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[K-Movie Night] Twenty

Welcome to K-Movie Night — a once-a-month feature where we microwave some popcorn, put on a face mask, and get cozy with a Korean movie from yesteryear. With so many films finally streaming (with subs!), now is the time to get caught up on all those movies we missed featuring our favorite drama actors.

Each month, we’ll pick a flick, write a review, and meet you back here to discuss whether or not it’s worth a watch. Super simple. All you have to do is kick up your feet and join us in the comments!

 
MOVIE REVIEW

[K-Movie Night] Twenty Junho

It’s only been a few weeks since King the Land wrapped up but I already knew I’d be wanting more Junho on my screen when it ended (because, well, that’s what I always want). So here we are with a movie night pick that pairs a young and green Junho – before the mega acting success we know now – with Kim Woo-bin and Kang Haneul, just in case you needed a pretty overload. And, really, who doesn’t?

Twenty was a crowd favorite on its release back in 2015, topping the box office and earning awards nominations for two of the three leads (no prizes for my bias) as well as screenwriter/director Lee Byung-heon (who recently saw another box office success with 2023’s Dream). With so much favorable word-of-mouth, and a trio of faces I can’t refuse, I decided to dive into this college-age comedy and see how it holds up.

[K-Movie Night] Twenty starring Kim Woo-bin Kang Haneul Junho

The heart of this movie is the bromance between the three leads, but the story spends little time at the heart, preferring instead the body’s nether-regions. We’re introduced to a trio of boys, just on the cusp of growing up, and – with a plethora of penis jokes and all the sex without the sexy – I’d say that’s also the movie’s target audience.

We meet our trio when they’re fresh out of high school, about to turn the titular twenty (which they believe is the midpoint of their lives), and not sure what to do next. All three make distinct decisions, owing to their very different personalities, and then we follow them on their journeys into young adulthood to see how those decisions play out.

[K-Movie Night] Twenty Kang Haneul

CHI-HO (Kim Woo-bin), sex-obsessed and ready to touch any breast in sight, decides for his friends that the best course of action is to lose their virginity ASAP. He has a girlfriend (Jung So-min) – whom the three boys fought over in high school (in fact, it’s how they became friends) – but she’s just there for when he can’t find another hookup to occupy his time. Since he’s from a wealthy family, he decides to forego college and live the playboy lifestyle around the clock.

In contrast, our narrator KYUNG-JAE (Kang Haneul) is a high-achiever who goes off to college ready to study hard and focus on school. Except he falls for one of his sunbaes (Min Hyo-rin) right away and spends a lot of time by her side – hoping she’ll drop her boyfriend and date him instead. Of course, heartbreak is in the cards, but it wouldn’t be a story about growing up without a few hearts that need mending and moving on.

[K-Movie Night] Twenty starring Lee Yubi Junho

The last in our trio, DONG-WOO (Junho), is the most fleshed-out character of the three with a bankrupt family, a father in jail, and a work ethic that allows him to stay back a year in school in order to work part-time jobs and save for college. He supports his mom and younger brothers (unintentionally when Mom is always dipping into his bank account) and has a wild dream of becoming a comic book artist.

Dong-woo has little time for girls, but that doesn’t stop Kyung-jae’s younger sister, SO-HEE (Lee Yubi) from following him around like a lost puppy. Now that he’s repeating his senior year, the two are in the same class, where she plunks herself down beside him and starts in with the most awkward and embarrassing conversation he can imagine having with the opposite sex. It’s part of her tactic to win him over, and before the credits roll, she does just that.

The cast is really the highlight with all the fun coming from seeing these actors play outrageous or against-type roles. Junho looks the most “regular” I have ever seen him, in jeans and tees that show off no muscle and a decidedly less catwalk-y stride. And Lee Yubi plays cute but annoying in a way that feels like an R-rated preface to her character in Yumi’s Cells. Alas, it’s only Kang Haneul that gets stuck in a familiar role, always the overachieving nerd.

Kim Woo-bin – though we’ve seen him do outlandish antagonist – is so over the top here that it’s hard to reconcile his character at all. Sure, it’s so the other two friends can play straight-faced against his absurdity (and their sober reactions offer the jokes that hit), but what starts as amusing antics ends up being hard to sit through. Watching a grown man throw a full on temper tantrum is just not funny enough to be a running joke.

If you’re in the mood for some angst, then this is the movie for you. It takes us through the transitory period between childhood and adulthood with three self-proclaimed “idiots” looking for an outlet. The film ends with a four-minute fight scene, viewed in slow motion, as Air Supply’s “Without You” plays overtop. It’s meant to be comedic, rather than overtly violent, but it’s also a release for these young people who don’t know what to do with all their uncomfortable emotions. At the outset, our narrator had told us, “Our twenties were more embarrassing than roaring” – but this final showcase seems to be an entrance into the roar they’ve been missing.

On this same note, there’s a scene where Chi-ho is watching the Wong Kar Wai movie Days of Being Wild – specifically, the scene where Leslie Cheung’s character does the mambo in shorts and a white undershirt. Chi-ho is wearing the exact same getup and knows all the moves by heart. Days of Being Wild is about a playboy, known for loving and leaving without guilt (much like Chi-ho’s character), but it’s also about listless youth. Twenty feels like a spoof of that listlessness, with seduction followed by violence – only in this case, it’s meant to be funny.

Overall, this is a film full of cliches about youth that wants to be feel-good, but sometimes tries so hard for a laugh that it falls flat. Even if you’re just here for a fun and brainless time, I find it hard to look past the underwritten and instrumental female characters, who only exist to further the male characters’ goals.

I’m reluctant to call this a coming-of-age movie because I’m not sure there’s been a clear transition by the end. Still, our bromantic besties do experience the realities of love, heartbreak, and having to put their childhood dreams on the backburner – which is certainly an entrance to adulthood. It’s a movie about growing up, for sure, it’s just that these characters still have a lot of growing to do.

Join us in September for the next K-Movie Night and let’s make a party of it! We’ll be watching Josee (2020) and posting the review during the last week of the month.

Want to participate in the comments when it posts? You’ve got three weeks to watch! Rather wait for the review before you decide to stream it? We’ve got you covered.

 
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I only made it 10 minutes into this movie, until the scene where Kim Woo-bin is trying to seduce a girl (in maybe the sleaziest way possible?) with his two friends hidden in the closet. That's a hard pass from me.

If I ever go back to it, I'll probably just ffwd until I get to all the Junho scenes, preferably without his more boring/disgusting friends. But that's a pretty big If.

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I really really wanted a spinoff of only Junho's storyline. I approve of ffwd to only his scenes.

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I’ve tried this movie previously but dropping for the same reason. This genre is just not my thing.

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Exactly I so hate that part. I actually only watched this because of Lee Yoobi but I watched this a long time ago so I forgot most. But that part

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When Kim Woo Bin did that three year old tantrum (wasn't it supposed to be 20s and not 3s)

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I'm with you @dramaddictally. I don't think this movie holds up. In fact, I might even say that this movie should come with a trigger warning for all who endured this type of male attention during their twenties.

What really got me wasn't the bawdiness, as that is what it is (although it's much less funny if you have ever had to hear such things in real life), but instead how--as you also note--it seems like our trio went through all of this hormonal, emotional, and physical torment, for no learning or growth at all???

Of the three main male leads, one is a spoiled brat who we are supposed to care for, mainly because it turns out--after some tribulations that were almost entirely of his own making--we “learn” he can actually feel things. We already knew he could feel things, that’s why he was behaving poorly...he felt bad things inside his body, causing him to act out! At that moment when he decides to address his bad feelings, and when he starts behaving better, that’s when we might authentically start to care for him.

Our second lead, the “pushover,” spends a number of scenes in the movie directly reflecting on the empty hopelessness of life at twenty years old. Indeed, one could argue that we spend the whole movie mainly just watching him gape at the horrible reality of youth and the yawning open panic of what it’s going to take to create an independent life. The thought is horrific. I agree. I’ve been there. Luckily, in the end, he learns...no, just joking. By the end, he’s still only talking about it and still unprepared and worried. Nothing’s changed for him over the course of the movie.

Our third lead is the saddest to me, although his end seems in other ways the “cutest.” Third lead plays the maknae in his friend group, but he’s actually the hyungnim in his family...however, he doesn’t really want either role, he wants to succeed on his own merits, and live his own life drawing cartoons. Sure, that might seem like a childish job, but (a) it’s an actual real profession that can make real money and (b) STOP, this dude has an actual internally-driven dream for heaven’s sake! Who else in this movie has a personal dream that extends beyond his physical chili pepper? No one. And what happens? He gives it up to work at a family factory where he’s clearly upstaged and completely out of his league.

The women were underdeveloped, yes, but it also seems to me that most of them, at some point in the movie, were also somehow used as "value for trade." This was true within our main trio with regards to their "first love," or true for the mother who's lost her beauty and so no longer feels she has "value," or in the most obvious example, true for the wife of the restaurant owner who is literally treated as a "good" who can be exchanged for keeping the restaurant intact by some gangsters. Ick.

Even with all that, at its core, what this film really had me thinking is how happy I am to no...

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...Even with all that, at its core, what this film really had me thinking is how happy I am to no longer be in my twenties. If you are currently in your twenties, know that it gets better.

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It does get better. I would pay cash money to not have to relive my twenties, and part of what makes this movie fun for me is being able to point and laugh from a considerable distance. I'm with @kdramapedia in finding this very much of its time and not something that's going to become a classic.

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In the U.S., in the early 1980s, when I was in my own early 20s, there were a series of films that sound pretty much like this one, although maybe a little raunchier. Actually I guess it started in the late 1970s with Animal House, but there was also Porky's, Losin It, Risky Business, Revenge of the Nerds, there were a ton of others, but I don't remember their titles, and don't want to spend the time looking them up. Oh yes, probably the best of them was Fast Times at Ridgemont High, but I think that was written by a woman.

They all centered on guys losing their virginity, which was supposed to be funny--why?

I always thought of them as a really stupid male pop culture reaction to feminism; lately, I must confess, I see them more grimly as the beginning of a decades long decline of white American manhood, from which it is still in need of recovery. I am sorry @attiton that you had to experience this kind of attention decades later.

More hopefully, from observing my son, and some of my male students, I think things are improving, but I can't be sure. Covid was pretty disruptive.

It is interesting to me that this kind of film had great appeal as late as 2015 in Korea. By then, Hollywood had moved to a more self-aware, almost parody of these 1980s sex-raunch comedies--the kind of films Judd Apatow was producing. I wouldn't say they were great, but at least they were trying to do a little more than say women exist for men to achieve sexual maturity but nothing else.

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I sound you on that, this one reminds me of John Hughes movies.

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Feels like so long ago I watched this movie. It definitely was weird in some parts. But I did watch the entire movie for the cast but wasn’t sure what the movie was about. Parts of it were ok some parts not. Not something I would recommend or rewatch.

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This kind of humor doesn't work on me.

They're friends or lovers but the relationship is very stupid and violent and the rare real moments are not strong enough to make me forget the rest.

It's why I'm kinda disapointed by the trailer of Kang Ha-Neul and Jung So-Min's next movie. It's the same genre.

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Twenty has a special place in my heart because it's the first Korean movie I saw in a movie theater. My favorite scene is at the pojangmacha; it still pops into my head sometimes!

It's sad to hear that it doesn't hold up. I believe that many movies/shows are products of their time and aren't meant to be classics or be revisited. So I'm always cautious with viewing older media with a modern lens. Some things that were wildly popular years ago are meant to stay in the past with that soft focus camera and rose-colored glasses, so I'll leave Twenty exactly where it's at in my memories.

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I started the movie only for Junho, but I was still surprised how normal and hardworking and likeable he was. I really loved his arc.

I'm not much of a Kim Woo Bin fan, and his character was so unlikeable that I mostly ff'ed through most of his scenes.
Kang Hanuel was just a repeat of a few of his other roles.

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Apparently I am actually a 15-year-old boy (which some of you may have already guessed), because I rewatched parts of it over the last few days and laughed as hard as the first time. It reminded me so much of the dipshit guys I knew in high school, except this time I get to laugh AT them instead of awkwardly pretending to laugh with them or finding an excuse to sneak out of the room. Of course, I went to high school in a previous century and in many ways this movie feels older than it is; it helps to have put decades between my current self and the one that had to put up with that kind of behavior. But also I sometimes find dick jokes funny, and make no excuse for that.

Kim Woo-bin's parts were the weakest - on first watch and especially on rewatch - but also provided the crude pleasure of seeing a handsome, rich, spoiled guy who treats girls poorly get a proper smackdown. I didn't mind the fact that the female characters are mere props as much as I might have otherwise, because this one says right up front that it's that kind of movie. And that fight scene just slays me. That song is a touchstone of my youth and allowed me to replay of all the *feels* of that era - and laugh my head off at them.

TL;DR: you might have to be me to love this movie.

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Also -

- I don't find Kim Woo-bin attractive at all - in fact somewhat repulsive - so the idea of him being a ladykiller added to the funny for me, and

- I'd love to hear what @hacja thinks of this movie, partly because his background is similar to mine, but also cannot actually recommend that he watch it.

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I would be happy to oblige, but I don't have time to see this one--I have to catch up on episodes of Behind Your Touch!

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Out of the frying pan, into the fire… I hear the show’s really funny if you just turn off your brain, though. Is that an option?

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I don't think he's attractive in the way that I think other actors are. To me he looks like a model (which he is, obviously) but in a way that looks out of place if he's not on a runway. I wouldn't really describe him as handsome or beautiful, but striking. And I always thinks he looks slightly out of place next to other people.

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Agree that one of the best things about this movie is the cast.

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As far as coming of age movies go, this was sub-par. I grew up with one of the most amazing coming of age film made during my 20s (the actors all were much older but the story hold even now). For those who are curious, it was "Dil Chatata Hai" (Hindi).

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Baby Junho is so cute even beat up Junho (prelude to Just Between Lovers ?) is 😺

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Dramaddictally
Your screenshot selection is top notch as usual. Kudos!
Sorry as a newbie I still don't know how to @ you.

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