Six Flying Dragons Watch: Episode 2

“War is not to be decided by the wealthy! As the only casualties in war are the poor. War must not be decided by the old! As the only ones who die are the young. Is it right for a child to hold a funeral for his father or is it right for a father to hold a funeral for his child? We have already held countless funerals for our children by the hands of our fathers.”

Jung Do-jeon, Six Flying Dragons

I don’t know about you, but I’m about ready to join the revolution and overthrow the corrupt Goryeo dynasty!

The powerful final scene caps off an episode that had so many characters and so many flashbacks that I got quite lost at one point. But thanks to the power of the internet (we really do live in a golden age of information), I was able to sort it out. I think. Mostly.

One of my watch mates, Ayaan, compared the final speech and rousing song by Sambong (the scholar and official, Jung Do-jeon, and one of our eponymous six dragons) as a Do You Hear the People Sing moment, aka Les Miserables. And while the French Revolution allegories are not entirely apropos, there is a powerful sense of rising up against the powerful and levelling of society in the way the show is unfolding.

The song Mu-Yi-Yi-Ya (Eng: Is there any difference)? speaks of two kind of death as being analogous: death by war and death by corrupt officials. It says that there is no difference between the sword and politics when it’s the innocent who die. It’s a requiem but one that calls for anger over the wildflowers strewn underfoot of the powerful.

Some of those wildflowers are the beggar children the Lee Bang-won has run away from home to join. His disillusionment with his father gives us several powerful and compelling scenes with those children (including the pint-sized badass Boon-yi, played by a Lee Re who is already an exceptional actor at the age of nine). Boon-yi and her older brother, Ddang-sae merely want to find their missing mother but in doing so they lead Bang-won to Jung Do-jeon. Do-jeon promises that he can stop the dangerous rapprochement between Goryeo and Yuan that could lead to war with Ming.

Do-jeon’s crowd-stirring, blood pumping speech at the end of the episode then becomes more than a successful plan to stymie efforts to re-align with Yuan. It also frames Do-jeon as a man who keeps his promises and can affect change – a man with the social power that Bang-won’s father seemingly lacks. It’s no surprise that Bang-won looks up at the end on a new father figure.

But for the young Ddang-sae, he sees something different when he gazes upon the ascendant Do-jeon. As the man bursts into song, he hears his mother’s voice. This is the person who may be able to help him find her.

Nonetheless the episode’s finest line goes to the Yuan envoy before he scurries off to report the response of Goryeo to their overtures. The empire may be strong but the individual wants to keep breathing. And with that, Lee In-gyeom’s dreams of dialogue with Yuan are dead.

The great Yuan has nothing to fear! But we are human beings with only one life.

Yuan envoy, Six Flying Dragons

Six Flying Dragons’ second episode ratchets up the stakes for our prepubescent protagonists and puts them right in the centre of the action. And despite its drive-by exposition designed for viewers who already know the period of history it’s fictionalising – and its somewhat dated direction at some points -it’s a quality hour of television. If it keeps up this pace and this level of writing, I can understand how so many make it all the way through.

Other important revelations this hour include the confession of Lee In-gyeom that somebody in the shadows is pulling his strings. It’s something he’s not happy about but since he benefits from their intervention he’s acted accordingly to date. Who this mysterious puppet master is remains to be seen.

And that’s two down and only 48 to go!

Which should be a piece of cake for somebody who’s also watching 700 episodes of Doctor Who...


Comments

2 responses to “Six Flying Dragons Watch: Episode 2”

  1. Vive la Révolution!!
    I actually had goosebumps during Jung Do Jeon’s speech, how many more lives will be lost by the greedy and corrupt politicians in power. I like the scenes between Jung Do Jeon and his oldest friend, the one who was convincing him to stop his plot to kill the Yuan Envoy. Unclear if the friend will continue to be on LIG side or support Jung Do Jeon.
    I also liked the line where Jung Do Jeon is saying that he has no stage, no one will listen to his words. It’s a moving moment when we see the other scholars band together to pledge to preven the War.
    Lee Re, better have won an award for this drama, she is so talented as Boon Yi! I am really looking forward to seeing how she continues to grow her acting career.
    can’t wait for next week, thank you!

    1. Lee Tennant Avatar
      Lee Tennant

      I also really liked the allusion in that scene to “all the world’s a stage”; that what’s important here is the story and the power of the storyteller. It’s maybe because I’ve just come off the back of watching Station Eleven, which strongly emphasised this particular theme. The ending of episode one was also about the power of storytelling, when Lee In-gyeom used a play to bring Lee Bang-won’s father to heel.

      Someone once said something like, “the right word at the right time can change the world” but it may have been Dan Abnett who once apparently said, “I know that words cannot move mountains, but they can move the multitude – we’ve proven that time and time again. People are more ready to fight and die for a word than for anything else. Words shape thought, stir feeling, and force action. They kill and revive, corrupt and cure.”

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