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[Drama 2013] Cruel City / Heartless City 무정도시


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A Year in Compliment Sandwiches [Year In Review, Part 3]
by HeadsNo2
| December 16, 2013

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SONG OF THE DAY : Heartless City OST – Bohemian – “Wound” [ Download ]

TOP 5 DRAMAS IN ORDER OF AWESOMENESS


End of the World - ..........


Heartless City

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I honestly had almost a non-reaction to the first episode of Heartless City. I went into it completely blind, having read little news about it and having even lesser faith that any show with Nam Gyuri as its central heroine would win me over. I remember thinking that the first episode was nicely filmed with a dark, atmospheric vibe reminiscent of old school noir crime thrillers. I was ready to write it off as Cool, But Not My Thing… until I watched the second episode. And the third. And maybe didn’t sleep for a while after that (I came into the show late).

In short, Heartless City was the crack drama of the year for yours truly. I loved it. I loved the romance between lord of the underworld Jung Kyung-ho and good-girl-turned-undercover-prostitute Nam Gyuri. I loved that this drama treated sex like it exists instead of perpetuating the myth that all children are conceived through a firm handshake. I loved the endearing bromance between a drug courier and his underling (played by relative newbie Yoon Hyun-min in what could only be called a breakout role), and how their bond of brotherhood lasted through multiple close shaves (not to mention villains draping their necks with necklaces of cocaine—because yes, that happens).

It’s probably because the drama aired on cable network jTBC that it was allowed to deal with more mature subject matter we’re not used to seeing on the big broadcast networks, like the underground drug trade and organized crime. There is still a limit though, in that you can’t escape the censors when it comes to knives (an unavoidable annoyance when nearly every episode features a knife fight), and, weirdly enough, also tattoos. Though I still don’t understand the concept behind blurring just the knives when the violence, blood, and body counts resulting from the [censored] could still be shown in full detail, I guess it comes down to whatever helps nervous parents sleep at night.

The plot maintained its penchant for twists and turns to an almost detrimental degree, since by the end of the show nearly every character had undergone some dramatic identity reveal or fifty. Some cases were more like, “He’s a villain!” “Wait, he’s really an undercover cop!” “No! He’s really an undercover cop gone bad!” “Just kidding! He’s really an undercover cop gone bad who was really good this whole time!” It was literally the world of cops and robbers as seen through an Instagram filter, just sprinkled with a bit more shadows and maybe a smidgen of the blood of the vanquished.

Which all goes to say that Heartless City was a rollicking good time worthy of the emotional hangover it left behind. Perfectly imperfect, [censored] and all.

Compliment Sandwich: I ♥ you. You broke my ♥. Even so, I still ♥ you.

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full article here

cr. dramabeans.com

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class="entry-title"2013 Year-end Korean, Taiwanese and Japanese Drama Reviews & Ratings Posted on December 12, 2013 by carolies541

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I’ll talk about Korean dramas, Taiwanese dramas and Japanese dramas I’ve either watched or currently watching.  I’ll comment on the drama in terms of the cast acting, chemistry between the OTP, the story and the overall execution.

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To be consistent with my blog title, I decided to rate these dramas using the “Obsession Level” criteria.
The fastest way to know what i think about a drama is to use this criteria and skim or skip the review if you’re lazy like me.
There are 3 different levels: STRONG, MILD and WEAK.

In brief,  STRONG obsession level means that the drama is highly recommended, satisfying and have the potential  to be the crack dramaMILD obsession level means that the drama is worth watching when you’re out of entertainment as It’s very enjoyableWEAK obsession level means that the drama is only worth watching for the cast and the plot or execution is not very satisfying.

This is NOT the complete list of dramas I watched as there are many Japanese/Korean/Taiwanese dramas which I dropped halfway and too lazy to talk about them.

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2013 Korean Dramas

Let’s start with the most popular category, K-drama! I’ve been watching Korean dramas ever since I was a kid and “Star in My Heart” gotta be one of my very first K-drama. Over the years, I’ve seen the evolution of K-drama, it’s definitely improving. While there’s still many cheesy and cliche plots, they have expanded the usual romance genre with a mix of interesting elements (at times..). I have a very high standard when It comes to the execution of a K-drama, especially in terms of music and directing so I may comment on the execution of some dramas in this list.

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Cruel City (20ep)

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Starring: Jung Kyung Ho, Nam Gyu Ri, Lee Jae Yoon, Choi Moo Sung, Yoon Hyun Min, Kim Yoo Mi (Dramawiki)
Obsession Level: STRONG

Cruel City (aka: Heartless City) aired on a cable channel,  JTBC so be prepared to see some strong violence, gore and steamy hot provocative scenes in this drama. I never find Jung Kyung Ho this attractive before, he’s so damn FINE and smoking hot as Doctor (his character’s nickname) that every single of his scene almost made me suffer a heart attack. The strongest impression I have about Jung Kyung Ho is his cute smile so I really didn’t expect him able to be this intense as an anti-hero. Doctor has gotta be one of the most interesting hero in K-dramaland to date. He’s very loyal to the friends he trust but very cruel to his enemies. Plus, he’s certainly not the best person to mess with as he’s not only skilled in action combats but also very intelligent to be able to plot against his mafia boss.

One of the main attraction of this drama has got to be our main OTP with their sizzling chemistry. Everytime they exchange eye-contact, I feel the electric. I never actually watched any of Nam Gyu Ri’s works (even the popular 49days) but I find her screen presence to be very sweet, her acting is also very natural and she’s a heroine that’s easy to root for. Soo Min (Nam Gyu Ri) is probably the only one that makes our hero put his guard down even when they’re still considered as strangers. Soo Min is coincidentally the sister of Doctor’s first love and she’s planning to take a revenge on Doctor whom she suspected to be the killer of her sister (she never saw the suspected killer’s face and only know his “nickname”) so this creates a delicious conflict for our main OTP.

Look at their sizzling chemistry…. Yummm!
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Even though Jung Kyung Ho had his breakthrough role in this drama, the other supporting characters are as interesting to watch as him, especially Kim Yoo Mi and Choi Moo Sung’s characters. They literally own every single scene that they’re in, their acting is so seasoned and intense which makes it so satisfying to watch them. I also love the bromance between Jung Kyung Ho and Yoon Hyun Min’s characters, they’re just so loyal to each other that it makes me wanna root for them to be the main OTP at times (LOL!), It also doesn’t hurt that they’re both handsome guys.

The execution of this drama is also icing on the cake as the action scenes are so intense and well-directed. The music scoring, ambience, stylish directing are just perfect for the dark and raw atmosphere of Cruel City. Overall, this is a must watch if you like action-packed, intense drama filled with intriguing characters. Never a dull moment!

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full article here

cr. obsessionsofline.wordpress.com

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One more good review from koalasplayground.com

you can read here  http://koalasplayground.com/2013/12/17/2013-drama-reviews-a-year-of-memorable-dramas-both-real-and-reel/

and the last I'll post the one which is my most favorite reviews of cruel city. She write almost everything about Cruel City, so complete that everytime I read her review, I feel so proud of cruel city! \m/

Thursday, September 5, 2013, Posted by Dnoella

Heartless City (2013)

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Heartless City
무정도시 / Cruel City
(May – July 2013)


--Spoiler Free Review--
who’s in it
Jung KyungHo (Smile You, Time Between Dog and Wolf)
Nam GyuRi (49 Days, Life is Beautiful)
Kim YooMi (Enjoy Life, Country Princess)
Lee JaeYoon (Ghost, Just Like Today)
Yoon HyunMin (Still You, More Charming By the Day)
Choi MooSung (I Live in Cheongdam-dong)
Son Chang Min (Horse Doctor, Man of Honor)
Go Na Eun (Assorted Gems) 



what’s it about 
For a show like this one, built on violence, suspense, and misdirection, any summary becomes too much summary because even a half morsel of information ends up giving everything away.


The bones of this drama, however, is simply about a police task force created for the sole purpose of bringing down a shifty criminal network that has been flooding massive amounts of soul-sucking drugs into Seoul. That is the spine of it, but there is so much more to the tale than the basic promise of cops going after drug dealers. There is blood, heart, brains, and a whole heaping mess of beautifully filmed gore, gristle, muscle…basically it’s a cinematically riveting organic explosion about the darker side of human nature as told from the point of view of a criminal underworld and a legal system that behaves no different than the people it chases. It is a modern story with old themes, ones as old as Rome, about the redemption of devils and the corruption of angels.

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Lee JaeYoon plays the detective chasing and Jung KyungHo plays the man being chased. Nam GyuRi plays the innocent caught between two worlds. That’s all you are allowed to know until you watch it, the show will reveal the rest. That’s all you should want to know if you have any interest in watching this one. Trust me on this, Heartless is not the show you should indulge your need for spoilers, as part of its hypnotic quality is about going in blindfolded and tied, being tossed completely innocent into this stylish romance with the dark side. 

commitment 
20 episodes

network
JTBC

director
Lee JungHyo

screenwriter
Yoo SungYeol



music
Nam HyeSung
Amazing soulful music in this one, and perfectly constructed for the show. There were so many layers that it fit so many aspects and themes. Hints of jazz and blues, sometimes even carnie, and all parts emotional.


photography
Choi YoonMan

The look of this one was all vintage style, atmospheric, and a personality of its own. Practically black and white…without actually being filmed in black and white.

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first impressions
What’s the date and time? I may have to notarize this moment.


It is possible that I have just begun watching the hands-down coolest, sexiest, most awe-smacking, well-produced drama served up to a kdrama audience in recent memory. Can a person tell they are living a momentous historical moment even before that moment passes? Absolutely I’m going overboard, but that’s how much amazement I have for this one, and how impressed I am by the first few episodes.


Not all the main characters have been introduced yet, in fact, a few only catch minutes of airtime. The ones we do meet have little direct interplay with the wider net of players as yet. They exist in their own corners of Seoul. Still, we already know that they are all insidiously interconnected, whether by circumstance or by people. The showdown we all know is coming already feels epic. We feel it looming ahead like the iceberg that must have seen the bloated tanker Titanic approaching. We know some of these characters only by their aliases, but what will happen when we know their true names and their true faces? How will they be revealed when their costumes are stripped away and the truth of the person inside is laid bare?

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This world is a winding clock, and the players in it the gears grinding along…and it is not a natural world in which they exist, not a world built for surviving.

And as spectators, we all hold our breaths knowing that someone or something—pure and hot—is about to come along with a hammer and smash its constant simple logic to smithereens, offering us a glimpse into the chaos and complexity behind the movement of lives.



wildcard factor
Wildcard 1: Nam Gyuri

Ok, I’ll say it on behalf of everyone, cuz yes, we’re all thinking the same thing: Nam Gyuri looks like a doll, a beautiful porcelain doll that is an unrealistic depiction of female perfection. Do we like her as an actress? For me personally, she’s not my fave. And I am awa

re she makes more than a few fans hesitate. Her casting made me hesitate, too. She’s not a bad actress, but she’s not proven to be a great actress either. At my most critical, I would even dare to call her casting as a shallow choice. At my kindest, I would say it was a casting that felt fitting to the part. I cannot think of an actress I would confidently cast as Nam Gyuri’s replacement, but another part of me believes there surely exists someone who would have done the part more justice. So I am still a little conflicted, but not enough to change my opinion of the show.

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First of all, the shallow casting bit: Nam looked the part she needed to play, a young innocent girl/woman sucked into the glamorous and enveloping warmth of the criminal underground that lured her with false security. The young actress looks like a pure doll, but she also looks like a plaything for men, and I mean that with no offense, simply as a statement of casting fact. She’s supposed to look like a doll. In this show, they styled her right: she was given a vintage flair, jazzy and sassy, heavy on the eyeliner. The little girl innocence that was carried in her exaggerated features made her alien, flawless, cold, but also carried in them a lost quality that was sometimes intriguing.

The point? We were never supposed to love Nam Gyuri’s character as much as we loved the men of the show. This is a genre of filmmaking that makes women the catalysts for movement, the femme fatales, not the thing being moved itself. She was a magnet that pulled at the men. If she wasn’t someone we could love, then it was ok that she was merely a device for and witness to the destruction to come. A shining piece of jewelry was all she needed to be for the show, at the minimum. She does succeed in being more than just that, thankfully.

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Second, this wasn’t a conventional drama where the central love story was all that important. There were multiple ‘romances’ in this one—bonds between men, women, friends, enemies—and they all held deeper significance than perhaps what drama followers would dub as the OTP=One True Pairing. There were many personalities in this show, including women, and they all held a very real piece of the main character Jung KyungHo’s heart. Would it surprise to know that Nam, the main female star of this show, literally probably only had about a few hours worth of screen time out of 20 hours? In the first three episodes alone, she shared less than five minutes of screen time with her portended lover.

Perhaps her character only worked because she had such a significant yet brief part in the show. The trailers painted her as the main female star, and her chemistry with Jung KyungHo was genuinely electric (although he did have chemistry with everyone in this one), but in all fairness, the real lady of this drama was Kim YooMi.

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And further, I would even argue that both the main men of this show, if they had an OTP in this drama, would not be with Nam but a woman that never had her full story told. I’ll leave it at that. Those who have seen it know of who I am speaking.



Wildcard 2: 
The Nature of A Crime Thriller

There are usually two huge concerns when it comes to the Korean drama version of a thriller, whether crime, cop, or whatever. 1) The worry that it will be some ridiculous farce of special effects abuse without any plot, or 2) the fear that it’ll end with everybody dead. And really, who wants to see either of those kinds of crap things in the summer, right?

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As a general statement, yes, the drama industry does make some pretty fail action shows. THIS IS NOT ONE OF THEM. You won’t be cringing at the action and violence in this one because it is so fake, you’ll be cringing because it is so bloody brutal and real. And they get pretty creative about it so that they can actually get away with airing it.

Second, the fear of a show’s ending for one such as this is legitimate. But this is a show where if you fear getting hurt by it, you will end up missing a wonderful experience. Some relationships are better for having gone through it, even if it brought you only pain. For really, at the end of it, you can say (to your therapist), “Wow, that drama really made me…feel something. It hurt. A lot. But I think it was worth it.” If art’s grand purpose is to move peoples’ emotions, this one does its job. Don’t fear how it will move you. Yes, I won’t sugarcoat it, Heartless will leave you wretched, but you’ll love every minute of it.



snoozer moments
Not a single minute of it.

20 episodes never felt so content-stuffed, character-rich, and plot over packed. In fact, this is a show that might have benefited from going to 24. It might not have felt as tightly scripted, but I think it would have been able to iron and explain a lot of the plot movements and jumps that many found confusing, make understanding of some wrinkles that felt rushed, jumping in logic and chronology.

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But of course, an extension would have been unlikely for many reasons, but most especially because of main star Jung KyungHo’s serious back injury during filming that had him literally crippling to the final credit roll. I never felt so sad to see a show go, yet so relieved, for it meant the actor could finally let go of work and tend to his health. It became stressful watching the final episodes of the show…for the drama’s storyline, and the real life pain on Jung’s face.



soju guzzling (angst factor) 
Frankly, I think these characters only consumed misery and liquor.

Normal people take a nap or watch television to decompress, these people drank, drank, drank. Sometimes they chugged down hard liquor like it was water. Jung KyungHo is a skinny thing and his character drank like a skinny alcoholic whale.

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what didn’t work  Nothing. Turns out when I love something this much, even when there are faults, I am unwilling to go there. Well, I guess I will say, I think the ending is up for debate and dissection and dissension, depending on who you ask, but I won’t do that in this review.
what did 
AmazingCast.jpg


To comment that this might be a career launching drama for many in the cast is a weird thing to claim, since many of the actors are well-established in the business. To say it will be a career changing one is even stranger, since the drama barely pulled in 1% in ratings during its airing. But it is a testament to the drama’s excellence and the actors’ amazingness that most watchers walked away from this one with two responses. One, that this drama was amazing in both its writing and acting. And two, what the hell were the other 99% of tv watchers in the ROK watching if not this?

The amazing richard simmons AMAZING cast (to name just a few):


Jung KyungHo | Doctor’s Son/Jung ShiHyun DOC2.jpg
Kim YooMi | Lee JinSook/YiSeul JINSOOK.jpg
Kim JongGu | Chairman Jo/Busan BUSAN.jpg
Choi MooSung | Safari Moon/Moon DukBae
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Yoon HyunMin | Soo/Kim HyunSoo
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notable scene(s)

Without a doubt, Jung KyungHo’s character had brass balls. He often strolled into danger knowing he would likely not stroll back out. While every other scene was a stand out in this show, I have to highlight the fact that any time Jung KyungHo and Choi MooSung shared the screen, the results were electrifying. The two men were like two sharks who circled the same reef, and occasionally, just occasionally, they found themselves in the same shallow surf. And blood often spilled.

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what kept me going
EVERYTHING
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Other factors:
predictability No.
cheese/engrish N/A
originality The themes have all been played before, but in a project made with a mind to honor what came before, the originality is in the successful delivery. So yes, original not for its plot specifically, but original because it was so flipping amazing.
eye-candy Yes
hair and fashion Simply GORGEOUS, obvious loving attention was devoted to the styling. Much of this show was communicated through visuals and actions, not merely words. There were two layers, what we were given at face value and what was slipped to us in subtext. Sometimes the subtext was all the more telling than what rippled on the surface.

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why you might like it
Oh I dunno, cus it’s awesome?

why you might not


Car.jpg Intense, serious, very little romance, hardly any flirt, no funny. Lots of death. Romcom lovers will be wary of this one, but I have to tell you, it is totally worth the thorns to get to the rose. I swear.



a list:
The Top 10 Reasons Why You Should Drop All Other KDramas and Watch This One Right Now

10: Bloggers Unanimous

My opinion is but one, and I’ll be the first to admit, not usually concurrent with trend, but this was a drama that united kdrama bloggers across the web, bloggers of all molds. We can’t all be wrong, can we? There were a lot of other dramas with bigger press going during Heartless City’s airing, including direct time slot competitor Shark. Unlike other dramas that boasted trendy names and trendier plot devices, this one was vague, only hinting at something to do with adult themes. This little crime drama was the strange moody interloper that didn’t quite fit into a category, but still, despite its black sheep status, we fans still found it. Sure, native K-audiences didn’t tune in, but it sure seemed like most every other English-speaking kdrama blogger did. I’m sure it says something about the difference in taste between audiences across oceans, but I think it speaks volumes more about the quality of the drama itself, in that it truly did capture the noir spirit it chased, which is as American and western in cynicism as it gets: nihilism, corruption, and moral ambiguity. If only out of pure curiosity, don’t you want to see what all the fuss was about?



9: Violence Beautiful

Safari3.jpg There was a lot of unrepentant violence, sometimes shocking in its brutality, occasionally beautiful in its orchestration. There were guns, but the majority here preferred bats, steel pipes, and intensely personal use of short and sharp blades. You know, we are the only creatures who play at killing for pure fun, instead of need, but it is not a hobby without cost for the killer. It is a traumatic thing seeing life extinguished. And the characters in this show felt it, carried it with them. Even the fight scenes carried a lot of weight, in blood, emotion, and pain. There were no easy deaths in this one.



8: HD Ready

15.jpg Most of the scenes were in secret hideaways and dark corners of Seoul such as warehouses, police stations, interrogation rooms, 24-hour convenience stores, evening drinking haunts, etc. Even places of their daytime travels were depressing in their hollow brightness: abandoned amusement parks, prison yards, cemeteries, orphanages, etc. 
02.jpg 03.jpg 11.jpg 14.jpg Gloomy was the world that hugged these people whether in the daytime or at night, and certainly it was no coincidence that many of the scenes were set against dusk and dawn, but all of it, even in its gloom, was done with purpose. The scenery was meant to be a part of the story, and it is great that technology lets us enjoy it as it was meant to be enjoyed, in glorious High Definition. The cityscapes alone, the cold beauty of a heartless night glittering with diamonds lit of human avarice, were worth the price of admission alone. 04.jpg 05.jpg 06.jpg 07.jpg 08.jpg 09.jpg 10.jpg 12.jpg 13.jpg



7: Sex in a Heartless City

Kissing+2.jpg People actually had The Sex in this one, like romping between the sheets sex, and the twisting against flesh type of real sex. Not just pressing tightly shut lips against one another. Nothing tacky and gratuitous, of course, but this was a sexy crime thriller, and its denizens knew about the sexy sex. 
Kissing3.jpg Lust, love, desire, revenge, blood, betrayal…all of it was bared because it was needed and required for a story like this one, otherwise, it would not have rang true. This was, above all, about the baser instincts of man: sex, drugs, and yes, homicide.



6: Shakespearean Relationships

Relationships.jpg In every direction, there was the unfolding and coiling, and then even more unfolding, of various relationship lines. And the coils were lined in thorns. Many of the characters didn’t even realize they were already drowning in someone else’s blood until the barbed vines were pulled away. The Puppet King who loved his son more than the throne. The Usurper who lost everything. The Femme Fatale who prized herself too much and too little. The Assassin who didn’t know how to stop. The Girl who fell in love with the wrong kind of boy. The Godfather who wanted to bury them all.



5: A Love Story That Burned

Doc%2526SooMin4.jpg The romance between Jung KyungHo and Nam Gyuri was a small band-aid for wounds too large, it only temporarily masked and relieved their pain. Their connection was a single flame caught in a thunderstorm. It burned so very hot, so much so that they both were burned by their immediate attraction and helpless to deny it, but like anything so pure and honest and instinctive, it could only be sustained in a cruel world for a short period. Is there a girl worth dying for? Crying for? Throwing everything away for? Is there a boy worth dying, crying and throwing everything away for? Or are those sorts of choices beyond the characters of this show? A hope too luxurious? In its quickness and intensity, it left us all longing for their happiness, and aching when their bittersweet story found its conclusion.



4: Sneering Dialogue


Soo1.jpg The language—in tight restraint or spitting fury, the inflections, the deliberation of word choices, the way vowels dripped from lips and were left hanging between characters like notes building a song—was an aspect of costuming that titillated and enthralled, and was one of the more fun(nier) parts of the show. Everyone had their jab at acidic wit, Jung KyungHo, Kim YooMi, and Yoon HyunMin all delivering their lines with a cadence full of curl and cunning. Jung KyungHo’s manner of speech drawled somewhere between city and slum and was enigmatic in its inflection. But truly, it was the boys of Busan that really delivered their lines in a way that was downright terrorizing. Choi MooSung, for example, playing a ruthless killer, hummed his dialogue in a sneering vibrato of a purr that was all at once sinister yet melodic. Whenever his Safari crowed his favorite turn of phrase, to wish everybody who got in his way to live, eat, richard simmons, or die beautifully, it was always both chilling yet playful. And that was delivery of script that took on a life of its own.



3: Silky Costuming


ShiHyun.jpg The styling and costuming of this show was a feast for the eyes, which one rarely says outside of sageuks usually. Even though this drama was a contemporary drama, it felt like a period piece at times, its view of a criminal underworld straight out of a closet of a hipster obsessed with the high fashion of prohibition era gangsters and their women. There’s no overestimating the importance of styling in a show of this type. It was all about the vintage. 1940’s America mixing with 2013 Korea, classic patterns and cuts, floral and frilly, a penchant for color and designer ritz, but with way shorter skirts and a lot more skin and sexy. And nowhere was style more evident than on the women.
1.jpg 2.jpg 3.jpg 4.jpg 5.jpg 6.jpg 7.jpg 8.jpg 9.jpg mirror.jpg It must have been pure bliss for the two primary actresses to dress in these clothes, especially Kim YooMi, who was never forced to wear a fabulous outfit twice. The actress said she lost weight to play this role, and I can see why, her wardrobe was amazing, but also the kind of cuts and fabrics that would be unforgiving, the kind that would demand perfection to wear perfection.



2: The Cast


Doc&Safari.png In terms of production, this was a show that excelled from top to bottom, from thread to end. Story was tight. Music was practically its lovechild. Direction was pitch perfect. And as good as the people behind the scenes, the cast in front of the lens delivered. It appeared to be a relationship between cast and crew that was fated. The actors seemed born to play these parts…and it was simply amazing that fate not only made this drama happen, but brought this cast together. There was no Huge Name star in this one that would make advertisers jump up in trendy hunger, but it is clear that the actors were not chosen for their mass market appeal, they were casted for their talent, for their look and fit for their very specific parts. They were recruited to play in this very dramatic, very perfectly choreographed theater. They all did so much in such minute details to create colorful people that were bigger than reality, but so believable in their tarnished humanity.



1: Jung KyungHo

 

JKH1.jpg If none of the nine reasons above entice in the least, than watch it for no other reason than to enjoy Jung KyungHo bring to existence the kind of devil in a dark suit that was even greater than the show itself. This one was never really about just a story following good guys capturing bad guys, it was a discussion about morality, and the mortals among us who play games with it. It was about larger-than-life characters born innocent but chipped and cracked and coerced into monsters by a cruel world, and none among an entire cast littered of broken glass pieces of humanity made a greater impression than this actor’s portrayal of Jung ShiHyun. There was an outsider charm to him, a dark brooding rebellion trapped and stifled by the wrapping of society. The dashing intensity of a young Montgomery Clift with the spit and skin of a vicious Al Pacino.
angry.jpg Not only did Jung sacrifice much personally in real life to see his character Jung ShiHyun to the very end, fighting through a debilitating back injury to finish filming one of the best dramas I have ever seen, but he succeeded in creating a hero among devils. Nathaniel Hawthorne, the master of allegory, once observed, in cynicism, “A hero cannot be a hero unless in a heroic world.” Jung KyungHo’s tragic figure waged a one man war on a world where heroes were dirtier than the villains, and became the only kind of hero that could exist in a Heartless City—a broken and bloodied one.



total enjoyment factor 
10/10

why this review is completely biased



It is surprising to me that it has taken this long for such a clever drama like this to be born when I think of the great risks Korean films have taken lately, and yet, I suppose, from a financial engineering point of view, not surprising at all. Apparently, as it’s coming to everyone’s attention, it’s expensive and risky business making a modern kdrama, some pointing fingers at deregulation as a main problem. Producers must be willing to gamble…and afford to take a loss, which they aren’t, so they chase the pandering tail (this incidentally probably explains why we’ve been seeing a lot more established idols with large fanbases instead of newbie actors in peripheral drama roles; a statement of fact, not judgment). Considering the news stories that have been coming out of late regarding how these dramas are financed, and the train wreck of lives the failed ones can leave behind, it sounds less like television production and more like playing high stakes backroom poker.

While I love the fluff, I’m also a pretty jaded tv watcher. Can you blame me? There’s a lot of crap out there, and I’m not specifically talking kdramas, I’m talking all kinds of tv and movies. But Heartless City came along…and made my eyes pop. Best of all? It got my jaded brain and my fangirl heart to come to an agreement, which majority of the time doesn’t happen. These are two personalities of my kdrama watching that sit on each shoulder and duke it out…sometimes the brain wins, most of the time my fangirl heart triumphs.


Not in this case. The two were standing on my head hugging each other and jumping up and down in glee.

Even as an homage to an old American cinematic style, it impressed and never embarrassed itself in the comparison. It was an honest tribute that stayed true, but was of course painted with kdrama elements. Peculiarly, but delightfully, America in the mid-1900s synchronizes well with 2013 South Korea in vogue and spirit.

As far as noir goes, it’s not my most favorite genre. My experience with it varies. Two of my favorite films of all time are noir, Rebecca and Vertigo, and yet, I would describe watching some others as having suffered through them, what pops first to mind is The Devil Thumbs A Ride. Since I’m not a film student nor an aficionado of the genre, I can’t claim to have loved it because it was noir, but I did love it because it was a stylized crime tale. In fact, I’m one of those people who have read Mario Puzo’s novels, instead of only having seen the Godfather films, and love those types of immersive gangster tales. For me, Heartless felt less like the classic noir films I have personally encountered, but more in line with the sulky and thinking sleaze of the younger generation of films that tackled organized corruption, such as Once Upon A Time In America, The Untouchables, Layer Cake, Eastern Promises, etc. In the end, no matter how anyone wants to label it, I guess what this show and its characters have in common with the Humphrey Bogarts, the Robert De Niros, the James Woods, the Daniel Craigs, and the Viggo Mortensens of the world is that they’ve now all cut teeth on a really cool crime tale.



verdict
I’ve kept this review fairly content brief and to the point:

I loved it.


This has easily become my favorite drama of all-time, as of 7/30/2013. And I know that in time, the pain and anxiety (in a good way) that this show has caused me will stop hurting and heal. Right? Right!?

The drama in its generic architecture was one about good guys chasing bad guys, except the real point of it was not if the good guys succeeded in saving the day, but to ask the question: what is the definition of a good guy and a bad guy? What beats in our deepest parts, who hides behind the lies we tell the world, the lies we tell ourselves? This struggle was the whale that devoured everybody in this show.

Is it noir, is it kdrama, is it this, is it that? Strip away all the fancy classifying of this show and we are left with one resounding answer, and this is fact: this was a tv show of 20 parts that happened to air on tv in South Korea, and it was damn good.

twilight.jpg
I have hopes of posting an in depth analysis of the show for my own catharsis and that post will be unapologetically crammed with lots of gushing and raving and ranting, including a discussion about the ending. So, basically, it will obviously be a spoiler landmine which is why I’m gonna post it separately. A show like this deserves to be peered at to death with a microscope, and my generic review format just won’t cut it. So instead I just threw at my review pictures galore, pretty much everything but a picture of the kitchen sink. To me, most important, was the aim to entice new viewers to try it but without accidentally spoiling it for a fan who hasn’t fortuned upon it yet.



Cr. kdramaguk.blogspot.com

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  • 2 weeks later...

[HanCinema's Year in Review] 

Raine's Top Six Picks of 2013

photo387141.jpg
It is the end of another year in K-dramaland and time to look back and count how many hours I spent watching dramas, running my drama blog, and working on drama-related projects. Since I watched twenty-eight 2013 dramas, recapped three and reviewed nine, and delved into past dramas, that would give me a total of...
...let's just not say how much time I invested in drama. Instead, let's talk about which of those twenty-eight dramas stuck in my head and why they did.
I chose these dramas because they stuck with me long after I watched them. They were full of heart, well-acted, well-produced and had me complete invested for the duration of the drama. I would watch (and have watched) them again and again. All of my chosen dramas have what I call "the feeling". What I mean by that is that I can escape into the world of the drama, feel what the characters feel, be where the director intends for me to be and really be in the moment with the characters. This does not mean a drama is without flaws, but that the quality of the show supersedes them.
"Heartless City"
Aired on jTBC, written by Yoo Seong-yeol, directed by Jang Yong-woo and Lee Jeong-hyophoto387142.jpg

This show was ridiculously addicting despite the simplicity of the drug ring's and the legal system's representations. This show was, at its heart, about Jung Shi-hyun (played by the amazing Jeong Kyeong-ho) and how he was trapped by the drug world and human greed. He tried to fight his way out and forged some steadfast relationships on the way. He was a character that made me root for him every step of the way and made me love him as fiercely as his friends and comrades did.
Lee Jin-sook (Kim Yoo-mi) is the strongest female lead I've seen to date. She is 100% woman, intelligent, clever, ruthless and sadly vulnerable. I love that she never lost her femininity despite being used as a prostitute and by the men in the real world and in the drug world. She kept who she was despite it all and was a rock for Shi-hyun to lean against until the bitter, bitter end. Even her antagonistic friendship with Kim Hyun-soo (Yoon Hyeon-min), Shi-hyun's best friend, was poetic and beautiful.
It was also beautifully shot and choreographed and timed and the wardrobes were exquisite. Thank you, cable!
This show has made it on my list because my heart still knots when I think about the characters and what happened to them. I still hate the villain and cheer for the hopeless romance. That, my friends, is what makes a powerful drama.

To read the rest of the picks go http://www.hancinema.net/hancinema-s-year-in-review-raine-s-top-six-picks-of-2013-64577.html
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I finished watching this drama and it left me speechless. Deym, show, what did you do to me? Now, i want thriller dramas as good as you. I know this drama not for all (you will get very minimal cute or lovey-dovey, but i guess when you ask for lovey-dovey from the main couple and they give it to you full force LOL).
This drama is so well done down to the actors, cinematography and music that i want them to win all the awards!!
Good job, show! For me you are the best drama of 2013. 

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So, has anyone heard about a DVD release for this drama yet? I only recently learned about this drama, and now that I'm watching, I am in LOVE with it. Unfortunately, it looks like jTBC has only released DVD's of their first two series (Padam Padam and Fermented Family) and haven't released any after that. I also saw an article on Dramabeans about how all the new cable channels opened in ~2011 were struggling and were cutting back on their drama budgets. Maybe that's why they haven't done any DVD releases of their dramas after those first two?

Is there a way to contact or petition jTBC to release a DVD set (Director's cut, preferably!) for this amazing, amazing drama?

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Guest chandara

czakhareina said:

[HanCinema's Year in Review] 

Raine's Top Six Picks of 2013


It is the end of another year in K-dramaland and time to look back and count how many hours I spent watching dramas, running my drama blog, and working on drama-related projects. Since I watched twenty-eight 2013 dramas, recapped three and reviewed nine, and delved into past dramas, that would give me a total of...
...let's just not say how much time I invested in drama. Instead, let's talk about which of those twenty-eight dramas stuck in my head and why they did.
I chose these dramas because they stuck with me long after I watched them. They were full of heart, well-acted, well-produced and had me complete invested for the duration of the drama. I would watch (and have watched) them again and again. All of my chosen dramas have what I call "the feeling". What I mean by that is that I can escape into the world of the drama, feel what the characters feel, be where the director intends for me to be and really be in the moment with the characters. This does not mean a drama is without flaws, but that the quality of the show supersedes them.
"Heartless City"
Aired on jTBC, written by Yoo Seong-yeol, directed by Jang Yong-woo and Lee Jeong-hyo

This show was ridiculously addicting despite the simplicity of the drug ring's and the legal system's representations. This show was, at its heart, about Jung Shi-hyun (played by the amazing Jeong Kyeong-ho) and how he was trapped by the drug world and human greed. He tried to fight his way out and forged some steadfast relationships on the way. He was a character that made me root for him every step of the way and made me love him as fiercely as his friends and comrades did.
Lee Jin-sook (Kim Yoo-mi) is the strongest female lead I've seen to date. She is 100% woman, intelligent, clever, ruthless and sadly vulnerable. I love that she never lost her femininity despite being used as a prostitute and by the men in the real world and in the drug world. She kept who she was despite it all and was a rock for Shi-hyun to lean against until the bitter, bitter end. Even her antagonistic friendship with Kim Hyun-soo (Yoon Hyeon-min), Shi-hyun's best friend, was poetic and beautiful.
It was also beautifully shot and choreographed and timed and the wardrobes were exquisite. Thank you, cable!
This show has made it on my list because my heart still knots when I think about the characters and what happened to them. I still hate the villain and cheer for the hopeless romance. That, my friends, is what makes a powerful drama.

To read the rest of the picks go http://www.hancinema.net/hancinema-s-year-in-review-raine-s-top-six-picks-of-2013-64577.html
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  • 3 weeks later...
Guest chandara

Sanam Khan said: After i watched a video of shi hyun and soo mi i decided to watch this drama . I serioulsy love it . But i am sad for the otp :( I hope they will give us a season 2 with the same cast and this time there would more romance . 

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  • 1 month later...

To all new fans of Heartless City or Cruel City I am happy to see new names in this thread.
HC is the kind of drama that leaves it remark in your memory.
I wish we will have more projects like this in the future.
@ Sanam Khan
if you backread 20/30 pages you will see a big disappointment regarding the last episode from most of us that were watching the show when it was airing . 6 months later i kinda accept the end and I believe it was ok-still not the best-for the drama.
 SPOILER,SPOILER
Most of us agreed that Baksa was alive,according the last scene when you see the back of a guy who looks like Baksa.If you read those pages from the thread you will get an answer about Baksa 's future.
: ) I hope I helped you.




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