MONDAY 12TH FEBRUARY, 2018......UPDATE ON REBEL
SHOWN ON JOY PRIME @ 8: AM
EPISODE # 05
As
Gil-hyun makes fake silver taels in the forge, his sister EORINI
approaches him with a bouquet of field grass and asks when Gil-dong
orabeoni (a ye olde word for oppa) will return.
Now
much older, Amogae looks over his flourishing village and thinks to
himself: “I didn’t die, and I survived. My children didn’t die. They
survived as well.”
We flashback to the time
when Amogae waved to his crying children on top of the hill, while on
his way to trade his rotting goods. He had promised that he would bring
back scholarly Chinese texts for Gil-hyun and taffy for Gil-dong. We
return to the present, where older Gil-dong sits on a hill looking
pensive.
Rumors of a famous peddler spread
among the nobles’ daughters. This peddler can help single women get
married and help childless couples become fertile. So while he may
simply be a merchant of women’s goods, they call him the “merchant of
craftiness.”
Ga-ryung (the captive we briefly
saw in the first episode) tells Nok-soo (the concubine in the first
episode) the success stories from this merchant, but she expresses
doubt. Ga-ryung insists that it’s real and tells her that this merchant
can share how to capture a man’s heart. That seems to catch Nok-soo
attention, as she momentarily stops painting.
As
Gil-dong returns home, a crowd of children follow him singing along and
eating his rice cakes. He’s intercepted by Ga-ryung, who checks his
identity and baits him with alcohol to meet her unni, since he’s also
rumored to drink like a fish.
Behind the shade,
Nok-soo requests Gil-dong’s service in helping her capture a man’s
heart. He can’t guarantee success and asks to know who she’s targeting,
to which she answers, “The king. I want to make the king my man.”
Gil-dong scoffs and asks her to reveal her face. She signals Ga-ryung to
lift the shade, and they stare at each other, the tension growing.
Upon
seeing Nok-soo’s face, Gil-dong disses her by saying that she’s not the
fairest woman, as the rumors make her out to be. Ga-ryung lets out an
exasperated gasp, but Nok-soo uses the diss to her advantage: This is
way she’s so talented, since seducing people with a pretty face would be
too simple, wouldn’t it?
She asks if Gil-dong
would be able to help her win the king’s heart, but Gil-dong gives her a
different offer. He jokingly asks her to be his partner instead, since
he likes her audacity. Before he continues with his insincere offer,
he’s slapped across the face by Ga-ryung, which comically snaps us out
of the dramatic scene. He’s shocked by the sudden slap, and she scolds
him for speaking to Nok-soo so rudely.
Nok-soo
stops her before she gets carried away, and Gil-dong gives Nok-soo his
real answer. He refuses to help, since he doesn’t even know how the king
looks like and because his younger sister’s birthday is approaching. He
bought her new shoes, and he can’t wait to give them to her. He tells
Nok-soo that next time they meet, it’ll be fate. He also bids Ga-ryung a
cheeky farewell and gets on his way.
He skips
onward with his entourage of children trailing behind him as Ga-ryung
watches him curiously. We hear a voiceover of a conversation between two
men talking about Gil-dong’s merchant work. They say that women fall
lovesick with him after he offers them goods, and one man claims that he
sells something other than women’s items. He refers to it vaguely as
“whatchamacallit,” but he’s implying that Gil-dong may be selling his
body.
As Gil-dong continues his trek home, he
thinks back to his interactions with Nok-soo and the slap from Ga-ryung.
He shakes his head and says that she’s charming. He doesn’t specify
who, but we can presume that it’s Ga-ryung he’s talking about, since he
touches his slapped cheek and smiles.
Before he
enters the bamboo forest, Gil-dong is stopped by fellow travelers, who
invite him to walk through the dangerous tiger forest together once a
few more people join their group. Gil-dong assures them that tigers are
not that scary, as he’s faced a tiger before, but the travelers don’t
believe him. One traveler urges the other to continue with his news
about the Ikhwari elder getting in a fight with the gangster Heotaehak,
and Gil-dong listens in.
Amogae
hears the news of gangster Heotaehak, and Ilchung explains that he’s a
business man who’s done almost everything to make money. In particular,
he’s made money from creating counterfeit civil status documents,
through which he’s turned nomads into slaves and created a business by
selling them off. Gil-hyun warns his father that Heotaehak is
disparaging their cloth business, and he advises that they meet soon.
As
advised, Amogae meets with Heotaehak for a tense business discussion
over drinks. Heotaehak describes his lucrative business of selling
nomad-turned-slaves. Due to the severe drought, there are an endless
amount of nomads that cause the king great stress. Heotaehak claims that
people like him relieve such pressures off the king and provide these
nomads with a means of survival. And for him, it’s like catching gold
with his bare hands with limited effort.
Amogae
wonders why he’s looking to share such a lucrative business, so
Heotaehak explains that his work — turning free people into slaves — is
illegal and wants to use Amogae’s extensive connections with government
officials to preserve his business. In return, he offers Amogae’s forty
percent of the profit.
Hearing the deal, Amogae
nods at the potential profitability, but he refuses the offer. He
acknowledges that they’re both engaging in illegal work, so he’s in no
place to argue which business is dirtier or cleaner; however, he doesn’t
do business selling people, especially one that turns young children
into slaves. Heotaehak tries to appeal with the profits of this
business, but Amogae asserts that he nor his people will engage in such
business.
We return to the Gil-dong, listening
in on the travelers’ gossip about the fight between his father and
Heotaehak. One traveler says that Heotaehak isn’t just any gangster and
that his underlings are all former warriors. They figure that the
neighborhood gangsters can’t prevail over bloodthirsty warriors.
Another
merchant joins the traveler group with more opinions against Amogae. He
can tell Amogae used to be slave, just based on his name. He works at
the slave courts, and he says that all slaves who rebel against their
current status are eventually ruined, so Amogae is bound to be ruined
sooner or later.
Gil-dong chimes in on this
conversation by sarcastically agreeing that all people who don’t know
their place should be gone to make this world livable. He tells the
travelers to promise to obediently remain in their class, no matter the
injustices done on their family. He specifically targets the new
traveler by urging him to vow to pass on his miserable slave status to
his children, and that comment initiates a fight.
Soboori
and Yonggae wonder when Gil-dong will return, since he always returns
in time for Eorini’s birthday, but Amogae feigns disinterest. Just then,
Gil-dong opens the door, and the group warmly welcomes him back.
Gil-dong offers to bow his father upon his return, but Amogae leaves the
room, telling his son to eat first.
Sitting on
the rocks outside, Gil-hyun assures Gil-dong that their father was the
most worried, even though he may not show it. Gil-dong doesn’t seem
convinced and proceeds to offer his brother a gift. It’s a rare book,
and upon seeing his Gil-hyun’s pleasure, Gil-dong wonders why he won’t
take the civil service exam. Gil-hyun argues that people like them will
only get the grunt work, even if they pass the exam.
Suddenly,
a pair of hands covers Gil-dong’s eyes — it’s Eorini, and she tells her
brother to guess who it is. He guesses that it’s his “ugly” sister, and
she’s adorably offended at the comment, which prompts Gil-dong to
jokingly call her even uglier.
Gil-dong bows to
his father, and Soboori asks how his travels were. Gil-dong describes
all the beautiful ladies he met in his travels, and Soboori quickly
tries to divert the conversation into one about settling down. He agrees
that he should find someone to marry, but he pointedly asks who would
want to marry the son of a gangster. At that comment, Amogae leaves the
room, followed by Gil-hyun. Once his father leaves, Gil-dong worriedly
asks Soboori about Heotaehak, but Soboori assures him that they have it
under control.
That night, Gil-hyun tells
Gil-dong not to worry about their invincible father, but that doesn’t
seem to quiet any of his concerns. Their worries are interrupted by
Eorini, who comes into her brothers’ room with her pillow, claiming that
she’s too scared to sleep alone. The brothers reluctantly let her sleep
between them, and we soon see the reason for their hesitance, as she
flails around in her sleep. She effectively chokes both brothers with
her arms and kicks them in sensitive places, while the brothers laugh
about their sister’s unbreakable habit.
The
next morning, as Gil-dong tries (but fails) to play cat’s cradle with
his sister, Keutsae approaches him to suggest a visit to the gisaeng
house. Gil-dong tells Keutsae that he’ll be cold rice (read: completely
ignored) if he goes there with Gil-dong, and Eorini agrees. Gil-dong
asks about his father, and Keutsae tells him that he left to meet with
Magistrate Eom. He only took Soboori, Yonggae, and Ilchung, while the
rest of the crew is off on their own. That sets off red flags for
Gil-dong, and he rushes out in search of his father.
Gisaeng
friend Sun-ah greets Amogae as he enters the gisaeng house to meet with
Magistrate Eom. As they wait in the room, a drunk man stumbles in and
spits curses at Amogae. Defensive Yonggae gets up to deal with the
disruptive drunk and fights off the rest of the intruders. When the
intruders make a run for it, Yonggae and Ilchung chase after them, and
Soboori ventures outside to see where they ran off to. Sensing a strange
silence, Soboori begins to turn around but gets knocked unconscious
before he sees who hit him. After he falls, we see that it’s Heotaehak’s
underlings.
Worried for his
father’s safety, Gil-dong runs through the snow to the gisaeng house and
quickly backpedals at the corner when he sees a group of Heotaehak’s
warriors blocking off the entrance. Inside, Amogae puts down his glass
when he senses his enemy’s presence. Heotaehak’s son enters the room
with his underlings and tells Amogae that he’s like a tiger without its
claws. Outside, Gil-dong clumsily climbs over the wall into the gisaeng
house to try and save his father, but unfortunately he’s faced with a
group of warriors. Oh no.
Heotaehak’s son tells
Amogae that this unfortunate situation is his fault, for failing to
train his underlings to not leave his side. Amogae asks what he plans to
do, so he takes out his sword, saying that his father wants Amogae’s
life. Not so fast, says a voice from behind. It’s Gil-hyun, with the
rest of Amogae’s crew. Amogae says that they knew about Heotaehak’s
tactics beforehand, and that’s the son’s cue to flee.
A
fight breaks out outside, and Amogae strolls out to witness the scene.
Soboori shows up, recovered but still in pain from the knock to the
head, and they hear Gil-dong yelling for his father. He runs toward his
father, and in his moment of confusion at the sight of the fight, he’s
captured again by his opponents. Gil-dong swings wildly, missing every
punch, and Amogae watches curiously. Eventually, Yonggae steps in to
save Gil-dong, who’s then dragged away to safety.
The
two sides gather outside the gisaeng house with their troops, ready to
fight. Keutsae belatedly joins the Amogae Avengers, and each member
prepares their weapons: Keutsae with his fist, all grown-up neighborhood
hyung Eobsan with his gloved fist, Ilchung with his fan, Gil-hyun with
his knife, Yonggae with his two beaters, and Segul with his rope.
Yonggae yells a battle cry, and they run into the brawl.
Heotaehak’s
son puts up a good fight, but he’s ultimately outnumbered by Team
Amogae. On top of that, Heotaehak is dragged to the scene, all roped up
and terrified. Amogae teases Heotaehak by asking whether he should cut
off his tongue or his down-there, and that causes him to pee his pants.
His
son has to look away from this mortifying sight, and Amogae decides
that he’ll cut off one of Heotaehak’s ears, so that he’ll listen only
with one ear to Amogae’s words. Soboori holds the ear, and Amogae slices
the ear off, as Gil-dong watches with watering eyes.
Amogae’s
people celebrate their victory with drinks, and Gil-hyun apologizes to
Gil-dong for leaving him in the dark. Drunk Yonggae mocks Gil-dong for
yelling for his father like a frightened child, but he quickly shuts up
when he notices his crush, Geumran. He tries to sober up and practices
his lines in front of the brothers. He calls for Geumran, but when she
approaches, he chickens out and says he never called for her. Gil-dong
asks if he’s scared of women, and Yonggae nods while sitting on
Gil-dong’s lap like a small child, ha.
It’s a
festival for Amogae’s people, and they’ve gathered around to watch
Gil-dong arm wrestle Keutsae, who’s supposedly the strongest of them
all. Gil-dong visibly struggles to stay in the game, as Eorini cheers on
her brother. From afar, Amogae watches the match and announces that
whoever wins the match will win a great prize. Gil-dong’s face cringes
as he musters all of his strength, and he ends up winning, much to his
own surprise.
Gil-dong brags to his brother and
father about his win, and we briefly flash back to young Gil-dong’s
manifested strength. Amogae and Gil-hyun seem to remember this time with
a hint of concern, while Eobsan hyung claims that Gil-dong is actually
really strong. No one believes him, though, seeing how he couldn’t even
defend himself earlier that day. Nevertheless, the villagers are
celebratory, and they sing and dance loudly. Amogae watches his people
celebrate and smiles.
Everyone passes out, and
Amogae walks through the pile of drunken bodies. Gil-dong approaches him
and asks for his prize from winning the arm wrestling match. Amogae
agrees to hear his request, so Gil-dong drops to his knees to ask that
they flee Ikhwari. He’s worried that Heotaeak will seek revenge and
knows that many others are out to kill his father. He found a nice place
with good land and water and begs his father to establish a quiet
farming life there.
Amogae
asks if the land and water are really nice, but he’s only giving
Gil-dong a false sense of hope. He asks his son, “Don’t you know what
will happen if we live as farmers?” Gil-dong responds with the same
question, “Don’t you know what will happen if we continue to live as
thieves?” Gil-hyun overhears Gil-dong’s disrespectful plea and drags him
away for a scolding.
At the large tree
decorated with cloth, Gil-hyun yells at his brother that in the land of
Ikhwari, their father is the king and the heavens. Gil-dong acknowledges
that everyone knows of Elder Amogae now, but he asks his brother if he
knows how their mother died. He says that their father killed their
mother, specifically their father’s greed. “People who don’t know their
place will die before fulfilling their full time. If we continue to live
like this, we will all die. Father will die, [you] will die, and Eorini
will die before her time as well.”
From
behind, Amogae asks his son, “Gil-dong, then do you think you can live
out your life?” Amogae touches the tree and tells his sons about its
history. The tree was gifted from a shaman from Jirisan, with the
purpose of supporting a great energy that will inhabit Joseon. Amogae
says that he then asked the shaman how Gil-dong will live his life out.
He doesn’t share the response but asks Gil-dong to wrestle against him,
without going easy.
They begin the wrestling
match, and they seem evenly matched. As they round in circles, Gil-dong
experiences a moment of great strength and lifts his father up. Amogae
tells his son to keep using his strength, but Gil-dong eventually gives
up and puts his father down. Angered by this, Amogae throws Gil-dong on
the ground.
When Gil-dong looks up, Amogae
demands that they wrestle again, but he says that he can’t. Amogae tells
Gil-dong to uproot the tree or break the rock, but he cries that he
can’t. Amogae approaches his crying son and asks why he can’t. He
wonders if his encounter with the tiger has anything to do with
Gil-dong’s reluctance to use his power. But Gil-dong claims that it was
all a lie — he never saw a tiger. At some moment, he lost his strength,
and he cries that he’s nothing now.
Amogae
looks at his crying son and sees the spitting image of young Gil-dong
crying at his father. More sympathetic now, Amogae wipes the tears on
Gil-dong’s face and holds his son’s face in his hands. That evening, he
summons Soboori and says that he’s going to rest now, meaning he’s going
to pass on his business. Gil-hyun watches Gil-dong sleep, looking
troubled about his brother.
The
next morning, Soboori asks Gil-dong if he asked his father to give up
his business. Soboori knows that Gil-dong must be the one who convinced
his father, and while Soboori looks worried, Gil-dong runs away
overjoyed. He goes to his father and confirms his plans to settle into
the farming life. His father walks out saying, “Farming life should be
nice. Plant barley and beans. And maybe even two pigs.”
Gil-dong
cautiously asks Gil-hyun if he doesn’t want their father to give up
their business. Gil-hyun says that it’s his father’s choice, but he’s
also tired of people out for their father’s life. The brothers smile at
each other, finally in agreement.
Eorini
asks Gil-dong if she’ll have to work on the farm now, and Gil-dong says
that he’d rather not have their “ugly” sister do any work. She pouts at
being called ugly again, but he quickly appeases her by gifting her
with a new pair of shoes. And with that, he’s off on another merchant
travel as Eorini yells at her brother to come home sooner this time.
On
his way out, Gil-dong stops by the Shaman Tree and stacks a rock for
his prayer. He prays that his father and family will be safe during his
travels, especially since their father has decided to lead a new life
now. He adorably leans in to hear the silent response from the tree and
thanks it for the protection. He happily walks off, but a gust of wind
blows and knocks down the rock stack. Bad omen.
Magistrate
Eom offers to introduce Amogae to Choongwongoon, a man of royal blood
who became infamous for killing one of his lady servants. Amogae isn’t
interested in a connection with such a person, but Magistrate Eom
convinces him by suggesting that this connection may be useful for his
sons’ futures.
At the royalty’s house, Amogae
asks Magistrate Eom if the royal families look any different. Magistrate
Eom confirms that they do and jokingly says that Choongwongoon looks
like a pig. They laugh while lying prostrate and immediately stand up to
greet the entering royal prince.
Choongwongoon
(Kim Jung-tae) greets his guests, and Amogae humbly asks how a royal
person would look for a person like him. Rumor has spread about
Heotaeak’s defeat, and Choongwongoon requests a job from Amogae. He
throws a scroll at him, and Amogae unrolls it to find a picture of a
woman. She’s a runaway servant girl, and Choongwongoon wants to find
her. He adds that if there is a man by her side, they can go ahead and
kill him.
It’s a barbaric request, and Amogae
sits in silence. We see Gil-dong happily walking off on his merchant
travels, and we hear Amogae’s agreement to farm life voiceover the scene
— “Farming life should be nice. Plant barley and beans. And maybe even
two pigs.” — hinting that the prospect of the simple life is at stake
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