Kim Soo Hyun recently participated in a photo shoot and interview for Vogue. Soompi reported that during the interview the actor was asked about his feelings after more than a decade of a career in the entertainment industry. Kim Soo Hyun replied, "I first started (career) in 2007 and somehow I've found myself here."
Kim Soo Hyun also shared that his values have changed after his military service. "I stopped feeling greedy," he said. “Before, I felt I was responsible for doing some things, and I had the greed to make myself stand out with my acting in every scene. But after I got out (of the military), I learned how to fit in." "I'm the type of person who thinks too much, but now I accept things as they are.
If I can, I try to be positive, but at least I try not to dig too deep. If I try too hard to perfect something, then I stuck in that habit and lost something else. Then I got more regrets, and it ended up poisoning all my attempts to start something new." He then explained how all the changes he applied when working on the drama "It's Okay to Not Be Okay".
“Unlike my previous work, 'It's Okay to Not Be Okay' is a project that I approach with a very comfortable attitude. I thought that I would feel more pressure because it was my comeback project , but I felt more free (while acting in the drama) than any other work I have done." Kim Soo Hyun also talked about his new upcoming drama “That Night,” the Korean remake of the BBC show “Criminal Justice,” which he co-stars with Cha Seung Won.
He said, “'Criminal Justice' is a drama set in the UK in 2008. There were five episodes in the original version, so the plot moves quickly and the audience sinks into the character more quickly. The American version has eight episodes, so there is more detail and explanation. Both versions have advantages.
The Korean version is planned for eight episodes at this time, but the timing and method of broadcast has not been determined. I don't feel pressured by the original version." "I saw the English version for the first time, and my first thought was, 'This is perfect.' Lead actor Ben Whishaw's acting, to the music, camera angles, style, overall tone and mood, all appealed to me.
Most of this genre drama focuses on finding the real villain, but this drama is about the relationship between the main character and the people behind him. "It's about what happens when an ordinary young man is placed in extraordinary circumstances and how the people around him interpret those events."
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