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Water Monitor Xu Dongqi

Water Monitor Xu Dongqi

Drama, Family

Park Kyu-tae

Jung Jin-young, Choi Woo-hyuk, Yoon Chan

2007

South Korea

Film review analysis↗

Completed

Korean

98 minutes

2025-02-20 02:23:48

Detailed introduction

This film (drama)Also known as날아라 허동구,is aSouth KoreaProducerwomen sex,At2007Released in year 。The dialogue language isKorean,Current Douban rating8.0(For reference only)。
Dong Qiu (played by Choi Woo-hyuk), an 11-year-old child with an IQ of only 60, is a naive and innocent kid who finds the happiest thing in the world is going to school. Although he senses that he is a bit different from his classmates, he is content just to be among his lively friends, even if it means sitting on the sidelines or going to fetch them some water from a distance. Dong Qiu doesn’t understand why his classmates always smile at him; he always responds with a clean and sweet smile. But one day, Dong Qiu’s water bottle mysteriously "flies away." It turns out his small happiness has been taken away by a new water dispenser—his classmates no longer need his help. Finally, Dong Qiu finds a new source of joy: the students of the baseball club are busy training, and staying hydrated has become a headache. Thus, Dong Qiu, the "water duty officer" of the baseball club, appears with a larger water jug to continue his "Water Monitor" career. Watching the athletes full of vitality under the blue sky, he gradually falls in love with the magical baseball that can make athletes laugh and cry, and he also starts to dream of becoming a baseball player chasing the lively bouncing ball. What fresh yet bittersweet experiences await Dong Qiu in the baseball club? Interestingly, his dad, Jin Kyu (played by Jung Jin-young), is a formidable guardian in Dong Qiu’s eyes. Thus, whether encountering danger in dreams or facing difficulties in reality, the SOS superhero that emerges in Dong Qiu's mind is always his dad, riding a delivery motorcycle from their fried chicken shop. "Dong Qiu, Dad will always protect your water bottle and your way to school"—Jin Kyu single-handedly raises his intellectually disabled son, working hard to run the fried chicken shop. As long as Dong Qiu doesn't dream of chicken monsters, he patiently teaches him to count, "One chicken, two chickens, three chickens..." To help Dong Qiu remember the route from school to home, he spent three whole years. Though it’s tough, to ensure his only son leads a normal and healthy life, Jin Kyu struggles to work while finding ways to teach him independent living skills. As Dong Qiu grows up, Jin Kyu faces new challenges: the school insists that Dong Qiu should transfer to a special education school, and the snobbish landlord implies they should move to avoid gossip. The life path originally planned for Dong Qiu seems to be blocked. What actions will Jin Kyu, determined to provide his son a nurturing environment, take to protect his son's future...?