The drama becomes a double POV race: each trying to fix their past mistakes, avoid their younger selves’ romantic traps, and somehow find each other again—without revealing who they really are. 1. The Double Time-Slip Most “back to youth” dramas focus on one protagonist. 17 Again gives us two separate timelines running parallel. We watch Woo-jin try to befriend his own daughter (now his classmate) while Da-eun tries to prevent her younger self from marrying Woo-jin in the first place. The irony is sharp, painful, and hilarious.
But two episodes in, I was sobbing into my ramyeon. By episode six, I had texted six friends to watch it. And by the finale? I’m calling it: this is the most emotionally mature fantasy rom-com of the last two years. Let me break down why. Go Woo-jin (played brilliantly by Lee Do-hyun in his first post-army role) is a 37-year-old former basketball prodigy. Once scouted for the national team, he now works as a middle school gym teacher, divorced from his first love, Jung Da-eun ( Kim Yoo-jung , perfectly cast as both a teenager and a weary 30-something). 17 again kdrama
On the night his daughter tells him she wishes he was "dead or 17 again," a mysterious lunar eclipse hits. Woo-jin wakes up in his 17-year-old body. But here’s the twist the show hides until episode 2: He’s not the only one . His estranged wife, Da-eun, also reverts to 17. Neither knows the other time-slipped. The drama becomes a double POV race: each