Friday, March 05, 2021

“Sisyphus: The Myth” synopsis by episode (Eps. 1-16, no spoilers) with in-depth analysis of its cinematography

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

From Wikipedia: “Sisyphus: The Myth,” also known as “Sisyphus,” is a South Korean television series starring Cho Seung-woo and Park Shin-hye. Labeled as “JTBC’s 10th Anniversary Special Drama,” it premiered on February 17, 2021, and is available for streaming on Netflix. Its estimated budget is approximately 18 to 22 million US dollars.

The drama is written by Lee Je-in and Jeon Chan-ho, with the following genre: drama, fantasy, mystery. It’s directed by Jin Hyuk whose previous works include “City Hunter” (2011), “Prosecutor Princess” (2010), “Master’s Sun” (2013), “Doctor Stranger” (2014), and “Legend of the Blue Sea” (2016).

“Sisyphus: The Myth” tells the story of a genius engineer named Han Tae-sul, who tries to uncover the truth behind his older brother’s death, and an elite warrior called Kang Seo-hae, who travels back in time to help him.

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. With Episode 16 (Finale), however, I included spoilers. Reason — people who have not seen this drama want to know whether it has a good/happy ending or a sad ending before they invest their time in watching it.

Episode 1


As she’s about to go back to the past, Kang Seo-hae is warned by her father to start running once she gets there, not to trust anyone, and never to contact Han Tae-sul. She arrives in the past, lugging around a big suitcase, but she’s immediately pursued by mysterious men with weapons and handheld meters.

Han Tae-sul is a genius engineer, who’s the founder of Quantum & Time, a cutting-edge engineering company. But his profligate ways with pills and his mishandling of the company’s affairs force the board of directors to demand that he institute changes for himself and for the company. As he flies back to Korea, missing yet again another meeting with the board of directors to the consternation of his co-CEO Eddie Kim, the jetliner he’s riding on meets severe turbulence and begins to stall.

Months after the jetliner incident, Tae-sul is brought back to his house to recuperate. Meanwhile, Seo-hae has found shelter with Choi Jae-sun (Sun), the young caretaker of an eatery in a rundown neighborhood.

One night, on his way home with his bodyguard, Tae-sul meets on the street a dazed and badly beaten man. The man gives him a USB drive; on it is video footage of what really happened to the jetliner.


Episode 2


Ep. 1 recap:

Tae-sul turned to pills because of his guilt over his brother’s death. To his shock, he finds out from the USB that it wasn’t a bird strike that crippled the jetliner; a suitcase and the body of his brother Tae-San hit the jetliner’s cockpit.

The jetliner’s co-pilot, who gave the USB to Tae-su, dies when his car explodes.

Based on his calculations, Tae-sul reaches a grassy field where he finds a suitcase. At the same time, however, Seo-hae tries to reach him on the phone and warn him against opening the suitcase.
Tae-sul finds inside the suitcase things that belonged to his brother Tae-han — cellphone, grade school yearbook, papers, camera, and a key. On his way home, as he charges the cellphone, he gets a mysterious call from someone asking about the suitcase. When he arrives home, he sees his co-CEO Eddie Kim with police officers searching through the rooms.

After finding a roll of film inside the camera, Tae-sul sets up an improvised darkroom and prints out the images. To his surprise, he finds not only images of his brother but also of his upcoming conference.

Seo-hae prepares to leave for Busan to find Tae-sul. But the Control Bureau agents have tracked her down in Sun’s apartment. The agents force their way in; Seo-hae fights them off, but as they’re cornered, Sun refuses to run anymore and gives up.

Tae-sul realizes that the key is for the safe in the first office that his brother built for him in an isolated spot. But as he searches for the safe, the Control Bureau agents arrive and surround the office.


Episode 3


Ep. 2 recap:

The man who calls up Tae-sul finds out that he’s only pretending to be his brother Tae-han.

Tae-sul finds among the images that he printed an image of him and a woman in wedding attire. In a vision, he sees the woman shot by someone.

Based on the DNA test of the ashes from the columbarium, Tae-sul finds out that the ashes do not belong to his brother.

Tae-sul is captured and interrogated by the Control Bureau.
During the conference, Tae-sul presents his company’s revolutionary technology. But his presentation is disrupted when he sees his brother Tae-san in the audience. Chaos then breaks out when the gunman attacks him. Seo-hae shoots back at the gunman and leads Tae-sul away, with the police officers chasing them.

The news breaks out that Tae-sul has been kidnapped, but the police officers in charge of the investigation don’t have a clue as to who the kidnappers are. Meanwhile, the board of directors of Quantum & Time, led by Kim Han-Yong, urge co-CEO Eddie Kim to take over the company.

The Control Bureau officers investigate the crime scene and find out that the broker Mr. Park is involved.


Episode 4


Ep. 3 recap:

During the conference, Tae-sul presents his company’s technology of teleporting a substance from one place to another.

The broker Mr. Park from Asia Mart kidnaps Tae-sul and Seo-hae. Later, he brings them to an isolated warehouse where, to his shock, Tae-sul sees a person being transported from the future to the present.
The future ...

Seo-hae wanders around the deserted streets, picking up whatever resources that she can.

The present ...

As Control Bureau agents raid the warehouse, Seo-hae attacks Mr. Park and one of his men. Tae-sul escapes, taking with him the man who had just been downloaded from the future.

The past ...

Two police officers investigate a complaint by a store owner about a half-naked man who tried to rob the store. The junior police officer goes into a dark alley and finds the half-naked man; as they fight, Control Bureau agents arrive.

The present ...

Eddie Kim signs the board resolution dismissing Tae-sul as CEO of Quantum & Time.

Using a stolen car, Tae-sul and Seo-hae take the downloaded man to his house; Seo-hae explains to Tae-sul why people from the future risk going back to the past and why he’s being hunted down. Later, the man tells Tae-sul how he can meet Tae-san, but the Control Bureau agents arrive and attack the house with gunfire.

Tae-sul and Seo-hae escape from the house. The Control Bureau, however, coordinates with the police to block their escape routes; it also sends drones to chase them.


Episode 5


Ep. 4 recap:

The downloaded man was the junior police officer; he confesses to Seo-hae that he became a Control Bureau agent assigned to track her down. He went back to the past in order to make things right with his sick mother.

Seo-hae tells Tae-sul that, besides the Control Bureau, a group known as “Sigma” is hunting him down. She also says that she will do everything to prevent him from inventing the uploader.

Tae-sul and Seo-hae get cornered at a dead end bridge. As they jump into the river below, Seo-hae is shot by one of the Control Bureau agents.
Tae-sul brings the wounded and unconscious Seo-hae to Seo-jin’s office late at night, but Seo-jin finds them there. He explains to Seo-jin about the kidnapping, the uploader, and Sigma, but she refuses to believe him and threatens to call the police in the morning.

The next morning, Tae-sul withdraws money from an ATM and tells Seo-hae to live her own life so that he can continue looking for Tae-san. Seo-hae warns him that he won’t make it alive and then walks off in anger.

At their headquarters, Control Bureau officer Hyun-seung tells policeman Hyeon-gi about what the bureau is and how Seo-hae is responsible for his mother’s death.

Flashback ... Seo-hae and her father scavenge for whatever they can find in an abandoned grocery store. But the gang that controls the area arrives and engages them in a firefight.

Tae-sul goes back to his home to get the key to the safe and prepare for the party where he hopes to find Tae-san. But when the alarm system becomes offline, Eddie Kim and the security men arrive.


Episode 6


Ep. 5 recap:

Seo-hae agrees not to interfere with Tae-sul’s desire to meet his brother.

Seo-jin remembers that in her interview, Tae-san mentioned Sigma.

Hyeon-gi’s senior officer, Kang Dong-Ki, is Seo-hae’s father.

Hyeon-gi becomes part of the Control Bureau, with the primary mission of killing Seo-hae.
Flashback, August 6, 2001 ... Tae-sul continues to work on his project before meeting his potential investors the next day. Meanwhile, Tae-san sees a man lying on the subway tracks; as he tries to help, he notices that the man is holding a picture of him and Tae-sul. He questions the man about the picture, but the man stumbles away, dragging along a suitcase.

At the chairman’s party, Eddie Kim recognizes Seo-hae. As Seo-hae sees and follows Tae-san, Tae-sul meanwhile finds the transfer technology agreement between Quantum & Time and Sigma. As he tries to strangle the chairman, he’s knocked out with an injection by Seo-jin.

Tae-san warns Seo-hae to stay away from Tae-sul. As the Control Bureau agents chase after her, Seo-hae runs outside of the house, but she’s shot by Hyeon-gi.

Tae-sul wakes up in a hospital, with Eddie Kim and Seo-jin beside him. It’s August 19th, four days after he was shot during the conference.


Episode 7


Ep. 6 recap:

Seo-hae escapes from the Control Bureau with the help of Sun, the young man to whom she gave the winning lotto numbers.

Seo-jin is the chairman’s daughter; they’re helping Sigma to acquire Tae-sul’s technology in order to help Seo-jin’s sick mother.

Seo-jin drugs Tae-sul to find out where the key to the suitcase is; she also tells Eddie Kim to just do what he’s told to do if he wants to be the CEO of Quantum & Time.

Through his computation of the moon’s azimuth, Tae-sul confirms that Seo-jin has been deceiving him; it’s September 15, one month after the Busan conference. He escapes from the house and ends up in a tool market. The men from Sigma catch up with him, but Seo-hae shoots them down.
Flashback ... Sun wins the lotto based on the numbers that Seo-hae gave to him. As she regains her strength, Seo-hae warns Sun to take his family abroad and escape the impending nuclear war.

After failing to contact Tae-sul, Seo-hae goes to Asia Mart to make a deal with Mr. Park.

Despite being warned by Seo-hae to stop looking for Sigma, Tae-sul confronts the chairman of Quantum & Time.

When the chairman fails to appear at the press conference, Eddie Kim reads aloud before the reporters the Quantum & Time board resolution ousting Tae-sul as the company’s CEO.

Episode 8


Ep. 7 recap:

Seo-hae gives Mr. Park the key to the safe, but all that’s in the safe is Tae-San’s letter to Tae-sul; the letter warns Tae-sul that Sigma was close to them from the beginning.

The chairman of Quantum & Time takes his own life.

During the press conference, Tae-sul dares Sigma to come after him.
Flashback ... The downloaded man, who was found by Tae-san on the subway tracks, makes a fortune from stock trading and horse racing. Later, through his broker, he contacts an IT investor named Kim Han-yong and tells him to invest in Tae-sul’s projects.

At the Control Bureau headquarters, Mr. Park is beaten up. One of the officers threatens his family, but he also threatens the officer.

Tae-sul and Seo-hae track down the man he suspects of being "Sigma" by using the database on facial recognition. They end up in an apartment where, through a painting, Tae-sul finally learns the meaning of "Sigma."

Flashback ... 2035, on her birthday, Seo-hae goes to the amusement park where she and her mother went to when she was a young girl. Later on, she sneaks into a hospital to get some antibiotics; an orderly finds her, however, and the guards chase her.

Episode 9


Ep. 8 recap:

"Sigma" refers to the Greek myth of Sisyphus, who was condemned to an endless punishment of rolling up a stone up a mountain, only for the stone to roll down back again.

In a grave with two skeletons, Seo-hae finds a diary in which the 2020 Seo-hae pleads with her to rescue Tae-seul.
Tae-sul brings Seo-hae to the amusement park to celebrate her birthday. While there, Seo-hae sees her mother and her childhood self.

As the Control Bureau agents surround and try to capture Seo-hae, Sigma calls up Tae-sul and tells him to choose between saving Seo-hae and saving the world.

While being held captive in the Control Bureau headquarters, Seo-hae flashes back to the day when South Korea was attacked and destroyed in a nuclear explosion.


Episode 10


Ep. 9 recap:

While Tae-sul is talking with the young Seo-hae at the ice cream stand, Seo-hae (from the future) meets her mother.

The Control Bureau official injects Seo-hae with a drug that will scramble her gene structure and make her disappear forever.

Mr. Park threatens one of the Control Bureau agents, saying that he and his men will escape the next day and kill everyone in the Bureau.

Tae-sul deduces where the Control Bureau might have taken Seo-hae; he finds out that the bureau’s headquarters is in the lower floors of a hospital sponsored by Quantum & Time and where Seo-jin works. With Sun’s help, he takes control of the hospital’s computer server.
Flashback ... Seo-hae’s father, a police officer, follows up a case involving an agent of the Control Bureau. But in an elevator, he’s attacked by a man with a gun. After fighting off the man, he’s stunned to find out that the Control Bureau is looking for an illegal entrant named Gang Seo-hae.

Present times ...

As Tae-sul rescues Seo-hae, the illegal entrants escape from their cells and attack the Control Bureau agents.

At the Asia Mart, Mr. Park tells Tae-sul about the advance group of men and women who were downloaded from the future. He also tells Tae-sul that someone from the advance group — a woman named Agnes Kim — is the only one who can save Seo-hae from certain death.

Tae-sul and Mr. Park leave Asia Mart to find Agnes Kim; meanwhile, Seo-hae’s father has taken his former partner Jung Hyeon-Gi captive and asks him, at gunpoint, why the Control Bureau is looking for his 9-year old daughter.


Episode 11


Ep. 10 recap:

Tae-sul visits Seo-hae’s parents and, through Seo-hae’s necklace, explains to them about the uploader and downloader. Later, he brings Seo-hae’s father to Asia Mart to see Seo-hae.

2035 ... Despite her father’s warning, Seo-hae decides to go back to the past and try to stop the war.

In the orphanage for illegal entrants, Tae-sul finds out that Agnes Kim is Kim Seo-jin. As they’re talking, Sigma arrives.
Sigma mocks Tae-sul by saying that people will always choose to save their loved ones instead of the world. Before letting Tae-sul go with Agnes (Seo-jin), he asks, “Don’t you remember me?”

Back in Asia Mart, Seo-jin tells Tae-sul that he must travel back to whatever timeline Seo-hae is in and inject the antidote into Seo-jin at the timeline nearest to the present; if he fails, he will wander around forever in space-time. She also warns Tae-sul that he cannot change the past or the future.

Tae-sul and Seo-hae wander around in their past timelines, reliving his regrets; meanwhile, Sigma appears in the Control Bureau headquarters.


Episode 12


Ep. 11 recap:

The Control Bureau works for Sigma.

Tae-sul injects Seo-hae with the last antidote, condemning himself to wander around forever in space-time. But later, Tae-San appears and gives him the antidote.
Flashback ... Despite her father’s protest, Seo-hae wants to go back to the past. On their way to the uploader, they manage to evade the gang that has been tracking them, but they run into another gunman.

Present ...

Seo-hae reunites with her father.

Mr. Park orders his men to buy guns, dried goods, medicines, and other supplies. On the other hand, Tae-sul and Seo-hae study the painting they found in Sigma’s apartment. After finding a clue, they go to his elementary school, but the Control Bureau tracks them down there.


Episode 13


Ep. 12 recap:

2035 ... The gunman who Seo-hae and her father meet turns out to be Tae-sul’s bodyguard.

Mr. Park returns to his neighborhood where he sees himself abusing his wife.

Sigma is Seo Won-ju, Tae-sul’s abused and bullied classmate from elementary school. After learning from Tae-sul how sodium mixed with water causes an explosion, he prepares the materials in his room; after his drunken father forces open the door to his room, the combined materials explode, the house catches fire, and his father dies. Later, at the playground, he tells Tae-sul that he will kill everyone.
Tae-sul and Seo-hae are cornered inside a classroom by Sigma and the Control Bureau agents. They barricade the room, but with no way out, Seo-hae wants to come out with her gun blazing.

Flashback, 2035 ... On their way to the underground uploader, Seo-hae and her father engage in a firefight the thugs who have been tracking them.

Present times ...

Seo Won-ju (the future Sigma) is a struggling painter, who’s consumed by his jealousy and hatred towards Tae-sul. Using a fake name, he harasses Tae-sul online.

At the Quantum & Time laboratories, Eddy Kim berates the engineers for again failing to make the uploader work. But Seo-jin offers him a way to succeed.

A package meant for Seo-hae has been downloaded at the Asia Mart. Despite his assistant’s protest, Mr. Park wants to deliver it personally to Seo-hae.

Frustrated with his life, Seo Won-ju decides to hang himself inside his small studio.


Episode 14


Ep. 13 recap:

Tae-sul’s former bodyguard rescues him and Seo-hae. Later on, before he disappears, he gives a small can to Tae-sul and tells him to use it as a last resort.

Seo-jin brings Eddie Kim to a meeting of Korea’s top government officials. Presiding over the meeting is Sigma, who tells everyone about the impending missile strike.

Tae-sul and Seo-hae track down Seo Won-ju in his small studio. But before they can kill him, Tae-sul gets a call from Sigma, who blackmails him about losing Seo-hae. When Mr. Park arrives, Seo-hae sees her father’s severed hand inside the package. In rage, she shoots Seo Won-ju pointblank.
As Seo Won-ju escapes from his studio, Seo-hae runs after him; Tae-sul follows but loses track of Seo-hae. Meanwhile, Sigma convinces Eddie Kim to continue working on the uploader.

Unable to find Seo-hae, Tae-sul stops by a bridge. He remembers what his bodyguard said about the can being the last resort; he opens the can and finds inside some ashes.

Mr. Park goes back to his old neighborhood to see what’s happening to his wife; as he sees his past self abusing his wife, he grabs his gun.

Seo-hae goes to the bunker, carrying her father’s severed hand. As she looks around, she flashes back to her days growing up in the bunker.

Sun searches for Seo-hae by going back to the Chinese restaurant. But he’s captured by the Control Bureau.

With the war only a day away, the top government officials who met with Sigma leave the country.


Episode 15


Ep. 14 recap:

Tae-sul experiences the Time Paradox when he touches the ashes inside the can; his bodyguard had found his grave and placed some of his ashes inside the can.

At the bunker, Tae-sul tells Seo-hae that he had the bunker prepared for her and her parents. As the Time Paradox begins to take effect on him, he locks Seo-hae inside the bunker.

Sigma forces Sun to help find Seo-hae by threatening to bring his mother and sister back to Korea.

After buying some guns from Asia Mart, Tae-sul goes to the Quantum & Time building and calls up Sigma.
Flashback ... Seo Won-ju (the future Sigma) survives the nuclear war.

Present times ... Tae-sul traces Sigma to the basement of the Quantum & Time main office. Meanwhile, Sun gets Seo-hae out of the bunker and immediately drives her to the airport. But Hyeon-gi finds out their location by monitoring the Control Bureau communications.

2035 ... Seo-hae and her father engage the security men in a firefight, using a steel barrier as a battering ram as they run towards the uploader.




Episode 16 (Finale)


Ep. 15 recap:

After killing Sun, Hyeon-gi goes to the Control Bureau and confronts Team 7’s top official.

During the firefight, Seo-hae’s father is shot in the leg. But, excited by the challenge, Sigma allows Seo-hae to go back to the past.

Seo-hae arrives at the church, but Sigma holds Tae-sul hostage; he mocks them, saying that he has manipulated them every step of the way.
Mr. Park goes back to his old neighborhood to kill his abusive self, but his assistant Bingbing stops him. He finds out that Bingbing is his daughter Ji-eun.

After Sigma is shot dead, Tae-sul and Seo-hae go to the basement where the uploader is located. They wait until Eddie Kim leaves before they use the uploader with the help of Mr. Park and his assistants. But Tae-sul has tweaked the code so that the uploader can only be used once.

Tae-sul and Seo-hae come back to the present several hours before the incidents with Sigma in the church. To her surprise and relief, Seo-hae finds out that Sun is alive.

Based on Tae-sul’s instructions, Seo-hae’s father searches for Seo Gil-bok (aka Seo Won-ju) in the park. He finds Seo Gil-bok cowering in a corner and, in act of kindness, gives him his jacket.

Using the sniper rifle that Tae-sul got from Asia Mart, Seo-hae shoots Sigma.

Tae-sul tells Seo-hae that his vision of the future ends there. As they’re saying goodbye, Eddie Kim arrives and shoots Seo-hae. He threatens to kill Seo-hae if Tae-sul doesn’t finish the code for the uploader.

With Seo-hae bleeding to death and Eddie Kim continuing to threaten them, Tae-sul decides to take his own life to save Seo-hae and the world. Before shooting himself, Tae-sul pleads with Seo-hae to somehow find him. After he dies, the missiles on the way to hit Seoul disappear, the nuclear power station doesn’t explode, and the world continues on.


In-depth analysis of the cinematography of “Sisyphus: The Myth”


I was intrigued when I found out that Jin Hyuk was directing this drama. I saw and liked “Brilliant Legacy” aka “Shining Inheritance,” his award-winning directorial debut in 2009. As part of my synopsis for “Brilliant Legacy,” I wrote about its excellent cinematography; thus, I wanted to find out how Jin Hyuk’s visual style has evolved through the years. (Besides “Brilliant Legacy,” he also directed “City Hunter,” “Prosecutor Princess,” “Master’s Sun,” “Doctor Stranger,” and “Legend of the Blue Sea.”)

For a better understanding of terms such as arc shots, tracking shots, dolly, push in, pull out, shaky cam, etc. please read the article “Types of Camera Movements in Film Explained: Definitive Guide” from Studio Binder.

A. Just like “Brilliant Legacy,” “Sisyphus” uses a lot of arc shots (in layperson’s terms, the camera moves in an arc or completely around a character). The arc shots are oftentimes used in combination with tracking shots, push in. push out, rack focus, etc.

1. Continuous or uninterrupted shot of the fight scene on the street in Ep. 4 using arc shot and tracking shot

Tae-sul helps Hyeon-gi escape, but they’re accosted by a Control Bureau officer. The camera arcs almost 360-degrees around the officer, and as a Control Bureau car arrives, Seo-hae shoves the officer aside. The camera tracks Seo-hae as she fights off the agents. This uninterrupted shot lasts around 37 seconds.


Continuous or uninterrupted shots create an immersive experience; they make the viewers think and feel that they’re part of the scene. But uninterrupted shots, especially of a fight scene, take a lot of practice and good coordination for the actors and the cinematographer. If the actors forget the fight’s choreography or the cinematographer is out of place, they would have to reshoot the scene again. That's expensive and time-consuming.

The video below shows the continuous or uninterrupted arc shot and tracking shot of the fight scene beginning at the 0:54 mark.



2. After he’s captured in Ep. 2, Tae-sul waits anxiously in a Control Bureau cell, tries to get a signal on his smartphone, and reaches for his pills. This GIF of the scene shows two arc shots; the arc shots (which aren't smooth) help create in the viewer’s mind Tae-sul’s confusion and helplessness.


3. Same scene in Ep. 2: The Control Bureau official and agents arrive; the camera arcs around Tae-sul, pulls out to a wide shot, pushes in, and then arcs around again to show the official taking his seat opposite Tae-sul. Again, this creates in the viewer’s mind Tae-sul’s confusion and helplessness.


4. Arc shot of Eddie Kim during the press conference where Chairman Kim fails to appear and he has to announce that Tae-sul is no longer the CEO before a hostile crowd of journalists.


5. Arc shot around Tae-sul and then the camera pushes in towards Eddie Kim who’s at the dining table. (Tae-sul and Seo-hae had sneaked into the house, but the alarm system alerted the security.)


6. Tae-sul opens the door, and the camera arcs to the left. The camera pushes out, and as he starts to move forward, the camera pushes in.


7. The camera arcs around Seo-hae; at nearly the end of the arc shot, the camera is against the light. The camera then slowly pushes out for an establishing shot of her bleak surroundings.


8. Arc shots, shooting against the light, and shaky cam

(Note: See “I” below to learn what “shaky cam” is.)

In Ep. 6, Seo-hae calls up her mother but hesitates when her mother answers.

(a) The shot is against the light, and thus the colors look desaturated. As camera arcs to the left, there’s also a subtle shaky cam (unless I’m mistaken because I always get nervous staring at Park Shin Hye’s beautiful face).

(b) After the close-up of Seo-hae’s hands, the next shot is a wide shot, showing Seo-hae sitting at the bench. Notice that the camera subtly arcs to the right.

(c) The next shot of Seo-hae is also against the light, but then the camera subtly arcs to the left until the shot is no longer against the light; although a lens flare is still visible, the colors now look saturated.

I think the last arc shot was used to indicate a change in Seo-hae’s mind; later on, she goes to Asia Mart and gives Mr. Park the key to Tae-san’s suitcase.


The Problem With
Action Movies Today
B. Tracking shots in the fight scenes

Action scenes in recent Holywood movies have been criticized because of their excessive use of fast cuts and “shaky cam” that produces unrealistic, sometimes incomprehensible, scenes. As you can read from the following articles, the problem started when directors misapplied the shaky cam and quick edits as used in the “Bourne” movies directed by Paul Greengrass: “How One Movie Trilogy Ruined Action Fillms Forever”; “Have Directors Forgotten How To Film Action?”; and “Let’s Talk About Shaky Cam.” The action scenes in this drama, on the other hand, are quite realistic; we can actually see Park Shin-hye fighting with the bad guys through the use of tracking shots, medium shots, and wide shots. In the action scenes that do not use tracking shots, there’s still clarity in who does what, where, when, and how.

(1) Fight scene, Ep. 9 at the amusement park; there are two tracking shots, separated by the shot of Seo-hae's mother panicking and calling out for the young Seo-hae.


The video below shows how this fight scene was filmed.



(2) Ep. 2 is famous for Seo-hae’s close quarters, hand to hand fight with the Control Bureau agents inside Sun’s room. As you can see in the GIFs below, the whole action scene uses two tracking shots.

(a) First tracking shot: The fight begins as one Control Bureau agent points his gun at Seo-hae, who sweeps it aside. The shot lasts for about 47 seconds, ending just before Seo-hae smashes a gun against an agent’s face shield. Note: the GIF program that I use limits GIFs to 30 seconds, and so I had to divide this tracking shot into two GIFs.




(b) Second tracking shot: Seo-hae tries to get to Sun, and as an agent grabs her, she smashes a ceramic object or something on the agent’s head. The shot, which lasts around 23 seconds, ends with Seo-hae and the agent crashing through a wooden partition and on to the floor.


Note: As Seo-hae and the agent struggle, there’s a close-up of the agent’s body as Seo-hae tackles him. Next thing we see is the agent hitting the ceiling; there may have been a cut there, which could mean that the next shot of Seo-hae crashing through the (breakaway) wooden partition could have been done by a stunt double for Park Shin-hye. Notice (1) before the crash, we can’t clearly see Park Shin-hye’s face; (2) after the crash, there’s a cut to Sun; and (3) after the cut to Sun, there’s a cut to Park Shin-hye getting up from the floor. The cut to Sun would have been unnecessary if Park shin-hye herself crashed through the partition and landed on the floor.

I couldn’t find the BTS video of the Ep. 2 fight scene, and I don’t read Korean; so, I stand to be corrected on whether it was a stunt double or it was Park Shin-hye herself who crashed through the (breakaway) wooden partition and landed on the floor. But if I were the drama’s director or producer, I would have insisted that a stunt double, rather than Park Shin-hye, crash through that partition and land on the floor.

The video below shows the Ep. 2 fight scene; try to see if you can spot where the tracking shots begin and end.



(3) Ep. 2 fight scene, outside the door of Sun’s apartment, lasting around 28 seconds; besides tracking shot, the cinematographer also uses a whip pan to show (a) Seo-hae firing her gun, (b) the agents in the other house, and then (c) back again to Seo-hae.

Fight scene at the door:


Whip pan (swish pan):


(4) Ep. 2 fight scene, up the stairs and on to the roof, lasting around 30 seconds; there are two tracking shots with the first ending when Seo-hae pushes Sun towards the lower roof. From the way the scene is edited, however, it looks like it’s only one tracking shot. (Actually, there could be three tracking shots, the third being when Seo-hae jumps from the upper roof down to the lower roof.)

Fight scene up the stairs and on to the roof:


Whip pan or swish pan (after Sun lands on the lower roof, the camera whip pans to Seo-hae):


The video below (starting at the 1:32 mark) shows the Ep. 2 fight scene from the door, up the stairs, and on to the rooftop; try to see if you can spot where the tracking shots begin and end. You can also see the camera operator executing the whip pan at the 3:37 mark. (Notice that at the 2:36 mark, there’s a stunt double on standby, but Park Shin-hye does the stunt herself and seems to be enjoying herself doing the stunt.)



(5) Ep. 12, school fight scene, two tracking shots; Seo-hae is attacked by a female agent of the Control Bureau; the first tracking shot lasts for around 13 seconds. As the agent spins Seo-hae towards the staircase, there’s a cut, and the second tracking shot, lasting around 8 seconds, ends with the agent lying at the bottom of the staircase. (It could have been just one tracking shot, but I tried slowing down the video and studying it, and there seems to be a cut when the agent spins Seo-hae towards the staircase.)


C. Not all the fight scenes in “Sisyphus” use tracking shots; other scenes use “cuts” aka “edits.” (A cut is “the point at which one shot ends and the next begins. Usually made by splicing two pieces of film together.”) Despite the fast cuts, especially in the Ep. 8 fight scene, there’s still clarity in who does what, where, when, and how.

Fight scene in Ep. 4: There are five cuts showing a Control Bureau agent hitting Seo-hae on the back and Seo-hae reacting in pain.


Fight scene in Ep. 6: There are five cuts showing Seo-hae fighting off two Control Bureau agents during the party.


Fight scene in Ep. 15 between Seo-hae and Hyeon-gi: Despite the 18 to 20 fast cuts in this scene, there’s clarity in who does what and how.


Fight scene in Ep. 8: There are around 29 cuts in this fight scene between Seo-hae and the man who ran away from Sigma's apartment. (Note: I had to cut the scene because of the 30-second limit of the GIF program that I use.)


The video below shows how this fight scene from Ep. 8 was filmed.



D. Cross cutting in Ep. 4: “Cross cutting is taking two or more scenes and cutting between them as they progress; it is used to establish actions taking place at the same time, whether in the same place or not.”

In Ep. 4, Tae-sul tries to escape with Hyeon-gi from the Control Bureau agents by hacking an electric car’s computer system. Meanwhile, on the street, Seo-hae is fighting off the agents. The scenes cross cut between Tae-sul fiddling with the electric car’s system to start the car and Seo-hae fighting off the agents; the cross cutting makes the scenes comedic and exciting at the same time.


E. Chiaroscuro (interplay of light and shadow): In Ep. 10, Tae-sul goes to the orphanage looking for Agnes. After he’s captured, Sigma arrives. Notice the beautiful interplay of lights and shadows as Sigma goes through the door and approaches Tae-sul.


In Ep. 11, again, notice the beautiful interplay of lights and shadows as Sigma leaves the orphanage.


Thie video below (at the 3:30 mark) shows the beautiful chiaroscuro as Sigma enters the orphanage and approaches Tae-sul.



F. Camera roll: The article “Types of Camera Movements in Film Explained: Definitive Guide” from Studio Binder explains:

“The camera roll is a rotational camera movement that rotates the camera over its side on its long axis. Rolls can be dizzying and unnatural. For this reason, filmmakers use it to disorient the audience or create uneasiness. It’s specific effect makes it a very intentional camera movement that should only be used when wanting to elicit a discomfort in the audience.”

In Ep. 7, Sun runs from store to store in trying to bet on the lottery with the numbers given by Seo-hae. To reinforce in the viewer’s mind Sun’s state of desperation as the deadline for that day’s lottery is about to end, the cinematographer uses a “camera roll.”


G. Dutch angle shot of a moving subject

The GIF below does not show a “camera roll”; it's a Dutch angle shot of a moving subject. Oftentimes, a Dutch angle or Dutch tilt shows a static subject, but in this case, the shot shows Seo-hae walking forward towards the camera. (It seems also that the camera is pushing in towards Seo-hae.)


H. Push in and push out

Tae-sul and Seo-hae tripped the alarm system as they sneaked into the house. The camera pushes in towards Tae-sul and Seo-hae and then pushes out showing the corridor leading to the door, with Tae-sul and Seo-hae looking at each other as they form a natural frame for the corridor. The camera then pushes in to show Eddie Kim and the security men arriving. (Notice that, at the very last moment, Cho Seung-woo gives a side eye to the camera operator.)


The video below shows how this scene was filmed. Notice that Cho Seung-woo and Park Shin-hye had to move aside as the camera operator moved forward in between them.



I. Shaky cam

Studio Binder in its article titled “The Handheld Shot in Film — Definition and Examples” states:

“The handheld shot is notorious for being the overly shaky cam used in modern action films. But filmmakers have utilized it, tweaked it, and innovated the shot in new ways to help them tell their story. From shaky cams, to shoulder mounts and easy rigs, the handheld shot is a type of shooting that does not rely on a fixed camera position.”

The article lists three reasons why a handheld shot is used: (1) to establish subjectivity; (2) heighten intensity or chaos, and (3) create intimacy between the characters.

(1) In Ep. 6, Tae-sul confronts Chairman Kim when he finds out that their company Quantum & Time has entered into a techonology-transfer agreement with Sigma. Notice the subtle camera shake as he and Chairman Kim argue about the transfer agreement; the shaky cam heightens in the viewer’s mind the tension between them.


(2) In Ep. 11, Seo-hae cries as she thinks that Tae-sul died while trying to save her. Notice the subtle camera shake as she cries after Tae-sul becomes conscious; the shaky cam heightens Seo-hae’s emotions and builds intimacy between them. (To better see the subtle shaky cam, look at the background rather than at Seo-hae or Tae-sul; with the shots of Tae-sul, the shaky cam is almost imperceptible.)


J. Rack focus: an object in the foreground is in focus, while an object in the background is out of focus (or vice versa); the object in the foreground then becomes out of focus, while the object in the background becomes in focus (or vice versa).

Example of rack focus from Ep. 11: Eddie Kim (background) is in focus, while Seo-jin (foreground) is put of focus. Then Eddie Kim becomes out of focus as Seo-jin becomes in focus. About two seconds later, Seo-jin becomes out of focus again as Eddie Kim becomes in focus.


Example of rack focus from Ep. 2: The tomato in the foreground is in focus; as the camera moves to the right, the tomato becomes out of focus, while Seo-hae becomes in focus. (When the camera moves parallel to the subject, it's called a “trucking shot.”)


K. Panning, arc shot, and rack focus

The camera pans (moves on a horizontal axis) from Chairman Kim to Seo-jin; as the camera arcs to the right and as Seo-jin turns to her right, she becomes out of focus, and the family portrait in the background becomes in focus.


L. Miscellaneous observations

(a) This GIF shows Sigma and a Control Bureau officer as they go through a door and walk through the corridor. The shot begins with a bird’s eyeview of them going through the door; as they continue walking, the camera tilts upward to keep them in frame.


(b) This shot begins with the camera pointing upward at the Asia Mart store sign and then tilts down (or is it a pull out?). As the camera starts to push in, Mr. Park’s assistant enters the frame; the camera continues to push in, tracking him. Notice that the camera stops moving once it reaches the door; this makes me think that the camera was on a crane.


This shot reminds me of a somewhat similar shot from “Brilliant Inheritance”:


(c) Tracking shot by drone

In Ep. 5, Seo-hae becomes angry and confused when Tae-sul tells her to live her own life and not bother him. She refuses the money that Tae-sul offers and walks away. As she starts to run, a drone tracks her in between buildings and out into the streets.


Drones have been used in cinematography for several years now because they are far cheaper to use than helicopters; they can also be used in places where a helicopter can’t be used.

The article “Eye in the sky: how drone technology is transforming film-making” (The Guardian, August 2020) says: “The aerial shot has become a cinematic cliche – but French drama Les Misérables gives airborne cameras a powerful new role.” The article describes the 2019 French movie “Les Misérables” directed by Ladj Ly where a young man, who uses a drone to spy on women, accidentally records a crime. The movie won the Jury Prize in the Cannes Film Festival and was nominated for the Oscars. The article concludes: “The film indicates a future for the drone in cinema: as part of the action itself rather than a slick, stylistic embellishment.”

The article compares the movie to Brian De Palma’s 1981 movie “Blow Out” starring John Travolta. In “Blow Out,” John Travolta’s character, a movie sound effects technician, records audio about an assassination.

“Blow Out” was based on Michelangelo Antonioni’s 1966 classic film “Blow Up.” The movie tells the story of a fashion photographer (played by David Hemmings) who thinks that he caught on film a murder in the park. The movie is famous for its enigmatic ending — as two mime artists play tennis in the park, David Hemmings’ character begins to smile. When I first saw “Blow Up” in the late 1970s, I couldn’t understand what it was trying to say, but it piqued my interest in learning how to process black-and-white film and to print pictures in a darkroom. (It was only after I read Francis Schaeffer’s book “Death in the City” did I come to understand what Antonioni was saying in his movie, that is, everything is relative. and that there are no absolute standards in the world.)

M. Things I’m still learning about are the differences between zoom in/zoom out and push in/pull out.

As a photographer, I’m used to zooming in or zooming out of my subject (my favorite zoom lens during my film-based days was the Vivitar 28-200 super zoom lens). Thus, I find it difficult to distingush between zoom in/zoom out and push in/pull out. With the two scenes below, I thought that the cinematographer zoomed out, but a film major told me that these shots are pull outs (with the first scene involving a change in focal length).




Lessons in photography from “Sisyphus: The Myth”

Shallow depth of field, foreground and background blur
Out of focus highlights
Low angle shot, juxtaposition
Background blur
Low angle shot, shooting against the light
Dutch angle, leading lines
Sidelighting, background blur
Low angle shot, Dutch angle
Low angle shot
Warm colors, foreground and background blur
Dutch angle or Dutch tilt
Lens flare
Dutch angle or Dutch tilt
Lens flare, keystoning
Sidelighting, background blur

Reflections
Baroque diagonal (Dynamic Symmetry)
Lines of direction, background blur
Compressed perspective, background blur
Dutch angle or Dutch tilt
Dutch angle or Dutch tilt
Low angle shot
Baroque diagonal (Dynamic Symmetry)
Extreme close-up, Dutch angle or Dutch tilt

Monday, March 01, 2021

“The World of the Married” synopsis by episode (Eps. 1-16, no spoilers)

(Click the picture above to view or download a bigger,
uncropped copy in another tab.)



Jump to synopsis of Ep. 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 8; 9; 10; 11; 12; 13; 14; 15; 16 (Finale); How I wrote this synopsis without spoilers; Historical / cultural backgrounders and other information; Life lessons from “The World of The Married”; Lessons in photography from “The World of the Married”

From Wikipedia: “The World of the Married” is a 2020 South Korean television series starring Kim Hee-ae, Park Hae-joon, and Han So-hee. Based on BBC One’s drama series Doctor Foster written by Mike Bartlett, it tells a story of a married couple whose betrayal of one another leads to a whirlwind of revenge, grief, forgiveness and healing. It aired on JTBC on Fridays and Saturdays from March 27 to May 16, 2020.

The series is the highest-rated drama in Korean cable television history, overtaking “SKY Castle” with its final episode reaching a nationwide rating of 28.371%. It also recorded the highest average rating for a drama on cable television, with an average rating of 18.829%. Although the series was criticized for its portrayal of sex and violence, it received critical acclaim for its screenplay, direction and acting performances, with Mo Wan-il winning Best Director and Kim Hee-ae winning Best Actress at the 56th Baeksang Arts Awards.

How I wrote these episode summaries without 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. 16 (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


Ji Sun-woo is a doctor and Vice Director of Family Love Hospital. She has been happily married to Lee Tae-oh (president of an events company and an aspiring film director), and they have a teenage son named Joon-young. But now that she’s in her 40s, she begins to worry about her looks.

After dealing with an incident involving one of the hospital’s doctors and with the demands of her patients, she becomes suspicious of Tae-oh when she finds a brownish/reddish strand of hair on her scarf and later meets someone who works for Tae-oh.

Sun-woo becomes suspicious of all the women Tae-oh knows who have brownish/reddish hair. She also becomes suspicious of her neighbor Ko Ye-rim who not only has brownish/reddish hair but also the same lip gloss that Tae-oh has. Ye-rim says that the brownish/reddish hair trended in their neighborhood after it was started by Eom Hyo-jung, who’s a former Miss Korea and an artist. Later, while checking Tae-oh’s cellphone, she sees a text message from someone asking Tae-oh to meet at a restaurant.

Sun-woo’s colleague Sul Myung-sook tries to change her mind about Tae-oh’s possible infidelity. Later, Sun-woo impulsively leaves the hospital and goes to Tae-oh’s workplace. She sees Tae-oh going out of a store with roses and a gift; as Tae-oh speeds away in his car, she follows him.

Desperate to know the truth, Sun-woo asks her patient Hyeon-seo to follow Tae-oh wherever he goes. Hyeo-seo agrees, in exchange for a prescription for sleeping pills.


Episode 2


Ep. 1 recap:

During Tae-oh’s birthday party and through Hyeon-seo’s report, Sun-woo finds out that Tae-oh is having an affair with Da-kyung, the daughter of Eom Hyo-jung. Through the pictures in Tae-oh’s cellphone, she finds out that he has been openly dating Da-kyung.

She also finds out that her colleague Myung-sook has been texting her husband about her suspicions about his infidelity.
Sun-woo backs out of her impulse to stab Tae-oh in front of everyone. Later, her friend Ye-rim introduces her to Da-kyung, who’s a Pilates instructor.

After fighting with his accountant Jae-hyuk, Tae-oh meets Da-kyung in a secluded place; as they kiss, somebody secretly videos them.

The next day, Da-kyung goes to the hospital for a medical consultation; later, Sun-woo goes home and throws Tae-oh’s things into a suitcase and rips off her pictures with Tae-oh. Joon-young and Myung-sook arrive, with Joon-young going straight to his bedroom. She offers Myung-sook a drink, who teases her that Ye-rim’s husband, Jae-hyuk, likes her. In response, she asks Myung-sook why she didn’t tell her about Tae-oh’s affair with Da-kyung.

Sun-woo intervenes in the abusive relationship between Hyeon-seo and her boyfriend. In her office, she treats Hyeon-seo’s wounds; when she asks what her plans are, however, Hyeon-seo says that she’ll stay temporarily in a “jjimjilbang” (traditional bathhouse) and eventually return to her boyfriend. Hyeon-seo, on the other hand, assures Sun-woo that Tae-oh, just like other men, was just tempted to have an affair with a younger woman.


Episode 3


Ep. 2 recap:

Sun-woo is emotionally devastated to find out that Da-kyung is pregnant. On the other hand, Da-kyung asks Myung-sook to give her an abortion.

The person who took the video of Tae-oh and Da-kyung kissing at the party is Dong-sik, Sun-woo’s patient.

Da-kyung threatens to break up with Tae-oh if he doesn’t divorce Sun-woo.

When Sun-woo confronts him if he has a girlfriend, Tae-oh denies it, but minutes later, he gets a phone call from Myung-sook, who tells him that Da-kyung is pregnant.
Tae-oh rushes out of the house to see Da-kyung. When he assures her of his love for her, Da-kyung becomes demanding and challenges him to prove it.

Sun-woo consults a divorce lawyer on what to do and what kind of evidence she needs against Tae-oh. Meanwhile, at her home, Ye-rim overhears Joon-young talking to his friend No-eul about how parents act when they’re about to divorce.

After meeting with the divorce lawyer, Sun-woo goes to the bank to look at her family’s financial status. To her shock, she finds out that Tae-oh has taken out a loan using their house and Joon-young’s college fund as collateral.

At the hospital, Sun-woo’s mother-in-law confesses to her that she knew about Tae-oh’s affair; she pleads with Sun-woo not to divorce Tae-oh and to continue living with him for Joon-young’s sake.


Episode 4


Ep. 3 recap:

During a chance meeting in a bookstore, Da-kyung tells Sun-woo that the man she’s involved with the for the last two years is planning to get a divorce within the next several months.

Sun-woo finds numerous bills that Tae-oh incurred in paying for things he bought for Da-kyung, such as an expensive bag worth thousands of dollars.

Joon-young tells Sun-woo not to get a divorce.

During the funeral for her mother-in-law, Sun-woo sees Tae-oh and Da-kyung inside a car, kissing and hugging each other. From afar, Je-hyuk, Ye-rim’s husband, also sees what’s happening.
The divorce lawyer advises Sun-woo that secrecy is the key to a successful divorce; he tells Sun-woo to act as normally as possible with Tae-oh.

Sun-woo gets a call from Hyeon-seo, who says that she’s starting to become close with Dak-yung and is about to go to her apartment. As Sun-woo searches Tae-oh’s car for the bag, she gets soaked under the rain, but Ye-rim’s husband, Jae-hyuk, appears and puts an umbrella over her.

At the hospital, an elderly, elegant woman sees Sun-woo for a consultation, after Sun-woo was recommended by Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu, Da-kyung’s father. To the woman’s shock, Sun-woo tells her that she has a sexually transmitted disease.

When Tae-oh leaves the house late at night, Sun-woo calls up Hyeon-seo and tells her to follow Tae-oh. Hyeon-seo records Tae-oh as he goes to Da-kyung’s apartment. But as she follows Tae-oh, her ex-boyfriend appears.

During a family night out, Sun-woo, Tae-oh, and Joon-young meet Da-kyung and her parents. As they have dinner together, Sun-woo casually asks Da-kyung about her romantic relationship.


Episode 5


Ep. 4 recap:

Hyeon-seo’s ex-boyfriend blackmails Sun-woo that if she doesn’t give him 30,000 US dollars, he will publicize the video recording of Tae-oh going to Da-kyung’s apartment.

Hyeon-seo shows up, badly beaten, in Da-kyung’s apartment and says that she decided to have an abortion.

Sun-woo has a one-night stand with Jae-hyuk; the next day, she threatens to tell Ye-rim about what happened unless he give her copies of the financial statements of Tae-oh’s company.
In the hospital, Sun-woo meets the man she met at the hotel elevator; he’s Kim Yoon-ki, the new doctor who’s replacing Dr. Ma, who was previously terminated. Later, after meeting Jae-hyuk, she finds out that Tae-oh’s company is bankrupt.

After a nasty incident with one of her patients, Sun-woo meets Ye-rim, who confides that she wants to have a baby but Jae-hyuk doesn’t want to. Sun-woo advises her that she and Jae-hyuk should seek counseling with the hospital’s new doctor.

When Sun-woo fails to come to the hotel, Jae-hyuk becomes angry and goes to her house. He tells her about what he found out about Tae-oh’s financial transactions, but he becomes angrier when she says that her lawyer will now take over.

Da-kyung leaves her apartment and decides to go back to her parents’ mansion.

Sun-woo continues to be blackmailed by Hyeon-seo’s ex-boyfriend. Later, after getting drunk in a makeshift bar, she finds herself out on the street under the rain. As she remembers an accident years ago, she walks into the path of an oncoming car.


Episode 6


Ep. 5 recap:

Dr. Ma, the disgraced doctor, saves Sun-woo from getting hit by the oncoming car. Later, Sun-woo confesses to him everything that’s happening to her family.

Jae-hyuk tells Sun-woo that Tae-oh has secretly set aside 320,000 US dollars. Later, he also says that Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu is Tae-oh’s secret investor.

During dinner at Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu and Hyo-jung’s mansion, chaos and anger erupt when Sun-woo reveals that Tae-oh and Da-kyung are having an affair and that Da-kyung is pregnant.

Jae-hyuk goes to the hotel room, expecting to see Sun-woo. Instead, he sees Ye-rim there.
Tae-oh tells Sun-woo that she cannot prevent him from seeing their son Joon-young, but Sun-woo stuns him by saying that Joon-young knows about his affair with Da-kyung. Meanwhile, at the hotel, Jae-hyuk admits to Ye-rim that he has been having affairs and had a one-night stand with Sun-woo.

The next day, Sun-woo sends the divorce papers to Tae-oh. Later, at the hospital, she tells Hyeon-seo’s ex-boyfriend that she won’t give in to his blackmail. The ex-boyfriend thus reveals to Tae-oh and Da-kyung how Sun-woo asked Hyeon-seo to spy on them.

Sun-woo’s patients cancel their appointments when numerous negative posts about her begin appearing in the hospital’s website.

Tae-oh confronts Sun-woo in the hospital director’s office, telling her that he will fight for custody of Joon-young. Sun-woo rushes out of the office and races to Joon-young’s school. Despite Joon-young’s protests, she takes him up to the mountains. But Tae-oh uses the tracker in Joon-young’s phone to follow them.

Back at home, Joon-young sees his mother Sun-woo with a bloodied face after she has been beaten up by Tae-oh.


Episode 7


Ep. 6 recap:

Sun-woo gets a restraining order against Tae-oh and everything she asked for in her petition for divorce.

Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu cuts off Da-kyung financially when she refuses to leave Tae-oh.

Two years later ...

Sun-woo tries to live as normal as possible, with Joon-hyung now in high school. Yoon-ki continues to try and win her affection.

Joon-young gets an invitation to the welcome back party of his father Tae-oh, Da-kyung, and their daughter Jenny. Now rich and successful, Tae-oh has returned to Gosan; the invitation shows the grand house he and his family will be living in.
The women’s association holds a pro bono event, with Sun-woo and Myung-sook giving check-ups. Meanwhile, Tae-oh goes to Joon-young’s school and tries to win back his affection with a special gift.

While everyone talks behind Sun-woo’s back about Tae-oh’s successful movie and his fabulous return to town, Hyo-jung continues calling all the town’s VIPs for the housewarming party. But Da-kyung says that she doesn’t care if no one from the town comes to the party.

Later, as the party is going on, Sun-woo goes to a bar and drinks by herself. Yoon-ki arrives and tries to comfort her. But then, she gets a message with a picture of Tae-oh and Joon-young enjoying themselves at the party. Despite Yoon-ki’s caution, she leaves and goes to the party to get Joon-young.


Episode 8


Ep. 7 recap:

Tae-oh and Da-Kyung argue over Tae-oh’s plan to give to Joon-young one of the rooms in their house.

Sun-woo causes a commotion at the party as she looks for Joon-young in all the rooms of the house. On their way home, Joon-young becomes irritated at seeing Yoon-sik driving for them.

Tae-oh meets the hospital director and Myung-sook and tells them that his company will make a large donation to the hospital. But he wants Sun-woo removed as the hospital’s Vice Director.

At home, while Sun-woo and Joon-young are having dinner, someone throws a rock that breaks a window.
The security men fail to find any trace of the intruder who broke the glass window. After they leave, Tae-oh arrives, and despite Sun-woo’s objection, he helps repair the window.

During a gathering of the women’s association, conflict arises among the members, with Ye-rim on one side and Da-kyung and her mother on the other side. Myung-sook, meanwhile, gets the help of the hospital director’s wife to help her take Sun-woo’s place as Vice Director. The hospital director’s wife promises to speak to the wife of the hospital’s chairman on her behalf.

Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu finds out about Tae-oh’s plan to donate money to the hospital; he warns Tae-oh about using their company’s money and tells him to make sure that Sun-woo is removed ad Vice Director.

To Sun-woo’s surprise, she finds Joon-young in the hospital as he visits Yoon-sik. Because of Yoon-ki’s advice, she later on allows Joon-yoong to have dinner in Tae-oh’s house.

Late that night, the intruder comes back and breaks into Sun-woo’s house. Sun-woo tries to escape, but the intruder drags her back and then chokes her.

Episode 9


Ep. 8 recap:

Joon-young has been in counseling for the last six months because he feels guilty about causing his parents’ divorce.

Sun-woo fights back, and the intruder escapes. The intruder turns out to be Hyeon-seo’s ex-boyfriend, who has been hired by Tae-oh.

Based on what she heard from the members of the women’s association, Hyeon-seo tells Sun-woo about the plan to kick her out as the hospital’s Vice Director. After hearing about the plan, Sun-woo confronts Tae-oh in his office. Tae-oh tells her that he wants custody of Joon-young and that she should leave town and start somewhere else.

Sun-woo becomes part of the women’s association, with the support of the hospital chairman’s wife and of Da-kyung.


Sun-woo warns Da-kyung about Tae-oh’s real character and that he’s stalking her. Da-kyung dismisses her allegation, but later on, she witnesses Tae-oh’s jealousy when they meet Sun-woo and Yoon-ki in a restaurant.

Myung-sook and Tae-oh continue their personal crusade of getting Sun-woo removed as the hospital’s Vice Director. He schedules a dinner meeting with Sun-woo, the Director, and Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu.

Despite being berated and warned off by Tae-oh, In-kyu continues to spy on Sun-woo. Meanwhile, Joon-young’s guilt and anxieties get him into trouble in school.

Before the scheduled dinner-meeting, Sun-woo receives a parcel; inside it are a dead bird and a picture of Joon-young. When she couldn’t find Joon-young in the “hagwon” (cram school), she contacts the police.

Episode 10


Ep. 9 recap:

After breaking up with the barista he’s having an affair with, Jae-hyuk tells Ye-rim that they should try having a baby.

Joon-young begins stealing things from his classmates.

The Director tells Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu that he’s grateful for the donations but that Sun-woo is the best qualified as Vice Director. In reply, Chairman Yeo mentions that Yoon-ki will be a good Vice Director.

Sun-woo finally finds Joon-young, but she also bumps into In-kyu who looks at her menacingly.

Da-kyung is stunned to find photos of Tae-oh stalking Sun-woo.

Despite Sun-woo’s warning, Hyeon-seo meets In-kyu, who promises to treat her better if they reconcile. Later, In-kyu blackmails Tae-oh and asks for more money, or else he will report everything to the police.

Chairman Yeo asks Yoon-ik what’s the real score between Tae-oh and Sun-woo.
After he meets Joon-young in a garage filled with fancy looking cars, Yoon-ik continues his conversation with Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu in a Japanese style restaurant. Chairman Yeo asks him what his feelings are for Sun-woo.

With In-kyu’s words echoing in his mind, Tae-oh barges into Sun-woo’s house where he finds her watching their wedding video.

The next day, Sun-woo arrives late in the hospital. She sees Ye-rim and Jae-hyuk there; intent on having a baby, they have scheduled examinations with Myung-sook. Later, she becomes worried about Hyeon-seo and leaves the hospital to look for her. As she talks to Hyeon-seo in the spa, Da-kyung sees them.

To Sun-woo’s surprise, the Director tells her that because of the large donations from Chairman Yeo’s company, Yoon-ik will replace her as the Vice Director. Later, at the driving range, she meets Chairman Yeo who advises her to leave Gosun and start life somewhere else.

In-kyu tries to win back Hyeon-seo with expensive jewelry and money. When Hyeon-seo calls her, Sun-woo goes to In-kyu’s house alone and confronts him. But In-kyu becomes enraged and throws her against the window and knocks her out.

Episode 11


Ep. 10 recap:

Sun-woo finds out the connection between Yoon-ik and Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu, but Yoon-ik tries to reassure her that he’s doing everything for her sake.

After finding out about the affair between Jae-hyuk and the barista, Ye-rim kicks him out of the house and plans to file for divorce. When Sun-woo asks what’s happening, Jae-hyuk warns her that Tae-oh entrapped him and could do the same to her.

Sun-woo takes Hyeon-Seo to the train station so that she can begin life somewhere else. But In-kyu catches up with Hyeon-Seo in the station. After finding in her car the money that she gave to Hyeon-seo, Sun-woo hurries back to the station. She sees a commotion and is shocked to see a bloody body on the ground.
Because of the scarf, Sun-woo thinks that the dead body is that of Hyeon-seo. But Yoon-ik takes her away from the station, reassuring her that Hyeon-seo is alive.

The next day, Sun-woo asks Yoon-ik what he was doing at the station. Meanwhile, Tae-oh asks Da-kyung how she knows that it was In-kyu who died at the station. He’s shocked when Da-kyung tells him that the police will investigate him for In-kyu’s death.

Because of the scarf, a police investigator goes to the hospital and asks Sun-woo some questions; he also says that she will be called to a formal investigation. Rumors begin flying in the hospital, the women’s club, and Joon-young’s school about Sun-woo’s involvement in In-kyu’s death.

Tae-oh confronts Sun-woo and accuses her of killing In-kyu. Later on, Sun-woo finds out that there was no CCTV footage covering the 12-hour period before and after In-kyu’s death.

Episode 12


Ep. 11 recap:

Da-kyung finds Tae-oh’s bloody clothes.

Hyeon-seo tells Sun-woo that Tae-oh killed In-kyu and gives her Tae-oh’s wedding ring as proof.

Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu orders Da-kyung’s spy to get the CCTV footage from the station.

Yoon-ik refuses the offer for him to become the Vice Director.

After she sees Sun-woo meeting Chairman Yeo, Hyeon-seo goes to the police station. On his way out of his office, Tae-oh is stopped by the police and brought to the station.
At the police station, Sun-woo disputes Hyeon-seo’s account of In-kyu’s death and provides an alibi for Tae-oh.

Sun-woo confronts the woman whose son has been has been spreading in Joon-young’s school rumors about her involvement in In-kyu’s death. But Joon-young goes to her office in the hospital and demands to know what she told his classmate’s mother.

When Joon-young decides to live with his father and Da-kyung, Sun-woon begins looking for a place where can start to build a new life.

Episode 13


Ep. 12 recap:

The CCTV footage shows that In-kyu committed suicide. But Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu keeps silent about the footage because he wants Tae-oh to be charged with murder.

Tae-oh finds out that Da-kyung wants to send Joon-young to study abroad; as they argue about it, Joon-young hears them.

In a rush of passion, Sun-woo and Tae-oh have sex.
As Tae-oh leaves Sun-woo’s house, someone is watching him from afar. At home, he finds out from Da-kyung that his daughter is sick; meanwhile, Sun-woo learns from Dr. Ma, her former colleague, about an opening for a doctor in Busan.

Sun-woo and Tae-oh rush to Joon-young’s school because he beat up his classmate who has been spreading rumors about Sun-woo’s involvement in In-kyu’s death. Sun-woo goes to the hospital to apologize to Joon-young’s classmate and his mother. But the mother says that they will proceed with the school’s investigation of the incident. On the other hand, Tae-oh takes Joon-young to the gaming station to apologize to the owner.

After learning that Joon-young has been stealing things from his classmates, Sun-woo goes to his room and inspects all his drawers.

Episode 14


Ep. 13 recap:

On her knees, Sun-woo asks the mother of Joon-young’s classmate for forgiveness.

To their shock, Sun-woo and Tae-oh find out that Joon-young saw them kissing.
Sun-woo and Tae-oh are mortified to find out that Joon-young saw them kissing. In the way home, Tae-oh tries to reassure Joon-young that everything will be okay because Sun-woo is leaving Gosun.

Tension erupts in the hospital when Sun-woo’s misdiagnosis causes her patient to suffer pain and bleeding in her stomach. The patient’s father threatens to sue the hospital if something bad happens to his daughter. When the Director scolds her about her poor performance lately, Sun-woo submits her letter of resignation and package her things in the office.

Tae-oh takes Joon-young to a psychiatrist who was recommended by Da-kyung. on the other hand, as a depressed Sun-woo visits her former colleague Dr. Ma at a seaside hospital, Myung-sook is appointed as the new Vice Director.

The next day, Dr. Ma finds that Sun-woo is missing from the hotel she’s staying in. He begins looking for her in all the beaches in the area and then calls up Yoon-ik.

As she looks at the water from the beach, Sun-woo remembers her parents’ funeral wake and how people talked about how her father cheated on her mother and that it was a suicide, not an accident. She takes off her jacket and walks towards the water.

Episode 15


Ep. 14 recap:

Yoon-ik saves Sun-woo and takes her out of the water; Tae-oh sees them from a distance and tries to hold back his tears as he walks away.

During the party, Da-kyung accuses Joon-young of hurting her daughter, and Tae-oh slaps him.

After Joon-young calls her up, Sun-woo rushes to Da-kyung’s house. Da-Kyung refuses to let Joon-young go without any word from Tae-oh. But Sun-woo questions the reason why she wants Joon-young to live with her and Tae-oh. When Da-kyung says that her marriage is different, Sun-woo shocks her by saying that she and Tae-oh slept together.
Da-kyung confronts Tae-oh about Sun-woo’s claim that she slept with Tae-oh. Meanwhile, Sun-woo tries to explain to Joon-young what happened between her and Tae-oh.

Tae-oh confronts Sun-woo about what she said to Dak-yung. After their argument, Sun-woo surprises the spy who has been monitoring her and tells him that she wants to speak to Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu.

After Sun-woo puts her house up for sale, Da-kyung visits the house with the real estate agent. Later on, Da-kyung meets Sun-woo and tells her that she will convince Tae-oh to give up his rights over Joon-young. But when she threatens Sun-woo not to bother her and Tae-oh anymore, Sun-woo takes her to her house and shows her what’s in her closet.

Tae-oh becomes enraged with Sun-woo. He tries to force open Sun-woo’s car, but she stays put. But when he threatens to turn Joon-young against her, she accelerates her car towards him.

Episode 16, Finale (with spoilers)


Ep. 15 recap:

Sun-woo shows Da-kyung that they have the same perfume and lingerie, which Tae-oh himself picked. She tells Da-kyung that when somebody else like her shows up, Tae-oh will cheat on her.

Encouraged by her parents, Da-kyung files for divorce against Tae-oh. Chairman Yeo Byung-kyu also cuts off Tae-of financially and kicks him out of the company.

One month later, Sun-woo goes back to her work in Family Love Hospital. But when she gets home that night, she finds a note from Tae-oh saying that he has taken Joon-young with him.
Flashback ... Sun-woo and Joon-young go back to their house in Gosan and try to re-establish their lives. Together with Myung-sook and Yoon-ki, they celebrate in a restaurant with Ye-rim and Jae-hyuk who have reconciled.

Present times ... Sun-woo finds Tae-oh and Joon-young near a river. Later on, in a fancy restaurant, Tae-oh cries and begs Sun-woo that they should get back together as a family.

Sun-woo rejects Tae-oh, but as she and Joon-young are about to drive away, Tae-oh nearly gets run over by a bus. Sun-woo tends to him, but Joon-young runs away.

One year later ...

Tae-oh continues to struggle to get his screenplay accepted.

Da-kyung is studying art.

Joon-young comes back home to Sun-woo.

Historical / cultural backgrounders and other information


Index: A. “The World of the Married” is the most watched drama on Korea’s cable TV history; B. As of 2015, adultery is no longer considered as a crime in South Korea; C. Statistics on marital infidelity in South Korea: 50% of Korean men have cheated on their wives; D. Domestic violence (intimate partner violence) in South Korea; E. In Korea, the offending spouse cannot file for divorce.

A. “The World of the Married” is the most watched drama on Korea’s cable TV history.

1. “TV drama ’The World of the Married’ sets ratings record” (The Korea Times)

The series started with a 6.3 percent rating, but has soared as it became the talk of the town with its intense, unpredictable storyline and much-teased cliffhanger for each episode.

2. “The World Of The Married ends on a high, sets record as most watched South Korean cable drama” (The Straits Times, May 2020)

According to data analytics firm Nielsen Korea, the 16-part series on cable network JTBC achieved a record peak rating of 28.4 per cent for its last episode, beating its own record of 24.4 percent from the night before, K-pop news website Soompi reported.

B. As of 2015, adultery is no longer considered as a crime in South Korea.

This drama revolves on the issue of adultery committed by the husband (Tae-oh) with a younger woman (Da-kyung) and how it impacted his marriage to his wife (Sun-woo). In 2015, the Korean Constitutional Court ruled that adultery is no longer considered as a crime.

1. “Court rules: Adultery no longer a crime in South Korea” (CNN)

Since 1953, a South Korean could get 2 years in prison for cheating on his or her spouse.

The Asian nation’s Constitutional Court overturned that law, saying times have changed.

A South Korean condom maker’s stock price soars 15% after the decision comes out.

2. “South Korea legalises adultery” (The Guardian)

3. “South Korean court decriminalises adultery” (BBC)

4. “South Korea sees surge in infidelity after law change ending jail for adultery” (Telegraph, September 2015)

C. Statistics on marital infidelity in South Korea: 50% of Korean men have cheated on their wives.

“Half of married Korean men have cheated: Study” (The Korea Herald/Asia News Network, August 2016) by Claire Lee:

The study was jointly compiled by Lina Korea -- the Korean unit of U.S. insurance giant CIGNA -- and a local sexologist clinic, and surveyed some 1,100 Koreans aged 20 or older.

The study found that 50.8 percent of the surveyed men, and 9.3 percent of the surveyed women, have cheated on their legal spouses at least once.

The study also found that the surveyed Korean men in their 50s had extramarital affairs with an average of 12.5 partners.

D. Domestic violence (intimate partner violence) in South Korea

This drama shows some of its characters experiencing intimate partner violence. Hyeon-seo is battered by her boyfriend, as we can see in Eps. 1-2, while Sun-woo is beaten up by Tae-oh in Ep. 6.

1. “Korean #MeToo spurs jump in reports of domestic violence” (Financial Times, 2018) by Bryan Harris and Kang Buseong

Police data released last week showed a 75 per cent jump in the number of household abuse cases reported to authorities over the past four years. Almost 280,000 cases were reported last year, up from 160,000 when the police began compiling centralised records in 2013.

2. “Almost 80% of South Korean men have abused girlfriend, study claims” (The Telegraph, August 2017) by Nicola Smith

3. “8 in 10 South Korean men used violence against girlfriends: Study” (The Straits Times, August 2017)

According to a study conducted by the Korean Institute of Criminology, 1,593 out of 2,000 South Korean men, or 79.7 per cent, said they had abused a girlfriend during the dating period.

About 71 per cent of those who admitted to a history of dating abuse said they had control over their girlfriends’ activities, such as restricting them from meeting friends or keeping them isolated from others, including family members.

4. “Violence, women and marriage” (The Korea Times) by Bernard Rowan

In February 2018, Statista.com reported South Koreans considered domestic abuse against women and girls the number one social issue. Violence sells and demands attention, also showing a deeper social and cultural weakness, and threat.

5. “Is domestic violence taken seriously in Korea?” (The Korea Herald, 2012)

According to the 2010 Korea National Survey of Domestic Violence and Sexual Violence, 53.8 percent of respondents who had been married had experienced spousal abuse in the previous year, and 16.7 percent had suffered physical abuse. Over the course of a marriage, the figures for physical abuse rose to 23.5 percent of respondents, with emotional abuse marking 50.7 percent, economic abuse 13.9 percent and sexual abuse 13.5 percent.

E. In Korea, the offending spouse cannot file for divorce.

1. “South Korea: Supreme Court Keeps Unfaithful Spouses from Being Able to File for Divorce”

2. “Anger at Adultery Betrays Fear at Fragility of Marriage” (Korea Expose) by Se-Woong Koo

Even after the constitutional court struck down the country’s decades-old adultery law in 2015, breaking up a marriage remains one of South Korea’s taboos.

An excellent 2015 survey by the daily Seoul Shinmun found that 24 percent of married respondents answered yes to having cheated on their spouses (with cheating defined as including paid sex).

3. “Court Denies Director Hong Sang Soo’s Divorce Filed So He Could Marry Actress Kim Min Hee” (June 2019)

Mid-2018, South Korean movie director Hong Sang Soo, equally well known for his controversial relationship with actress Kim Min Hee, filed for divorce with his current wife – allegedly so he can officially end the affair and marry the actress. The court has ruled against Hong Sang Soo and denied his request, so he remains married to his wife.

The judge then denied the filed divorce case, stating that Hong Sang Soo is the one responsible for the marriage failing and so he cannot be the one to end it. He also pointed out that Hong Sang Soo has not been diligent in his effort to heal the relationship between his wife and daughter after he has caused them emotional pain with his affair with Kim Min Hee.

Life lessons from “The World of The Married”


A. The “Cycle of Violence” (aka “Cycle of Abuse”) explains why Hyeon-seo got caught up in an abusive relationship with her boyfriend.

“Hyeon-seo” is a character in this drama who a lot of people find intriguing because she alternates from being weak and dumb (in her relationship with her abusive boyfriend) to being strong and wise (in her pieces of advice to Sun-woo).

From Eps. 1-2, we find out that Hyeon-seo is a battered woman. In Ep. 2, she’s badly beaten up by her boyfriend, and after tending to her injuries, Sun-woo asks her why she wants to return to her abusive boyfriend:

Hyeon-seo: “I’ll stay in a spa and then go back.”

Sun-woo: “Do you want to waste your one and only life because of a jerk like that?”

Seo-hae: “What if his life is totally dependent on me? No one would take him in other than me. He just takes it out on me now and then because life stinks. He’s not a bad guy deep down. I’m going to make him a good guy.”

Sun-woo: “People don’t change that easily. Didn’t you ever think that he may kill you?”

Hyeon-seo: “It’s because I love him.”

The “Cycle of Violence” (aka “Cycle of Abuse”) explains why Hyeon-seo got caught up in an abusive relationship with her boyfriend.

1. “The Cycle of Violence”: The cycle of violence is a repeating pattern often seen in abusive relationships. It involves three different stages that continuously repeat until the victim is able to leave the relationship. What often makes the situation even worse is that as the cycle continues the violence often escalates and worsens.

2. “Battered Woman Syndrome” (written by Ana Gotter and reviewed by Debra Rose Wilson, Ph.D.

3. “The Cycle of Violence”: Phase 1: Tension-Building; Phase 2: Use of Violence – The “Explosion”; Phase 3: “Honeymoon” Period

4. “Domestic Abuse Cycle Break Free TODAY”: This article discusses the signs of different kinds of abuse: verbal, emotional, physical, financial, and sexual. It also has an excellent graphic on the Cycle of Violence.


B. It’s foolish to think that you or your spouse will never be attracted to another person.

Near the end of Ep. 2, Sun-woo reminds Tae-oh: “We talked about this when we first got married. We thought we might fancy other people after a while. We promised to be honest with each other if it happened.”

From “Pillow Talk: A-Z of an Intimate Marriage”by Karen Scalf Linamen:
Accept that you’re not immune to an adulterous relationship, and neither is your husband.There is no perfect safeguard for any marriage, but when a person says, “Everything’s fine at home, or “I don’t need to worry about it. I’m safe,” those are danger signals. You always have to be on guard.

Practice accountability.

Many times, extramarital involvement has an edge of excitement about it because there is a forbidden aspect. When something is brought out into the open, a lot of the excitement evaporates.

If you find yourself attracting romantic attention from someone other than your husband, confide in your husband or a trusted friend. And if you find yourself attracted to someone other than your spouse, tell someone trustworthy who will give you godly counsel and hold you accountable to remain pure in thought and deed.

Dr. Willard Harley Jr. in his bestselling book “His Needs, Her Needs” talks about what he calls “The Policy of Radical Honesty”: talking about your unmet needs; informing your spouse if you are developing an attraction toward someone; if someone tells you that he or she finds you attractive, being prepared to tell that person how much you love your spouse, and then telling your spouse about the situation, etc.

C. The devastating impact of marital infidelity

Events move fast in Ep. 1 with Sun-woo becoming suspicious that Tae-oh is having an affair at around the 16:39 mark. She starts secretly following Tae-oh at the 38:06 mark. By the end of the episode, she has confirmed that Tae-oh is indeed having an affair; she gets a pair of scissors and walks towards Tae-oh, determined to kill him in front of everyone in the birthday party.

Dr. Willard Harley Jr. in his Marriage Builders website says about the impact of marital infidelity:
“A spouse’s unfaithfulness is the most painful experience that can be inflicted in marriage. Those I’ve counseled who have had the tragic misfortune of having experienced rape, physical abuse, sexual abuse of their children, and infidelity have consistently reported to me that their spouse’s unfaithfulness was their very worst experience. To be convinced of the devastating impact of infidelity, you only need to go through it once.”

David Clarke, Ph.D. in his book “What to do when your spouse says, ‘I don’t love you anymore’” says:
“When your spouse tells you that the love is gone, you are traumatized in every sense of the word. There is no more brutal form of rejection. Your life is in pieces, and you have no clue what to do. What to say. How to attract your partner back and save your marriage. You are shocked. Stunned. Horrified. In absolute disbelief. Your mind can’t seem to grasp what’s happening. You’re in denial. You’re in grief. You’re in a fog. You’re in a panic. You’re overwhelmed.”

Dr. James Dobson in his book “Love Must Be Tough” discusses the 11 stages that a person passes through when infidelity comes into a marriage. You can read about Stages 8-11 in his website.

Related resources from my “Salt and Light” blog: Relationship tips from Korean dramas; Surviving Marital Infidelity; Marital infidelity: causes, consequences, and conclusions.

Lessons in photography from “The World of the Married”


Conveying depth through diagonal lines and overlapping forms
Low angle point of view
Cast shadow
Establishing shot
Linear perspective, background blur
Shooting against the light
High angle shot, diagonal lines
Sidelighting
Natural frame
Linear perspective
Reflection
Leading lines
Out of focus foreground elements as natural frame
Low angle point of view
Establishing shot
Background blur, compressed perspective
Dutch angle or Dutch tilt
Diagonal lines
Quality and direction of light
Reflection
Foreground and background blur
Out of focus foreground element as natural frame
Reflection