Lovers in Paris
Lovers in Paris | |
---|---|
Promotional poster | |
Also known as |
Des amoureux à Paris Romance in Paris |
Genre |
Drama Romance |
Written by |
Kim Eun-sook Kang Eun-jung |
Directed by | Shin Woo-chul |
Starring |
Kim Jung-eun Park Shin-yang Lee Dong-gun |
Country of origin | South Korea |
Original language(s) | Korean |
No. of episodes | 20 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Kim Yang |
Location(s) |
Korea Paris |
Running time | Saturdays and Sundays at 21:55 (KST) |
Production company(s) | The Coup Media |
Release | |
Original network | Seoul Broadcasting System |
Original release | 12 June – 15 August 2004 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | Into the Storm |
Followed by | Magic |
Related shows |
Lovers in Prague Lovers |
External links | |
Website |
Lovers in Paris (Hangul: 파리의 연인; RR: Pari-ui yeon-in) is a 2004 South Korean television drama series starring Kim Jung-eun, Park Shin-yang and Lee Dong-gun. It aired on SBS from 12 June to 15 August 2004 on Saturdays and Sundays at 21:55 for 20 episodes.[1]
The series was very popular during its run, with its peak viewership rating of 57.6% making it the 11th highest rated Korean drama of all time (by episode).[2][3] Kim Jung-eun and Park Shin-yang shared Grand Prize ("Daesang") honors at the 2004 SBS Drama Awards, and later at the 2005 Baeksang Arts Awards, Kim won Best TV Actress, Kim Eun-sook and Kang Eun-jung won Best TV Screenplay, and the drama won the Grand Prize for Television.
It is the first of three TV series in the Lovers trilogy by writer Kim Eun-sook and director Shin Woo-chul. This was followed by Lovers in Prague (2005), and the third, simply titled Lovers (2006), was not set in Europe like the first two.
Synopsis
Kang Tae-young (Kim Jung-eun) is the daughter of a film director and carrying on her father's wishes, she studies film in Paris. To make ends meet, she works as a housekeeper for Han Ki-joo (Park Shin-yang), which she loves because she can watch his movies and drink his wine.
Unhappy with her services, he fires her. However, when he realizes that she is from the same hometown as the wife of a potential business partner, he hires her to act as his fiancee to warm up to his business partner. She agrees in exchange for getting her housekeeping job back. During the two dates that he takes her out, she is smitten by the fairy tale quality of the event. In turn he finds himself unexpectedly captivated by her. However, the fake girlfriend plan backfires, and they part ways on bad terms in Paris. Through a series of events she also meets Yoon Soo-hyuk (Lee Dong-gun), who is Ki-joo's nephew.
Recalled by his father, Ki-joo returns to Korea, and Tae-young also returns to attend her father's death anniversary. Both are reunited coincidentally in Seoul and have their misunderstandings resolved. She prepares to return to Paris, but discovers her uncle has squandered away her family house and run away, leaving her with her young cousin and the debts he has incurred.
While trying to sort out her family problems and retrieve her father's camera that was confiscated by the creditors, she meets Ki-joo again. Through multiple coincidental encounters, he finds himself attracted to her. Soo-hyuk also returns to Korea to track Tae-young down. He stays at her place and tries to win her heart. But he is devastated when he realizes that his uncle is also vying for her affections.
The situation is further complicated with the introduction of Moon Yoon-ah, the daughter of an influential politician whom Ki-joo's father has selected to become Ki-joo's wife. She also happens to be Tae-young's classmate in high school and is determined to win Ki-joo as her husband.
As Ki-joo and Tae-young open their hearts to each other, a scheming Yoon-ah and an emotionally wounded Soo-hyuk plot to split them up. Matters are further complicated when a long-held family secret is revealed: Soo-hyuk's mother Ki-hae is in fact Ki-joo's mother and not his older sister. Ki-hae had been in love with Ki-joo's father, but due to the difference in their wealth and status, the young couple was forced to separate by her father. She gave birth to Ki-joo out of wedlock, and to save face, the Han family raised Ki-joo as Ki-hae's younger brother. Then Ki-hae was married off to a rich man she didn't love, Soo-hyuk's father. Ki-joo reels from the revelation, and must deal with the lie at the center of his identity. Soo-hyuk also realizes that the closeness between his emotionally distant mother and Ki-joo was not that of siblings', but because Ki-joo was Ki-hae's more favored son. His bitterness grows that the two most important women in his life, his mother and Tae-young, have always chosen Ki-joo over him.
Meanwhile, Park Young-ji, an executive at GD Motors who wants to bring down Ki-joo, takes advantage of Soo-hyuk's feelings of envy and rivalry. He schemes with Soo-hyuk to leak the latest car design to the rival of GD Motors. The new car is announced and GD Motors is petrified because their latest design had been stolen. Later, Ki-joo figures out that Soo-hyuk was the culprit, but forgives him. The fact that Ki-joo forgave him so easily drives Soo-hyuk crazy. After getting into a car accident while blazing through the streets, he gets amnesia and loses his recent memories. (However, he was only pretending he had amnesia, as a final selfless act so that Tae-young and Ki-joo can be together guilt-free.) Yoon-ah also decides to let go of Ki-joo and throws her engagement ring into the Han River.
Ki-joo and Tae-young can finally be together. Unfortunately because of his family's disapproval of her, they decide to separate temporarily. She goes back to Paris and he stays in Korea. After 2 years, the new car is announced and is a success. Ki-joo immediately catches a flight to Paris. For some time, they do not know where the other is and keep missing each other.
Then one day, just like in the beginning of the series, Ki-joo throws a coin into a fountain and makes a wish to see Tae-young again. As he turns, he sees her standing there. The next scene shows them sitting by a river. Tae-young breaks the silence and asks, "If we had not met in Paris, do you think we would still have ended up together?" Ki-joo answers, "Most likely we would have."
Cast
- Kim Jung-eun as Kang Tae-young
- Park Shin-yang as Han Ki-joo[4]
- Lee Dong-gun as Yoon Soo-hyuk (Ki-joo's nephew)
- Oh Joo-eun as Moon Yoon-ah
- Kim Seo-hyung as Baek Seung-kyung (Ki-joo's ex-wife)
- Jung Ae-ri as Han Ki-hae (Soo-hyuk's mother)
- Kim Sung-won as Han Sung-hoon (Ki-joo's father)
- Park Young-ji as Choi Won-jae (Ki-joo's right-hand man)
- Jo Eun-ji as Lee Yang-mi (Tae-young's friend in Paris)
- Yoon Young-joon as Kim Seung-joon (Ki-joo's secretary)
- Sung Dong-il as Kang Pil-bo (Tae-young's uncle)
- Kim Young-chan as Kang Gun (Tae-young's little cousin)
- Lee Se-chang as Park Jung-hak (CEO of J Motors)
- Kim Sang-soon as Congressman Moon Ji-hwan (Yoon-ah's father)
- Seo Kwon-sook as Mrs. Moon (Yoon-ah's mother)
- Kim Chung as Madame Vaudier
- Yoon Jin-seo as girl on the beach (ep 20)
Production
Many of the scenes were filmed on location in Paris, France, and Seoul, South Korea. The Korean filming locations are as follows:[5]
- Namsan Fountain and Namsan Park, Namsan, Seoul.[6]
- The interior of the penthouse of the Oakwood Premier COEX Center, of the COEX complex in Samseong-dong, Gangnam District, was used as the Paris home of Han Ki-joo in the first three episodes.
- Several scenes were shot at the Grand Hyatt Seoul, in Yongsan District, on the historic Mount Namsan: the swimming pool which Tae-young falls into; the lobby where Ki-joo and Tae-young first kiss; The Paris Bar, where Ki-joo sings to Tae-young; J.J. Mahoney's, where the college hockey party was held; and the grand ballroom, where the engagement ceremony was held.
- Sangam CGV Multiplex Cinema at the World Cup Mall, Seoul World Cup Stadium was used as the location of Baek Seuk-kyung's CSV cinema, where Tae-young also worked and had the pajama party.
- Mokdong Ice Rink at Mokdong Stadium, Mok-dong, Yangcheon District was where Ki-joo and Soo-hyuk played ice hockey.
- Seoul Broadcasting System building was used as the headquarters of GD Motors.
Reception
With an average viewership rating of 40+% and a peak of 57.6%,[7] Lovers in Paris became one of the most highly rated Korean dramas of all time. It also received several high-profile awards, making it one of the most successful series aired on SBS. The drama's quotes, fashion and music made their way to mainstream pop culture (sparking trends and parodies),[8][9][10][11] notably when Soo-hyuk put Tae-young's hand over his heart and said, "You are in here"; and Ki-joo's two lines "Let's go, baby"; and "Why can't you say it? Why can't you say that this is my man, that this is the man I love?"[12]
Episode ratings
Date | Episode | Nationwide | Seoul |
---|---|---|---|
2004-06-12 | 1 | 23.6% | 23.9% |
2004-06-13 | 2 | 25.9% | 27.6% |
2004-06-19 | 3 | 31.9% | 33.1% |
2004-06-20 | 4 | 32.5% | 34.0% |
2004-06-26 | 5 | 35.0% | 37.1% |
2004-06-27 | 6 | 37.1% | 37.9% |
2004-07-03 | 7 | 40.5% | 42.8% |
2004-07-04 | 8 | 43.6% | 44.4% |
2004-07-10 | 9 | 42.5% | 44.1% |
2004-07-11 | 10 | 46.1% | 48.4% |
2004-07-17 | 11 | 44.1% | 44.9% |
2004-07-18 | 12 | 49.5% | 51.9% |
2004-07-24 | 13 | 47.0% | 48.4% |
2004-07-25 | 14 | 50.0% | 51.1% |
2004-07-31 | 15 | 37.6% | 38.7% |
2004-08-01 | 16 | 39.2% | 38.7% |
2004-08-07 | 17 | 41.3% | 41.7% |
2004-08-08 | 18 | 51.5% | 52.2% |
2004-08-14 | 19 | 51.3% | 53.1% |
2004-08-15 | 20 | 56.3% | 57.6% |
Average | 41.3% | 42.5% |
Source: TNS Media Korea
Awards and nominations
Year | Award | Category | Recipient | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | 2nd Andre Kim Best Star Awards[13] | Best Star | Lee Dong-gun | Won |
| Best OST | "By Your Side" by Jo Sung-mo[14] | Won | |
| Best Actress | Kim Jung-eun | Won | |
| Grand Prize (Daesang) | Park Shin-yang and Kim Jung-eun | Won | |
Top 10 Stars | Park Shin-yang | Won | ||
Kim Jung-eun | Won | |||
Lee Dong-gun | Won | |||
2005 | | Grand Prize (Daesang) for Television | Lovers in Paris | Won |
Best Drama | Lovers in Paris | Nominated | ||
Best Director (TV) | Shin Woo-chul | Nominated | ||
Best Actor (TV) | Park Shin-yang | Nominated | ||
Best Actress (TV) | Kim Jung-eun | Won | ||
Best New Director (TV) | Shin Woo-chul | Nominated | ||
Best Screenplay (TV) | Kim Eun-sook and Kang Eun-jung | Won | ||
| Best Actress | Kim Jung-eun | Won | |
International broadcast
- It aired on NTV in Japan beginning 1 March 2005 and became a hit, with a peak rating of 26.1%. SBS officially opened a Japanese website for the series on 4 March 2005.
- It aired on VTV3 in Vietnam beginning 29 March 2005.
- Dubbed in Tagalog, it aired on ABS-CBN in the Philippines in 2004, and was later aired worldwide via ABS-CBN's affiliate TFC. It re-aired again on ABS-CBN from 30 June 2014 to 29 August 2014 weekdays at 10:15 am, airing right after Naruto Shippuden season 6.
- In Singapore, it also aired on MediaCorp Channel U in 2007.
- In Thailand, it also aired on Channel 7 in 2006.[15]
Musical theatre adaptation
It was adapted into a stage musical that ran at the D-Cube Arts Center in 2012, starring Lee Ji-hoon and Jung Sang-yeon as Han Ki-joo, Bang Jin-wi and Oh So-yeon as Kang Tae-young, and Lee Hyun, Jung Woo-soo and Run as Yoon Soo-hyuk.[16]
Remake
The Philippines produced a remake in 2009, starring KC Concepcion (in her first primetime leading role), Piolo Pascual and Zanjoe Marudo.[17]
The Indonesian remake was titled Pacar Pilihan.
References
- ↑ "2004 good for movies, gloomy in performing arts". The Korea Herald via Hancinema. 29 December 2004. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ Kim, Sun-woo (9 August 2004). "Lovers in Paris Hits Highest Viewing Rate of 51.5 Percent". The Dong-a Ilbo. Retrieved 2015-07-09.
- ↑ "Top 50 highest-rated TV dramas of all time". Electric Ground. 8 December 2010. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ Sunwoo, Carla (28 December 2011). "Actor Park Shin-yang to hold a concert at the end of the month.". Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ "Korean TV Drama: Lovers in Paris". Korea Tourism Organization. Retrieved 2012-06-12.
- ↑ "Looking Down on the Whole of Seoul". The Chosun Ilbo. 27 April 2006. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ "MBC Drama Sparks Kim Sam-soon Syndrome". The Chosun Ilbo. 4 July 2005. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ "MS Korea to Hold Lovers in Paris Promotional Event". The Chosun Ilbo. 26 July 2004. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ Choi, Hong-seop (15 December 2004). "Cyworld Named Hit Product of the Year". The Chosun Ilbo. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ Lee, Hee-sung (8 April 2005). "When stars talk, consumers watch ― their mobile phones". Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ "Way Back Wednesday: K-dramas Part 2 (2001–2005)". Allkpop. 5 December 2012. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ "B1A4 Sandeul-Baro, Comic Parody of Lovers in Paris". KpopStarz. 16 January 2013. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ Park, Chung-a (16 November 2004). "Fashion Designer Andre Kim Gives Out Best Star Awards". The Korea Times via Hancinema. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ "2004 M.net Korean Music Festival Winners list". MAMA. Retrieved 2014-06-12.
- ↑ "เกาหลี ฟีเวอร์ ซีรี่ส์ละครฮิตติดจอตู้". positioningmag (in Thai). 25 August 2015. Retrieved 5 February 2006.
- ↑ "Lee Hyun to play Lee Dong Gun's role in Lovers in Paris musical". Allkpop. 29 March 2012. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ "Piolo, KC enjoy first shoot of Lovers in Paris". ABS-CBN News. 13 March 2009. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
External links
- Lovers in Paris official SBS website
- Lovers in Paris at HanCinema
- Lovers in Paris at the Internet Movie Database