Immortal Admiral Yi Sun-sin

Immortal Admiral Yi Sun-Sin
Format Drama, History, War
Developed by Youn Seon Ju
Written by Youn Seon Ju
Starring Kim Myung Min
Yi Jae Ryong
Choi Jae-sung
Choi Chul Ho
Country of origin South Korea
No. of episodes 104
Production
Producer(s) Jeong Yeon Chul
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time Saturday and Sunday, 1 Hour
Broadcast
Original channel KBS
Original run September 4, 2004 – August 28, 2005[1]
Korean name
Hangul 불멸의 이순신
Hanja 不滅의 李舜臣
Revised Romanization Bulmyeolwi I Sun-sin
McCune–Reischauer Pulmyŏlŭi Yi Sun-shin

Immortal Admiral Yi Sun-sin is a South Korean television show based on the life of Admiral Yi Sun-sin. It was first broadcast in August 2004 in Korea and later the same year in the United States. Many times, it filmed on location at the actual battle sites. It made extensive use of rendered images and a reconstruction of a turtle ship. Due to the preparation needed, the show took many months to produce.

Contents

Synopsis

It is late 1598, shortly before the Battle of Noryang, the final confrontation of the Imjin War. The renmants of the Japanese invasion force are desperate to go home, but are also driven by personal motivation to beat their greatest adversary, Admiral Yi Sun-shin, once and for all. Self-serving Ming generals and Joseon officials also fear Yi's growing popularity and its impact on their personal base of power. These incidentally combining ambitions fan King Seonjo's paranoia and make him eventually fear that Yi might come after his throne, and after a series of what he calls acts of high treason he decides to have Yi arrested.

Yi, on the other hand, is determined to teach the Japanese a lesson for the atrocities they committed on the Korean people, and despite orders to remain quiet while the Japanese are to pull out without anymore bloodshed, he rallies his naval force and prepares for the upcoming battle. the battle commences and the Japanese are dealt a crippling blow, but Yi is fatally wounded by an arquebuse bullet. As he lays dying, the plot backtracks important stations of Yi's life, from his boyhood to his military career, his disgrace at the hands of his king and his reinstatement, back to the battle of Noryang, where he succumbs to his wound just as victory is declared.

Artistic license in the series

The drama has been the focus of some attention due to historical inaccuracies, explained away with artistic license, though it concerns some that it may be promoting itself as based on fact.[2]

When Admiral Yi is portrayed as a boy, he is shown to be a weak, shy, and lonely boy though common belief is that he had leadership and creativity at an early age. Nevertheless, he is portrayed to display those qualities as a growing man, unable to avert his eyes from social injustice.

Instead of vilifying Won Gyun, a Korean admiral who contributed to the jailing of Admiral Yi for jealous reasons, Won Gyun is portrayed as a strong and smart man who befriends and leads Yi throughout his early life. This deviates from the common belief that Won Gyun had always conspired against Yi. In the show, his jealousy and rivalry is portrayed in his later years as a veteran commander when he begins to show his arrogance as one of Joseon's strongest warriors, refusing to follow along with what he deems to be Yi's cowardly tactics and treachery to the King. His betrayal to Yi is explained through the show's ongoing politics and his inability to distinguish military merits from protection of the people. There is much debate about this positive portrayal of Won Gyun as recent research suggests that he may have been excessively vilified during the Park Chung-Hee administration.[3] Reception and reviews have since been positive with much praise for the show's emphasis for humanity and their portrayal of Won Gyun.

Cast

References

External links