Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo | Ep 1

But two figures dominate the screen.

It is a seemingly silly, playful scene. But watch it again. Hae Soo is drowning in a shallow puddle. She is helpless, far from home, surrounded by men who could kill her with a word. The rain is not just weather; it is the tears of the drama’s future. Every time she laughs in this episode, the audience knows she will eventually be crying alone in a palace room. The mud represents the political quicksand she is about to sink into. Of course, Episode 1 is not perfect. The pacing is breakneck. Characters are introduced so quickly that the uninitiated viewer needs a family tree on a sticky note. The modern soundtrack (including Taeyeon’s "All With You" and a pop-rock guitar riff) feels jarring against the historical setting. Furthermore, the tonal shift from slapstick comedy (Ha-jin complaining about a prince’s "skinny wrists") to high melodrama (a prince threatening to kill a child) is dizzying. moon lovers: scarlet heart ryeo ep 1

In the sprawling landscape of K-drama history, few premieres have wielded the tonal whiplash quite like the first episode of Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo (2016). Upon its initial broadcast, the episode was criticized for being rushed and chaotic. But viewed through the lens of the tragedy to come, Episode 1 is a masterclass in dramatic irony. It is not merely a pilot; it is a prophecy dressed in sunshine and pop music, laying the foundation for one of the most heartbreaking stories ever told on television. A Modern Girl, A Total Eclipse The episode opens with a paradox. Ha-jin (Lee Ji-eun, aka IU) is a young woman drowning in the 21st century—not in water, but in emotional debt. She is a cynical, modern百货 store worker who has been hardened by betrayal and a broken family. When she witnesses a stranger’s suicide attempt, she tries to save him, only to end up in a river herself. But two figures dominate the screen

Three brothers see her. Wook stops, hesitates, and looks back. Wang So simply watches, unmoved. But then, a young boy—the 10th Prince, Eun—laughs and jumps into the puddle to splash her. Hae Soo is drowning in a shallow puddle

Then, there is . His introduction is everything the K-drama hero’s is not. Covered by a mask that hides a facial scar, cloaked in black, and introduced as a "wolf-dog" feared by his own family, Wang So is a storm. He enters the frame not with romantic music, but with the screech of a horse and the thud of a fist. He is a brutal outcast, a prince exiled for his violence.