Because You Are My First Love Thai Drama File

In the vast ocean of Thai television dramas (Lakorns), few have managed to capture the universal, butterflies-in-your-stomach feeling of adolescence quite like Because You Are My First Love . Airing on GMM 25 and streaming on Viu, this 2022 coming-of-age romance drama is not just another high school series. It is a culturally adapted remake of the mega-hit Taiwanese drama In Time With You (2011), which itself was inspired by the Korean drama The Time We Were Not in Love .

As Chaba walks toward the gate, P’Wu finally breaks. He doesn’t run after her screaming "I love you!" Instead, he sends a single line of text: "Because you are my first love... I have to let you go so you can find your last." because you are my first love thai drama

However, Because You Are My First Love allowed them to play a more mature, nuanced dynamic. Freen’s Chaba is not a passive damsel; she is fiercely intelligent and stubbornly blind to her own heart. Kao’s P’Wu is not a stoic cold male lead; he is vulnerable, he cries, he makes mistakes, and he has a wicked sense of humor hidden under his shy smiles. Watching them navigate the "friend zone" is like watching two puzzle pieces that refuse to admit they fit. Thai dramas are famous for their OSTs, and this one delivers. The main theme, "First Love" (รักแรก) performed by a hidden gem of a Thai indie artist, became a viral hit on TikTok Thailand. The lyrics mirror the plot perfectly: "I counted the years, ten of them, sitting next to you / And every day, I fell in love with the person who didn't see me." In the vast ocean of Thai television dramas

Mood: Nostalgic, Tearful, Hopeful Best Watched With: Your own best friend (and a box of tissues). As Chaba walks toward the gate, P’Wu finally breaks

The instrumental score, mixing soft guitar with the sound of rain and old cassette tape hiss, creates a nostalgic haze that makes you miss a time you never lived through. Yes, with one caveat.

For fans of Freen and Kao, it is a showcase of their incredible range. For fans of romance, it is a beautifully shot, deeply felt, and quietly revolutionary story about what it means to truly see the person standing right in front of you.

But Pakorn is a masterclass in writing a realistic antagonist. He isn't evil. He is simply... wrong for Chaba. He loves the idea of her—her beauty, her social grace—but he doesn't know that she cries during sad movies, or that she hates cilantro, or that she talks in her sleep. P’Wu knows these things. Pakorn represents the glittering mirage, while P’Wu represents the water in the desert. Spoiler alert for the emotional core of the series. In Episode 15, Chaba is offered a dream job in New York. P’Wu drives her to Suvarnabhumi Airport. In the Taiwanese original, this scene is quiet. In the Thai version, it is a volcanic eruption of repressed emotion.