TWENTY | 스물 (South Korea, 2015)
Directed by: Lee Byeong-heon
Starring: Kim Woo-bin, Lee Jun-ho, Kang Ha-neul

Three friends enter their twenties with sex on the mind, easy access to soju, and absolutely no clue how to navigate college, money, or women… or really anything else in the world. The leader of the group is a slacker from a comfy background (model-turned-actor Kim Woo-bin) who just wants to date as many women as he can; then there’s a wannabe cartoonist from a poor background (Lee Jun-ho from Korean boy band 2PM) and a shy dreamer (actor-singer Kang Ha-neul) who falls for a wealthy older student at the university where he's a freshman. While engaging in a series of amorous pursuits, the trio try to set themselves a goal at what they think is a crucial period in their lives between being a minor and adulthood—and end up blindsided at every turn. Thanks to the fresh and breezy screenplay by Lee Byeong-heon and the leads’ great chemistry, Twenty is not only revolutionary in its transformative effect on Korean youth films, which have traditionally been known for darker subject matter, but also a painfully hilarious and universal reminder about how awkward the transition into adulthood can be.