Ditayangkan pada : 13 April 2019, setiap hari Minggu - Jumat pukul 19.35. BACA JUGA: Sinopsis Drama Korea My ID Is Gangnam Beauty Lengkap. Link SINOPSIS In Youth Episode 1 - 38 Terakhir : Sinopsis In Youth Episode 1: SINOPSIS Secret Garden Episode 1 - Terakhir (Drama Thailand 2019) by Andre; Mei 29, 2019;
249 January 15, 2011January 24, 2016 Secret Garden Episode 19 by javabeans We’re almost there! Phew, what a roller-coaster journey this drama has been, and this episode is no different — it takes us from one extreme to another, serving up some silly moments, light romantic beats, cute comedy, and then more melodrama with lots of angsty tears. Talk about a wild ride. SONG OF THE DAY Secret Garden OST – “읎유” Reason by 4men [ Download ] Audio clip Adobe Flash Player version 9 or above is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser. EPISODE 19 RECAP Ra-im pulls back as Joo-won asks if they’ve kissed before. She starts reciting Joo-won’s “Kim su-han-mu, the tortoise and the crane
” chant, saying that she’s protecting him till his memory comes back, like he’d protected her. He balks at the frank way she speaks to him, but she’s unruffled and tells her not to order her around. Plus, if he wants to see her, then he should come to her, rather than having her summoned. Why could she not be this assertive with the 34-year-old Joo-won? In any case, 21-year-old Joo-won is startled and even backs up, which is hilarious. He instructs her to move her stuff here until he figures out why he likes her — and later, to leave upon his say-so. Nice that his sense of romance is still intact. Ra-im goes one step further by casually offering to be the Little Mermaid and disappear into bubbles. She tells him to think it over, and leaves. He has no idea what to with her, and her newfound confidence in their love just compounds his confusion. From outside, she turns back to give him a jaunty wave, and Joo-won wonders, “Why is her smile so pretty?” He chases her down to offer a ride, and she asks why it took him so long to catch up, as she was walking extra slowly and “looking totally pretty from the back.” Gah, maybe Joo-won left his conceit behind in her body after the last swap. At the action school, Ra-im hears disappointing news the Dark Blood crew have opted to go for a Hong Kong actress instead. She bears the news well and optimistically says that just getting the role was enough to fulfill her dream. Jong-soo tells Joo-won not to forget who Ra-im is, or that he put up his own life for her. That confuses Joo-won, who asks himself, “I risked my life for a short-legged woman like that?” Despite the cheery face in front of her teammates, Ra-im is more disheartened about losing the job than she let on, and she broods alone in the locker room, remembering all the work she’d put into the project. Joo-won finds her there and can see that the movie was important to her; she tells him that he’d made the miracle happen for her, and apologizes since it didn’t work out. Joo-won takes this moment to ask Ra-im about one of her habits how she makes use of leftover soap pieces, and she starts to reply before realizing that there’s no way that this amnesiac Joo-won would know that. He explains that he’d seen it in her locker, then realizes he hasn’t. At this sign that his memory might be trickling back, Ra-im waits anxiously while he thinks, trying to recall more things
 like Ra-im wearing sexy lingerie. Which earns him a swift kick to the shin. Seul finds Tae-sun staying at Oska’s place, and they engage in a round of not-quite-jealous-sparring, with Tae-sun smirking that he didn’t leave Korea because Oska kept him back. He even pointedly asks Seul’s age, which raises her hackles — is the pretty boy actually trying to suggest he’s more appealing because he’s younger than her? Oska joins them, as clueless as ever, and merely tells Seul that he’s gotta keep Tae-sun nearby in case he runs away. Seul snaps, “And what if I run away?” He takes her aside for some business talk — he’s resuming activities with his new album and an MV — and Seul asks Oska if Tae-sun is gay. She’s shocked that Oska knew all this while, but he still hasn’t put two and two together and says that it’s “not like that” between them. Seul is sharper to pick up on the vibe and says that his thick-headedness is why he goes around hurting people without knowing it. Joo-won interrupts the conversation, and is immediately taken with Seul’s beauty, to Oska’s disgruntlement. Joo-won flatters her while Oska blusters that she’s not for him, and she gets to enjoy the reversal of being the object of jealousy, rather than the one feeling it. Heh. Mom drops by, and Joo-won tells her about the girlfriend he has discovered he has. Mom is pleased at Joo-won’s assessment of Ra-im as lacking feminine coyness and having only a so-so figure. He can see from her reaction that she dislikes Ra-im, and she asks eagerly, “If I say I don’t like her, will you stop dating her?” But no, Joo-won shakes his head like a little boy and replies, “No~ope. I like her.” Joo-won asks his mother about the firefighter who’d saved him from the elevator, wondering if it would be too strange to pop up now, 13 years later, to thank the man. Mom’s smile falters and she uneasily says that he shouldn’t since she already took care of it, but agrees to look up his information to satisfy him. Ah-young is shocked to hear that her dreams were right-on, because she dreamt another one last night, and it was spooky enough that she’s afraid of sharing it. Pressed to answer, Ah-jung explains dreaming of a tall black door, in front of which three children wearing white were crying. Joo-won was also on the side crying, while Ra-im yelled. Upon waking, Ah-jung had been filled with foreboding. Joo-won calls Ra-im for some spa time, declaring that his purpose is to check out her figure. Oh, boys and their one-track minds. She gets annoyed when he says he’s done this with other women, though she gets back at him by insinuating that she’s also had quite a bit of experience with men. She repeats the comments he’d misinterpreted at their first meeting about men liking to “do it” on roofs and in cars, when she’d been referring to stunts and he’d assumed she meant more frisky activity. Joo-won retorts that she can’t fool him with the same line twice — another slip that reveals that he’s getting back snippets of his memory. She’s so happy that she hugs him, and he says suggestively that he might be on the cusp of remembering other things
 while trailing his hand lower down her back. Incorrigible. Ra-im twists his arm literally, pinning it painfully behind his back, and shows him a more accurate representation of what their physical relationship was like. I know that it’s a funny gag for this moment, but is anyone else bothered about the actual truth in that statement? When Joo-won drops her off at her place later that night, his reaction is just as it was the first time. Horrified that he’d be involved with someone so poor, he tells her to erase his number from her phone, and immediately leaves. Oska loves Tae-sun’s song and ruffles his hair affectionately, which earns him an annoyed glare. I know Tae-sun may end up with a bruised heart, but I do love all the double entendres and hidden meanings in their interactions — meanings to which Oska remains solidly oblivious. Joo-won comes in — wearing his blue tracksuit, earning him a round of mocking from both Oska and Tae-sun — and asks his cousin about what kind of woman Ra-im is. Oska starts to answer that she’s his fan, and hearing that is enough for Joo-won to decide that she won’t do. Ha. It’s time for another Mom face-off as Seul meets with Oska’s mother, but this one thankfully yields much more instant gratification than the angst of that other Mom. Oska’s mother is insulted that Seul would date Joo-won and then switch to Oska, and starts to tell her off. Oska arrives and asks his mother to back off, defending Seul, but that just earns him a whack on the head with Mom’s purse. She heaps disapproving scorn onto her son and raises her hand a second time to knock some sense into him
 only to find her hand blocked in midair. Both mother and son are stunned at Seul’s audacity, but she holds firm and merely suggests they talk things out over drinks. And so the trio relocates to a bar, to duke things out the Korean way showdown by liquor. Seul and Mom take turns taking shots — both in the drinking sense, and the verbal offense sense, volleying back and forth. I love that while these two ladies trade barbs, Oska sits there meekly, pouring drinks and trying to stay out of it, not wanting to get caught in the crossfire between his two women. The mood takes a turn when Mom takes out her facial spray, worried that the alcohol will dry out her skin, and Seul notes that this is a habit they share. She takes her own spray out, and then Seul and Mom actually bond over their cosmetics preferences. Oska can’t believe this — they’ve gone from fighting over him to acting like spa buddies, and when he complains, Mom just asks, “Are you still here?” Seul tells him that if he’s bored, he could sing meaning Get out of our hair and go occupy yourself with the karaoke, boy. LMAO. In fact, Seul and Mom are still drinking later when he arrives home. He receives some good news, though — he’s been contracted as a spokesperson advocating nonsmoking, which means his public image has recovered and his days of hardship are over. Oska drops by the action school to check on Ra-im and ask how things are with 21-year-old Joo-won. Ra-im answers that she finds him and his youthful energy adorable, even with his pervy tendencies. He’s also starting to remember in bits and pieces, which is promising. Oska drives her home, and they banter back and forth in their mock-flirtatious way like they used to — until Joo-won interrupts to say, “What a pretty picture.” Just like old times indeed. Joo-won protests at their cozy vibe — didn’t she say she loved him? What are they doing together? Thoroughly enjoying this, Ra-im links arms with Oska and invites “oppa” in for tea while Joo-won ineffectually demands an explanation. Standing at a distance is Mom’s personal secretary, who has grown tired of this constant routine you’re not the only one, buddy and wishes dearly that Joo-won could be better about avoiding the secretary’s surveillance. The secretary reluctantly takes out his phone to report to Mom, who actually has the temerity to blame the Gils for forcing her to “stoop this low” for her next move. Responsibility, she knows not what it is. While Ra-im fixes Oska coffee, Joo-won complains about the Oska poster hanging on her wall. But he gets back at them by saying that if Ra-im and Oska date, then he can have Seul with her 36-24-34 measurements — a comment that raises the hackles of both. Mom calls Joo-won in time to break up a brewing fight as Oska kicks Joo-won in retaliation to admit the “truth” about the firefighter. She says that he was Ra-im’s father, but also that Ra-im had used this knowledge to bind Joo-won to her, preying on his guilty conscience. Joo-won asks Oska to leave them alone, and gets straight to the point. Did her father’s death have anything to do with his accident? She confirms it, and tells him that to explain everything that happened between them would make for a very long story and don’t we know it. She starts to tell him the whole truth, but he declines to hear it, saying coolly that this is something he’ll have to remember on his own. If it’s true that she tricked him before and is trying to trick him now, he might fall for it again. He goes home to work things through, and asks his housekeeper why she doesn’t clear away the cash on his bedside table. She answers that he’d been very attached to the 45,000 won, in addition to a few other items. He sits there pondering the pile of seemingly random objects stacked in front of him, wondering what he could have possibly valued so dear about that vacuum, or basket of tangerines, or women’s clothing. He calls Secretary Kim to ask about them, but Secretary Kim wails in frustration, “How am I to know that?” In a bit of self-parody, Ah-young happens to get cappuccino foam on her lip, and Secretary Kim recognizes that as his chance to make a move. Offering to wipe it for her, he leans in and kisses her — only the reaction he gets is not as romantic as he’d hoped. Ah-young shoves him back and throws water in his face for kissing her without her permission, and he pouts that the guys never wait for permission in the movies. Yeah, well that’s the price you pay for thinking that scenes in dramas are acceptable real-life behavior. Oska calls Seul out to take her for a walk, ignoring her protests that people will see since that that’s the point. Taking her hand, he walks with his head held high while bystanders gawk, and when people ask questions, he declares frankly that he’s dating Seul. He tells Seul that this is their first time walking outside holding hands, like a normal couple. A few petulant fangirls complain that this is betrayal, but he says he wants to date too — he’s 36, not an idol boy — and urges them to jump ship to 2PM or Beast instead. LOL. In his library, Joo-won finds the page left in his copy of Alice in Wonderland, and now the last line has been altered, with lines added “The Little Mermaid was about to disappear, and at that moment, the prince realized the truth and said to the princess, Is this the best you can do? Are you sure?’ and broke off the engagement. He ran to the Little Mermaid, but she’d noticed the water bubbles and developed an air-bubble washing machine and became a chaebol. Meanwhile, the prince went broke with a bad investment and became the Little Mermaid’s Secretary Kim, and they lived a long, long, really looooong time.” OMG. That’s priceless. Joo-won initially scoffs at this childish story, ready to dismiss it, but then recognizes his own handwriting. Puzzling over that, he recalls Ra-im’s offer to turn into the Little Mermaid, and finally, that does the trick — it triggers his memories, which come flooding back to him. Joo-won races outside, heading for Ra-im while his brain releases fragments in quick succession. They come in a barrage, in reverse order, starting with the most recent memories and finally landing on one we haven’t yet seen — from the firefighter’s funeral thirteen years ago, when a teenage Ra-im had sobbed for her father. That last one stuns him, because it’s one that’s been repressed for the last thirteen years as opposed to the past week. When he shows up at her door, she thinks he’s still upset about the news of her father and starts to explain. To her surprise, he grabs her in a hug, which awakens the hope that he’s recovered his memory. However, Joo-won deflates her hopes by telling her that he hasn’t remembered, and furthermore, he announces that he’s planning to go on another blind date with another bride candidate. He says that the more she insists that they were in love, the more he can’t believe it, since she’s not his type. Ra-im looks at him with hurt and confusion, as he tells her that she’s pretty dumb not to catch on — of course he remembers, that’s why he’s here. Realizing that he was just pulling her leg, Ra-im starts to cry, which startles him enough that he apologizes for teasing. He kisses her on the forehead, and tells her, “I love you. That one’s mine.” She’s still smarting from the lie and calls him a jerk, so he repeats the kiss and adds, “I really love you. That’s your father’s.” Now that his entire memory is intact, Joo-won relates the story of his accident, when he’d been stuck inside that elevator with an injured leg, fearing that he was going to die. As Ra-im’s father had gone to check for more survivors, he’d prayed that prayer for safety. When the doors opened, Joo-won saw a firefighter holding out a hand. But with his leg injury, he couldn’t reach, so the man had entered the elevator and given him oxygen. While the elevator had shaken on its unsteady cables, the doors had slammed shut and Ra-im’s father had radioed for help. Ra-im’s father had used his axe to force the doors open, and lifted Joo-won out. Joo-won had reached down to pull Dad up, just as the elevator started to shake. Immediately Ra-im’s father had known he wouldn’t make it, and perhaps Joo-won had sensed it too, because he had grabbed the man’s hand even tighter and begged him to climb up. Ra-im’s father, however, had pulled his hand out of his grasp, knowing that if held onto it, both of them might die. He’d insisted that Joo-won escape to safety, ignoring Joo-won’s sobs, and asked him to tell his daughter that he loved her. With the cable ready to snap, Dad had shoved Joo-won back — just as the elevator crashed down the shaft into flames. Ra-im sobs as Joo-won finishes the story, ending on her father’s last words and apologizing for taking so long to pass along the message. Ra-im tells him it’s okay and thanks him for letting her know how much she was loved. Together, they visit Dad’s memorial vault to pay their respects, and Joo-won again apologizes this time to Dad for being so slow to convey his last words. In fact, he’d tried once before to pass along the message, but had been unable to — he means the day he’d seen Ra-im sobbing at the funeral, but Ra-im looks at him curiously at the comment. Joo-won thanks Dad for saving him and asks for his daughter’s hand, promising to make her happy for the rest of her life. Afterward, he wonders with an uncertainty that is endearing whether her father would’ve liked him, and seems genuinely upset when she says no — why would he like the guy who’s always making his daughter cry? She tells him there’s only one way to remedy that — for them to love each other like crazy. He smiles at that, because that’s one task they’ve got well covered. Joo-won’s mother expresses her joy at the return of Joo-won’s memory, but her smile fades when he asks pointedly if she’s truly happy rather than fearful. He trusted her, “But you were bad till the end.” Not only did she act wrongly to him and Ra-im, but to herself as well by making up such a horrible lie. She shrills, “So what of that stupid little lie?” He replies evenly, “You weren’t always right, but when you weren’t being right, you were still always confident and cool. I loved that mother. But this time, you’ve lost both your confidence and me. So from now on, I won’t live as your son. I’m truly sorry, but I’ve lived as your son for 34 years. For the rest of my life, I’ll live as her husband.” COMMENTS I sort of think this drama has a Monet-like effect — from a distance it’s pretty and seems to have all the elements of an engaging, addicting drama, like the beautiful scenery, wonderful acting, engaging music, pretty color palette, and so on. It’s up close that things start to fall apart a bit, particularly when we’re talking about plot logic — like the whole body-swapping gimmick, the magical element, the various different amnesias that Joo-won suffers. And, most frustratingly, the whole Mom-opposition dance. WE GET IT. Mom no likey the girlfriends. That’s really been the core conflict this whole drama through, and when even her secretary sighs from fatigue at this never-ending storyline, I wanted to tell him sympathetically, “Believe me, I’m right there with ya, dude.” That aside, I’m thankful that people are FINALLY standing up to her, although Joo-won’s already stood up to her before on more than one occasion. But this time Ra-im is there with him, after having gotten her father’s permission to stop bowing her head apologetically not that I see why she couldn’t have held her head high before that last wine-drinking dream. But it’s more fun to think about the things I liked about this episode, like the Seul/Tae-sun showdown mild though it was, and the Seul/Mom showdown which was GREAT, and most of all, Joo-won’s awesome amendment to his Little Mermaid story. Truth be told, despite Hyun Bin’s awesome portrayal of Joo-won I haven’t really liked the character for much of the drama and for an even more unpopular opinion, I haven’t really liked Ra-im much either — definitely not much until recent episodes. But the story revision shows growth on his part, and I love that not only did he essentially concede that his whole Little Mermaid analogy was utter bunk, he reworked it to elevate Ra-im, to make her well, the Little Mermaid a self-made woman who created her own success. He didn’t just have the Little Mermaid marry a chaebol to become a chaebol through marriage, but made her a chaebol through her own effort. 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SecretGarden. nonton Secret Garden terlengkap, Secret Garden Subtitle Indonesia, Secret Garden sub indo, download Secret Garden sub indo, streaming Secret Garden di DramaID. Shikeurit Gadeun, Jardín secreto. Status: Completed Network: SBS Dirilis: Nov 13, 2010 - Jan 16, 2011 Durasi: 1 hr. 5 min. Negara: South Korea Tipe: Drama Episode: 20 EditSummariesWith Joo Won's adult memories locked away in his subconscious, Boon-Hong makes another bold stab to permanently crowbar Ra Im out of her son's his adult memories, Joo Won struggles to comprehend what kind of a relationship he had with Ra Im - a girl with no outstanding qualities. While Ra Im and Oska have a little fun at Joo Won's expense knowing deep down his love for Ra Im still exists, Boon-Hong seizes the opportunity to plant an insidious lie to get Joo Won to turn against Ra Im forever - a move that will finally produce a substantial result. Meanwhile, Yeun-Sul and Tae-Sun start to vie for Oska's attentions, leading Oska to make a public appearance that will settle the matter of his affections once and for all riling a few of his most arduous fans.ñ€”statmanjeffSynopsisIt looks like we don't have any synopsis for this title yet. Be the first to moreContribute to this pageSuggest an edit or add missing contentIMDb Answers Help fill gaps in our dataLearn more about contributingEdit pageMore from this title
Sinopsis: Menceritakan tentang Kim Joo Won (Hyun Bin) seorang CEO yang arrogant dan memiliki sebuah Departemen Store. Karena sebuah kesalah pahaman, Joo Won berkenalan dengan Gil Ra Im (Ha Ji Won) seorang Stunt Woman dan akhirnya Joo Won menyukainya.
Joo Won Believes His Mother's Lies To Be True Things start to look up for Oska both personally and professionally with Seul. Joo Won regains his memory and runs back to Ra Im. Aired January 15, 2011 Finally! Yay! Yosha! They're together and that horrible Mother totally got what she deserved. D Now that the mainies' story is finished, how about focusing on Oska for the last episode? I would be really happy about that. ; Was this review helpful to you?
Thetrouble with simple living is that, though it can be joyful, rich, and creative, it isn't simple. Secret GardenCast & crewEpisode aired Jan 15, 20111h 2mWith Joo Won's adult memories locked away in his subconscious, Boon-Hong makes another bold stab to permanently crowbar Ra Im out of her son's Joo Won's adult memories locked away in his subconscious, Boon-Hong makes another bold stab to permanently crowbar Ra Im out of her son's Joo Won's adult memories locked away in his subconscious, Boon-Hong makes another bold stab to permanently crowbar Ra Im out of her son's production, box office & company infoPhotosBe the first to reviewContribute to this pageSuggest an edit or add missing contentEdit pageMore to explore berceritatentang kim joo won (hyun bin), seorang ceo arogan dan eksentrik yang mengelola citra kesempurnaan tampak, dan gil ra im (ha ji won), seorang stuntwoman miskin dan rendah hati yang kecantikan dan tubuh adalah obyek iri di antara aktris top. pertemuan tanpa sengaja, ketika kesalahan joo won ra im untuk aktris park chae rin, menandai awal
Tag Secret Garden 45 March 18, 2022 [Friday Flashback] Secret Garden by DaebakGrits Released 2010 Genre Romance, Comedy, Supernatural Synopsis Kim Joo-won is your typical rich and arrogant CEO. Gil Ra-im is a poor stuntwoman, who kicks butt on and off screen. They live... Tags Friday Flashback, Ha Ji-won, Hyun Bin, Kim Sa-rang, Lee Jong-seok, Secret Garden, Yoon Sang-hyun 127 August 13, 2021August 13, 2021 Actors in dramaland Overcoming a bad first impression by missvictrix Secret Garden Getting into K-dramas is like jumping into the deep end of a swimming pool. You don't know exactly what you're in for — and suddenly you're over your head.... Tags Boys Before Flowers, Crash Landing on You, Extraordinary You, Flower Boy Ramyun Shop, I Hear Your Voice, Love Alarm, Marriage Not Dating, Memories of the Alhambra, Misaeng, My Girl, My ID Is Gangnam Beauty, My Name Is Kim Sam-soon, Nice Guy, Run On, Secret Garden, Shut Up Flower Boy Band, Summer Scent, When My Love Blooms, You're Beautiful 135 January 23, 2011February 20, 2013 Secret Garden to live on? by girlfriday ...and on... and on.... SBS's latest hit Secret Garden might just get an afterlife, although it remains to be seen whether it will be one filled with rose petals and... Tags Secret Garden 638 January 16, 2011January 24, 2016 Secret Garden Episode 20 Final by girlfriday It's the bow-tied, triple-knotted kind of ending for this cast of characters, as we say our final goodbyes to Secret Garden. I'd personally like to say farewell to omo-queen Secretary... Tags featured, Ha Ji-won, Hyun Bin, Kim Sa-rang, Philip Lee, Secret Garden, Yoon Sang-hyun 249 January 15, 2011January 24, 2016 Secret Garden Episode 19 by javabeans We're almost there! Phew, what a roller-coaster journey this drama has been, and this episode is no different - it takes us from one extreme to another, serving up some... Tags featured, Ha Ji-won, Hyun Bin, Kim Sa-rang, Philip Lee, Secret Garden, Yoon Sang-hyun Posts navigation Premium Supporter Currently Airing
SecretGarden - Drama ini bercerita tentang Kim Joo Won, seorang CEO yang sombong dan eksentrik yang mempertahankan citra kesempurnaan yang tampak, dan Gil Ra Im, seorang stuntwoman yang miskin dan rendah hati yang kecantikan dan tubuhnya menjadi objek kecemburuan di antara para aktris papan atas. 351 November 22, 2010January 24, 2016 Secret Garden Episode 4 by girlfriday I didn’t necessarily get the “you’re prettier when you’re angry” thing, but I definitely get it now
 Joo-won and Ra-im are totally angry-hot, as in having especially explosive chemistry
 when they’re at each other’s throats. I mean, I always knew the bickering hate phase was intended to spark a few flames, but these two are downright X-rated. I swear, every time they yell at each other, I half expect them to rip each other’s clothes off. Whew! Is it getting hot in here? EPISODE 4 RECAP Joo-won sees Ra-im standing in his department store, and takes her up to his office to talk. He can’t believe that she came all the way down here, just to pick up a stupid raffle prize, as if her desire for a free vacuum cleaner is a direct affront to him. Did you maybe stop to think she came here to see YOU, doofus? She asks if maybe he put her name into the drawing, and he scoffs that he doesn’t have the time to do something like that, and belittles her coldly, that he really must’ve been crazy to fall for a woman without family or education, who’d come all the way here to claim some dinky vacuum cleaner. Oh, you are an ASS. Ra-im’s jaw drops as she hears the angry, haughty words come out of his mouth, which he even repeats, just to get his point across, adding that she’s embarrassing him at work. For someone so obsessed with manner and upbringing, you really are the biggest asshole of them all. No doubt he’s reacting in this childish way to cover up his own insecurities and troubling obsession, but still. If it walks like an ass and talks like an ass
 Ra-im steels herself and then apologizes, retaliating with a, “You said I’m pretty when I’m angry, but I’m pretty when I smile too, right?” Heh. If you’re planning to make him more obsessed with you for revenge, that’s pretty ingenious, but a little passive for my taste. I prefer it when you kick him in the shins. She insists on taking the vacuum cleaner, just to prove a point. She says that if he’s that embarrassed, he can tell everyone that she was just someone he played with and threw away. He flares up at those words, saying that he can’t, and drags her down to the department store. He starts throwing shoes and clothes at her feet, angrily yelling, “Play? Play with you? You’re not even at the level for me to play with!” Dude, you are taking rich bastard to new heights. He basically throws the evidence down at her feet, of how far apart they are in social standing. It’s beyond insulting—it’s degrading and hurts her where she’s most insecure. He grabs a dress and drags her into a dressing room to put it on. He follows her in there, and they end up face to face in that tiny space, within kissing distance and tension flaring high. Gah, it’s unfair if you’re evil AND sexy. That’s just not right. He tells her to put it on “Should I put it on for you?” He reaches to undress her, and she stops him angrily. She asks him what he’s trying to prove—what he’ll do with her if she puts on the dress. He replies that he’ll do nothing; he’s just trying to show her how far apart they really are. Listen, if all you’re doing is trying to prove that you’re unattainable, you’re sending a girl mixed messages, what with your stalking of her and all. I know you’re nuts, but that’s no excuse. Beads of sweat start to pour down his face, as he looks up at the four walls of the tiny dressing room, realizing how small a space he’s in, all the while trying not to lose the argument. You’re the one who pushed her in there, Mr. Claustrophobia. He holds his panic in for just a moment longer, and then can’t stand it anymore and pushes her aside to clamor out of there. He runs out, barely breathing, and has a panic attack in the middle of his store. Ra-im leaves in a daze, and arrives at the action school, late for training. She decides to spend a few hours taking out her frustrations
by hurling herself at a car. Repeatedly. Sheesh. I guess stunt people can’t just punch a wall or something. Meanwhile, Joo-won drives home, and has another panic attack in the middle of a tunnel. It’s a nice visual sequence, and the tunnel is great literally and figuratively as a motif for his fear of being trapped. He barely manages to make it out to the other side, and pulls over on the side of the road. He calls number 1 on his speed dial his therapist. God, I love that his shrink is speed dial 1. That’s so telling. She comes over to check on him, but because they’re old friends, he refuses to actually tell her what’s going on with him. I’d like to ask his shrink, but I bet half the stuff he suffers from is made up in his head to give him an excuse to keep himself locked away. He finally tells her not to think of him strangely, since he just read it in a book, but
”What are the symptoms of lovesickness?” Hahahaha. His sincerity about this just cracks me up. Later, he sits outside in his garden, and starts picking the petals off a flower, saying, “She’s cursing at me, she’s not; she is; she’s not
” until he picks the final one, landing at “She is.” He gets mad at her for cursing him in his mind, but that seems to be no different for him, hilariously, and stalks off angrily. Heh. As he walks away, the camera pans down and we see that he’s left a giant pile of those yellow daisies, having plucked the petals off of a hundred of them. Little twinkly lights start to work their magic on the daisy patch, and one lands on the last flower that he dropped, magically re-growing one last petal. Aw, cute. And how adorable is it that the guy’s the one killing flowers over “She loves me; she loves me not”? The next morning, Joo-won wakes up to find that Seul’s family has sent him a strange present, out of the blue. He walks outside to find himself face to face with a herd of
deer? He asks if he’s supposed to eat them to the horror of his assistant “Omo” and tells him to send them back. It’s a totally random, hilarious comment on the oddities that rich people spend their money on. He gets a call for his monthly obligatory family dinner, and heads over to his grandfather’s mansion, where everyone takes turns being passive-aggressive over the steak course. With a family like this, I’m surprised Joo-won doesn’t have a few more neuroses under his belt. In particular, he gets outed for only showing up to work two days a week, making his disappointed grandfather even more disappointed in him. Also, random fashion note, but how neurotic and nerdy is it that he’s wearing three highlighters in his pocket as an accessory? Oska goes all the way down to Jeju to find Tae-sun, who rebuffs him yet again, this time acknowledging who he is, but saying that it doesn’t make his music any less crappy. Oska just stands there slackjawed, unfamiliar with people who don’t worship at his feet for being a Hallyu star. I love that he constantly refers to himself as “The Hallyu Star,” making him just that extra bit of ridiculous self-aggrandizing. Oska has punked out on his music video shoot in Thailand, but it doesn’t seem to matter much to the director, who has washed his hands of the project at Seul’s request. Or rather, her payment of large sums of money. She takes over the music video, with the excuse that she doesn’t need to spend any time improving her looks or her schooling, so she may as well have some fun. Oh, okay, princess. She goes straight to Jong-soo’s action school, embarrassing herself with her VERY LOUD and off-putting use of English. Gah, the horror! I’m cleaning my ears out with soap. Jong-soo replies, but looks at her strangely, as well he should. Because girl’s off her rocker. She asks for his help in the music video shoot, announcing that Oska is the star. Ra-im continues to work out her angst, thinking back to the department store fight with Joo-won. As she was leaving earlier, she had paused in front of a mirror, holding the dress up wistfully. I like these little touches that reveal her girly side, that she doesn’t show to anyone. Her roommate Ah-young arrives home with the dreaded vacuum cleaner in tow, causing Ra-im to freak out that she accepted it on her behalf. She calls Joo-won right away, who goes from brooding to instant happy face when he realizes that she’s calling. But of course he can’t let HER know his excitement, and just snaps at her to return it herself or throw it away if she doesn’t want it. He hangs up abruptly and returns to the task of art-buying with a renewed sense of interest. He even starts seeing the paintings differently, now that Ra-im is back in his orbit. Heh. And aw. He insists that the house in one of the paintings had its lights on a minute ago, making everyone think that he’s insane, but we see that it’s the same bit of whimsy that’s been re-petaling the daisies and such in his life, having a bit of fun. Ra-im heads out to give Joo-won a piece of her mind, and when Ah-young tells her that he isn’t at work today, she calls her action school sunbae to get Joo-won’s address off of his registration form. Jong-soo overhears and hangs his head. Joo-won, meanwhile, sits on his patio with sheets blowing in the wind and desserts and
wait
did I fall asleep and land in some fantasy? He is totally going to such lengths on purpose, waiting for her to show. Also, he happens to be reading a book about why there are starving people in the world, as if he can read a book to study her, like she’s some social experiment. Ra-im rides in on her motorcycle, vacuum strapped to the back. She marvels at the expansive grounds as she rides around, and stops to ask an employee where Kim Joo-won lives. The lady’s like, um
here. Ra-im “I know here, but which house is his?” “They’re ALL HIS.” Haha. She finally finds him, and throws the vacuumn down at his feet, demanding to know what he meant by sending it to her. Oh, honey. Don’t you know when a boy is pulling your pigtails? He did it so you’d do this. She leaves it there and turns to go, when she hears a splash. She turns around to find the vacuumn floating in his lake, and Joo-won sitting there without a care. He tells her that he doesn’t need it, so if she wants it, she can fish it out herself. She looks at him in shock, then walks right into the lake and hauls the box out, carrying it back to her bike. It’s enough to finally get Joo-won out of his seat and yelling at her. He can’t believe that she’d go in there herself, instead of making him apologize. And you couldn’t have, say, apologized yourself WITHOUT the tantrum? Sheesh. He basically calls her a charity case, making her feel as low as she can go. She fights him off and to keep her from leaving, he grabs her key and throws it in the lake. You are so transparent, buddy. He ends up dragging her into the house to get cleaned up rawr, only to come face to face with his dragon lady mother. Damn it, Mom. You have the worst timing ever. She glares a hole through Ra-im’s skull, making it all too clear that she’d rather her precious son play with others “at his level.” Shivers. Now we know where his horrid snobbery comes from. Ra-im insists that she’s not here to play, and that she dare not deign to be someone that Joo-won sees romantically, since she’s just a charity case nice job, to use his words back at him. Mom is offended at her tone and the mere presence of a poor person, and sneers as Ra-im makes her exit, even as Joo-won ineffectually tries to stop his mother. He’s interrupted with a call that Oska has gone AWOL to Jeju, and does some damage control. Looks like the music video will have to be shot there, along with the department store contest, since that lands him in Jeju anyway. He comes out to find Ra-im’s bike still there, and jumps into the lake to retrieve her key. Ra-im returns to the action school to find the guys planning a car stunt for Oska’s music video shoot in Jeju, and excitedly asks what part she’ll get to play. Jong-soo tells her that she doesn’t have enough experience with car stunts, and when she begs him for the chance, he snaps at her that it’s too dangerous; he can barely tolerate the danger she puts herself in now, but he does it because it’s what she wants to do. Jong-soo broods for a while, then calls Ah-young for a favor. He gives her a purse for Ra-im, and has her pretend that she bought it for her at work. Ra-im swoons from the pretty. See, this is why you’ll never get the girl, Tall dark and handsome. Because even though Joo-won is a petty bastard, he’ll take credit and endure the backlash. Silent protector never wins against self-righteous asshole. I know. It’s unfair. But them’s the rules. Oska calls Joo-won from Jeju, having landed himself in jail for an altercation with some gangsters. He’s being extorted for harassing a woman, but he tells Joo-won “You know me. If I sleep with a girl, I sleep with her. But I’m not the type to harass.” Haha. I love that he’s so forthright—he is who he is. Joo-won makes sure that he’s repaid, tit for tat, and has his lawyer sent to bail him out. He asks Secretary Kim about the winner of the trip to Jeju, and finds out that the first- and second-place winners had to forfeit out, so that leaves third place, which is Ra-im of course, former winner of the vacuum cleaner, now upgraded to vacation with her favorite pop singer. Joo-won immediately cries, “NO! Send the fourth-place winner!” But she’s already gone, because her stunt team is down there for the music video shoot. Joo-won “So, what you’re telling me is
Oska and Ra-im are on a vacation, and I’M paying for it?!” Haha. Well, that’s karma for ya, babe. Ra-im arrives on the island and sneaks a peek at her stunt team, who report to Seul for the shoot. Well this isn’t going to get complicated or anything. Oska sees Ra-im lurking and greets her warmly, surprised that she’s the winner of the contest. He warns her that he believes in fate, and invites her to lunch. He chomps down on some tofu in the meanwhile having just gotten out of jail and when Ra-im asks why, he says, “Because I stole something. Someone’s
heart?” Hahaha. Cheesetastic, as always. They head over to the restaurant for lunch, where Joo-won is waiting for them. Ra-im’s eyes widen, and he smirks, “You’re ten minutes late.” COMMENTS The maneuvering of every single character to Jeju is clunky, but I do love Joo-won’s reaction to realizing that he just sent his crush on her dream vacation with her idol, and his lifetime rival
on his dime. It’s as delicious a revenge as you can get, for the assholery that went on throughout this episode. Which isn’t to say that I hate Joo-won, because I love his character, with all of his rich boy eccentricities and girlish affectations. I like the little touches, like the fact that he cares enough to accessorize his outfits down to every last detail, or that he always has fresh flowers nearby. Ra-im in contrast is so oblivious to the kinds of things he puts so much painstaking care into, that it actually angers him—because he can’t control the situation. She’s outside his wheelhouse, which throws him, and he can’t control his feelings, which is even stranger. It’s the perfect wrench to throw in the neurotic control-freak’s world, made even more delicious by the crackling sexual tension that they can’t ignore. I seriously feel invasive when I’m watching the close-quarters angry fighting scenes, because they play it like they’re two seconds away from tearing their clothes off. The acting in those moments is so amazingly layered, from both of them. They go from I hate you, you disgusting excuse for a human being, to Kiss me now, and I’ll forget it all in a matter of seconds, in just a look. It’s crazy good. What’s great about the pair is that they’re both incessantly stubborn Joo-won’s haughty stubborn versus Ra-im’s prideful stubborn that it seems like if left to their own devices, these two would NEVER work out their differences. Neither of them would give an inch, ever, and even if their fights landed them in bed, they’d never be able to sustain a relationship that way. It makes the body switch necessary, if we ever want to see them grow up, and start to inch toward understanding one another and their circumstances. By now I’m dying for the switch to happen, not because I don’t enjoy this stage, but because I can see the potential hijinks around the corner. And I actually really like the unexplained, whimsical magic fairy dust or whatever you want to call it. Because this isn’t a mythology-laden show with a gumiho that needs a mystical throughline, I prefer it that the magical element is just left oblique, without driving an explanation into the ground. It can just be seen as an extension of Fate, with sprinkles on top. RELATED POSTS Secret Garden Episode 3 Secret Garden Episode 2 Secret Garden Episode 1 Song Yoon-ah plays her fashionable self in Secret Garden cameo Hyun Bin’s on top for Secret Garden Secret Garden sold abroad before premiere A deluge of new stills from Secret Garden SinopsisSecret Garden / ì‹œíŹëŠż 가든 Episode 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19 s/d 20 Episode Terakhir. Detail : Judul: ì‹œíŹëŠż 가든 / Se Secret Garden InformeçÔes Gerais[] Titulo ì‹œíŹëŠż 가든 / Secret Garden Genero Romance, comedia, fantasia, melodrama Episodios 20 Canal SBS Periodo de TransmissĂŁo 13/11/2010 a 16/01/2011 HorĂĄrio Sabado & Domingo Ă s 2145hs Trilha Sonora Secret Garden OST Sinopse[] O drama narra a histĂłria de Kim Joo Won Hyun Bin, um CEO arrogante e excĂȘntrico que mantĂȘm a imagem de ser uma pessoa perfeita, e de Gil Ra Im Ha Ji Won, uma pobre e humilde dublĂȘ cuja beleza e corpo sĂŁo objetos de inveja entre as atrizes famosas. Eles se encontram acidentalmente, quando Joo Won se engana achando que Ra Im Ă© a atriz Park Chae Rin, e marca o inĂ­cio de uma relação tensa e cheia de brigas, e onde tambĂ©m se inicia a tentativa de Joo Won esconder a sua crescente atração por Ra Im, e que o deixa tanto confuso quanto incomodado. Para complicar ainda mais as coisas, um estanha sequĂȘncia de eventos resulta na troca do corpo entre os dois. Elenco[] Secret Garden - Correlacao Hyun Bin como Kim Joo Won Ha Ji Won como Gil Ra Im Yoon Sang Hyun como Choi Woo Young / Oska primo de Joo Won Kim Sa Rang como Yoon Seul Lee Philip como Im Jong Soo Lee Jong Suk como Han Tae Ssun Yoo In Na como Im Ah Young Kim Ji Sook como Moon Yeon Hong Park Joon Geum como Moon Boon Hong Kim Sung Oh como Kim Sung Woo secretĂĄrio de Joo Won Choi Yoon So como Kim Hee Won irmĂŁ de Joo Won Kim Sung Kyum como Moon Chang Soo Lee Byung Joon como Park Bong Ho Sung Byung Sook como Park Bong Hee Yoon Gi Won como Choi Dong Kyu Yoo Seo Jin como Lee Ji Hyun Kim Gun como Yoo Jong Heon Baek Seung Hee como Park Chae Rin Jang Seo Won como Hwang Jung Hwan Kim Dong Gyoon como diretor Kim Mi Kyung como ahjumma da casa de hĂłspedes Nam Hyun Joo como Diretor Nam Lee Tae Woo como filho de Ra Im Song Yoon Ah como ela mesma cameo Lee Joon Hyuk como ele mesmo cameo, ep 8 Beige ëČ ìŽì§€ cameo Baek Ji Young como ela mesma cameo, ep 13 Han Ye Won como Cherry cameo, ep 15 Son Ye Jin como ela mesma cameo, ep 20 Kang Chan Yang Kim Sung Hoon Sa Hee CrĂ©ditos de Produção[] Produtor Oh Se Kang Diretor Shin Woo Chul, Kwon Hyuk Chan Roteirista Kim Eun Sook PrĂȘmios[] 2011 "Prime Minister" award in 'Boardcasting Movie Grandprix' category Kim Eun Sook 2011 Korea Contents Award by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism in Korea Secret Garden 2011 Mnet Asian Music Awards MAMA Melhor Baek Ji Young– "That Woman" Secret Garden 2011 Grimae Awards Grande PrĂȘmio Daesang Diretores de Camera Huh Dae Sun e Lee Seung Chun Melhor Atriz Ha Ji Won Diretor de Iluminação Park Man Chang 2011 4Âș Korea Drama Awards Drama do Ano - Grande PrĂȘmio Daesang Secret Garden Melhor Roteiro Kim Eun Sook 2011 6Âș Seoul International Drama Awards - Hallyu Drama Categories Melhor Diretor de Drama Hallyu Shin Woo Chul Melhor Roteiro de Drama Hallyu Kim Eun Sook Melhor Trilha Sonora de Drama Hallyu Baek Ji Young- "Secret Garden" OST – "That Woman" 2011 47Âș Paeksang Arts Awards - Television Categories Ator do Ano - Grande PrĂȘmio Daesang Hyun Bin Melhor Roteiro Kim Eun Sook Drama de SĂ©rie do Ano Secret Garden Melhor Atriz Estreante Yoo In Na 2010 SBS Drama Awards PrĂȘmio Top ExcelĂȘncia, Ator - Drama Especial Hyun Bin PrĂȘmio Top ExcelĂȘncia, Atriz - Drama Especial Ha Ji Won PrĂȘmio Estrela Top Ten Hyun Bin PrĂȘmio Estrela Top Ten Ha Ji Won PrĂȘmio Netizen de Popularidade Hyun Bin PrĂȘmio Netizen de Popularidade Ha Ji Won PrĂȘmio Netizen de Popularidade - Drama Secret Garden PrĂȘmio de Melhor Casal Hyun Bin e Ha Ji Won PrĂȘmio de Beijo Romantico Hyun Bin AudiĂȘncia[] Ver Secret Garden/Audiencia Links Externos[] Site Oficial Novos artigos 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 Temporada Anterior SBS PrĂłxima Temporada Life is Beautiful SĂĄbado & Domingo 2145hs New Tales of Gisaeng b5ot.
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  • sinopsis secret garden episode 19