When the Weather Blooms (2025)
Starring: Rowoon, Choi Yi-hyun
Platform: JTBC / Netflix
Douban Rating: 8.6

Plot Summary:
Yoon Ji-hoon (Rowoon) is a young florist who lost his fiancée in a tragic accident three years ago. Every winter, he arranges the same bouquet—her favorite—for the empty bench where she used to wait for him. One snowy morning, he meets Han Seo-won (Choi Yi-hyun), a bright but emotionally guarded weather forecaster who’s transferred to his rural town.
As snowstorms roll in and frozen time begins to melt, their encounters become a quiet ritual—exchanging forecasts and flowers, slowly thawing each other’s pain. But Seo-won hides a haunting secret of her own: she once predicted the very storm that took Ji-hoon’s fiancée.
Highlights:
- Rowoon delivers a restrained, deeply emotional performance that lingers long after the screen fades.
- Choi Yi-hyun is luminous, portraying layered grief and guilt beneath a hopeful exterior.
- The cinematography is dreamlike—framing frost-covered windows, soft snowfall, and silences that say more than dialogue ever could.
- The soundtrack, composed of gentle piano and string pieces, perfectly underscores the melancholic tone.

What Could Be Better:
- Some may find the pacing slow, as the drama relies heavily on atmosphere over plot twists.
- The emotional reveals come late, requiring patient viewers who enjoy subtle character arcs.
Verdict:
When the Weather Blooms is a masterclass in emotional storytelling. It’s quiet, slow, and heart-wrenching in all the best ways. For fans of Twenty-Five Twenty-One, Our Beloved Summer, or Just Between Lovers, this drama offers a soul-healing experience that explores how grief can lead to unexpected renewal.
Watch it with tissues. And maybe a cup of warm tea.