Actor Moon Chae-won said she might change her values if she fell in love.

On the 9th, at a café in Palpan-dong, Jongno-gu, Seoul, an interview with actor Moon Chae-won was held for the film "Heartman" (director Choi Won-seop, distributed by Lotte Entertainment, produced by Movierock·Like M Company).

The film "Heartman" is a comedy about the returned man Seung-min (Kwon Sang Woo), who struggles to not lose the first love he meets again, but develops a secret he can never tell her, and it opens on Jan. 14. In the film, Moon Chae-won plays Bona, who has grown from Seung-min's (Kwon Sang Woo) legendary first love into a professional photographer and has become more mature.

While discussing the film, a question arose comparing Bona, who in the film does not like children, to what kind of style Moon Chae-won herself is.

She said, "When I was young, I had a habit of holding my relatives' babies even though they were quite big and heavy, so I used to hold them. Now they're all adults, and my relatives and parents said they liked babies. As I grew up, I haven't had many chances to see babies. The only thing I saw was my relatives' babies when I was young, and these days there aren't any. Even if someone on the street says 'they're cute,' I can't hold them, so I don't do that."

She went on to say about marriage, "You can't plan marriage and make it happen. You can't even plan dating. I just think it's somewhat like in the movies. It's not that someone on a white horse appears; maybe you have to call it luck to some extent? Isn't a fate necessary for a relationship to be formed?"

In "Heartman," unlike Seung-min, Bona chooses to change her values after falling in love. When asked whether she thought she might change her values if she fell deeply in love, Moon Chae-won said, "I think it's possible. In my 20s it was rather impossible. Even if you like someone, in your 20s you want the environment you want and want them to do certain things for you; when you like someone for the first time in your 20s, you still can't be cool about it."

She added, "But it seems to happen as time passes, so maybe it's more likely this year than last year, and last year was more so than two or three years ago. I feel you can't live together without giving in sometimes. In my 20s, I think I was less willing to make those concessions."

When asked if there was a person who came to mind for her first love, Moon Chae-won said, "For me, the standard is the person I liked the most at first. Calling what happened in the classroom love is a bit… For me, my first love was when I was in my 20s, after I turned 21 or 22. It came a bit late."

Meanwhile, "Heartman" opens on Jan. 14 as the first comedy of the new year.

[Photo] Provided by Lotte Entertainment

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