Spring Day (TV series)
Spring Day | |
---|---|
Also known as | Spring Days |
Genre | Romance, Drama |
Written by | Kim Kyu-wan |
Directed by | Kim Jong-hyuk |
Starring |
Go Hyun-jung Jo In-sung Ji Jin-hee |
No. of episodes | 20 |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
Kim Yang Moon Jung-soo |
Running time | Saturdays and Sundays at 21:45 (KST) |
Release | |
Original network | Seoul Broadcasting System |
Original release | January 8 – March 13, 2005 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | Save the Last Dance for Me |
Followed by | Green Rose |
Website |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 봄날 |
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Revised Romanization | Bomnal |
McCune–Reischauer | Pomnal |
Spring Day (Hangul: 봄날; RR: Bomnal) is a 2005 South Korean television drama series starring Go Hyun-jung, Jo In-sung, and Ji Jin-hee.[1][2][3][4][5] Loosely adapted from the 1995 Japanese drama Heaven's Coins (星の金貨 Hoshi no Kinka), it aired on SBS from January 8 to March 13, 2005 on Saturdays and Sundays at 21:45 for 20 episodes.
The series marked Go Hyun-jung's acting comeback 10 years after she retired from the entertainment industry upon marriage to a chaebol (they divorced in 2003).[6] Largely due to Go, Spring Day became the 5th most popular Korean drama of 2005 with an average viewer rating of 30 percent.[7]
Synopsis
Go Eun-ho (Ji Jin-hee), a doctor from Seoul, goes to Biyang Island to meet his father's mentor. There, he meets Seo Jung-eun (Go Hyun-jung), a silent, elusive beauty who has suffered a trauma so great that she's lost the will to speak. Fascinated and empathetic, Eun-ho helps Jung-eun find a way to overcome her past. But just when her gratitude starts to blossom into love, fate cruelly intervenes, leaving Eun-ho in a coma, caused by a car accident when driving with his long-lost mother, who died at the scene.
At the hospital, Jung-eun meets Eun-ho's stepbrother Eun-sup (Jo In-sung), who is also a doctor. Despite his best intentions, Eun-sup finds himself powerless to resist Jung-eun, and he falls for her as Eun-ho lies comatose. Later, Eun-ho does regain consciousness, but his state of mind is stuck in childhood. Little by little, he begins to regain his memory. One day as he intercepts a car, he starts to recall the past and understand that his unacknowledged pain and fear of cars resulted from his mother's death. Jung-eun, fed up with hiding the truth, tells him the shocking news that his mother died in a car accident.
Latent rivalries and misunderstandings come to a boil as the two brothers fight for Jung-eun's affection, with other opposing characters making matters worse. A bar girl and Kim Min-jung both despise Jung-eun for stealing the hearts of Eun-sup and Eun-ho, respectively. Eun-sup's mother also shows disdain for Jung-eun, since she sees Jung-eun's grandfather, her husband's mentor, as a threat to her marriage. Spiteful that Eun-ho desires to marry Jung-eun, Eun-sup's mother contemplates a plan using Min-jung to poison their relationship. Min-jung visits Jung-eun, deceitfully telling her that she is hindering Eun-ho from a successful career by furthering his studies at the prestigious Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, which his family wants for him. Believing this, Jung-eun breaks off her engagement to Eun-ho, and leaves him.
Eun-sup one day sees the phony medical school pamphlet that Min-jung presented to Jung-eun, and tells Eun-ho about it. Min-jung admits her scheme to Eun-ho, saying it was done out of her love for him. Eun-ho confronts Jung-eun and tells her about the misunderstanding, but Jung-eun refuses to reconcile. She then confesses that her heart loves Eun-sup, not him. After Eun-sup learns that Jung-eun loves him back, they spend more time together before she goes back to Biyang Island. In the end, Eun-ho decides to forget his feelings for Jung-eun and forces himself to like Min-jung. The two brothers are reconciled. Eun-sup leaves Seoul to become a doctor at the Biyang Health Center, while living with Jung-eun on the island. The ending scene recalls the drama's opening scene as Jung-eun runs to the ferry to reunite with her love, who is now Eun-sup.
Cast
- Go Hyun-jung as Seo Jung-eun
- Jo In-sung as Go Eun-sup
- Ji Jin-hee as Go Eun-ho
- Han Go-eun as Kim Min-jung
- Shin Choong-shik as Seo Dal-ho (Jung-eun's grandfather)
- Jang Yong as Go Hyung-jin (Eun-sup's and Eun-ho's father)
- Lee Hwi-hyang as Oh Hye-rim (Eun-sup's mother)
- Park Chul-min as Lee Jin-tae
- Lee So-yeon as Kim Kyung-ah (bar girl)
- Lee Kyung-jin as Eun-ho's mother (piano teacher)
- Park Jung-woo as Sung-joon
- Lee Hee-won as young Seo Jung-eun
- Jang Ah-young as young Seo Jung-eun
- Jo Eun-sook as Yoon-sook (runaway mother)
- Oh Ji-hye
- Lee Hyun-woo
- Jung Jong-joon as gang boss
References
- ↑ Kim, Sun-woo (9 November 2004). ""I Want a Second Spring Day"". The Dong-a Ilbo. Retrieved 2015-04-13.
- ↑ Hwang, You-mee (15 January 2005). "TV dramas woo viewers with top actresses". The Korea Herald. Retrieved 2013-07-11.
- ↑ "Ji Jin-hee and Cho In-sung to meet with Japanese fans". KBS Global. 28 October 2005. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
- ↑ "A drama Bomnal airs in China and Hong Kong". KoreaContent.org via Hancinema. 17 August 2005. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
- ↑ Kang, Myoung-seok (3 November 2009). "10LINE: Ko Hyun-jung". 10Asia. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
- ↑ "Ko Hyun-jung Poised for Belated Big-Screen Debut". The Chosun Ilbo. 17 April 2006. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
- ↑ Shin, Hae-in (21 December 2005). "'Boorish' women knocked out 'Cinderellas'". The Korea Herald via Hancinema. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
External links
- Spring Day official SBS website (Korean)
- Spring Days at HanCinema
- Spring Days at the Internet Movie Database