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Wednesday, February 22, 2006

. . 14ths of every mth in korea . .

cam translated and posted on quilt's freeboard
Source : baidu.com, english.kbs.co.kr/life/trend


On the 14th of each month in Korea


Did you know there is a special day on the 14th of each month for lovers to celebrate as well as a few other goodies along the way?

January 14 is Diary Day in South Korea when sweethearts are encouraged to buy gifts such as planners and mark all their red-letter days of love.

Next on the calendar is February 14 and Valentine's Day, where South Korean women buy chocolates for their boyfriends.

Army trucks are regularly deployed to deliver chocolates from women whose boyfriends are in uniform as part of South Korea's mandatory military service.

March 14 is White Day. This celebration was born in Japan, imported to South Korea and is marked by South Korean men returning the favor of their Valentine's chocolates with candies for their girlfriends.

Waiting one month to reciprocate a gift takes the pressure off the boys because they have usually figured out exactly who likes them and gave them a gift in February. While it is not required that you give a return gift, that is usually the accepted thing to do. However, guys are not limited only to the people who gave them chocolate. They may give sweets to any girl they fancy. If you received chocolate or candy in either February or March, you take the following month off to plan gifts for the rest of the year. But if you weren't a recipient in February or March, then April becomes a month of singles celebration.

April 14 is Black Day and is purely Korean. This is a day where those who have not found love mark their status as lonely hearts by eating black food.

The dish for the day is Chinese noodles topped with a thick black sauce ( ja-chang-myeong). Single students at universities order scores of bowls and eat them together in the hope of finding a soul mate over noodles.

May 14 is Yellow Day-Rose Day. Lonely hearts gather for curry and companionship. Those who find love by this day exchange roses. Dressing in yellow is also recommended.

The day when those who were unable to eat black noodles on Black Day go to eat yellow curry rice.

June 15 is Kiss Day.The day when lovers kiss to confirm their love.

July 14 is Silver Day. On Silver Day, couples can freely ask their friends to give them money to pay for a date while couples are supposed to exchange gifts made of silver.

August 14 is Green Day: when couples are supposed to dress in green, walk in the woods and drink cheap liquor that comes in green bottles.

September 14 is Music & Photo Day: The day of presenting a CD with love songs. The day when lovers take pictures to keep memories of their love.

October 14 is Wine Day: The day when lovers drink wine and share love.

November 14 is Movie Day: The day when lovers go to see a movie holding hands.

December 14 is Hug Day-Money Day : The day of giving hugs to your loved ones. The day of spending generously for your lover .

A new day that has taken off in South Korea is a festivity that combines feelings of affection with chocolate on a stick. Nov 11 is Pepero Day (Bachelor Day in Chinese. Pocky Day in Japanese) and is named after a pencil-shaped cookie stick covered in chocolate that is purchased in abundance on the day and exchanged mostly by young South Koreans as an expression of their affection.


There are up to 21 anniversaries, special days and celebrations a year for couples to shower each other with affection and gifts. It is a good thing they made January 14th Diary Day because you will need a journal to remember all these dates for the rest of the year.

Sunday, February 12, 2006

. . christmas in august (2). .

Another review of "Christmas in August"




Jin-ho Hur's "Christmas in August" is the 1998 forerunner to his masterpiece "One Fine Spring Day", and just like the other film, "Christmas" explores the human condition and sheds light on the power of love found, lost, and the lives touched in-between.

"Christmas in August" stars Han Suk-kyu ("Shiri") as Jung-won, a 30-something photographer in a small town who is slowly dying from a terminal disease. The film never bothers to elaborate on the cause or even the name of the disease, and that's probably because it's not very important. The disease is a plot device that Hur and writers Oh and Shin uses to explore Jung-won's life and his budding romance with a young meter maid (or as the movie calls them, traffic cops) name Darim, played by the always affable Eun-ha Shim ("The Uprising").

"Christmas in August" is a good prelude to "One Fine Spring Day" because both posits on the positive aspects of newfound love and the subsequent lost of said love and everything else in-between. Both movies explore the joys (and sometimes trials and tribulations) of family and generational ties; and always in the background, the onset of old age and life, which like love, comes and goes, and encourages the appreciation of both after they're gone.


Veteran actor Han Suk-kyu plays the likeable Jung-won, a free-spirited man who doesn't run from his illness. Throughout the film, Jung-won never once tells the love-struck Darim about his illness, resulting in Darim's feelings of betrayal once Jung-won's illness overcomes him and interrupts their daily visits together.


The film is most effective when it touches on the subject of death, as when an elderly woman returns to Jung-won's studio to take the picture that South Koreans use to memorialize their life after death; the woman returns later in the night, after having been at the studio to take family pictures with her family. She is alone, not at all concern about her inevitable death, but rather pleased that she's able to give her family a picture of herself, as directed by herself. Her scenes with Jung-won, who knows intimately that he will be taking his own memorial picture soon, is incredibly moving.

Eun-ha Shim, as Darim, provides the inspiration necessary to make Jung-won fall in love again. Besides the age difference, Darim and Jung-won are at two vastly different junctures of their life -- his own life is coming to an end and hers is just beginning. The movie does not go the easy route and have the two consummate their relationship. Instead, the script is content to focus on the burgeoning relationship by following the normal, gradual sequence of measured and sometimes awkward events involved with a courtship. The interplay between Darim and Jung-won also ensures that "Christmas in August" doesn't become a moody melodramatic exercise in gothic morbidity, and instead the two's interactions bring joy and sunshine into a movie about death and loss.

"Christmas in August" is a great film, filled with memorable scenes and quiet, subtle moments that some may need to see more than once to fully appreciate. "Christmas in August" doesn't advertise its Impact Scenes, but have no doubt that they are present and they are very powerful indeed.


Credit: http://www.beyondhollywood.com/reviews/christmasinaugust.htm

. . christmas in august (i) . .

I'm not only a K-drama fan, but also a K-movie fan.. okok, anything that has got to do with K-entertainment, I'm all interested! Had been watching quite a few K-movies since I've downloaded quite a few. One of the movie I wanna watch is "Christmas in August" directed by Director Hur. Ever since April Snow, many began to get interested in Director Hur's works, including myself. I've read many reviews saying that Director Hur's style is very special, and one of the good movies he made include "Christmas in August". Just like April Snow, it is a melodrama with many quiet scenes filled with deep meanings. Below are some reviews and pics from the movie.

Christmas in August (1998)

Directed by: Hur Jin-Ho
Starring: Han Suk-Kyu, Shim Eun-Ha
108 minutes, 35mm

"...a wrenchingly associative feel-good/feel-bad classic where everything is seen through panes of glass, and a meter maid learns more than she ever wanted to know about expired time.
- Chuck Stephens, Film Comment"


The sidelong glance, the shared ice cream, the lazy afternoon nap, the date that no one's calling a date - out of these tiny details CHRISTMAS IN AUGUST builds a movie about the beginning of falling in love. Considered by many to be the Great Korean Movie Romance, this is a gentle mediation on life, death, and parking violations that's lingers on your eyes long after it's over.

Han Suk-Kyu runs a photo shop in a rural suburb of Seoul. He's sick, and dying, but he keeps it to himself. He's a little too quick to laugh, covering up the rage that burns in him at the unfairness of this death sentence. He seems like everything's going A-OK, but when no one's looking he crumbles.

Shim Eun-Ha is a meter maid, tucked into a starched uniform and dispatched onto the streets where she and her partner are pariahs, chased out of restaurants and bullied by angry motorists. The two of them slog on, dispensing tickets, photographing offending vehicles, writing writs and summons.

One day she drops off photos at Han Suk-Kyu's place, and they meet, and they like each other. That's it. That's the movie. But within this sketchy outline there's volumes on happiness and despair, on living and dying. It's there in the way the characters study each other when no one's looking, in the impatient way Han Suk-Kyu teaches his dad how to use the VCR, in the excitement of Shim Eun-Ha waiting for a date, in the way she tells and retells a joke, even when she mangles it.

So transcendent that too many words will ruin the delicate spell it casts, this is the director's first film, and the movie that made Shim Eun-Ha a superstar. The performances, operating on some attenuated wavelength not visible to human sight, are riveting in their simplicity. Like a lazy summer evening, there's something inexplicably rewarding about such a small, quiet movie that sets out to speak about life, death, and love, slowly, gently, and without pretension.

Most folks assume that slow and gentle equals "boring" and "box office death", but that wasn't the case with CHRISTMAS. In 1998, it swept the Korean Film Awards, coming away with "Best Picture", "Best Director", "Best Actress" (Shim Eun-Ha), and "Best Cinematography" and its fans are legion - rabid in their devotion to this movie.

CHRISTMAS IN AUGUST talks about the big things in life by focusing on the small. It's there in the way friends speak when they go out for drinks, in the shared late night walk, in the eating of a watermelon. It's there in the way a man who's dying and a woman who's living realize that we build our lives out of the details, and that while we're alive every one of them is like frozen time. And that after we're gone, all the details, all the perfect mornings, all the shared experiences, all the times we talked to someone who was really listening - after we're gone it's all lost, forever.

Awards: Official Selection, Cannes Film Festival, 1998.
Winner, Best Picture, Best Actress, Best Director, Best Cinematography, Korean Film Awards, 1998.


Credit: http://www.subwaycinema.com/frames/archives/kfest2001/christmas.htm

Friday, February 10, 2006

. . pics of "screen quota" . .

Credit: CindyW88 posted in Soompi forum

Movie stars attending the “Screen Quota (스크린쿼터) Protest Demonstration” (2/8/06):

Moon Geun Young Kim Hee Sun Lee Byung Hun

Song Yun Ah Jo In Sung & Im Soo Jung Lee Byung Jun again

Kim Rae Won & Jin Ji Hee Kim Rae Won & Jin Ji Hee again

. . my point of view . .

Quote a post by Vignette on the issue in Korea now (see previous entry) in Soompi, I posted my thots and thus reposted here:
QUOTE(vignette @ Feb 8 2006, 03:22 PM)

The korean govt used to limit the no of foreign films being screened in their cinemas giving more priority to local movies. The US has been pressuring them to increase the number of foreign films in exchange to bigger export quotas of other korean products in their country. Finally the korean govt. gave in and agreed to reduce the number of local films to be screened in half (approx. 73) starting July.

I'm getting real giddy trying to get the picture clearly on what is going on.

The reasons behind the decisions made by the Korean goverment is understandable in a way as it would further promote Korean products further worldwide which will bring in better economic benefit for their country but correct me if I'm wrong, I personally feel that US is being quite bossy to come out with such terms and conditions.

I'm not sure, but are US movies not that hot in Korea? I thought they have already conquered most parts of the world already. Else why do they want to came up with such a deal? It is only natural and logical that if one country's talents are excellent and has something to be proud of, the country would want to celebrate and enjoy within their own country, it will be a bonus to them if they are being recognised outside their own country. That's exactly what Korea are enjoying right now because thanks to their talented artistes, they are widely recognised at least in Southeast Asia and if I'm not wrong, even US.

If the Korean government is strong enough and have strong principles of their own, they wouldn't have been shaken so easily by other people. Someone wrote in this topic that Korean government should be confident of themselves and I fully agree with him/her.

Well, just a thought about this issue. May be right, may be wrong..

Thursday, February 09, 2006

. . news on k-scene . .

South Korean movie stars rally against 'Hollywood invasion'
Credit: www.channelnewsasia.com
Time is GMT + 8 hours
Posted: 08 February 2006 1647 hrs



South Korean movie industry workers hold anti-FTA placards during a rally opposing the government's plans to cut the screen quota system for local films in Seoul

[Chris: Seriously, if you ask me, I definitely support them in their oppose towards their government decision.. Why tarnish the hardwork of their own local people who have worked so hard to make K-movies and K-drama so popular worldwide? Correct me if I'm wrong, the worldwide showbiz industy seemed to be so jealous of the sudden boom of Korean showbiz!! Why why why? ]

SEOUL : South Korean film stars have led a rally opposing plans to cut in half the screen quota system, a government decision they said would trigger a Hollywood movie invasion.

The rally near the US embassy in central Seoul drew about 1,000 movie producers, actors and directors under a banner reading "Stop humiliating negotiations that will allow a cultural invasion".

Surrounded by riot police, the protestors including Choi Min-Shik, the star of South Korea's 2004 Cannes Grand Prix-winning "Old Boy," waved placards and chanted slogans opposing a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with the United States.

"We oppose the United States, which is forcing humiliating free trade negotiations," they said

South Korea and the United States last week announced the launch of talks aimed at establishing the FTA.

South Korea, the seventh-largest trade partner of the United States, has cleared the way for the talks by halving the 40-year-old quota, which forced cinemas to show domestic movies on at least 146 days a year.

South Korea's movie industry has condemned the decision as an "anti-cultural coup d'etat."

Finance and Economy Minister Han Duck-Soo defended the government's decision saying the reduced quota reflected the enhanced competitiveness of South Korean films.

Of the top 10 box office hits in South Korea last year seven were homegrown and only three from the United States, none of which made the top five.

"We decided to reduce the quota because the competitiveness and quality of our movies has improved sharply," he said.

He said the free trade agreement would boost South Korea's exports and economic growth.

- AFP/ms

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

. . I'm Sorry I Love You . .

I'm Sorry I Love You (Misa)
*Reviewed by Devache1



[Chris: I didn't know it is known as Misa too, until I almost complete the show. This is such a sad sad movie, all the way from the start to the end.. *heartache* I sobbed so much, I woke up with to 2 puffy eyes this morning!

The topic on death has always been avoided as one is always told to be more positive in life. I've been thinking and wondering how it feels to die and am really dreading the day my loved ones slowly leaves me. I'm still feeling the sadness as I recalled the scenes. Will be looking for the OST now. Before I go.. So Ji Sub is such a great actor!!]


: : Main Homepage : :
www.kbs.co.kr/drama/misa/index.html

: : Cast : :

Cha Moo-hyuk: So Ji Sup (Glass Slippers/Memories of Bali)
Song Eun-chae: Im Soo Jung (...Ing/A Tale of Two Sisters)
Choi Yoon (singer): Jung Kyung Ho
Kang Min-joo: Suh Ji Young
Moon Ji-young: Choi Yeo Jin
Oh Deul-hee (real name: Jo Mal-bok) (Yoon's mom): Lee Hye Young
Yoon Seo-kyung: Jun Hye Jin
Song Dae-chun (Eun-chae's dad): Lee Young Ha (Sang-doo)
Jang Hye-sook (Eun-chae's mom): Kim Hye Ok (Running After Dream)
Min Hyun-suk: Shin Goo (Miss Kim's Adventures in Making a Million/Wife)
Song Sook-chae (Eun-chae's older sister): Ok Ji Young
Song Min-chae (Eun-chae's younger sister): Jung Hwa Young
Kim Kal-chi (Seo-kyung's son): Park Gun Tae


: : Synopsis : :

Cha Moo Hyuk is a smalltime gangster prying the streets of Australia. He was abandoned by his parents as a kid and his foster parents brought him to Australia. Unfortunately, he was mistreated by his foster parents and thus roams the streets, cheating foreigners of their money when they are lost.

It is through one of his ruses that he bumps into Song Eun Chae. Song Eun Chae is the coordinator and childhood friend of the famous Korean singer, Choi Yoon. She sees Choi Yoon as her life's focal point and does everything she can to please him.

Choi Yoon visits Australia to do a photoshoot with another famous Korean actress, Kang Min Joo, who happens to be good friends with Eun Chae. Choi Yoon gets Eun Chae to get him close to Min Joo, as he is interested in her. It breaks Eun Chae's heart but she does so accordingly. One day, Eun Chae's luggage and money are stolen by the same crime group as Moo Hyuk.


Tired, hungry and helpless, she bumps into Moo Hyuk who helps her unknowingly. She is forced to spend a night with him when gangsters threaten in the open and the next morning, she finds her luggage and money right in front of her.

Alas, Moo Hyuk managed to find the stuff stolen by his gang and return it all to Eun Chae and with her stuff, she's happily on a plane back to Korea, when she bumps into Min Joo and Choi Yoon, who are now a couple.

Several weeks later, Moo Hyuk receives an invitation for his ex-girlfriend's wedding. At the wedding, Moo Hyuk is accidentally shot twice in the head when someone attempts an assasination bid on his ex-girlfriend's husband. The doctors save him but only can remove one bullet. The remaining bullet in lodged too deeply within his head such that it cannot be surgically removed. It's killing him, and he has no longer than a year to live. Moo Hyuk is dying and his ex-girlfriend now married. He's a roaming gangster and his life, an utter mess.

Guilt-stricken, his ex-girlfriend gives him a huge stash of cash and tells him to go back to his native Korea to find his birth parents. He does so, and finds out that his mother is none other than the famous Korean actress, Oh Deul Hee. She has a son, Choi Yoon and both mother and son are adored by the Korean people as they portray a loving relationship and are immensely popular.

Moo Hyuk is heartbroken when he even manages to enter the house of Oh Deul Hee, and sees the portrait of Choi Yoon and her son. He bumps into his birthmother for the very first time in his life, but can't help but feel so betrayed because she is doing so well in life, whilst he is merely living out the remainder of whatever little time he has left.

Feeling angry and rageful, he vows revenge upon the mother and son. He starts by getting close to Choi Yoon, eventually making it to become his manager. Bit by bit, he plots to bring Choi Yoon and his mother down, but never expects himself to fall slowly in love with Song Eun Chae, the girl he helped in Australia.

Inevitably, Choi Yoon is struck by a heart disease and to put it plainly, he will die without a heart transplant. Suddenly, Moo Hyuk is stuck with the decision of saving his brother, or selfishly bringing them down.......


The Review **Warning, Spoilers included**


"I'm Sorry I Love You" was a drama that I had been eagerly anticipating for it to arrive in my country since its release in Korea in the December of 2004. Originally planned to be screened only for 16 episodes, the netizens of Korea demanded an extension and KBS complied by asking the drama's directors and producers to extend by another 4 episodes. However, the makers of the drama refused and said they couldn't and quite frankly, I'm happy they did.

"I'm Sorry I Love You" is the first Korean drama that I've catch in 2005 and to put it in a nutshell, it didn't disappoint. The drama doesn't revolve around the typical stereotypes in Korean dramas. The storyline is unique and the acting by the two main leads are nothing short of outstanding. It focuses on a mother's love for her child and how human beings are inevitably, soft-hearted creatures.

In fact, the drama was so popular that KBS even issued a second OST album for it due to overwhelming response. Not to mention that the last two episodes were so sad, that even the makers of the drama couldn't help but cry when the scenes were played out (I'm crying now as I'm listening to the OST in fact....nonetheless..) But enough about how great this drama is, let's move on to the cast and the memorable moments in this drama:


: : Cast : :


So Ji Sup as Cha Moo Hyuk

Marvellous.
Bravo.
Outstanding.

I don't have the vocabulary to describe So Ji Sup's performance in 'Misa'. I had watched him in 'Memories of Bali' and always knew that he was good. But this time he really outdid all of us.

I would quote what one member of Soompi said: "So Ji Sup is just perfect for Cha Moo Hyuk".

Many a times I found myself amazed at the intensity of his expressions. The countless times he threw tantrums as the irritable Cha Moo Hyuk (the bullet affects his mood greatly). The way So Ji Sup reaches out to his audience is nothing short of spectacular. I find it a huge pity he has to go serve out his military service as a Korean after this drama (He enlisted in Febuary 05 I believe, and Korean males are required to serve for a mandatory two years), but I'm sure once he returns to the acting scene, he will have no shortage of offers to do movies and dramas.

Cha Moo Hyuk is one angry man, abandoned by his mother only to find she is doing so well now. He plots his revenge but falls in love with Song Eun Chae. He is further angered by Eun Chae's devotion to Choi Yoon, his half-brother. In the entire show, some of the things that Moo Hyuk does may be all in an attempt to plot the downfall of his mother and half-brother, but he never jeopadises Eun Chae, and quite rightly so, he puts her right up the list of his priorities.

If Choi Yoon is God to Eun Chae, then Eun Chae is quite simply God to Moo Hyuk.

When he sees how well Eun Chae fits in with his family (he has a retarded twin sister and her son), he feels he can leave this world in peace. There is this scene in the drama that made me tear very badly, when we hear dear Moo Hyuk think aloud as he piggybacked her back home:

"Dear God,
If you would allow Song Eun Chae to be with me, from now to my death.
If you would allow her just be with me.
My hate.
My anger.
My jealousy.
I would gladly take it all back."

I felt So Ji Sup must have been really deeply affected by his role in "Misa". Though I'm not sure, I believe So Ji Sup was raised single-handedly by his mother and during the KBS Award ceremony in 2004, when he won the prize for Best Actor together with Bi, he thanked his mother. Perhaps it was this upbringing that helped So Ji Sup adapt to Cha Moo Hyuk's role so effortlessly.

So Ji Sup may not be as handsome as Bae Yong Jun or charming as Lee Byung Hun, but you can't deny the amount of talent he exudes by his acting.

Simply mindblowing.


Im Soo Jung as Song Eun Chae


With comparisons to her co-star, I loved Im Soo Jung from top to bottom. She was very much what her character required to portray: A simple-minded girl without her own dreams. In the beginning, Eun Chae desired whatever Choi Yoon desired, because Choi Yoon was the epitomy of her life. But once she got to know Moo Hyuk, that changed forever.

She learnt what it felt like to be loved, what it meant to have your own direction in life. Many a times we find Eun Chae torn between Moo Hyuk and Choi Yoon, and it's especially saddening when we see poor Eun Chae hallucinating about Moo Hyuk. I guess it was simply how much she was pining for him but know she couldn't because Choi Yoon needed her.


Jung Kyung Ho isn't too bad himself, excelling as the spoilt and incredibly-sensitive Choi Yoon. He may play the spoilt brat in the initial stages of this drama but the ending sees him transform into a mature person as he bravely discusses with Moo Hyuk over how the both of them should just leave Eun Chae, as both of them are driving her crazy.


Suh Ji Young, member of the K-pop group, SHARP, not a bad performance by her but I think her role was more aethestic than anything else. Apart from the few scenes where Moo Hyuk disguises himself as a rich man and seduces her away from Choi Yoon to complete his revenge, she's ok.


: : Reviewer's Thoughts (Post-drama) : :

The inital stages of "I'm Sorry I Love You" may be a little slow and unappealing to most but that was the way in which the director purposely played the drama out. The dramas get especially tear-jerking and appealing in the final four episodes, as we see Eun Chae slowly succumbing to the pressure she faces from Moo Hyuk and Choi Yoon.

We also see a more humane side of Oh Deul Hee, the birthmother of Moo Hyuk as she breaks down in front of the doctor saying she would do anything to save Choi Yoon, including give her heart. I really pitied Moo Hyuk at that scene. Imagine your birthmother saying she will do anything to save her son, yet you her other son, is standing right beside her, dying. If Choi Yoon was sad, then Moo Hyuk was pathetic. Because Choi Yoon had some remote hope of survival, but Moo Hyuk had only his inevitable death to anticipate.

There were numerous scenes that I felt touched me very deeply through this drama, but they mainly came in the last four episodes. There is this scene where we hear Eun Chae confessing to Moo Hyuk through the toilet door, as Moo Hyuk is violently vomiting out his food (a sign of his impending death), and she keeps telling him how sorry she was... and how she wanted so so much to bring him happiness but all she could give him was pain and more pain.




And there's the scene where Moo Hyuk forces Eun Chae to promise him she will forget him soon after he is gone, because he does not wish to see her suffer emotionally after his death.

Eun Chae promises him but knows all too clearly she won't. She tries to snap photos of him on her handphone for remembrance sake and eventually falls asleep........ when they part again, she brings out the handphone to see him just once more.... but alas the photos are gone. Moo Hyuk had only pretended to fall asleep and deleted the photos while Eun Chae was asleep. [Chris: One of the most heart-wrenching scene.. made me sobbed real bad]

The drama revolved not only around the love of Eun Chae and Moo Hyuk, but also the love Moo Hyuk yearned so much from his mother. This is more apparent when Choi Yoon and Moo Hyuk are in a discussion and Choi Yoon revealed to Moo Hyuk that he was adopted. Moo Hyuk is in shock and Choi Yoon simply tells him:

"For someone who is unrelated to her, she is willing to give up her own life. What do you think she would do for her own son?"

That left Moo Hyuk in a daze and it was also when he realised that he had made a terrible mistake, and that his mother had not intentionally abandoned him.

The subtlety in which the drama was shot also made it a huge hit.

The times when Moo Hyuk and Eun Chae would sit next to each other and not talk, but yet have so much to say. Many a times, the director drew a parellel between Moo Hyuk and Choi Yoon. It's even more obvious in this photo where Moo Hyuk is lying against the wall, with him beside the photo of his mother, and behind him the face of Choi Yoon.

And the last episode when he requests for Oh Deul Hee to cook for him just once: For a son to eat the food cooked by his mother for the first and last time . We see Moo Hyuk sobbing uncontrollably as he thinks aloud about how he's so happy to have such a mother like Oh Deul Hee who loves her foster son (Choi Yoon) so much, and forgives her to deal with his imminent death alone.

"I'm Sorry I Love You" has a deeper meaning throughout the normal K-dramas we see about love. It dwells more on the humanity of a person and if anyone ever doubted how silly the title was, think twice. In the end, we see Eun Chae travel to Australia and revisit the places where she first met Moo Hyuk and recap on those times.

She eventually visits the cemetary in which Moo Hyuk is buried (Moo Hyuk had passed away and donated his heart to Choi Yoon). On his tombstone engraved are the words: ""I'm Sorry I Love You"", because he had left Eun Chae with memories and memories alone, as he could no longer be with her. We see Eun Chae narrating as she lie down beside his grave:

"Even as I was alive, he was lonely.
I can't leave him alone like this.
Just this once in my life.
I'm thinking for myself.
And living for myself.
I will accept any punishment that comes."

What that meant, I leave it to you to go watch the drama and find out what happened, as I wish not to spoil the ending for you.

"I'm Sorry I Love You" is drama beautiful beyond words.

You must watch it, and in my opinion bags a full 5 out of 5.