Vagabond

8.3
20191h

Stuntman Cha Dal-geon gets involved in a tragic airplane crash and ends up discovering a national corruption scandal in the process. Go Hae-ri, the oldest daughter of a deceased marine, decides to work for the National Intelligence Service as a secret ops agent in order to support her mom and younger siblings, although all she wanted to do is to become a civil servant.

Production

Logo for Celltrion Entertainment
Logo for Sony Pictures Television

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Vagabond | Official Trailer | Netflix

Vagabond | Official Trailer | Netflix

Thumbnail for video: [Behind the Scenes] Lee Seung-gi and Suzy’s on-set hijinks with Team Vagabond | Vagabond [ENG SUB]

[Behind the Scenes] Lee Seung-gi and Suzy’s on-set hijinks with Team Vagabond | Vagabond [ENG SUB]

Seasons

16 Episodes • Premiered 2019

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 1: Episode 1

1. Episode 1

7.7

Cha Dal-geon encourages his nephew to go to Morocco with the taekwondo demonstration group. Go Hae-ri walks in late to a meeting at the Korean embassy.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 2: Episode 2

2. Episode 2

8.4

Cha Dal-geon makes a disquieting announcement to the other bereaving families and implores Go Hae-ri for help, but she seems to be hiding something.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 3: Episode 3

3. Episode 3

8.2

Hae-ri remains skeptical about the flight-deck voice recording but is told that the evidence points to a faulty aircraft. Dal-geon is ambushed.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 4: Episode 4

4. Episode 4

9.0

Dal-geon gets a call from someone out of the blue and is approached by a journalist, who claims to be pursuing a story about the plane crash.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 5: Episode 5

5. Episode 5

9.0

Dal-geon attempts to alert the press about what he knows -- but someone interferes. Hae-ri contacts Gi Tae-ung to get answers about the flash drive.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 6: Episode 6

6. Episode 6

9.0

The NIS takes Dal-geon to a safe house. Tae-ung questions O Sang-mi about her husband’s involvement in the plane crash but is ordered to release her.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 7: Episode 7

7. Episode 7

8.6

Dal-geon sees someone who’s supposed to be dead. Hae-ri and Tae-ung head to Morocco to capture their suspect. The NIS takes Jessica Lee into custody.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 8: Episode 8

8. Episode 8

9.2

Dal-geon runs into trouble while trying to carry out his own search. Tae-ung is displeased that the operation in Morocco doesn’t go as planned.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 9: Episode 9

9. Episode 9

8.6

Dal-geon and the agents try to keep Kim Woo-gi alive, and request NIS backup. Jessica moves to pin the plane crash on someone else.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 10: Episode 10

10. Episode 10

9.0

After running from the embassy, Dal-geon and the others head back to Korea another way. Min Jae-sik confronts Gang Ju-cheol.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 11: Episode 11

11. Episode 11

9.3

Dal-geon and Hae-ri make contact with Jae-sik. Jessica and Yun Han-gi see a big win at the National Assembly. Tae-ung undergoes scrutiny.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 12: Episode 12

12. Episode 12

9.5

The plan to get Woo-gi safely to the courthouse takes an unanticipated turn -- and throws the Blue House into panic mode.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 13: Episode 13

13. Episode 13

8.5

Dal-geon's explosive on-air accusation toward the president sparks a media storm. Jessica's press conference goes south quick.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 14: Episode 14

14. Episode 14

9.0

When O Sang-mi disappears, Dal-geon and Hae-ri realize there's more to the situation. Meanwhile, Hong Sun-jo takes advantage of the crisis.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 15: Episode 15

15. Episode 15

9.0

Sang-mi leaves behind a warning about a shady figure named Samael, putting everything Dal-geon thought he knew about the crash into question.

Still image for Vagabond season 1 episode 16: Episode 16

16. Episode 16

7.5

When Jessica asks for NIS protection in exchange for Samael's identity, Hae-ri heads to prison undercover. In hiding, Dal-geon plans his next steps.

Cast

Photo of Lee Seung-gi

Lee Seung-gi

Cha Dal-gun

Photo of Suzy

Suzy

Go Hae-ri / Elsa

Photo of Shin Sung-rok

Shin Sung-rok

Gi Tae-woong

Photo of Moon Jeong-hee

Moon Jeong-hee

Jessica Lee

Photo of Baek Yoon-sik

Baek Yoon-sik

Jung Gook-pyo

Photo of Moon Sung-keun

Moon Sung-keun

Hong Sun-jo

Photo of Lee Kyung-young

Lee Kyung-young

Edward Park

Photo of Lee Ki-young

Lee Ki-young

Kang Joo-chul

Photo of Kim Min-jong

Kim Min-jong

Park Man-young

Photo of Jeong Man-sik

Jeong Man-sik

Min Jae-shik

Photo of Hwang Bo-ra

Hwang Bo-ra

Gong Hwa-sook

Photo of Choi Gwang-il

Choi Gwang-il

Park Man-young

Photo of Lee Si-yu

Lee Si-yu

Seo Young-ji

Photo of Kim Jong-soo

Kim Jong-soo

An Gi-dong

Photo of Shin Seung-hwan

Shin Seung-hwan

Kim Se-hun

Photo of Kim Jeong-hyeon

Kim Jeong-hyeon

Hong Seung-bum

Photo of Ko Kyu-phil

Ko Kyu-phil

Park Gwang-duk

Photo of Teo Yoo

Teo Yoo

Jerome / Park Su-chan

More Like This

Reviews

Y

Yohan Yukiya Sese Cuneta 사요한

8/10

**_Did I just watch a true-to-life movie series?_**

**WARNING**: Some may find a few of the information mentioned a _spoiler_.

**I. Story**
Overall, the story was great. The number of twists and turn, unexpected revelations, the high level political game, and the multiple layers, made this series one of the best crime drama of this decade ('10s). However, it failed closing the story properly.

In the last episode (16th), it was obvious it was rushed. There was no direction. Everything the series built up from episodes 1 to 15 disappeared. It started awesome, then became great, good, and ended poorly.

It is common among creative writers to have an open-ended story but in this case the ending was not an open-ending, no, it was a cliffhanger intended to be a premise for a guaranteed Season 2. If the intention was to have an open-ending, it should have ended with them driving to the airport. Everything else after that scene killed what made it great.

I still give it 8 out of 10 stars for the story regardless of the disaster after the "driving to the airport scene". I also applaud the writers and director for not inserting romantic scenes just because their lead female is well-known for it.

**II. Acting**
Suzy did well in portraying an intelligence officer. This was a big change from her usual romantic roles and I wasn't expecting she can pull it off. Yet, in the first two episodes, she already shone in her role, that's a sure sign of a talented actress.

The acting of the other actors were superb. I usually see them in dramas about family and relationships, seeing them portray political and intelligence roles was refreshing and in they owned the characters they portrayed in series.

Together, the acting were too believable I kept thinking I was watching a fictionalised true story. The characters were too real, all thanks to their acting and synergy.

**III. Production**
Did I just watch a 16-episode (16-hour) movie? It was clear they spent money on Vagabond to get it all right. But in the last episode the explosions were very bad. This was the other reason why I said earlier that anything after the "driving to the airport" scene should not have been included.

**IV. Overall score**
All things considered. I give it a rating of 8 out of 10 stars. The superb acting and quality production were what pulled it up, and for avoiding creating romantic scenes just because they have a great romantic-genre actress as a female lead.

A series I'll watch again in the future but not the scenes I mentioned earlier.

P

ParkMin

5/10

As per usual, such dramas start with abroad locations and a big budget just to serve us with whatever later on. While the drama had action later on but it wasn't on the same level of its earlier episodes. The plot itself couldn't compensate for that. There was a certain level of carelessness and ridiculousness in a non-comical setting from the director that's impossible to explain other than being intentional to maintain the dumb action vibes like a B grade action flick. It got progressively challenging to tolerate regardless of its "supposed" entertainment value. After what they had done in this 16-episodes runtime, they had the audacity to keep all threads as open as possible for a direct sequel, which will never happen! Was it some kind of a practical joke? Other than some of the action scenes and a handful of selected moments, I can't see much value in this drama.

You've reached the end.