(Source: DramaWiki)", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/drama/9YYYgc.jpg", "genre": [ "Drama", "Romance", "Supernatural" ], "contentRating": "PG-13", "datePublished": "Apr 1, 2008", "dateModified": "2019-12-09", "startDate": "Apr 1, 2008", "endDate": "Apr 18, 2008", "actor": [ { "@type": "Person", "name": "Ryu Seung Ryong", "alternateName": "류승룡", "birthDate": "November 29, 1970", "nationality": "South Korean", "description": "Ryu Seung Ryong is a South Korean actor. Ryu began his acting career in theater, subsequently becoming one of the most versatile supporting actors in Korean film and television. In 2013, he headlined "Miracle in Cell No. 7", which became the third highest-grossing Korean film of all time, and in 2019 he starred in the comedy film "Extreme Job", which is currently the 2nd highest-grossing film of all time in South Korea. Ryu is the first Korean to star in four movies that have drawn over 10 million viewers each.
Before making his name known as a movie star, Ryu performed on stage as a member of the nonverbal performance Nanta and enjoyed popularity. After that, Ryu entered Korean cinema with Director Jang Jin’s films and continued his career as a supporting actor to be recognized for his acting skills. His first major role was in the 2009 horror film "Possessed". The 2011 film "War of the Arrows", in which the actor appeared in his 40s, topped the Korean box office that year and won Ryu the Best Supporting Actor at the Blue Dragon Award for playing the villain character perfectly.
After that, Ryu Seungryong walks down the royal road. In All About My Wife (2012), he portrayed the so-called ‘dirty sexy’ charm with his unique sense of humor. Casanova Sungki, the cheesy, imposing, and romantic character presented the actor with the Best Supporting Actor at the Blue Dragon Award. Also, through Masquerade (2012), his first movie that recorded 10 million viewers, Ryu won the Best Supporting Actor at the Grand Bell Awards. In these three films, in which he won the Best Supporting Actor, Ryu showed his potentials as the top-level supporting actor by dictating the tone and flow of the films.
The 2013 film "Miracle in Cell No. 7" served as a turning point for Ryu as he took the first lone main character in his career, and the film became his major work, drawing over 10 million audiences and winning the Best Actor at the Grand Bell Awards and the Grand Prize at the Baeksang Arts Awards.
Ryu married his non-celebrity girlfriend on April 19, 2015. They have two sons, named Geon Ryoo and Gang Ryoo. (Source: Theactorispresent)", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/qPwzQ_5c.jpg" }, { "@type": "Person", "name": "Ryu Deok Hwan", "alternateName": "류덕환", "birthDate": "June 12, 1987", "nationality": "South Korean", "description": "Ryu Deok Hwan began his career as a child actor on stage at the age of six. Ryu Deok Hwan also lent his voice to the animated Korean "Earth Rep Rolling Star" (2010) and has also acted in the stage plays "Equus" and "Jang Jin's Clumsy People."
Ryu's mother is musical producer Jung Ok Young.
(Source: MyDramaList)", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/eY0eZp_5c.jpg" }, { "@type": "Person", "name": "Lee Yun Hee", "alternateName": "이연희", "birthDate": "January 9, 1988", "nationality": "South Korean", "description": "Lee Yun Hee is a South Korean actor under Saram Entertainment. She was born in the Bundang district of Seongnam, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea. In the summer of 2001, 13-year-old Lee Yun Hee successfully signed a contract with SM Entertainment after she won the category of "Best Feature" in the SM Entertainment Best Youth contest. For the contest, she acted out a monologue, singing to Dana The Grace's "Until the End of the World", and also did freestyle modelling poses. After she joined the company, she began intense training lessons on acting, singing, and dancing.
Her big break came in the form of the movie "A Millionaire's First Love". Through it, she also made her singing debut, singing "Do Re Mi" from The Sound of Music in the movie and "Insa" on the original soundtrack.
In 2007, soon after the debut of labelmates Girls' Generation, she revealed that if she had not decided to continue her career as an actor, she would've become a member of Girls' Generation, as they had trained together when they were still trainees.
Yun Hee married her non-celebrity boyfriend in a private ceremony on June 2, 2020. On September 13, 2024, Yeon Hee gave birth to their fist daughter.
(Source: MyDramaList)", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/BwXQ5c.jpg" }, { "@type": "Person", "name": "Kim Won Hae", "alternateName": "김원해, 金元海, キム・ウォネ, Ким Вон Хэ, كيم ون هاى", "birthDate": "April 06, 1969", "nationality": "Busan, South Korea", "description": "He attended the Seoul Institute Of Arts with a major in Theatre and Film. He is best known for being a cast member on season 1-4 of SNL Korea (Saturday Night Live Korea). He is signed under Pium Entertainment and Kim began his career in 1991. He made his acting debut in the 1998 film “Spring in My Hometown.” He has since appeared in many popular films and television dramas. In 2016, he took home the Bonsang award at the Scene Stealer Festival. Active Years: 1991 - now Education: Seoul Institute of the Arts Occupation: Actor (Source: Viki, Wikipedia)", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/kim-won-hae.png" }, { "@type": "Person", "name": "So Ji Sub", "alternateName": "소지섭", "birthDate": "November 4, 1977", "nationality": "South Korean", "description": "So Ji Sub is a South Korean actor under 51K Entertainment. He was born in Yongsan, Seoul, South Korea, and grew up in Incheon, South Korea. After making his debut as a jeans model, he made his acting debut in 1996 with the drama "Three Guys and Three Girls" (남자셋 여자셋). He has also released several hip-hop EPs.
Self-described as introverted and insecure in his childhood and teenage years, So trained to become a professional swimmer for 11 years and bagged the bronze medal at the Korean National Games.
He was named the goodwill ambassador of Gangwon Province to boost tourism there, and a 51-kilometer-long trail in the province was named "So Ji-sub Road," which was unveiled to the public on May 20, 2012. He was the first Korean actor to have an entire road named after him. He was also named promotional ambassador for cybercrime prevention by the National Police Agency, helping to raise awareness and prevent cybercrimes such as hacking and Internet fraud by taking part in various promotional activities.
So is the owner of the Apgujeong-dong branch of CJ Foodville's A Twosome Place. He has also helped import foreign films, having invested in art-house films such as the U.S.-British-French co-production Philomena (2014), the Chinese film Coming Home (2014), the Japanese crime thriller The World of Kanako (2014)" and the American horror film A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night (2015).
On April 7, 2020, he announced his marriage to former TV presenter Jo Eun Jung.", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/p0pErc.jpg" } ], "director": [ { "@type": "Person", "name": "Jang Jin", "alternateName": "장진", "birthDate": "February 24, 1971", "nationality": "South Korean", "description": "South Korean film director, theatre director, playwright, screenwriter, film producer, actor and TV personality. Considered one of the most distinctive voices to emerge from the 1990s Korean cinema renaissance, Jang's unique filmmaking style mixes unconventional storylines, quirky characters, dry and subversive humor, comic twists, sharp puns, stagy presentation, a keen observation of society, and humanism. Jang’s films do not sell millions of tickets but he has nurtured a faithful fan base that appreciates his "Jang Jin-ish" style. Jang Jin dreamed of becoming a musician in middle school, but his ambition changed when he saw his first theater play in his freshman year of high school. As a high school student, he acted in more than 40 plays, receiving good reviews and a few awards for his performances. After majoring in theater studies at Seoul Institute of the Arts, he joined the writing team for the SBS variety show Good Friends in the mid 1990s. He created his own portion Hollywood Message, which he wrote and edited by himself, where he would take famous scenes from some of the most popular Hollywood films showing in theaters, and make parodies, add silly popups, mix scenes from different films together to form a bizarre, unique collage of images. Because of his contribution, ratings for the show surged to unexpected heights. In January 1995, Jang entered newspaper daily The Chosun Ilbo's annual literary contest with Cheonho-dong Crossroad, his first full-fledged script. Using three characters which would feature in most of his theater plays and early films (Hwa-yi, Dal-soo and Deok-bae), his new and creative brand of storytelling won over the judges, who awarded him the top prize. He wrote his first stage play Heotang ("labor in vain") at the age of 21 while serving his military duty, and his followup Clumsy People, not only granted him lots of praise, but was also a big success, and allowed actress Song Chae-hwan to win the Best Actress Award at the Seoul Theater Festival. At the same time, he was helping adapt Song Jae-hee's original into what became A Hot Roof, a feminist comedy where a group of women from all walks of life protest their position in society from the roof of a building, while their husbands and the rest of the city try to cope with all that in the midst of one of the hottest summers Korea had ever seen. It would take another few years before Jang could start working full-time in Chungmuro, but during that time, he built a reputation as one of the most brilliant theater directors in the country, with unique scripts and characters who came across as real even in the most surreal of situations. His 1997 play Taxi Driver was a huge success, displaying his wit and talent for snappy dialogue. The original starred Choi Min-sik as Deok-bae, a taxi driver from the countryside who decides to come to the city, buys a private taxi after his mother sold some land, and hopes to finally make a change in his miserable life. The success of his theater plays raised his profile in the industry. Veteran TV drama director Kim Jong-hak commissioned Jang for a script, but the project was delayed. Jang decided to shop around his script, which led to his debut feature 1998 comedy The Happenings (though only half of what he shot ended up in the final cut). In 1999 Jang founded the theater troupe Suda, and among his regulars were Jung Gyu-soo, Shin Ha-kyun, Jung Jae-young and Jang Young-nam. After working on the play Magic Time, he then shot his second film The Spy, an underrated comedy starring Yoo Oh-sung as a North Korean spy trying to steal the magic formula of the South's "super pig" to combat the famine. The rest of Jang's career brought him to the top of Korea's A-list directors, with the same brand of "Jang Jin style" crowd pleasers, such as Guns & Talks, a black comedy about four talkative assassins. In 2000 Jang established his own film production outfit Film It Suda, hiring his "family" of fellow writers, producers and directors. Their first production was the three-part omnibus No Comment in 2002. With his theater and film successes, Jang was finally able to move on to producing and his real passion, writing. But the huge flop of the 2003 melodrama A Man Who Went to Mars (also known as A Letter from Mars, which Jang wrote) brought the company's future to a serious crossroad: either focus on hot items or risk losing everything. Though the aftermath of the film's failure was felt even in 2004, romantic comedy Someone Special had a decent box office performance despite the film's low budget, as well as glowing reviews for its stars Lee Na-young and Jung Jae-young. Jang then focused on adapting his successful 2000 theater play Leave When They're Applauding into the big screen. The result was 2005's Murder, Take One, about a homicide case being broadcast live for 48 hours, a whodunit with a campy take on the ratings-obsessed media and the viewers' craze for reality TV. But it would be another of the company's films that became one of the biggest critical and commercial successes of 2005. Adapted by Jang from his same-titled 2002 play, Welcome to Dongmakgol is the story of a remote mountain village where North and South Korean soldiers as well as an American soldier are stranded during the Korean War. The fantasy dramedy was the debut feature of Park Kwang-hyun, one of several of Jang's colleagues from his theater days who joined Film It Suda. In August 2005 Jang served as theater director for the first time on a play he didn't write himself. He directed his fellow Seoul Institute of the Arts alumni in a staging of Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman. The play commemorated the 43rd anniversary for Dongnang Arts Center affiliated to the institute and the 100th birthday of the late Yu Chi-jin, founder of the institute and the nation's first amphitheater. After his doing his takes on the gangster genre (2006's Righteous Ties) and the melodrama genre (2007's father-centered My Son), Jang wrote the witty script for Ra Hee-chan's Going by the Book, about a mock bank robbery drill that turns embarrassingly real. He also injected an enhanced comic effect into the screenplay of Public Enemy Returns, the third installment in Kang Woo-suk's series on tough detective Kang Cheol-jung (played by Sol Kyung-gu). His feel-good political satire Good Morning President was the opening film of the 2009 Busan International Film Festival. At the MBC Drama Awards that year, Jang won a Special Award for his 2008 radio show segment Radio Book Club on MBC Standard FM. His next films, 2010 ensemble comedy The Quiz Show Scandal and 2011 melodrama Romantic Heaven, though well-reviewed, were less successful at the box office. Besides being the CEO of Film It Suda, he is also co-founder of the film production company KnJ Entertainment Inc. alongside friend Kang Woo-suk. Jang was a judge on the first and second seasons of Korea's Got Talent. He wrote and directed the first three seasons of sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live Korea and anchored SNL Korea's version of Weekend Update. Jang says he believes satirical comedies can change society for the better.", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/vXQAJ2_5c.jpg" } ], "trailer": { "@type": "VideoObject", "name": "Trailer for U-Turn", "embedUrl": "https://www.youtube.com/embed/Wxgp6OR-oDk", "thumbnailUrl": "https://img.youtube.com/vi/Wxgp6OR-oDk/0.jpg" }, "productionCompany": [ { "@type": "Organization", "name": "OCN", "description": "
OCN is a movie channel on basic cable throughout South Korea, owned by CJ ENM E&M Division.[1] In the 2000s it became the most viewed station in South Korea, which prompted them to create their widely recognized English-language slogan, "Korea number-one channel." With cable TV penetration quite high in South Korea, OCN is a popular movie resource.", "logo": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/network/ocn.png" } ], "countryOfOrigin": { "@type": "Country", "name": "South Korea" }, "numberOfEpisodes": "4", "episode": [ { "@type": "TVEpisode", "name": "Episode 4", "url": "https://ww7.kissasian.video/watch/u-turn/episode-4.html", "episodeNumber": 4, "datePublished": "2019-12-09" }, { "@type": "TVEpisode", "name": "Episode 3", "url": "https://ww7.kissasian.video/watch/u-turn/episode-3.html", "episodeNumber": 3, "datePublished": "2019-12-09" }, { "@type": "TVEpisode", "name": "Episode 2", "url": "https://ww7.kissasian.video/watch/u-turn/episode-2.html", "episodeNumber": 2, "datePublished": "2019-12-09" }, { "@type": "TVEpisode", "name": "Episode 1", "url": "https://ww7.kissasian.video/watch/u-turn/episode-1.html", "episodeNumber": 1, "datePublished": "2019-12-09" } ]
}
Ji Sub is coming back home after an unsuccessful audition. Suddenly, a sound makes him stop his car. When he opens his trunk, he discovers a young woman, Yeon Hee, who doesn't remember anything about herself. Who is that girl and why did she appear in front of Ji Sub?
(Source: DramaWiki)Watch drama online for free.
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