When Was The Smile Has Left Your Eyes First Released?

2025-10-22 12:39:31 302

6 Answers

Uma
Uma
2025-10-25 08:06:08
The thing that surprises people is how long this story’s been around — the original was released back in 2002. The Japanese series was broadcast under the title 'Sora Kara Furu Ichioku no Hoshi' (which roughly translates to 'Hundred Million Stars from the Sky'), and that 2002 airing is where the narrative first reached viewers. Years later, the emotional core of that story was reinterpreted and repackaged under the English title 'The Smile Has Left Your Eyes', so when folks ask about that title they’re often thinking of the later adaptations.

I first encountered the tale through conversations about the 2018 Korean remake, which used the English title 'The Smile Has Left Your Eyes' and brought the story to a whole new audience. That remake starred Seo In-guk and Jung So-min and aired in 2018, which is why many international fans associate the English title with that year. If you want the origin point, though, the narrative first hit screens in 2002 with the Japanese production — that’s the seed that later versions grew from.

It’s one of those stories that feels timeless: whether you start with the 2002 Japanese original or jump into the 2018 Korean version, the melancholic atmosphere and the tangled characters hook you. For me, knowing the 2002 origin only deepened my appreciation of how different cultures rework the same emotional core, and I love comparing details between versions.
Peyton
Peyton
2025-10-26 14:06:29
You’re probably thinking of the 2018 drama because that’s when the English title 'The Smile Has Left Your Eyes' became widely discussed outside Japan, but the very first release actually dates back to 2002. The original Japanese drama aired that year under the name 'Sora Kara Furu Ichioku no Hoshi' — the story that later got adapted and retitled for international viewers.

The Korean remake in 2018, which starred Seo In-guk and Jung So-min, brought the title 'The Smile Has Left Your Eyes' into a lot of English-language conversations, and understandably so — it’s a moody, character-driven piece that translates well across cultures. If someone asks when the story first released, I always point to 2002 for the original Japanese broadcast, and then note 2018 as the year the newer, widely-shared adaptation arrived. Both versions are worth watching for different reasons, and I enjoyed tracing how certain scenes were reinterpreted across the two.
Hallie
Hallie
2025-10-26 14:26:49
If you want the very first release, that goes back to 2002 — the Japanese series premiered that year as 'Sora Kara Furu Ichioku no Hoshi', and that original is the source material later adapted and known in some regions as 'The Smile Has Left Your Eyes'. The version that popularized the English title internationally came in 2018 with the Korean remake starring Seo In-guk and Jung So-min, so people often mix the two up. Personally I like starting with the 2002 original to see where the core mystery and character beats began, then watching the 2018 take to appreciate how different directors emphasize different emotional notes. I always come away moved by both.
Violet
Violet
2025-10-27 20:25:56
If you're asking about the release date commonly cited now, the Korean drama titled 'The Smile Has Left Your Eyes' premiered on October 3, 2018. That modern version is what most international viewers encountered first. However, the narrative itself goes further back — it’s adapted from a 2002 Japanese drama originally known as 'Sora Kara Furu Ichioku no Hoshi', so the story’s first screen release actually dates to 2002. I find it fascinating how a story can be reborn across eras like that; watching the 2018 series after tracking down information about the 2002 original made me appreciate how different production values and cultural contexts reshape the same core emotions.
Isla
Isla
2025-10-27 22:24:18
Back in the days when I was hoarding dramas for weekend marathons, 'The Smile Has Left Your Eyes' turned up as a title that refused to leave my head. The version most people talk about today is the South Korean TV remake that premiered on October 3, 2018, on tvN — it starred Seo In-guk and Jung So-min and carried that moody, melancholic vibe that made it easy to binge. That 2018 airing is the one that introduced the story to a whole new international audience, with streaming chatter and soundtrack posts all over my feed for weeks after the premiere.

If you trace the title back further, the Korean series was adapted from a 2002 Japanese drama whose original Japanese title is 'Sora Kara Furu Ichioku no Hoshi' (often localized in English as 'The Smile Has Left Your Eyes'). So the seed of the story first aired in 2002, and then the remake was released in 2018. I love comparing the two — the pacing, the little cultural shifts, and how the soundtrack choices change the whole feel — and honestly, the 2018 remake brought a lot of attention back to that early 2000s gem, which made a lot of my retro-drama-loving friends very happy.
Faith
Faith
2025-10-28 18:52:02
That title has a way of sticking with you; for me, the timeline is pretty clear once you line up the versions. The story originated on Japanese television in 2002 under the title 'Sora Kara Furu Ichioku no Hoshi', which is the project people later translate or refer to as 'The Smile Has Left Your Eyes'. That was the first release of the narrative that many international fans later discovered through the Korean remake.

The Korean take, which gave the title renewed popularity, first aired on October 3, 2018, on tvN and showcased Seo In-guk and Jung So-min in the lead roles. Because the remake hit global streaming platforms and social media, a lot of viewers assumed the story was new — but digging back reveals that 2002 is where it all began. I like to revisit both versions now and then; the contrast in tone between early-2000s Japanese TV and late-2010s Korean production is a neat study in how storytelling styles shift over time.
View All Answers
Scan code to download App

Related Books

Give Me Your Smile
Give Me Your Smile
Alexa Whittier has always been a cheerful child but sometime in her preteen years, something terrible happened to her that wiped that angelic smile off her lips. Her heart becomes a stone-cold wasteland. Will she ever smile again? Will she ever love again? Find out in this amazing, chilly, emotional and breathtaking adventure of Alexa Whittier.
10
10 Chapters
Through Your Eyes
Through Your Eyes
Just when I thought I had successfully moved on from a loveless relationship, I realized I made the same mistake again. I fell in love with a kind and handsome billionaire, and I thought he was already the perfect man. However, I learned about his deep secret--the secret evolving around my identity, and the secret that shattered my respect for him.I broke off with him and claimed everything that belonged to me. I hated him like he was the fiercest criminal in the world. I accused him as a thief, stripping him off from his once, dazzling glory.But then, a particular event led me to the truth. Only to know that I was already too late!
10
125 Chapters
When His Eyes Opened
When His Eyes Opened
Avery Tate was forced to marry a bigshot by her stepmother as her father's company was on the verge of bankruptcy. There was a catch, the bigshot—Elliot Foster—was in a state of coma. In the public’s eye, it was only a matter of time until she was deemed a widow and be kicked out of the family.A twist of event happened when Elliot unexpectedly woke up from his coma.Fuming at his marriage situation, he lashed out on Avery and threatened to kill their babies if they had any. “I’ll kill them with my very hands!” he bawled.Four years had passed when Avery returned to her homeland with her fraternal twins—a boy and a girl.As she pointed at Elliot’s face on a TV screen, she reminded her babies, “Stay far away from this man, he’s sworn to kill you both.” That night, Elliot’s computer was hacked and he was challenged—by one of the twins—to kill them. “Come and get me, *sshole!”
8.9
3175 Chapters
YOUR EYES ARE MINE
YOUR EYES ARE MINE
He is blind and has the money. She is poor and has eyes. Both are perfect together on their quest for revenge, which brought them into the turmoil of lust, love, and hate. *** Leonardo pulled Angela's arms hard and said, "You will serve me and do my wish." He then tore her dress. "This is a wrong move, Mr. Vera." Angela twisted her wrist from Leonardo's grip, but Leonardo's strength remained intact and overpowering; he instead made her a prisoner in his arms and then pinned her on the wall. She was almost , with only her lingerie covering her and below. And he touched her face, down to her neck, her . Angela's hatred escalated with his touch, and she struggled, but he persisted in taming her, dragging and pinning her to his bed. His weight over her made her immobile. And she remembered her gun in her bag and reached out for it at the side of the bed, as Leo’s hand grasped her other hand and pinned it above her head. He was blind, but he knew what he was going to do. A little voice in Angela’s mind screamed, "KILL HIM!" as she grasped the gun in one hand.
10
57 Chapters
Your First Luna
Your First Luna
Like a nightmare for an Omega, she has to accept the fact that her Alpha rejects her for another woman he has liked for a long time. Olivia tries to endure the pain of ending her life as an outcast Luna after Hunter throws her out of the house and chooses Emily, another Omega who has been betraying her. But Olivia's departure left a question mark, because after 5 months of their divorce, Hunter found Olivia pregnant, but unfortunately at that time the Omega was not alone, another Alpha was accompanying her. Thinking that the baby Olivia was carrying was the result of an affair with another Alpha, made Hunter angry and asked the entire pack to ban her from entering their area, including the Alpha who was with her. Hunter is a handsome and rich Alpha. His father is highly respected in their region and has only one desire, he wants to have a son to succeed his throne. But unfortunately, after being married to Olivia for 5 years, he didn't get what he wanted until betrayal came and destroyed everything. However, what if Hunter finds out the truth about the baby Olivia is carrying? Will Olivia's fate change? Or it's too late to fix it.
Not enough ratings
6 Chapters
The look in your eyes
The look in your eyes
Violet, a rich blind girl, gets married to the man she falls in love with, everything changes when she finds out her husband was having an affair with his lover disguise as a maid in the house, using her disability to his advantage. Violet learns about her husband plans and flees back to her fathers house, but then Violet is put in a bigger situation that cost her everything. To get her revenge, Violet teams up with Luther her ex-bodyguard, they fake a relationship and make a come back into her husband's life.
10
86 Chapters

Related Questions

How Do Anime Artists Draw Asian Eyes Realistically?

3 Answers2025-11-06 13:58:05
Studying real faces taught me the foundations that make stylized eyes feel believable. I like to start with the bone structure: the brow ridge, the orbital rim, and the position of the cheek and nose — these determine how the eyelids fold and cast shadows. When I work from life or a photo, I trace the eyelid as a soft ribbon that wraps around the sphere of the eyeball. That mental image helps me place the crease, the inner corner (where an epicanthic fold might sit), and the way the skin softly bunches at the outer corner. Practically, I sketch the eyeball first, then draw the lids hugging it, and refine the crease and inner corner anatomy so the shape reads as three-dimensional. For Asian features specifically, I make a point of mixing observations: many people have a lower or subtle supratarsal crease, some have a strong fold, and the epicanthic fold can alter the visible inner corner. Rather than forcing a single “look,” I vary eyelid thickness, crease height, and lash direction. Lashes are often finer and curve gently; heavier lashes can look generic if overdone. Lighting is huge — specular highlights, rim light on the tear duct, and soft shadows under the brow make the eye feel alive. I usually add two highlights (a primary bright dot and a softer fill) and a faint translucency on the lower eyelid to suggest wetness. On the practical side, I practice with portrait studies, mirror sketches, and photo collections that show ethnic diversity. I avoid caricature by treating each eye as unique instead of defaulting to a single template. The payoff is when a stylized character suddenly reads as a real person—those subtle anatomical choices make the difference, and it always makes me smile when it clicks.

What Are The Best Tips For Drawing Eyes In Manga Style?

2 Answers2025-11-04 05:27:58
I geek out over eyes—seriously, they’re the little theater where a character’s whole mood plays out. When I sketch, I start by thinking about the silhouette more than the details: bold almond, round and wide, slit-like for villains, soft droop for tired characters. That silhouette sets the personality. I use a light construction grid—two horizontal guides for the top lid and the bottom of the iris, a vertical center for tilt—then block in the brow ridge and tear duct. That immediately tells me where the highlights will sit and how big the iris should be relative to the white, which is the single biggest factor that reads as age or youth. Big irises and large highlights read cute and innocent (think of the dreamy sparkle in 'Sailor Moon'), while smaller irises with more visible sclera can make characters feel mature or intense. For linework and depth, I treat lashes and lids like curved planes, not just decorative strokes. The top lash line usually carries the heaviest line weight because it casts a tiny shadow; use thicker ink or a heavier brush there. Keep the lower lashes sparse unless you’re drawing a stylized shoujo eye—those often have delicate lower lashes and starry catchlights. For anime-style shading, I blend a gradient across the iris from dark at the top (occluded by the eyelid) to lighter at the bottom and then add one or two catchlights—one crisp white specular and one softer reflected light near the pupil. To sell wetness, add a subtle rim highlight where the sclera meets the lower lid and a faint spec on the tear duct. In black-and-white manga, I’ll suggest screentone or cross-hatching on the upper sclera area to imply shadow; digital artists can use Multiply layers for the same effect. Practice routines I swear by: redraw the same eye shape 20 times with tiny variations—tilt, distance between eyes, eyelid fold depth. Then do perspective drills: tilt the head up, down, three-quarter, extreme foreshortening. Study real eyes too—photos show how eyelid thickness, skin folds, and eye moisture behave. Compare those observations to how stylists cheat in 'Naruto' or 'One Piece' and deliberately simplify. Don’t be afraid to break symmetry slightly; perfect symmetry looks robotic. Finally, emotion comes from tiny changes: a half-closed lid softens, a sharply arched brow angers, inner-corner creases can add sorrow. When I finish, I like to flip the canvas and nudge a line or two—if it still reads well mirrored, it’s doing its job. Drawing eyes never gets old for me; each tweak feels like finding a new expression, and that keeps me excited to draw for hours.

Which Pencils Suit Drawing Eyes With Soft Shading?

2 Answers2025-11-04 15:50:53
My go-to pencils for soft, natural eye shading are really all about a small, complementary range rather than a single ‘magic’ stick. I usually start a drawing with a harder pencil—something like 2H or H—very lightly to lay out the eye shape, eyelid folds, and pupil placement. That keeps my construction crisp without smudging. After that I switch to HB or 2B for building the midtones: these are perfect for the subtle gradations in the whites of the eye, the gradual shadow under the brow, and the soft plane changes on the eyelids. For the shadowed areas where you want a lush, velvety feel—a shadowed iris rim, deep crease, or lashes’ roots—I reach for 4B and 6B. Those softer leads give rich, blendable darks that aren’t crunchy, so you can get a soft transition rather than a hard line. Paper and tools matter as much as pencil grade. A smooth hot-press or Bristol board lets you achieve those delicate gradients without the tooth grabbing too much graphite; slightly toothier papers work too if you want more texture. Blending tools—tortillons, a soft brush, or even a bit of tissue—help turn the 2B–4B layers into silky skin tones, but I try to avoid over-blending so the drawing retains life. A kneaded eraser is indispensable: pull out tiny highlights on the iris and the moist glint at the tear duct, and lift delicate edges near lashes. For razor-sharp details like individual lashes or the darkest pupil edge, I’ll pull out a 0.3mm mechanical pencil or a very hard 4H for tiny, crisp catchlights after shading. If you want brand suggestions, I gravitate toward Staedtler Mars Lumograph and Faber-Castell 9000 because their grades are consistent and predictable—very helpful when layering. For bolder, creamier blacks, Caran d’Ache Grafwood or softer Derwent pencils work great. Experiment: try a simple set of H, HB, 2B, 4B, 6B and practice building values from light to dark in thin layers, saving the softest pencils for the final mood and shadow accents. Eyes are all about contrast and subtle edges; the right pencil mix plus patient layering will make them read as soft, wet, and alive. I always feel a little thrill when a rough sketch suddenly looks like a living gaze.

What Plot Twist Left Viewers With Something To Talk About?

6 Answers2025-10-22 12:04:54
Few plot twists have lodged themselves in my chest the way the reveal in 'The Usual Suspects' did — it blindsided me, rewired the whole movie, and then haunted every rewatch because I kept looking for the breadcrumbs I’d missed. That kind of twist isn’t just a surprise; it forces you to re-evaluate trust, perspective, and narrative authority. Other shocks that get people talking for similar reasons include 'Fight Club' — where identity and reality fold inward — and 'The Sixth Sense', which turns the whole film into a different genre on the final frame. Those moments are conversation fuel because they reframe everything that came before, making discussions about foreshadowing, misdirection, and director craft feel like treasure hunts. On the small-screen or in long-form storytelling, the same mechanics can do even more damage (in a good way). The Red Wedding in 'Game of Thrones' shredded viewer assumptions about safety and plot armor, and it sent fandom into a frenzy of grief, theorycrafting, and moral debate. 'Death Note' had its own seismic turns around L and Light that split viewers into camps about justice and manipulation. Even anime like 'Neon Genesis Evangelion' and 'Erased' ('Boku dake ga Inai Machi') sparked pages of analysis because they either upended genre expectations or collapsed timelines and personal identity in ways that begged for communal unpacking. What ties these together is emotional investment: if you care deeply about characters, a twist that changes what you thought you knew becomes personal, not just intellectual. Beyond the gasp and the forum posts, the best twists usually teach me something about storytelling itself — how to plant clues without being obvious, how to balance payoff and fairness, and when ambiguity serves the theme. They also say a lot about audience culture; today a twist gets clipped, memed, dissected, and theorized within hours, which keeps the conversation alive in a different way than pre-internet eras. I love a twist that rewards rewatching and honest debate, the ones that don’t just shock you but invite you back into the story with a new set of eyes — those are the ones I keep recommending and arguing over with friends late into the night.

How Does The Left Right Game Differ From The Original Reddit Story?

9 Answers2025-10-28 21:31:05
I've read the original 'the Left/Right Game' on Reddit and binged the audio drama, and the difference felt like watching a sketch turn into a full stage production. The Reddit version thrives on immediacy — it's raw, first-person, slice-of-moments writing with cliffhanger updates and a living comment section that reacts in real time. That format makes the supernatural rules feel hazy and your imagination fills in gaps; you sense the community debating what is real and what was embellished. The podcast 'The Left Right Game' cleans up that haze on purpose. It gives characters defined voices, motivations, and backstory; sound design creates jump scares and atmosphere where the original relied on suggestion. Scenes are smoothed into a coherent arc with clear pacing, and some plot points are expanded or changed to suit a scripted, hour-long episode structure. For me, the Reddit read felt more unsettling because of its raw unknowns, while the podcast is more cinematic and emotionally directed — both are great, but they hit different nerves.

Which Movie Twist Left Audiences Saying Didn T See That Coming?

9 Answers2025-10-28 10:37:31
Years of late-night movie marathons sharpened my appetite for twists that actually change how you see the whole film. I'll never forget sitting there when the credits rolled on 'The Sixth Sense'—that reveal about who the protagonist really was made my jaw drop in a quiet, stunned way. The genius of it wasn't just the shock; it was how the movie had quietly threaded clues and red herrings so that a second viewing felt like a treasure hunt. That combination of emotional weight and clever structure is what keeps that twist living in my head. A few years later 'Fight Club' hit me differently: the twist there was anarchic and thrilling, less sorrowful and more like someone pulled the rug out with a grin. And then there are films like 'The Usual Suspects' where the twist is as much about voice and performance as about plot—Kaiser Söze's reveal is cinematic trickery done with style. Those moments where the film flips on its head still make me set the remote down and replay scenes in my mind, trying to spot every sly clue. Classic twists do that: they reward curiosity and rewatches, and they leave a peculiar, satisfied ache that keeps me recommending those movies to friends.

Where Can I Watch Nine Months Pregnant, I Left My Husband Online?

9 Answers2025-10-22 12:28:47
If you’re in the mood for melodrama with a modern domestic twist, I tracked down where to watch 'Nine Months Pregnant, I Left My Husband' and had good luck with a few legit streaming sources. The first place I checked was the big Chinese platforms — iQIYI and Youku often carry new mainland dramas and sometimes upload them with multi-language subtitles on their international apps. WeTV (Tencent Video’s international service) also licenses a lot of romantic family dramas, so it’s worth searching there if you want official subs and decent streaming quality. If those don’t show the series in your region, Rakuten Viki and Amazon Prime Video sometimes pick up shows like this for international distribution, offering volunteer or professional subtitles. I always prefer the official streams for reliability and to support the creators, and the subtitle quality is usually better on those platforms. Region locks can be a nuisance; if you run into that, check whether the platform has an international version or a DVD/transactional VOD for purchase. Personally, I found an English-subbed copy on an international iQIYI feed and appreciated how clean the playback and subtitle timing were — it made binge-watching way easier.

Where Can I Read The Left Hand Of Darkness Online For Free?

5 Answers2025-11-10 01:01:44
I totally get the urge to dive into 'The Left Hand of Darkness'—Ursula K. Le Guin’s masterpiece is mind-blowing! But here’s the thing: finding legit free copies online is tricky. The book’s still under copyright, so most free sites hosting it are pirated, which isn’t cool for supporting authors. Your best bet? Check if your local library offers digital loans via apps like Libby or OverDrive. Mine had it, and I devoured it in a weekend! If you’re tight on cash, used bookstores or ebook sales often have it dirt-cheap. Le Guin’s work deserves proper appreciation, and honestly, holding a physical copy adds to the experience—those icy landscapes of Gethen feel even more immersive. Plus, libraries sometimes host book clubs where you can geek out about gender themes with others!
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status