Product Information
Director: | Jo Geun-Sik |
Country of Origin: | South Korea |
Genre: | Romance, Drama |
Release Date: | Dec 04, 2006 |
Publisher: | KM Culture |
Product Made In: | South Korea |
Case: | CD Case |
About Rare Item
If it marked as a 'Rare Item', it may be a secondhand in mint condition.
Product Details
Tracks:
그 해 여름
여름이야기
사랑이 다가오는 소리
그녀를 만나러 가는 길
수내리의 하루
사랑을 던져준 그대
Dialog
사람을 부르는 향기
타버린 도서관
Dialog
편백나무 안에 그녀
떠난줄 알았던 그녀가
아픔의 시작
멈춰버린 여름
다 하지 못한말
Dialog
놓쳐버린 손
누군가에게 전하는 말
그녀를 다시 만난다면
Dialog
눈물되는 시간
그 해 여름
여름이야기
사랑이 다가오는 소리
그녀를 만나러 가는 길
수내리의 하루
사랑을 던져준 그대
Dialog
사람을 부르는 향기
타버린 도서관
Dialog
편백나무 안에 그녀
떠난줄 알았던 그녀가
아픔의 시작
멈춰버린 여름
다 하지 못한말
Dialog
놓쳐버린 손
누군가에게 전하는 말
그녀를 다시 만난다면
Dialog
눈물되는 시간
About Once in a Summer
First love comes and goes as fleetingly as summer, but the memories stay forever...
Lee Byung Hun (A Bittersweet Life) and Soo Ae (Love Letter) star in this moving romance about ten days of love that spans thirty years of time. The sophomore film from No Manners director Jo Geun Sik, Once in a Summer jumps back and forth from the present day to that fateful summer thirty years ago when the leads first meet. In 1969, Korea was in the midst of great economic changes and political turbulence under the Park Chung Hee regime; set against such chaotic times, the film brings out remarkably simple and genuine sentiments with a heartwarming, yet heartbreaking love story. Jo's lens beautifully captures the contrast between present and past, pastoral countryside and urban Seoul, and Lee Byung Hun convincingly portrays his character both in reckless youth and wizened age.
Lee Byung Hun (A Bittersweet Life) and Soo Ae (Love Letter) star in this moving romance about ten days of love that spans thirty years of time. The sophomore film from No Manners director Jo Geun Sik, Once in a Summer jumps back and forth from the present day to that fateful summer thirty years ago when the leads first meet. In 1969, Korea was in the midst of great economic changes and political turbulence under the Park Chung Hee regime; set against such chaotic times, the film brings out remarkably simple and genuine sentiments with a heartwarming, yet heartbreaking love story. Jo's lens beautifully captures the contrast between present and past, pastoral countryside and urban Seoul, and Lee Byung Hun convincingly portrays his character both in reckless youth and wizened age.
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