Asides

Something to watch tonight: Wednesday 9 October

By October 9, 2024No Comments

Sunny (Robbins, 2024)

Rashida Jones in the Apple TV+ series Sunny

Sunny is anoth­er of those Apple TV+ shows that has impec­cable pro­duc­tion val­ues, a deep applic­a­tion of taste in the design and con­struc­tion and an interest in the mis­ap­plic­a­tion of tech­no­logy in our human lives.

I’d love to be a fly on the wall in the com­mis­sion­ing meet­ings for Apple (and Amazon for that matter).

Do we have enough con­tent about the risks of AI, dehu­man­isa­tion at the hands of auto­ma­tion, or gen­er­al futur­ist­ic dysto­pi­as?” “Hold on, let me check my phone.”

In Sunny, Rashida Jones plays Suzie, an American woman who has decamped to Kyoto to teach English. We meet her a few years later when her hus­band and son have been killed in a plane crash and she is wrest­ling with Japanese post-disaster cus­toms with the help of an unsym­path­et­ic mother-in-law (Judy Ongg).

When she gets home, intend­ing to blot the pain out with alco­hol, she finds a gift of a shiny iPod-inspired domest­ic home-help robot who intro­duces her­self as Sunny (voiced by Joanna Sotomura). The gift is from her hus­band Masa (Hidetoshi Nishijima from Drive My Car) and the first ques­tion is, did he pre­pare the gift know­ing that the plane was going to crash? When Sunny tells Suzie that Masa designed her, Suzie is sur­prised – she thought Masa worked on refrigerators.

And so begins a weird and often amus­ing com­bin­a­tion of Japan-noir – Suzie enlists the help of a cocktail-artist played by YouTuber Annie the Clumsy to help her and Sunny invest­ig­ate – along with social satire, futur­o­logy, fish-out-of-water travelogue, yak­uza viol­ence and a mish­mash of so much more.

At ten epis­odes Sunny feels a couple of epis­odes too long but they are mostly 30–40 minutes, not full TV length. One of the epis­odes is entirely from inside the con­scious­ness of Sunny the robot and takes the form of one of those wacky Japanese vari­ety game shows. Another is one of those mid-season flash­backs that explain all the mys­ter­ies we’ve seen earli­er and sets up the path to the con­clu­sion, a struc­ture I feel we can all move on from now.

We liked this because we eat up almost any­thing set in Japan, the char­ac­ters were dif­fer­ent and nicely played, and the plot grew on us to the point where the “one more epis­ode” impulse was triggered.

It did not, how­ever, make us want a shiny white domest­ic robot with express­ive animé eyes.


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Where to watch Sunny

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Worldwide: Streaming on Apple TV+