

The foul-mouthed Jin-hee (Hong Jin-hee) married rich, but her husband cheats, and she pretends to be ladylike. Jang-mi ( Go Soo-hee) is struggling as a life insurance sales agent. Na-mi hires a private detective to find the members of Sunny. Chun-hwa then tells her she would like to see Sunny reunited one more time before she dies. She learns that Chun-hwa ( Jin Hee-kyung) became a successful businesswoman, but has terminal cancer with two months to live. Throughout the movie, there are flashbacks of the time the two spent together as he becomes Na mi's first love.īack at the present time, Na-mi returns to Chun-hwa's room and confirms it is indeed her high school friend. During this time Na-mi meets Han Joon-ho ( Kim Shi-hoo), a friend of Jang mi's brother. Chun-hwa suggests naming their group they settle on "Sunny," after a night-time radio DJ responds to their letter on air.

Na-mi is accepted into their group as their seventh member after she unexpectedly proves herself against a rival group from a different school when she uses her diabetes as a front for spirit possession. Jung Su-ji ( Min Hyo-rin) is a quiet, mysterious beauty whenever she speaks to Na-mi, it is always with disdain. Ryu Bok-hee ( Kim Bo-mi) has dreams of becoming Miss Korea she carries a small hand mirror and makes faces to herself. Seo Geum-ok ( Nam Bo-ra) is a bright student who wants to become a writer she will hit anyone who messes with her friends. Hwang Jin-hee ( Park Jin-joo), the daughter of a Korean literature professor, swears profusely.

There, Na-mi meets Ha Chun-hwa ( Kang So-ra), who introduces Na-mi to her group of friends: Kim Jang-mi (Kim Min-young) is a portly girl who is obsessed with her looks and desires cosmetic surgery for her eyes. The students make fun of her country accent, and she becomes embarrassed of her shoes and clothing. Many of the girls are wearing American athletic shoe brands. In class, the girls are dusting records and admiring posters of American actors. A teenage Na-mi ( Shim Eun-kyung) is revealed. She asks her chauffeur to take her to the all-girls high school she attended in Seoul. Īfter visiting her mother, Na-mi passes a patient's room with the sign "Ha Chun-hwa," and thinks about her high school life. She looks outside and notices a group of high school girls who are walking and laughing. Na-mi eats breakfast alone every morning while her husband and daughter head to work and school, respectively. When she asks her husband to visit her mother at the hospital, he replies by giving her money to buy luxury bags, and her daughter expresses similar indifference and annoyance. When she washes her face, she sees wrinkles on her skin. While things look perfect on the outside (wonderful home, generous husband, beautiful daughter), she is depressed about her life. Im Na-mi ( Yoo Ho-jeong), a wealthy housewife and mother, does her daily routine. ( March 2012) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message) Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise. This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. Actress Kang So-ra won several awards for her role as the teenage girl Ha Chun-hwa. Kang Hyeong-cheol and Nam Na-yeong won Best Director and Best Editing, respectively, at the Grand Bell Awards. As of 20 September 2012, it is the 13th best-selling film of all-time in South Korea. Released on, Sunny was the first film of that year to sell five million tickets in South Korea, and became the second highest-grossing Korean film by the end of the year. It is the second film by writer-director Kang Hyeong-cheol, who previously directed Scandal Makers (2008). The film alternates between two timelines: the present day where the women are middle-aged, and the 1980s when they were in high school. The film is about a middle-aged woman who tries to fulfill her friend's dying wish of reuniting their group of high school friends. Sunny ( Korean: 써니 RR: Sseoni) is a 2011 South Korean comedy-drama film.
