Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo Episode | 1

This is why the episode works. It refuses to comfort the viewer. Instead, it says: You are as lost as she is. Now watch her try to build a self from rubble. In an age of tidy time-travel fantasies, Scarlet Heart Ryeo begins with a drowning that never truly ends. And that is its brutal, unforgettable genius.

The episode’s greatest directorial choice is to deny Ha Jin any moment of wonder upon arrival. She does not wake in silk sheets or a flower field. Instead, she opens her eyes in a muddy riverbank, gasping, only to witness two men being executed by sword. The Goryeo she enters is not a romanticized history but a gauntlet of shock and sensory overload. Men are stabbed in baths. Princes sneer. A dog devours a court lady’s corpse. moon lovers: scarlet heart ryeo episode 1

This is not the courtly intrigue of The Crowned Clown —it is a horror film dressed in hanbok. The camera lingers on blood seeping through straw mats and the cold indifference of palace guards. For Ha Jin, and for the viewer, the 10th-century court is a place where vulnerability is fatal. Her modern skills—swimming, CPR, emotional transparency—are useless here. When she instinctively tries to resuscitate a drowned court lady, she is met with horror and accusations of witchcraft. The episode systematically strips her of every tool she once relied upon. This is why the episode works

Episode 1 introduces eight of the Goryeo princes not as romantic leads, but as potential predators. Wang So (Lee Joon-gi), the fourth prince, enters through a mask and a wound. He is introduced killing a man in a bathhouse, then tending to a bleeding gash on his own face with terrifying calm. His gaze when he sees Ha Jin is not longing—it is curiosity tinged with danger. Wang Wook (Kang Ha-neul), the eighth prince, offers the first flicker of kindness, yet even he is framed with shadows, his gentle smile never quite reaching his eyes in close-up. Now watch her try to build a self from rubble

Most pilot episodes offer a thesis or a promise of romance to come. Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo Episode 1 offers only dislocation. By the final scene, Ha Jin is kneeling in the mud, rain pouring down, surrounded by princes who may kill her or save her—and she does not know which. The episode ends not with a cliffhanger, but with a suspension. She has not found love. She has not found purpose. She has only found survival, and even that is tentative.

This mundane devastation is crucial. Unlike time-travel heroines who are displaced by accident or destiny, Ha Jin is displaced by exhaustion . Her journey to the Goryeo Dynasty is not an escape—it is a continuation of her drowning, merely in a different river. When she saves a drowning child in a lake during a solar eclipse, she is literally pulled under while trying to do what she failed to do in her modern life: protect someone. The water becomes a threshold of trauma, not fantasy.

Before the eclipse, before the lake, the episode establishes Ha Jin (IU) as a woman on the verge of drowning in the present. She is not a glamorous CEO or a starry-eyed romantic; she is a peripheral figure in her own life—neglected by her family, exploited by her lover, and stripped of her identity. When she discovers her boyfriend’s infidelity and her family’s financial betrayal in quick succession, her breakdown is not melodramatic but achingly ordinary. She cries in a convenience store. She wanders into traffic.