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Shota, a Japanese businessman in his fifties, leaves for what he believes will be his final business trip, carrying a resignation letter he cannot bring himself to submit. Meanwhile, Daesung, a young Korean man nursing the pain of a recent breakup, travels alone to Enoshima, Japan, hoping to reconnect with a love he has lost. On the first night of their journeys, the two strangers meet by chance at a small ramen shop in Enoshima. Over drinks, they share fragments of their lives and, half in jest, promise to deliver each other's unsent letters—Shota taking Daesung's love letter, and Daesung carrying Shota's resignation letter. What begins as a lighthearted agreement quietly draws both men into one another's emotional worlds, leading them to confront feelings they have long avoided.
Director
Writer
Status
Post Production
Original Language
KO

Dreaming of making a way station for his sister and the villagers who have no choice but to commute along the dangerous train tracks every day, Joon-kyung sends many letters to the President, but with no reply. Ra-hee, who has a crush on Joon-kyung, does everything she can to help him meet the President.

She has never lived in a high-rise apartment, and she wonders how her sister can live at this height every day. A few days ago she kind of burst in to stay with her sister, and she is now becoming re-accustomed to life in Korea. While seeming to keep a grave secret to herself, she manages life one day at a time with a sense of mindfulness. Meanwhile a certain director, some years younger than her, has asked her to join his project, and after a polite refusal, they have agreed to meet for the first time today. Downtown Seoul is filled with narrow alleys that harbor tiny old bars, and that's where they meet. As they are getting drunk, there is sudden rainfall and thunder.