The City Hall (TV series)

The City Hall

Promotional poster
Genre Romance
Comedy
Drama
Written by Kim Eun-sook
Directed by Shin Woo-chul
Starring Kim Sun-a
Cha Seung-won
Country of origin South Korea
Original language(s) Korean
No. of episodes 20
Production
Location(s) South Korea
Running time Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:55 (KST)
Production company(s) Yein Culture
Release
Original network Seoul Broadcasting System
Original release April 29 (2009-04-29) – July 2, 2009 (2009-07-02)
Chronology
Preceded by Cain and Abel
Followed by Swallow the Sun
External links
Website tv.sbs.co.kr/cityhall/

The City Hall (Hangul: 시티홀; RR: Siti Hol; lit. "City Hall") is a 2009 South Korean television series starring Kim Sun-a and Cha Seung-won. It aired on SBS from April 29 to July 2, 2009 on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:55 for 20 episodes.[1]

Written by Kim Eun-sook and directed by Shin Woo-chul, the story revolves around a low-ranking government clerk who becomes the youngest mayor of the fictional Inju City, and her romance with an ambitious and cynical deputy mayor.[2][3]

Synopsis

For the past seven years, Shin Mi-rae has been the lowest ranking public servant working in Inju City Hall. Her main job is to serve coffee to the high-ranking public officials. Mi-rae owes a huge credit card debt, so she enters a beauty pageant to win the first prize of ₩20,000,000 (approximately US$20,000). But when the prize money ends up in the corrupt mayor's pocket, Mi-rae holds a one-person demonstration in front of the city hall. After a series of ups and downs, Mi-rae gets her prize money, but has no choice but to resign from her job. When the situation is leaked to the press, the mayor resigns as well. The job of mayor is up for grabs and Mi-rae becomes nominated as a mayoral candidate. With the support of her followers and the backing of Jo Gook, the powerful deputy mayor, she becomes elected as the youngest mayor of Inju. With no political background but filled with the desire to genuinely work for her constituents, Mi-rae begins to reform the bureaucratic culture of the city hall administration. But in the process she butts heads with the cold-hearted and cool-headed Jo Gook, who had an ulterior motive in installing her and has presidential ambitions of his own.

Cast

Main

Supporting

  • Lee Joon-hyuk as Ha Soo-in
  • Jung Soo-young as Jung Boo-mi
  • Park Joo-ah as Yoo Kwon-ja
  • Choi Il-hwa as BB
  • Cha Hwa-yeon as Jo Yong-hee, Jo Gook's mother
  • Kim Jin-sang as Jo Rang
  • Choi Sang-hoon as So Yoo-han
  • Yeom Dong-hwan as Mayor Go Boo-shil
  • Park Tae-kyung as Boo Jeong-han
  • Kwon Da-hyun as Bong Sun-hwa
  • Kang Joo-hyung as Mang Hae-ra
  • Yang Jae-sung as Kang Tae-gong
  • Kim Dong-gun as Park Ah-cheom
  • Shin Jung-geun as Director Ji
  • Choi Dae-sung as "Eraser"
  • Kim Ah-rang as "Run Honey"
  • Kim Neul-mae as "Rooftop Cat"
  • Moon Hee-soo as "Jessica Alba"
  • Chae Geon as young Jo Gook
  • Yoon Chae-rin as young Shin Mi-rae
  • Kim Gun as Yang
  • Min Joon-hyun as reporter Lee Jik-pil
  • Im Dae-il as Director Moon
  • Ryu Sung-han as Director Byun
  • Lee Jae-goo as Ye-san
  • Kim Dong-gyun
  • Nam Hyun-joo
  • Kim Sung-oh

Soundtrack

  1. 다 잘 될 거야 - Noh Young-shim
  2. 그래 나를 믿자 (Okay, I'll Believe in Myself) - Jung-in feat. Bizzy
  3. 불안한 사랑 (Uncertain Love) - Horan of Clazziquai
  4. 미래's 왈츠 (Mi-rae's Waltz) - Noh Young-shim
  5. 웃어봐 (Smile) - Chae Dong-ha of SG Wannabe
  6. Bright Funk - Noh Young-shim
  7. 이사랑 부제; 이사랑 버리자 (This Love) - Position
  8. 저무는 길 - Kim Jung-bae, Han Seol-hee
  9. 희망찬 미래 - Noh Young-shim
  10. Tension - Noh Young-shim
  11. 정치적 In 멜로디 - Noh Young-shim
  12. One Dream - Seo Moon-tak
  13. 그럴 순 없어 - Noh Young-shim
  14. 회기 불능 - Noh Young-shim
  15. 다시 돌아갈 수 있을까 - Noh Young-shim
  16. 저무는 길 Piano Ver. - Noh Young-shim
  17. 캐슬 허슬 - Noh Young-shim
  18. 종친다 - Noh Young-shim
  19. 그래 나를 믿자 Shuffle Ver. - Noh Young-shim
  20. Memory - Noh Young-shim
  21. 사랑하고 사랑합니다 (Bonus Track) - Park Sang-woo of Bohemian

Ratings

Date Episode Nationwide Seoul
2009-04-29 1 13.9 (7th) 14.9 (8th)
2009-04-30 2 14.6 (5th) 16.0 (3rd)
2009-05-06 3 15.3 (5th) 16.3 (3rd)
2009-05-07 4 16.7 (2nd) 17.8 (2nd)
2009-05-13 5 14.6 (5th) 15.4 (3rd)
2009-05-14 6 16.4 (3rd) 17.2 (3rd)
2009-05-20 7 15.3 (4th) 16.6 (3rd)
2009-05-21 8 17.8 (3rd) 18.3 (3rd)
2009-05-27 9 15.5 (4th) 15.8 (3rd)
2009-05-28 10 16.9 (2nd) 17.8 (2nd)
2009-06-03 11 16.7 (3rd) 17.4 (2nd)
2009-06-04 12 16.8 (4th) 17.6 (3rd)
2009-06-10 13 17.0 (4th) 17.1 (3rd)
2009-06-11 14 14.1 (3rd) 14.6 (2nd)
2009-06-17 15 16.7 (3rd) 17.8 (3rd)
2009-06-18 16 17.4 (2nd) 18.9 (2nd)
2009-06-24 17 18.0 (3rd) 19.4 (2nd)
2009-06-25 18 18.3 (2nd) 20.0 (2nd)
2009-07-01 19 17.6 (2nd) 18.8 (2nd)
2009-07-02 20 19.6 (2nd) 20.8 (2nd)
Average 16.5% 17.4%

Awards

2009 SBS Drama Awards

International broadcast

References

  1. "Male Actors Try New Roles in TV Dramas". KBS Global. 2 July 2009. Retrieved 2013-07-10.
  2. Han, Sang-hee (21 April 2009). "City Hall to Bring Public Officials to TV". The Korea Times. Retrieved 2013-07-10.
  3. Oh, Jean (29 April 2009). "More romantic comedy for prime time". The Korea Herald. Retrieved 2013-07-10.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.