Where memory and reality blur
The video opens like a door swinging back into a past too bright to hold: A vibrant flash of youth, as friends drag Jin into a bathtub and spray him with paint. It looks like joy. It feels like home. But scenes melt into each other like watercolour on wet paper—spray paint becomes vandalism as RM and V graffiti public walls; laughter cuts to Jin’s haunting vision of V drowning.
And right when you want answers, the chorus drops:
Run, run, run
The montage becomes breathless. J-Hope recovering in a hospital, tossing a pillow at Jimin; memories erupting into playful war; and then, the moment that still scorches years later:
Suga and Jungkook’s violent fight, glass shattering, Jungkook frozen in shock and loneliness.
The video doesn’t pause. Neither does youth.
It runs through forests, hallways, streets, hearts out of breath and terrified to stop.
A soundtrack to recklessness and freedom
The video follows the song’s heartbeat:
“It’s okay to fall. Curse me, you foolish fate.”
It threads into HYYH’s themes—recklessness, impulsivity, the confusion of piecing together a future without a map. As J-Hope admits in his verse:
He can’t tell the difference between sweat and tears anymore.
But they make him run again; his heart beats again.
Run captures the feverish, relentless pace of being young. I Need U grabbed you by the throat and hurled you into the suffocating trauma of lonely adolescence, while Butterfly floated with whimsical, bittersweet fragility. Run stands firmly between them—rooted in theory, layered in emotion—speaking to young adults searching for meaning in a world that offers few signs. And it’s almost autobiographical too, reflecting the members themselves at a time when they were still struggling to carve out their place in the industry.
Lakshana is an entertainment and lifestyle journalist with over a decade of experience. She covers a wide range of stories—from community and health to mental health and inspiring people features.
A passionate K-pop enthusiast, she also enjoys exploring the cultural impact of music and fandoms through her writing.