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Sad Love Story

2005 South Korean television series


Summary

2005 South Korean television series

FieldValue
imageSad Love Story-poster.jpg
captionPromotional poster for Sad Love Story
alt_name
genre
developerKim Sa-hyun (Planning)
writerLee Sung-eun
directorYoo Chul-yong
starring
music
language
num_episodes20
location
runtime60 minutes
companyKim Jong-hak Production
networkMBC TV
first_aired
last_aired
budget

Sad Love Story () is a 2005 South Korean television drama series starring Kwon Sang-woo, Kim Hee-sun and Yeon Jung-hoon. It aired on MBC from January 5 to March 17, 2005, on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:55 for 20 episodes.

Plot

From the moment they meet, Jon-young (Kwon Sang-woo) and the blind Hye-in (Kim Hee-sun) share an instant connection. Young and naïve, they believe that nothing can change their love. Life, however, pulls them in opposite directions. Jon-young is sent to Seoul, while Hye-in immigrates to America. Misleadingly informed that Jon-young is dead, Hye-in struggles to begin a new life alone. Years later, Hye-in returns to Seoul. With her eyesight restored, she is now a singer happily engaged to her producer Gun-woo (Yeon Jung-hoon). Everything changes though when Gun-woo's composer friend turns out to be none other than Jon-young. He instantly recognizes her, but Hye-in has never seen Jun-young before. When love is no longer simple and blind, can Hye-in and Jun-young still find their way back to each other? This series is a series of love, death and suspense.

Cast

;Choi/Seo family

  • Kwon Sang-woo as Seo Joon-young / Choi Joon-kyu
    • Yoo Seung-ho as young Joon-young
  • Yoo Seung-ho as Joon-young's son
  • Na Young-hee as Seo Hyang-ja, his mother
  • Lee Young-ha as Choi Joon-il, his father

;Park family

  • Kim Hee-sun as Park Hye-in
    • Kim So-eun as young Park Hye-in
  • Jin Hee-kyung as Audrey / Lee Mi-sook, her aunt

;Lee family

  • Yeon Jung-hoon as Lee Gun-woo
  • Jo Kyung-hwan as Lee Kang-in, his father
  • Lee Yeon-soo as Lee Soo-ji, his handicapped, older sister
  • Lee Jong-won as Oh Sang-jin, Soo-ji's husband

;Cha family

  • Kim Yeon-joo as Cha Hwa-jung
    • Go Ah-sung as young Hwa-jung
  • Lee Mi-young as Hwang Min-kyung, her mother
  • Kang Nam-gil as Cha Chang-man, her father, a taxi driver

;Extended cast

  • Jung Woo as Lee Min-ho, a small-time gangster who likes Hwa-jung
  • MC Mong as Jang Jin-pyo, Joon-young and Gun-woo's friend
  • Lee Hyun-woo as Jang-ho, guitar player
  • Lee Da-hee as Kang Shin-hee, Gun-woo's NYC friend
  • Choi Ran as Sook-ja
  • Hong Seok-cheon as Charlie
  • Yang Geum-seok as Gun-woo's deceased mother
  • Baek Bong-ki as Yong-chul
  • Kim Hee-jung as Choi Joon-il's girlfriend
  • Ha Seok-jin as Ha Seok-jin
  • Kim Sung-oh

Production

The series originally cast actor Song Seung-heon to play the character Gun-woo. Song had already filmed several scenes overseas and recorded songs for the soundtrack, when a draft-dodging scandal involving him broke out, causing him to enlist in the military service. On short notice, Yeon Jung-hoon was selected as his replacement.

Partly shot overseas with a budget of , it was one of the most expensive Korean dramas of the mid-2000s. It received average 16.3% ratings in South Korea. It attracted much attention when it was broadcast in Japan and Middle East.

International broadcast

The series aired in Japan on Fuji TV in August 2005 every Saturday at 4:00 p.m. where it received ratings around 10%. According to a poll conducted by TV Asahi variety show SMAP Station in May 2007, Sad Love Story ranked as the sixth most popular Korean drama in Japan.

The series aired in Indonesia on Indosiar in September 2006 every Saturday at 7:30 p.m. where it received ratings around 10%. Korean Dramas now go on air in According to a poll conducted by antv variety show SMAP Edition in June 2007, Sad Love Story ranked as the sixth most popular Korean drama in Indonesia.

References

References

  1. Suh, Jung-bo. (October 21, 2004). "Kim Hee-sun, A Blind Singer in the New Drama ''Sad Love Song''". [[The Dong-A Ilbo]].
  2. Hwang, You-mee. (January 15, 2005). "TV dramas woo viewers with top actresses". [[The Korea Herald]].
  3. (December 27, 2005). "A Year of Big Changes and Small Setbacks for Korean TV". [[The Chosun Ilbo]].
  4. Lim, Jae-un. (May 12, 2005). "Paying off the stars through advertising".
  5. (August 16, 2005). "60 Korean dramas now go on air in Japan". Korea Content Agency via [[Hancinema]].
  6. (August 3, 2007). "Actress Kim Hee-seon Holds Promo Tour in Japan". KBS Global.
  7. (July 2, 2007). "''Winter Sonata'', The Most Popular Korean Drama In Japan". [[Hancinema]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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