gives Ba-woo a new “hopae” with a fake identity.

King Gwanghae’s bodyguard kills the bookstore owner, but fail’s to kill Ba-woo when Lee Dae-yeob fights him off.

Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s men corner Su-kyeong and Chun-bae. But Lee Dae-yeob rescues them; he has also stolen the genuine ledger.

Su-kyeong gives the genuine ledger to Kim Ja-jeon and asks him to plead with King Gwanghae to restore Ba-woo’s status as the grandson of King Sunjo’s father-in-law.

Court Lady Kim Gae-shi orders Kim Ja-jeon to capture and kill Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong). But King Gwanghae finds out from his bodyguard that Princess Hwa-in could still be alive.

At the interrogation grounds, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom is stunned that the prisoner is actually Ba-woo.


Ba-woo confirms to King Gwanghae that he is indeed the grandson of King Sunjo’s father-in-law. King Gwanghae tells him that he must become his sword and shield by passing the special military exam.

Lee Dae-yeob hastily leaves his family’s compound; when his brother, the police chief, wonders if he has found out his real identity, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom orders that his sister Haeindang Lee be brought back from the temple immediately.

Using the genuine ledger, King Gwanghae pressures Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom to appease the Western faction by restoring the status of everyone in the plot involving Grand Prince Yeongchang.

With his status restored and his family’s confiscated properties returned, Ba-woo says goodbye to Su-kyeong. But as he and Cha-dol are about to leave, King Gwanghae’s bodyguard and his men arrive.

Episode 13


Ep. 12 recap:

King Gwanghae tells Lee Dae-yeob to pass the military exams and prove himself loyal to him.

Ba-woo gives to Lee Dae-yeob Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s letter to Eunuch Wei.

King Gwanghae forces Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom to release Ba-woo’s mother and sister. Later, he and Princess Hwa-in reconcile. He allows her to live in Ba-woo’s house in Hanyang, with a military unit to guard her.

Lee Dae-yeob asks forgiveness from his father Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom, saying that he had to trick Ba-woo in order to retrieve the letter to Eunuch Wei.

Haeindang Lee threatens her brother Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom that if he doesn’t forgive Lee Dae-yeob, she will reveal the truth about Lee Dae-yeob’s real identity. Later, as a test of loyalty, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom orders Lee Dae-yeob to shoot and kill Ba-woo during the military exams, making it appear like an accident.

As an insurance in case Lee Dae-yeob backs out, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom bribes a candidate in the military exams to shoot Ba-woo.


The ministers conclude that Ba-woo’s shooting was accidental and thus allow the man who shot him to go free. After they’re dismissed by an enraged King Gwanghae, they privately discuss how the Crown Prince can take over as regent.

Ba-woo asks King Gwanghae for two weeks to do something about Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom; meanwhile, Su-kyeong investigates Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s possible ties to the smuggling of silk from Ming.

Ba-woo and Chun-bae follow up Su-kyeong’s tip, but at the silk store, Ba-woo sees his sister’s husband.

Fed up with the way Ba-woo’s mother treats Su-kyeong, Court Lady Jo decides to contact Royal Noble Consort Yun, Su-kyeong’s mother.

Episode 14


Ep. 13 recap:

After reading Princess Hwa-in's letter, Court Lady Kim Gae-shi tells the court maid to deliver the letter to Royal Noble Consort Yun; she then orders Kim Ja-jeon to find out if Princess Hwa-in is hiding in Ba-woo's house.

Royal Noble Consort Yun pleads with King Gwanghae to let her meet Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong).

After Ba-woo finds the evidence, King Gwanghae dismisses the eldest son of Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom as police chief. Later, at the gisaeng house, the former police chief kills Ba-woo's brother-in-law after finding out that he was the mole responsible for busting the smuggling ring.


As his medical condition worsens, King Gwanghae orders the Royal Physician to give some more of the medicine that he has been taking. Back at the Royal Pharmacy, the Royal Physician meets Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom.

While trying to find out how he can have revenge on the former police chief, Ba-woo learns from his gisaeng-informant about the outrageous activities of the Minister of Justice’s son, including the kidnapping of a commoner’s wife.

Court Lady Kim Gae-shi offers to work together with Ba-woo in order to save Kim Ja-jeon; she warns him that Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom has a contact among the royal guards.

Su-kyeong tells Ba-woo to accept Court Lady Kim Gae-shi’s offer but warns him not to fully trust her or King Gwanghae.

The Minister of Justice pleads with Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom to help him. While they’re asking for an audience, King Gwanghae collapses.

When Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom refuses to dismiss the Royal Physician and to assign another physician to look after King Gwanghae, Court Lady Kim Gae-shi orders the king’s trusted bodyguard to kill the Royal Physician.

With the Queen’s consent, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom pleads with Crown Prince Neungyang to temporarily take over as regent for King Gwanghae.

Episode 15


Ep. 14 recap:

Through the mask drama players, Court Lady Kim Gae-shi helps Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) meet her mother Royal Noble Consort Yun. Later, when the palace is locked down after King Gwanghae collapses, she and Lee Dae-yeob help Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) to escape.

Crown Prince Neungyang reinstates the Minister of Justice and the eldest son of Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom as police chief.

Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom manipulates Crown Prince Neungyang to send Ba-woo to investigate what’s happening at the border between Ming General Mao Wenlong and his enemy, the northern barbarian General Amin.

Cha-dol’s biological mother suddenly arrives in Ba-woo’s house.


Ba-woo’s mother allows Cha-dol’s biological mother to stay after finding out that she’s from a noble family.

Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom pressures King Gwanghae to abandon Kim Dae-seok (Ba-woo) and to provide food rations and a war chest for Ming General Mao Wenlong. But King Gwanghae is worried about Joseon being dragged into the war between the Ming Empire and the Later Jin Dynasty.

Ba-woo and Lee Dae-yeob escape from their prison cell; in the woods, the man who shot Ba-woo during the military exams shoots at him but hits Lee Dae-yeob instead.

Episode 16


Ep. 15 recap:

Cha-dol’s biological mother bullies Su-kyeong and tries her best to win the affections of Ba-woo’s mother and sister.

Acting on Su-kyeong’s letter, the head monk helps Ba-woo and Lee Dae-yeob to escape.

General Amin’s soldiers capture Ba-woo and Lee Dae-yeob; they find on Lee Dae-yeob the letter from Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom to Ming General Mao Wenlong.


Cha-dol’s biological mother continues to bully Su-kyeong, hoping to drive her away before Ba-woo returns.

Through the help of a former Joseon military officer, Ba-woo and Lee Dae-yeob are released by General Amin. Ba-woo reports to King Gwanghae how Joseon could avoid being dragged into the war between the Ming Empire and the Later Jin Dynasty, but Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom opposes the plan to restrict General Mao Wenlong in his island refuge.

Lee Dae-yeob justifies his actions to Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom by saying that Ming is about to collapse as an empire and that the Later Jin Dynasty is not barbaric as has been claimed.

Ba-woo drags his wife out of the house, but she stops him by threatening to reveal that Princess Hwa-in is hiding in his house.

Episode 17


Ep. 16 recap:

Ba-woo reveals to his mother that Su-kyeong is actually Princess Hwa-in, daughter of King Gwanghae.

After overhearing the head monk tell Ba-woo, his mother, and his sister that he will take her to the temple, Cha-dol’s biological mother reports to Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom that Princess Hwa-in is alive and hiding in Ba-woo’s house.

Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom takes his contact with the royal guards to help him and his men deal with the guards at Ba-woo’s house. But at the front gate, Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) meets them alone.


Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom and his men are forced to retreat from killing or taking Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) with them when dozens of civilians turn up at the house for the scheduled distribution of rice.

After denying Princess Hwa-in’s request to marry Ba-woo, King Gwanghae visits Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom; he offers to forget all of the day’s events if they can work together again for Joseon’s welfare.

Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom stirs up the people’s resentments through riots and slanderous posters against King Gwanghae as a prelude to launching a coup. The posters accuse King Gwanghae of killing his brothers and nephew and of conniving with Court Lady Kim Gae-shi in poisoning the late king.

King Gwanghae meets Ba-woo, Lee Dae-yeob, Kim Ja-jeon, and Court Lady Kim Gae-shi. He orders Lee Dae-yeob to bring the evidence to back up his claim that there’s no evidence that his father Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom fomented the public unrest.

Episode 18


Ep. 17 recap:

The assassins fail to kill Princess Hwa-in when King Gwanghae and his royal guards arrive.

Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom blackmails Court Lady Kim Gae-shi by threatening to bring out the Royal Chef who prepared the poison for the late king. Later, Court Lady Kim Gae-shi tells Ba-woo that to ensure the restoration of his status and the safety of King Gwanghae and Princess Hwa-in, he must find and kill the Royal Chef.

Lee Dae-yeob gets caught after finding the document signed by Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom and the conspirators in the coup plot against King Gwanghae.

Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom reveals to Lee Dae-yeob that he is actually the grandson of Prince Imhae, the eldest son of the late king.


Lee Dae-yeob says that he does not want to become the next king. But Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom entices him by saying that if he’s the king, he can have Princess Hwa-in as his queen because a king can have no shame. Later, he tells his mother (whom he has always known and called as aunt) that when he becomes king, he will take Princess Hwa-in and make her his queen.

While chasing the Royal Chef, Ba-woo and Chun-bae stumble upon a meeting of Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom and his faction of ministers involved in the coup plot.

Episode 19


Ep. 18 recap:

After overhearing his mother threaten Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom by saying that she will reveal his very last secret, Lee Dae-yeob tells Ba-woo to run away with Princess Hwa-in.

Ba-woo and Su-kyeong get married.

Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom brings the Royal Chef to King Gwanghae. Cornered, King Gwanghae agrees reluctantly when Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom says that Princess Hwa-in must die. He also orders that the restoration of status granted to Ba-woo and others be rescinded. In exchange, Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom orders that the Royal Chef be killed.

After King Gwanghae’s bodyguard warns him of the danger, Ba-woo sends his mother, his sister, and Cha-dol to the temple.

Su-kyeong suggests to Ba-woo, Court Lady Jo, and Chun-bae that they could hide in the West Palace where Grand Queen Inmok has been confined. But while trying to climb over the wall of the West Palace, they’re caught by the guards.



Lee Dae-yeob rescues Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) and Chun-bae; while hiding in his mother’s quarters, he learns that Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) has gotten married to Ba-woo.

As a countermeasure based on Goryeo history, King Gwanghae considers the plan for a self-coup to be launched by the Western faction against Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom and his faction. He orders Court Lady Kim Gae-shi to find out from Kim Ja-jeon if the Westerners have ulterior motives.

Ba-woo swears to King Gwanghae that if he cannot stop the coup plot, he will kill Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom and himself. Later on, together with Lee Dae-yeob, he finds out where the rebel troops are being trained.

Episode 20, Finale (with spoilers)


Ep. 19 recap:

Lee Dae-yeob burns the evidence from his mother that proves Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom killed his father Prince Imhae.

Ba-woo blows up the coup plotters’ armory of swords, rifles, and bombs, but Lee Dae-yeob gets caught by Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s men.

In the palace, after Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom gives King Gwanghae two hours to give up Princess Hwa-in, Court Lady Kim Gae-shi betrays Princess Hwa-in.

Royal Noble Consort Yun slaps Court Lady Kim Gae-shi and confronts King Gwanghae about why he abandoned Princess Hwa-in to Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom.
Ba-woo secures a letter from Grand Queen Inmok allowing the Westerners to overthrow King Gwanghae and to get rid of Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom and his faction.

Lee Dae-yeob dies in the clash between Left State Councilor Lee Yi-cheom’s private army and Ba-woo’s men.

During the rebellion, Kim Ja-jeon captures Court Lady Kim Gae-shi; meanwhile, Court Lady Jo and Chun-bae save Royal Noble Consort Yun.

The Westerners reinstate Grand Queen Inmok; with King Gwanghae overthrown and exiled, they install Prince Neungyang as the new king.

Princess Hwa-in (Su-kyeong) hides with her mother Royal Noble Consort Yun in the temple. She decides to become a nun, realizing that a dethroned king’s daughter will never be allowed to be with the nephew of the Grand Queen. But before she can take her vows, Ba-woo and Cha-dol kidnap her.


Historical / cultural backgrounders and other information


1. From Wikipedia: “Bossam” refers to a customary remarriage procedure during the Joseon Dynasty where a widow is kidnapped for money; the kidnapping may be with the widow’s consent. During those times, it was considered immoral for a woman to remarry after her husband’s death.

Movies and dramas that depict Gwanghae-gun



“Masquerade” (2012; portrayed by Lee Byung-hun)



“Warriors of the Dawn” (2017; portrayed by Yeo Jin-goo)



“Goddess of Fire” (2013)



“The King’s Face” (2014)



“Splendid Politics” aka “Hwajung” (2015)



“The Crowned Clown”(2019)
2. This drama’s king is based on Gwanghae-gun or Prince Gwanghae (1575–1641; reigned 1608–1623); he was the 15th king of the Joseon Dynasty.

Gwanghaegun was the second son of King Seonjo, born to Lady Kim (Gongbin), a concubine. When Japan invaded Korea to attack the Ming Empire, he was installed as Crown Prince. When the king fled north to the border of Ming, he set up a branch court and fought defensive battles. During and after the Seven Year War (1592–1598), he acted as the de facto ruler of the Joseon Dynasty, commanding battles and taking care of the reconstruction of the nation after the devastating wars, in the place of old and weak King Seonjo.

Although it brought prestige to him, his position was still unstable. He had an elder but incompetent brother Prince Imhae (Imhaegun, 임해군, 臨海君) and a younger but legitimate brother Grand Prince Yeong-chang (Yeong-chang Daegun, 영창대군, 永昌大君), who was supported by the Lesser Northerners faction. Fortunately for Gwang-hae, King Seonjo’s abrupt death made it impossible for his favorite son Yeong-chang to succeed to the throne.

Violence of Greater Northerner faction

Before King Seonjo died, he named Prince Gwang-hae as his official successor to the throne and ordered his advisers to make a royal document. However, Lyu Young-gyong of the Lesser Northerners faction hid the document and plotted to install Prince Yeong-chang as king, only to be found out by the head of the Great Northerners faction (대북; 大北), Chung In-hong. Lyu was executed immediately and Prince Yeong-chang was arrested and died the next year.

After the incident, Gwang-hae tried to bring officials from various political and regional background to his court, but his plan was interrupted by Greater Northerners including Lee Icheom and Chung In-hong. Then, Greater Northerners began to take members of other political factions out of the government, especially Lesser Northerners. In 1613, the Greater Northerners moved against Prince Yeong-chang; his grandfather Kim Jenam was found guilty of treason and executed, while Yeong-chang was sent into exile, where he too was executed. At the same time, Greater Northerners suppressed the Lesser Northerners; in 1618, Yeong-chang’s mother, Queen In-mok, was stripped of her title and imprisoned. Gwang-hae had no power to stop this even though he was the official head of the government.

Achievements

Despite his poor reputation after his death, he was a talented and pragmatic politician. He endeavored to restore the country and sponsored the restoration of documents. As a part of reconstruction, he revised land ordinance and redistributed land to the people; he also ordered the rebuilding of Changdeok Palace along with several other palaces. Additionally, he was responsible for the reintroduction of the hopae identification system after a long period of disuse.

In foreign affairs he sought a balance between the Ming Empire and the Manchus. Since he realized Joseon was unable to compete with Manchu military power, he tried to maintain friendly relationship with the Manchus while the kingdom was still under the suzerainty of Ming, which angered the Ming and dogmatic Confucian Koreans. The critically worsened Manchu-Ming relationship forced him to send ten thousand soldiers to aid Ming in 1619. However, the Battle of Sarhū ended in Manchu’s overwhelming victory. The Korean General Gang Hong-rip lost two-thirds of his troops and surrendered to Nurhaci. Gwanghaegun negotiated independently for peace with the Manchus and managed to avoid another war. He also restored diplomatic relationship with Japan in 1609 when he reopened trade with Japan through Treaty of Giyu, and sent his ambassadors to Japan in 1617.

In the domestic sphere, Gwanghaegun implemented the Daedong law, which let his subjects pay their taxes more easily. However, this law was activated only in Gyeonggi Province, which was the largest granary zone at that time, and it took a century for the law to be extended across the whole kingdom. He encouraged publishing in order to accelerate reconstruction and to restore the kingdom’s former prosperity. Many books were written during his reign, including the famous medical book Donguibogam, and several historical records were rewritten in this period. In 1616, tobacco was first introduced to Korea and it soon became popular amongst the Korean aristocracy.

Dethronement and later life

On April 6, 1623, Gwanghaegun was deposed in a coup by the Westerners faction. The coup directed by Kim Yu took place at night, Gwanghaegun fled but was captured later.[3] He was confined first on Ganghwa Island and then on Jeju Island, where he died in 1641. He does not have a royal mausoleum like the other Joseon rulers. His and Lady Ryu’s remains were buried at a comparatively humble site in Namyangju in Gyeonggi Province. The Westerners faction installed Neungyanggun as the sixteenth king Injo who promulgated pro-Ming and anti-Manchu policies, which resulted in two subsequent Manchu invasions.

In modern South Korea, Gwanghaegun is considered one of the wiser kings rather than a despot.

Relevant resources:

“Controversy reignited over King Gwanghae” (Korea JoongAng Daily, 2012)

“What if Prince Gwanghae of Joseon wasn’t cooped and remained in power?” (Quora)

3. In Ep. 3, Ba-woo, Cha-dol, and Princess Hwa-in are on their way to the palace. After Princess Hwa-in hurts her foot, Ba-woo goes to the market to buy a pair of shoes. The store owner sells to him a pair of red “danghye,” which was crafted for Princess Hwa-in’s wedding.

That “danghye” appears in several other scenes, most notably in Ep. 20 (Finale).

From “The Light Steps of Grace”: “The type of Danghye worn by the noble women in the Joseon Dynasty was made of leather or silk, and covered with silk. The heels were low, and the tips were pointy and rolled up. The interior lining was smooth with cushion. The shoes were covered with a thick layer of finely bright silk to achieve graceful beauty.”

From “The Joseon Fashion Show – Footwear Special Part 2 – Shoes”: “In the Joseon Dynasty, shoes were not only used as foot coverings and decorations, but also as indicators of social class and status. The materials and shapes of shoes differed depending on gender, class, job, social background, income and attire.”

From “Traditional shoes represent Korean beauty, elegance” (The Korea Times, 2011): “Gatsin,” better known as flower shoes, are traditional Korean leather shoes which are separated into two kinds, “hwa” (boots) and “hye” (low-rise shoes). “Gatsin” or leather shoes were originally only worn by “yangban” (noble class) and royal families while the commoners wore wooden clogs or straw shoes during the Joseon Kingdom (1392-1910).


4. In Ep. 15, Ba-woo and Lee Dae-yeob are captured by soldiers under Ming General Mao Wenlong. While they’re in jail, a woman gives Ba-woo rice wrapped in paper. To Ba-woo’s surprise, he sees a symbol on top of the rice. He bites off that part of the rice with the symbol before a Ming soldier takes the rice from him.

To people from Western countries, that symbol on top of the rice looks like a “swastika,” the Nazi symbol that has come to represent hate, oppression, and genocide of the Jewish people during World War II. But that symbol is actually the Buddhist “manja” cross.

(The rice given to Ba-woo came from the head monk, who helps him and Lee Dae-yeob escape from their jail cell.)

From Wikipedia:
The swastika symbol, 卐 or 卍, today primarily recognized in the West for its use by the Nazi party, is an ancient religious icon in various Eurasian cultures. It is used as a symbol of divinity and spirituality in Indian religions, including Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism.

In the Western world, it was a symbol of auspiciousness and good luck until the 1930s when the German Nazi Party adopted a right-facing (’clockwise’) form and used it as an emblem of the Aryan race. As a result of World War II and the Holocaust, many people in the West still strongly associate it with Nazism and antisemitism. The swastika continues to be used as a symbol of good luck and prosperity in Hindu, Buddhist and Jain countries such as Nepal, India, Mongolia, Sri Lanka, China and Japan. It is also commonly used in Hindu marriage ceremonies.

In Hindu and Buddhist cultures, the swastika is a holy symbol. On the day of Diwali, Hindu households commonly use the swastika in decorations. Reverence for the swastika symbol in Asian cultures, in contrast to the West’s stigmatisation of the symbol, has led to misinterpretations and misunderstandings.

In East Asia, the swastika is prevalent in Buddhist monasteries and communities. It is commonly found in Buddhist temples, religious artefacts, texts related to Buddhism and schools founded by Buddhist religious groups. It also appears as a design or motif (singularly or woven into a pattern) on textiles, architecture and various decorative objects as a symbol of luck and good fortune. The icon is also found as a sacred symbol in the Bon tradition, but in the left-facing orientation.