Lee Do Hyun and Go Min Si are knocking it out of the park in the K-drama, “Youth of May,” where their slow-burning romance is set against the tense backdrop of the Gwangju Uprising. The series title refers to the span of time (May 18 to May 27, 1980) when nearly a quarter million Korean citizens demonstrated against martial law. The official death count issued by the government neared 200 — most of them civilians. But student organizers and Gwanju residents argued that the figure was closer to 2,000 fatalities. South Korea of that era wasn’t a democracy as we know it today. Brute force was used to limit both citizens’ personal freedom and stifle the press. (Some excellent films to watch about this era include “A Taxi Driver” — starring “Parasite” actor Song Kang Ho — and Lee Chan Dong’s “Peppermint Candy,” which offers a brilliant time capsule.)
I will admit that when I first started watching this, I had a difficult time. Why? Because I remembered them as brother and sister! Did anyone else watch the horror series “Sweet Home,” where Do Hyun played another med student and Min Si was his ballet dancing younger sister? They had a more contentious relationship, with Min Si regarding him as a straight and narrow do-gooder who — she felt — was stuck taking care of her (his parents had adopted her).
Ironically, there’s a kinda/sorta similar plot line in “Youth of May.” When Hee Tae is set up on a blind date with Myeong Hee’s rich friend, Myeong Hee takes her friend’s place. And that’s how the two meet.
Are you watching “Youth of May” right now? What are your favorite elements of the series — the era it’s set in, the cast, or the writing? Let me know in the comments!