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Seumool

  • 2015
  • R
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Seumool (2015)
ComedyDramaRomance

A story about three friends, Chiho, Dongwoo, and Gyungjae. Each of them has just turned 20 years old and they must decide what to do with their life.A story about three friends, Chiho, Dongwoo, and Gyungjae. Each of them has just turned 20 years old and they must decide what to do with their life.A story about three friends, Chiho, Dongwoo, and Gyungjae. Each of them has just turned 20 years old and they must decide what to do with their life.

  • Director
    • Lee Byeong-heon
  • Writer
    • Lee Byeong-heon
  • Stars
    • Kim Woo-bin
    • Lee Jun-ho
    • Kang Ha-neul
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lee Byeong-heon
    • Writer
      • Lee Byeong-heon
    • Stars
      • Kim Woo-bin
      • Lee Jun-ho
      • Kang Ha-neul
    • 10User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 8 nominations total

    Photos7

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    Top cast15

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    Kim Woo-bin
    Kim Woo-bin
    • Chi-ho
    Lee Jun-ho
    Lee Jun-ho
    • Dong-woo
    Kang Ha-neul
    Kang Ha-neul
    • Kyung-je
    Jung So-min
    Jung So-min
    • So-min
    Lee Yoo-bi
    Lee Yoo-bi
    • So-hee
    Choi Cham-sarang
    • Sa-rang
    Kim Chan-hyung
    • Head
    Kim Eui-sung
    Kim Eui-sung
    • Chi-ho's father
    So Hee-jung
    So Hee-jung
    • Gyung-jae's mother
    Yang Hyun-min
    Yang Hyun-min
    • So-joong
    Na In-woo
    Na In-woo
    • Dong Won
    Jeon Ji-ae
    Lee Joo-han
    • Art academy teacher
    Jung Joo-yeon
    Jung Joo-yeon
    • Eun-hye
    Kim Sung-gang
    • Seafood restaurant chef
    • Director
      • Lee Byeong-heon
    • Writer
      • Lee Byeong-heon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    6.82.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8phd_travel

    Makes good use of each of the stars

    This is a funny clever movie about 3 friends of age twenty learning about life and love. Each faces different problems with their relationships. The humor is sharp and witty. Kim Woo Bin is good as the playboy. Junho is good as the one facing family financial problems. Kang Ha Neul is the college guy who falls for the wrong woman. Some may be put off by the explicit sexual references now and then but it's a refreshing change from the too PG dramas. After all movies are where they can let loose,

    Look forward to more from this director / writer.
    MovieIQTest

    Pretentious, exaggerating, shallow and moronic

    one of the worst Korean films so far reviewed in 2015. shallow and stupid screenplay that formulaicly depicted three cool-wannabe Koreans young men who proved the ultimate failure under the Korean education system. what we got here are three imbecile-like young men who got no heart, no conscience and no shame for what they did to other people. they are so pretentious, so childishly stupid keep doing immature things that they thought to be cool, yet at the same time only showed their shallowness and heartless cruelty. you could never imagine that young men who already reached twenty would be still so shallow and so stupid. the main actor who played the alpha male moron is one of the worst young actors who never know how to act normally, only by pretentiousness and exaggeration constantly.

    the Korean young guys' hairdos are the most incomprehensible myth to me. their hairdo with the front covering almost all the area of their foreheads and thinking that's cool and would make them look more attractive to girls is one more proof how they are so shallow. are all the Korean young guys got scars on their foreheads where the only way to cover those scars is combing down their hairs to cover up their foreheads?

    the leading young actor is the worst possible candidate who choose acting being his career, yet almost in all of his films so far, all he did was acted with pretentiousness and exaggeration, not a natural actor with enough acting talent.

    the shallow screenplay almost got me sick during the ongoing of this film. what we got was no fun but disgust to the extreme. by reaching twenty years of age yet still decided refusing to become more mature, taking more responsibilities to themselves and treating other people with basic respect only sealing themselves as certified lifetime losers.

    the first step not to fall into this category is to comb up their hairs, allowing their foreheads facing their future clearly.

    to all the Asian young men trying so hard to imitate these Korean's hairdos/hairstyles: don't do it, cos it only makes you look like morons.
    8melhans-65125

    Dumb, Dumber and Dumb Again (in a great way).

    Three male high school friends graduate and spin their wheels trying to figure out how "to adult" and have sex with girls in this light comedy. Reminds me of Dazed & Confused. The guys are immature idiots, guided by poor impulse control and hormones and go through some things to grow up a little bit. There are some VERY funny scenes, one set to the 1970's Harry Nilsson hit: "I Can't Live Without You" that left me weeping with laughter.

    Cultural differences aside, the humor is easily appreciated here in America for universal reasons: aimless young men failing to launch and living at home to the frustration of parents, ex-girlfriends of one finding a sincere partner in another which causes hissy fits of impotent jealousy, over-drinking, over-sharing, nosy, snarky younger siblings, and zero ability to brawl.

    Short. Lots of fun. Good cast, including Lee jun Ho. HIghly recommend.
    8missraze

    Very entertaining coming of age comedy!

    OK I love everything about the film, entertainment wise. If you know the three main actors, you'll know this film was really just meant to compliment their careers, that's all. Kim Woo-Bin who played superficial Cha Chi Ho started off as a model in real life, and is a Korean primetime TV heartthrob; he stars in one of the most popular and beloved high-school romance series, like a live action manga series kind of show. So his appearance and role here is rather complimentary. Lee Jun Hoo and Lee Yu Bi are singers, and Kang Ha-nuel has starred in popular teen K-horror. Jung So-Min is also rather popular as I believe she also stars on Korean primetime TV.

    This film is not meant to be Shakespearean to the loser guy above who couldn't even spell "formulaic." I didn't just see this film; it's been about a year since my first time, but I signed in just to say the racist moron who posted the review here is so busy being bitter and jealous-hearted, scrutinising their (sexy) appearances, that he forgot this is a film review section. Not America's Next Top Model. Which Kim Woo-Bin could DEFINITELY win.

    For what the film was trying to do, it achieved and then some, which was to entertain its clear target audience (to lure women of all ages to the eye candy, and to find males who could relate). Ask any Korean or look at any video host site, this is such a popular film. There are many films that are MEANT to be popular and to achieve what "20" did, but did not at all, needless to name.

    The only thing the other reviewer here got right who gave it 1 star was understanding their roles. Yes, they are immature, they're 20, and the film started off when they were portraying teenagers...horny, insecure teenagers. And they progressed into adulthood also as being horny and insecure but most people do that; no one immediately gets it right out of high school. I related to this film tremendously and I'm not male nor Korean! And I know many Koreans loved it. I just think the guy in these reviews was jealous of how successful the film is...It doesn't even need film reviews written here because the fans revel everywhere else.

    Dong-woo is poor, struggling through college, single mom, no love life because women are interested but he pushes them away, knowing he's got nothing to offer. Sad, huh?

    Kyung-jae is the narrator, fairly normal guy but in the middle class. He is the balance between his two best friends, the needed voice of reason.

    Cha Chi-ho is a spoiled party boy in a family of rich business and this was no accident in the film so why is the guy writing in this section angry...? He was supposed to be a moron, everyone in the film called him that so calling the film moronic is futile! But his role was meant to be a light-hearted comic relief since Korean films have a rule that every film needs at least one sad, tragic moment. They mocked those sad moments constantly through the film though such downfalls were added in throughout. I feel his sating and comedic scenes carried the movie though the other actors/actresses and scenes were still featuring popular talent and satisfying moments.

    Their characters and looks are rather quintessential to Korean films, (which the other poor viewer must be new to), and especially films meant to be popular among teens and young adults, and it was.

    The main thing I didn't like was the girl Kyung-jae liked, those parts were kind of boring to be honest but not necessarily poorly done; I just wanted to get to sexy Kim Woo-bin's parts.

    The main thing I loved was the ending scene, the last 10 minutes, it was funny and beautiful. Mainly because the rest of the film delicately added up to that final climactic moment and the epilogue which was sweet.

    They also didn't exactly mature, because that would be miraculous. What they did though was gain optimism, with each other and new relationships and career pursuits, though still with bumps in the road, but that's OK, because they have a stronger friendship/brotherhood, and a better outlook on life! How can you not love that?
    8aminifatimaaa

    fresh, invigorating coming-of-age drama that's small on scale but big in its heart and charm.

    Even though I found most of the film funny and heartwarming, I must confess to finding some of the humor quite dated and cliched as well. Much of the joy of the film does come from the charismatic leading men, and this is a nice addition to their filmographies. Twenty is overall a decent addition to the coming-of-age genre and features aspects where other films can learn from: exploring the realistic aspects of pursuing careers, pursuing one's dreams and how these may not intersect.

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    Storyline

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 25, 2015 (South Korea)
    • Country of origin
      • South Korea
    • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Language
      • Korean
    • Also known as
      • Twenty
    • Filming locations
      • Seoul, South Korea
    • Production companies
      • IHQ
      • M Tree Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $136,125
    • Gross worldwide
      • $22,271,862
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 55m(115 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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