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Wonderful Life (2005 TV series)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wonderful Life
Genre
Written byJin Soo-wan
Directed by
  • Lee Chang-han
  • Jo Soo-won
Starring
ComposerChoi Wan-hee
Country of originSouth Korea
Original languageKorean
No. of episodes16
Production
Executive producerShin Ho-gyun
Production locations
  • South Korea
  • Singapore
Running time60 minutes
Production companyJS Pictures
Release
Original networkMunhwa Broadcasting Corporation
Original releaseMarch 7 (2005-03-07) –
April 26, 2005 (2005-04-26)

Wonderful Life (Korean원더풀 라이프; RRWondeopul Raipeu) is a 2005 South Korean television series starring Kim Jaewon, Eugene, Lee Ji-hoon, Han Eun-jung and Jung Da-bin. It aired on MBC from March 7 to April 26, 2005 on Mondays and Tuesdays at 21:55 for 16 episodes.

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Transcription

Synopsis

Han Seung-wan (Kim Jaewon) travels to Singapore to visit his first love, Lee Chae-young (Han Eun-jung). At the airport, he bumps into a young woman named Jung Se-jin (Eugene), and they accidentally swap passports. While Se-jin is on her way to the address listed on Seung-wan's passport, she meets Min Do-hyun (Lee Ji-hoon), who kindly gives her a piggyback ride. When Seung-wan and Se-jin finally meet at Chae-young's apartment, Seung-wan agrees to give back Se-jin's passport on the condition that she help him track down his missing girlfriend. To Seung-wan's shock, they discover that Chae-young is in a relationship with Do-hyun, whom she'd met in Australia. Heartbroken, Seung-wan goes drinking with Se-jin and turns to her for comfort, and they end up having a one-night stand in a hotel in Sentosa.[1]

The morning after, Se-jin tells Seung-wan that she'd been a virgin and that he should "take responsibility" for their sexual encounter. The immature Seung-wan leaves her, and returns home earlier than scheduled. Back in Korea, his father kicks him out of the house for spending too much money on liquor, and he contacts Se-jin again. She agrees to help him earn money to pay back his father, but soon realizes that her increased appetite and vomiting of late are symptoms of pregnancy. She buys a pregnancy test while in disguise, and runs into Do-hyun again. After confirming that she's pregnant, Se-jin tells Seung-wan that she's leaving Korea and study abroad in Australia.

A year later, Se-jin's older sister crashes Seung-wan's father's birthday party, carrying his daughter, Shin-bi (Jung Da-bin). Their parents force Seung-wan and Se-jin to get married for the baby's sake, but the two draw up a list of rules that they must abide by, including the freedom to pursue their own careers and individual love lives, as well as a possible divorce in five years' time. Unprepared for the twin responsibilities of a quickie marriage and young parenthood which were thrust upon them, the two bicker and gradually figure things out. Seung-wan takes a job in his father's construction business to support the family, but is forced to leave for mandatory military service shortly after.

Upon his return, the reunited Seung-wan and Se-jin face new challenges. While the former juggles chores due to his continuing studies to become a pilot, the latter struggles to find employment in a job market that discriminates against her for being a mother. Chae-young gets her an interview at the Kidsbear company where she works, though her assistance hides jealous intentions; aware of Do-hyun's feelings for Se-jin, Chae-young plots to regain her former boyfriend Seung-wan by breaking up the family. Se-jin gets hired by Kidsbear, but she and her husband continue to deal with relationship problems brought on by Chae-young's interference.

But when Shin-bi is diagnosed with leukemia and Seung-wan and Se-jin desperately search for a viable bone marrow donor, they realize how much they love each other and the family they've created.

Cast

Ratings

In the table below, the blue numbers represent the lowest ratings and the red numbers represent the highest ratings.

Episode # Original broadcast date AGB Nielsen [2]
Nationwide
1 2005-03-07 13.7 (7th)
2 2005-03-08 11.6 (12th)
3 2005-03-14 12.4 (9th)
4 2005-03-15 13.5 (8th)
5 2005-03-21 12.8 (8th)
6 2005-03-22 14.0 (8th)
7 2005-03-28 11.4 (13th)
8 2005-03-29 11.3 (11th)
9 2005-04-04 12.3 (10th)
10 2005-04-05 13.0 (10th)
11 2005-04-11 11.0 (13th)
12 2005-04-12 10.3 (16th)
13 2005-04-18 11.4 (13th)
14 2005-04-19 11.5 (12th)
15 2005-04-25 9.6 (16th)
16 2005-04-26 10.3 (14th)
Average 11.9%

References

  1. ^ Park, Chung-a (March 21, 2005). "Television Dramas Make Marrying Young Look Hip". The Korea Times via Hancinema. Archived from the original on December 19, 2013. Retrieved August 21, 2013.
  2. ^ Source:AGB Nielsen Korea Archived February 8, 2015, at the Wayback Machine (in Korean)

External links

This page was last edited on 18 August 2023, at 06:03
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