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Contents

   



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1 Plot  





2 Background  





3 Cast  





4 Box office  





5 References  





6 External links  














Miracle of a Giving Fool






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(Redirected from BABO)

BA:BO
Hangul

바보

Revised RomanizationBabo
McCune–ReischauerPabo
Directed byKim Jung-kwon
Written byKim Young-tak
Kim Jung-kwon
Based onBA:BO
byKang Full
StarringCha Tae-hyun
Ha Ji-won

Production
company

Wire to Wire Film

Distributed byCJ Entertainment

Release date

  • February 28, 2008 (2008-02-28)

Running time

98 minutes
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean
Box office$6,453,485[1]

Miracle of a Giving Fool, also known as BA:BO (Korean바보; lit. fool, idiot) is a 2008 South Korean film.[2] Based on a webtoon, the film was directed by Kim Jung-kwon, and stars Cha Tae-hyun and Ha Ji-won in the lead roles.

Plot

[edit]

Ji-ho (Ha Ji-won) is a promising pianist who has been studying and playing abroad for years, but her career takes a blow when she is struck with stage fright. Upon returning home, Ji-ho is reunited with her old school friend, Seung-ryong (Cha Tae-hyun), who saw her returning home and they eventually met while Seung-ryong was busy trying to gaze at the stars in the middle of the day. Ji-ho then learnt how Seung-ryong become mentally disabled through her aunt and she takes the initiative to rekindle their friendship.

Seung-ryong often sells toast near the high school of his younger sister where he can be near to his sister who he guards with his life as that was the gift from his mother. Ji-in (Park Ha-sun) hates the fact that her brother is selling toast near the school and frequently chastise him for being mentally disabled.

In a flashback of a memory of Ji-ho, she mistakenly thought that Seung-ryong burnt the piano that was donated to the middle school which eventually led to Ji-ho to be mad at Seung-ryong but the fire was actually started by Sang-soon who was smoking near the piano while the rest were having physical activity in the field. All the kids blamed Seung-ryong for causing the fire but Seung-ryong mother believed that he was innocent.

Ji-ho walks around the area where she lived as a child and frequents a café that was run by Sang-soo (Park Hee-soon) who also went to the same middle school as Ji-ho and Seung-ryong. In the café, one of the workers is fond of Sang-soo, but she is held hostage by a gangster whom she owes money to and resorts to sell her body to repay the debt which causes Sang-soo to be angry which led to him drinking accompanied by Seung-ryong.

Sang-soon eventually wakes up at Seung-ryong's house and tells Ji-in (Park Ha-sun) to eat the breakfast that her older brother prepared for her, but she is adamant that she hates toast. One night, whilst Ji-ho was walking in the snowy road, she overheard Seung-ryong sing Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and realized that Seung-ryong were the one who helped her perform the song in front of the church she was attending, which she later told Seung-ryong.

One day, Seung-ryong noticed that Ji-in (Park Ha-sun) was tardy while going to school and learning that she was sick through the conversation from her class-mates. Seung-ryong barged into her school and clarified to her teacher that she is his sister. Ji-ho then gifted Seung-ryong a new pair of shoes which he eventually cherishes.

Ji-in eventually was told by her attending doctor of the sacrifice that Seung-ryong has made since he was a child selling toast. They become closer and her illness is eventually cured.

Sang-soo (Park Hee-soon) later falls into trouble with some gangsters after trying to save his loved one from trouble. The mob boss sends someone to kill Sang-soon, but the two hit-men didn't know what Sang-soo looks like and they attack Seung-ryong, who eventually succumbs to his injuries.

Upon learning of the passing of her older brother, she eventually saw what made Seung-ryong be so positive and have such a strong will to live. Sang-soo takes over the toast shop from Seung-ryong, whilst Ji-ho who was able to recover from her stage fright, plays in a grand hall with ease and pays homage to what Seung-ryong had done for her to recover from stage fright.

Background

[edit]

BA:BO was adapted from a popular webtoon of the same name created by Kang Full, which ran from January to April 2004. Director Kim Jung-kwon, himself a fan of the comic, was approached directly by Kang, and described the film as being faithful to the source material.[3][4]

Cast

[edit]

Box office

[edit]

BA:BO was released on February 28, 2008,[5] and was ranked third at the box office on its opening weekend, grossing $2,302,058.[6] By April 6 the film had grossed a total of $6,450,178,[7] and as of March 23 the total number of tickets sold was 951,573.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Miracle of Giving Fool".
  • ^ [1] "As Spring draws near, star actors Cha Tae-hyun and Ha Ji-won will warm up the season with director's Kim Jung-kwon's (Ditto, A Letter From Mars) latest movie Miracle of a Giving Fool (aka. BA:BO), a heart drenching drama slated for release Feb. 28. Fool is a film adaptation of the explosively popular online cartoon Babo (which means fooloroaf in Korean) by Kang Full. It had millions of Netizens in tears, and the director, also a big fan, describes the movie version as being faithful to the original."
  • ^ a b c Lee Hyo-won, Cha, Ha To Bring Tears, Laughter, The Korea Times, January 29, 2008. Retrieved on April 9, 2008.
  • ^ Top Korean Film Projects in 2006, Korean Film Observatory No.18 Spring 2006[permanent dead link], page 33. Retrieved on April 9, 2008.
  • ^ a b BA:BO, HanCinema. Retrieved on April 8, 2008.
  • ^ South Korea Box Office February 29–March 2, 2008, Box Office Mojo. Retrieved on April 8, 2008.
  • ^ "South Korean Box Office Weekends for 2008".
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Miracle_of_a_Giving_Fool&oldid=1226656450"

    Categories: 
    2008 films
    2008 drama films
    South Korean romantic comedy films
    Films based on South Korean webtoons
    Films based on works by Kang Full
    2000s Korean-language films
    Films directed by Kim Jung-kwon
    Live-action films based on comics
    2000s South Korean films
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