Home Music splendidly bizarre robotic comedy for Severance followers

splendidly bizarre robotic comedy for Severance followers


Not too many comedies begin off with a lady dropping her husband and son in a horrific airplane crash. However then not many additionally characteristic cute speaking robots, Yakuza assassins and black-market sex-bot manuals. No matter Sunny appears to be like like, it’s not. A present about grief dressed up as an ironic sci-fi thriller, and a zany Kawaī comedy that isn’t afraid of occasional graphic homicide, A24 and Apple TV+’s newest effort feels prefer it was made to fuck together with your algorithm – and it’s one of many oddest highlights of the summer season.

Take it at face worth and Sunny is each sappy pet film that’s ever been made: Rashida Jones is Suzie, an American residing in Kyoto, Japan, who spirals after dropping her household earlier than begrudgingly getting a “home robotic” known as Sunny (voiced by Joanna Sotomura) that ultimately begins cheering her up. Sunny is relentlessly upbeat, and Suzie’s drunken suits of distress begin to get shorter as she retains waking as much as see Sunny smiling away, cleansing up all her empties.

That in all probability would have been sufficient for a half-decent present (Jones nails a humorous/unhappy efficiency right here that may have lifted even the shallowest tackle the identical story), however Sunny has larger plans. Firstly, we’re not too certain whether or not or not Suzie’s husband is even lifeless. A name to his cellphone that doesn’t go to voicemail is the primary trace that Masa (Drive My Automobile’s Hidetoshi Nishijima) won’t be who we thought he was – adopted by a path of different clues that leads Suzie and Sunny right into a plot filled with underground robotic fights, gang murders, company conspiracies and darkish net hackers. There’s a baddie with a removable finger (confusingly known as ‘You’), an annoying and probably lethal mother-in-law (Judy Ongg) and a plucky bartender who appears to be serving to out of sheer boredom (a star-making flip from comic and singer annie the clumsy).

Sunny
‘Sunny’ streams on Apple TV+ from July 10. CREDIT: Apple TV

There’s a contact of latest exhibits like Severance and Maniac to the look and tone of Sunny’s future-set Japanese underworld, however it by no means veers too far into sci-fi to make it simple to label. Sunny’s personal design (and that of the opposite robots that often roll into the background behind all of the mad mystery-solving) feels real, and Sotomura lends the bot sufficient humanity to make you neglect it’s not actual. And, in actual fact, the longer the present goes on, the much less any of the sci-fi stuff even issues – with different strands much more eccentric than a little bit of informal robot-bonding.

Jones, as ever, is the proper lead to assist tie all of the lose threads round one thing grounded and heartfelt, giving the sort of sharp deadpan efficiency the collection must maintain it from coming aside on the seams. Sunny is strictly the type of present that very simply might have turn into a whole mess – throwing every thing on the wall and seeing what sticks, undercutting all of the heavy feelings with goofy robotic jokes and at all times feeling unbalanced in the very best means. Exhibits this bold, bizarre and humorous should be caught with.

‘Sunny’ is streaming on Apple TV+ from July 10



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