Unlike typical flashbacks that serve as emotional relief, the documentary footage in Our Beloved Summer acts as a . The adult characters are forced to sit in a dark room and watch their younger, vulnerable, unedited selves. This act of forced viewing disrupts the false narratives they have built to survive the intervening years. 2. Deconstructing the Archetypes | Character | Surface Archetype | Hidden Wound | Coping Mechanism | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Choi Woong | Carefree, lazy artist | Fear of abandonment (orphaned, then “left” by Yeon-soo) | Performative apathy & isolation | | Kook Yeon-soo | Harsh, pragmatic realist | Shame of poverty & being a burden | Hyper-independence & self-sabotage | | Kim Ji-woong | Loyal, stoic producer | Survivor’s guilt & unrequited love | Silent observation & emotional repression |
The drama suggests that maturity is not moving on, but moving back with better tools. Its final image—a new documentary being filmed, this time with both subjects smiling—is not a denial of past pain, but an acknowledgment that the same camera can capture a different story when the people inside the frame have finally learned to be honest. our beloved summer latest
Abstract Our Beloved Summer (SBS, 2021) appears on the surface to be a familiar contract-romance drama. However, beneath its picturesque cinematography and enemies-to-lovers trope lies a sophisticated exploration of memory, personal growth, and the often-painful process of self-revision. This paper argues that the drama’s central innovation is its treatment of time not as a linear healer, but as a documentarian—recording, replaying, and forcing its characters to confront the versions of themselves they thought they had left behind. 1. Introduction: The Documentary Frame The drama’s unique narrative device is its meta-documentary structure. The story begins with a high school documentary about the “top student” (Kook Yeon-soo) and the “bottom student” (Choi Woong), which goes viral a decade later. This frame is not mere nostalgia bait; it is the central thematic engine. Unlike typical flashbacks that serve as emotional relief,
subverts the “chaebol heir” trope. He is not rich due to birth but due to talent, yet he rejects fame. His arc is not about learning to work hard, but learning to risk loss again . His greatest fear—being left—is exactly what he must confront by re-entering a relationship with Yeon-soo. Abstract Our Beloved Summer (SBS, 2021) appears on