Glamorous Temptation (Korean: 화려한 유혹; RR: Hwaryeohan yuhok) is a South Korean drama series that aired on Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation (MBC) every Monday and Tuesday at 10:00 PM from October 5, 2015, to March 22, 2016, spanning 50 episodes.[1][2] Starring Choi Kang-hee as the protagonist Shin Eun-soo, a single mother who inadvertently enters the world of Korea's wealthiest elite, the series depicts her entanglement in schemes of jealousy, betrayal, and revenge orchestrated by rivals within high society.[3][4]Joo Sang-wook and Cha Ye-ryun co-star as key figures in the ensuing love triangle and power struggles, with the narrative emphasizing themes of temptation and moral compromise among the upper class.[1] The drama, directed by Kim Sang-hyup and written by Son Young-mok and Cha I-young, received moderate viewership ratings, starting with around 7-8% for its premiere episodes and maintaining a consistent audience through its extended run.[2][5]
Synopsis
Plot Overview
Glamorous Temptation follows Shin Eun-soo, a woman raised with the lesson from her whistleblower father that honesty does not always prevail, who faces overwhelming debt shortly after her marriage to a wealthy businessman.[4] She discovers that her husband's family orchestrated her own father's imprisonment and her family's bankruptcy, prompting her to pursue revenge by infiltrating and dismantling their empire.[6]
Eun-soo forms an alliance with private investigator Jin Hyeong-woo, whose father was similarly framed for embezzlement by the same influential political family, fueling his quest for justice.[6] Their partnership evolves amid rivalries, as the envious and ambitious Sin Yeong-jae schemes against Eun-soo, entangling them in a love triangle marked by betrayal and power struggles within the upper echelons of society.[1]
The series, spanning 50 episodes broadcast on MBC from October 5, 2015, to March 22, 2016, examines the greed and hypocrisy of the elite, contrasting them with themes of forgiveness, family reconciliation, and personal redemption.[4]
Cast and Characters
Main Cast
Joo Sang-wook starred as Jin Hyeong-woo, the ambitious scion of a powerful conglomerate family entangled in schemes of power and romance.[7][8] Choi Kang-hee portrayed Shin Eun-soo, a resilient woman from modest origins who navigates temptation and betrayal after personal tragedy.[7][8] Cha Ye-ryun played Kang Il-joo, a cunning socialite driven by jealousy and desire within elite circles.[7][8] Jung Jin-young depicted Kang Seok-hyeon, the authoritative chairman whose influence shapes the central conflicts.[7][8] These lead performances, confirmed in pre-production announcements on August 22, 2015, anchored the 50-episode series' exploration of wealth's corrupting allure.[9]
Supporting Cast
Kim Mi-kyung portrayed Choi Kang-ja, the resilient mother of Shin Eun-soo who endures personal hardships and supports her daughter's journey through adversity.[10][1] Jang Young-nam played Kang Il-ran, a scheming figure within the affluent Kang family, contributing to the interpersonal conflicts and power dynamics central to the plot.[10][8] Na Young-hee acted as Han Young-ae, adding depth to the ensemble through her role in the familial and social entanglements.[10]The younger counterparts of the leads were depicted by emerging actors: Kim Sae-ron as the adolescent Shin Eun-soo, Nam Joo-hyuk as the teenage Jin Hyung-woo, and Kim Bo-ra as the young Kang Il-joo, illustrating key formative events in flashbacks.[7][11] Additional supporting performers included Kim Byung-se as Jin Hyung-woo's father, influencing the protagonist's vengeful motivations, and Kim Ho-jin, whose performance earned a Best Supporting Actor award at the 2015 MBC Drama Awards for his nuanced contribution to the revenge-driven narrative.[7][11] These roles collectively amplified the drama's themes of temptation, betrayal, and redemption across its 50 episodes aired from October 5, 2015, to December 21, 2015.[11]
Production
Development and Writing
Son Young-mok served as the primary screenwriter for Glamorous Temptation, with Cha I-young contributing as co-writer.[2] Son, born in 1966 and a graduate of Korea University, debuted as a drama writer in 1992 with the co-authored episode "Tomorrow is Love" alongside his wife, Kim Ji-su. His prior works, including the 2012 revenge melodrama May Queen and the 2013 family sagaGolden Rainbow, established his style of intricate plots blending ambition, betrayal, and emotional turmoil, elements central to Glamorous Temptation's narrative of elite-class revenge and desire.[12][13]The series was conceived as a 50-episode Monday-Tuesday slot drama for MBC, replacing Splendid Politics and targeting themes of social inequality and psychological manipulation within Korea's upper echelon. Son's script emphasized character-driven conflicts over supernatural tropes common in makjang genres, earning post-broadcast praise for elevating melodramatic excess into structured psychological depth, as noted by critics reviewing the writers' handling of desire-twisted fates.[14] No public records indicate major deviations from the initial outline during writing, though the extended episode count allowed for serialized expansions on subplots like corporate intrigue and familial vendettas.Development accelerated in mid-2015 under director Kim Sang-hyub, with the first table read occurring on August 26 at MBC's Sangam studios, involving principal cast members including Choi Kang-hee, Joo Sang-wook, and Jung Jin-young.[15][16] Kim highlighted the production's focus on collaborative enjoyment amid the "long journey" ahead, signaling an intent to balance intense scripting with actor input for authentic emotional delivery.[15] Filming commenced immediately after, prioritizing childhood flashback sequences featuring young actors Kim Sae-ron and Nam Joo-hyuk to establish backstory before adult arcs.[17] This phased approach facilitated iterative script refinements, typical for MBC's pre-airing production model, ensuring alignment between writing and visual execution by the premiere on October 5, 2015.[2]
Casting Process
The principal casting decisions for Glamorous Temptation were announced in August 2015, culminating in a confirmed lineup of prominent actors selected for their proven dramatic range and suitability for the melodrama's themes of ambition, revenge, and social ascent. Joo Sang-wook was cast as the male lead Jin Hyeong-woo, an ambitious political aide; Choi Kang-hee as the female lead Shin Eun-soo, a resilient single mother burdened by debt; Jung Jin-young as the patriarchal elite Kang Seok-hyeon; and Cha Ye-ryun as the driven politician Kang Il-joo.[18][19] The production team, led by director Kim Sang-hyeop, highlighted these choices as a "perfect match" for character transformations, with Choi Kang-hee's role marking her reunion with the director after their 2013 collaboration on 7th Level Civil Servant.[19]Supporting roles followed swiftly, with Kim Beop-rae confirmed on August 27, 2015, to portray the conservative, authoritative National Assembly member Kang Il-do, a chaebol family figure whose wife would be played by Park Jeong-ah.[20] Veteran performers including Kim Chang-wan, Na Young-hee, and Kim Mi-kyung were later announced in September 2015 to depict members of the upper echelon, adding depth to the portrayal of entrenched power structures.[21]For the drama's extensive flashback sequences spanning the protagonists' youths, Kim Sae-ron and Nam Joo-hyuk were cast as the younger Shin Eun-soo and Jin Hyeong-woo, respectively, with filming of these childhood portions commencing before the adult cast's integration.[17] A table read for the main adult cast took place on August 24, 2015, at MBC's Sangam-dong studios, signaling the transition to principal photography.[2] This phased approach prioritized early capture of time-sensitive youth scenes while aligning the ensemble for cohesive narrative delivery across the 50-episode run.
Filming and Technical Aspects
The series was directed by Kim Sang-hyub, who helmed multiple episodes including key dramatic confrontations, alongside co-director Kim Hee-won, employing a conventional K-drama style focused on close-up emotional exchanges and sweeping establishing shots to underscore class contrasts.[1][11]Principal photography began after the initial script reading on August 16, 2015, at MBC's facilities in Sangam-dong, Seoul, with production spanning from late 2015 into early 2016 to align with the Monday-Tuesday broadcast schedule of 50 episodes.[2]Filming occurred predominantly in South Korea, utilizing a mix of urban studio sets at MBC studios for interior scenes and exterior locations to depict affluent lifestyles and rural backdrops central to the plot's themes of temptation and revenge. Key sites included the Seowon Valley clubhouse in Paju, Gyeonggi Province, where sequences portraying elite political and social gatherings were shot, leveraging the venue's manicured grounds and modern architecture for visual opulence.[22][23]Technical execution adhered to standard South Korean television norms, with multi-camera setups for dialogue-heavy scenes and post-production editing emphasizing melodramatic pacing through quick cuts and heightened sound design to amplify tension in revenge arcs. Behind-the-scenes materials from episodes 10, 16, 18, and the finale document on-site coordination challenges, such as weather-dependent outdoor shoots and actor improvisations, but no major production halts were reported.[24][25][26]The original soundtrack, composed under music director Huh Joon-man, integrated orchestral swells and piano motifs during filming to guide performances, later refined in editing for emotional synchronization.[11]
Broadcast and Release
Domestic Airing
Glamorous Temptation premiered on Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation (MBC) in South Korea on October 5, 2015.[5] The series occupied MBC's Monday-Tuesday primetime slot at 10:00 p.m. KST, succeeding the historical drama Hwajung and preceding Monster.[27][2] It aired for 50 episodes, each lasting approximately 70 minutes, marking MBC's first long-form melodrama in the slot since 2000.[5]The drama concluded on March 22, 2016, after spanning five months of weekly broadcasts.[28] This extended format allowed for detailed character development in its revenge melodrama narrative, though it faced competition from shorter KBS and SBS offerings in the same time period.[28] Domestic airing emphasized MBC's strategy to revive multi-episode sagas, drawing on established viewer loyalty for family-oriented viewing habits prevalent in South Korean television consumption during the mid-2010s.
Viewership Metrics
"Glamorous Temptation" achieved an average viewership rating of 10.3% in the Seoul metropolitan area according to TNmS metrics across its 50 episodes, which aired on MBC from October 5, 2015, to March 22, 2016.[29][30] Nielsen Korea, which measures household ratings, reported consistently higher figures, with nationwide averages approximately 10.6% and Seoul averages at 11.5%, reflecting stronger household engagement compared to TNmS individual viewer data.[31]The series premiered with Nielsen nationwide ratings of 8.5% (episode 1, October 5, 2015), rising to 9.7% for episode 2 the following day.[31] Ratings fluctuated initially but trended upward, entering double digits by episode 5 (TNmS Seoul 10.0%, October 19, 2015) and sustaining momentum through intense plot developments.[32] Peak performance occurred in later episodes, with episode 39 (February 16, 2016) recording 15.1% (TNmS nationwide), the program's highest, amid heightened narrative tension.[33]Episode 31 (January 19, 2016) also marked a notable high of 13.8% nationwide per Nielsen Korea.[34]
These figures positioned the drama competitively in its Monday-Tuesday evening slot, outperforming rivals at peaks and demonstrating sustained audience retention despite a lengthy run.[35] Note that Korean ratings differ by agency methodology—TNmS surveys individuals via meters, while Nielsen focuses on households—leading to variance, with Nielsen often higher.[36] The finale (episodes 49-50, March 22, 2016) closed with Nielsen nationwide at 12.4%, affirming endgame appeal.[31]
International Distribution
Glamorous Temptation was distributed internationally primarily through digital streaming platforms catering to global audiences of Korean dramas, rather than traditional television broadcasts. In Southeast Asia, Viu launched the series with English and Chinese subtitles starting in early 2016, aligning with its Tuesday-Wednesday airing schedule on MBC in South Korea.[37] This platform, operated by PCCW Media, targeted markets including Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, and Indonesia, where demand for subtitled K-dramas was rising via mobile and online access.[37]OnDemandKorea, a subscription-based service for overseas Korean content, provides full episodes of the series, enabling access for diaspora communities and international fans primarily in North America and Europe. Similarly, KOCOWA+, a joint venture between KBS, MBC, and SBS, streams the drama globally with multilingual subtitles, emphasizing its availability to subscribers in regions like the United States, Canada, and parts of Latin America since its licensing post-2015 release.[3]In Japan, where K-dramas enjoy significant popularity, the series is accessible via U-NEXT and Amazon Prime Video, with Japanese subtitles facilitating viewership among local audiences. These platforms reported availability as of recent checks, reflecting ongoing licensing by MBC Global Media for video-on-demand distribution rather than linear TV slots. No major free-to-air or cable television premieres were documented outside Asia, underscoring a shift toward streaming for mid-2010s K-dramas in international markets.[38]
Reception
Critical Reviews
Critics commended the performances in Glamorous Temptation, particularly Joo Sang-wook's nuanced depiction of the protagonist's isolation and vengeful drive, conveyed effectively through subtle expressions amid intense confrontations.[39]Choi Kang-hee's portrayal of the conflicted lead was similarly highlighted for capturing internal struggles between revenge and redemption, contributing to the drama's emotional depth in exploring human desires and moral dilemmas.[28] The narrative's rapid plot reversals and escalating tension were noted for sustaining viewer engagement, with episode developments praised for their thriller-like momentum in unraveling conspiracies tied to wealth and power.[40]However, the series drew substantial criticism for its reliance on makjang conventions, characterized by melodramatic excess, contrived coincidences, and a proliferation of clichés such as familial betrayals and over-the-top villainy, which some argued diluted narrative coherence over its 50-episode run.[41] Reviewers pointed to the convoluted structure—spanning multiple timelines and intertwining genres from revengethriller to social commentary—as a potential flaw that risked undermining immersion and resulting in an "awkward" execution.[42] Korean media outlets like Yonhap News emphasized its stark, violent portrayal of societal undercurrents, contrasting it with lighter contemporaries, but critiqued the format for prioritizing sensationalism over subtlety, leading to perceptions of it as emblematic of formulaic broadcasting trends.[43]Further analysis in Hankyoreh faulted the drama's broad indictments of corruption and inequality as superficial, suggesting that despite ambitious social targets, the execution fostered audience detachment from real-world parallels, rendering the critique "boring" and ineffective.[44] Despite these reservations, the production's technical execution, including tight episode pacing in later arcs, was acknowledged as a mitigating factor, though overall, professional reviews positioned it as a competent but uninnovative entry in the revenge drama genre, appealing more through visceral intensity than groundbreaking insight.[28]
Audience Response
Audience reception to Glamorous Temptation was mixed, appealing primarily to enthusiasts of extended melodramatic narratives while drawing criticism for its structural flaws. On MyDramaList, the series holds an average user rating of 7.1 out of 10, derived from 862 votes, reflecting moderate satisfaction among international viewers familiar with Korean dramas.[4] Domestic audiences responded positively to the drama's high-tension plot twists and emotional intensity, with episode endings frequently cited for delivering "heart attacks" through cliffhangers and revelations that heightened suspense.[45][46]Viewers frequently commended the lead actors' chemistry, particularly between Joo Sang-wook and Lim Ji-yeon, for sustaining engagement amid the story's revenge-driven intrigue and political machinations; media reports highlighted "explosive" reactions to their poignant interactions, which stimulated emotional investment and kept audiences hooked despite competitive programming.[47][48] The fast-paced "brain battles" and layered betrayals were also praised for mirroring real-world power dynamics, contributing to its status as a "guilty pleasure" in online discussions.[49][50]Criticisms centered on the 50-episode length, which amplified repetitive elements and pacing drags, particularly in the early childhood arcs and recurring confrontations that felt convoluted and stalled momentum.[51] The finale elicited frustration for its perceived lack of resolution, with some users noting it shied away from fully exploring the narrative's darker implications, leading to dissatisfaction among those expecting a more conclusive payoff to the multi-generational conflicts.[51] Parrot Analytics data indicated audience demand in South Korea was 1.4 times the average for TV series, underscoring sustained interest but not exceptional fervor compared to shorter contemporaries.[52]
Awards and Nominations
Glamorous Temptation garnered recognition at the 2015 MBC Drama Awards, securing three wins for its performances. Jung Jin-young received the Top Excellence Award in the Actor category for Special Project Dramas for his portrayal of the lead antagonist.[53][54] Kim Ho-jin won the Best Supporting Actor award in the Special Project Drama category for his role as the scheming Kwon Moo-hyuk.[54][55] Child actress Gal So-won was awarded the Child Actor prize for her depiction of Hong Mi-rae, the protagonist's daughter.[54][56] These accolades highlighted the drama's strong ensemble acting amid its weekday evening broadcast slot, though no further major awards or nominations were reported from other ceremonies.[54]
Analysis and Legacy
Thematic Elements
Glamorous Temptation prominently features themes of revenge and betrayal, driven by interpersonal conflicts among its central characters. The narrative centers on Shin Eun-soo, a woman thrust into elite society, and her childhood friend Shin Sang-yi, whose jealousy escalates into calculated schemes that betray their longstanding bond, fracturing trust and fueling retaliatory actions.[51] This dynamic exemplifies the drama's exploration of how envy corrupts relationships, with Sang-yi's manipulations extending to romantic and familial spheres.[6]A core theme is social mobility and the perils of ascending into the upper echelons of power, as Eun-soo transitions from a life of hardship to entanglement in the top 1% of society, confronting greed, hypocrisy, and institutional corruption such as political bribery and slush funds.[5] The series illustrates the seductive yet destructive allure of wealth and status, where ambition propels characters toward moralcompromise, highlighting causal links between socioeconomic disparity and ethical erosion.[1]Jealousy and generational desire underpin much of the conflict, with parental legacies of illicit affairs, hidden births, and power grabs reverberating across offspring, twisting alliances and perpetuating cycles of antagonism.[57] These elements manifest in love triangles and family secrets, where initial romantic ideals clash with vengeful pursuits, ultimately leading to resolutions involving forgiveness and relational reconstruction.[1] The drama's makjang structure amplifies these through exaggerated plots, emphasizing retribution's psychological toll without romanticizing unchecked ambition.[58]
Narrative Critiques
The narrative structure of Glamorous Temptation, a 50-episode makjang melodrama centered on intergenerational revenge, amnesia, and familial betrayals, has drawn criticism for its repetitive cycles of conflict and resolution that prioritize emotional escalation over logical progression. Reviewers note that the plot frequently revisits the same interpersonal tensions—particularly push-pull dynamics within the Kang family—without expanding into broader stakes, resulting in a stretched-thin storyline that feels stagnant beyond domestic intrigue.[59][60]A common point of contention is the uneven pacing, with the initial episodes hampered by prolonged childhood flashbacks that delay engagement with the adult revenge arc, creating a disjointed entry point. The mid-series development, while initially coherent, devolves into confusion through redundant schemes and contrived obstacles, such as improbable pursuits involving multiple adults chasing a child or reliance on symbolic props like parrots and shipping containers, which amplify melodrama at the expense of plausibility.[59][51]The core revengemotif, hinging on a marriage-for-vengeance premise, is frequently deemed underdeveloped and inconsistent, as antagonists face minimal repercussions despite years of destructive actions, with sudden shifts to redemption undermining causal accountability. The female protagonist's arc exemplifies this, portraying her as persistently passive and "tossed around" rather than evolving into an aggressive avenger, which clashes with genre conventions and renders motivations unconvincing.[59][51]The conclusion exacerbates these issues, delivering a weak and bitter resolution that forgives key perpetrators without narrative justification, leaving viewers with unresolved threads and a lack of cathartic payoff typical of the format. While the small ensemble suits intimate family drama, it limits plot diversification, confining events largely to the Kang household and forgoing opportunities for wider political or corporate scheming implied by the chaebol setting.[59][61]
Cultural Impact
Glamorous Temptation reinforced the makjang genre's dominance in South Korean television during the mid-2010s, employing hallmark tropes such as intergenerational vendettas, sudden amnesia, and convoluted betrayals that mirrored elements of daily soap operas while airing in the competitive Monday-Tuesday slot.[41] The drama's narrative structure, marked by rapid plot escalations and frequent flashbacks, drew comparisons to extended serial formats, yet it garnered criticism for inducing viewer confusion through repetitive recollections that disrupted pacing.[62]Despite these elements, the series evolved traditional makjang conventions by emphasizing psychological interplay between desire, love, and rivalry, positioning events as manifestations of characters' internal conflicts rather than mere sensationalism.[57] This approach contributed to its second-place ratings performance by episode 10, with 9.6% viewership, signaling audience tolerance for moderated extremity that avoided full descent into unsubtle excess.[63] Such balance highlighted a shift toward hybrid storytelling, where makjang frameworks incorporated deeper emotional realism, influencing perceptions of the genre as capable of sustaining prime-time appeal without alienating viewers seeking substance amid spectacle.[41]