Plot
They were half-brothers, all the same age, and they did not care that they were each born from different mothers. One of the brothers, "963,"is a courier, and has a sentimental, somewhat gloomy, personality. The second brother, Gae-ko, is a bit rebellious, but on the inside he is probably the brother that cares about their father the most. He understands the solitude that comes at their father's age. Women would come to their father to ask him for children, and he obliged in all cases. He fathered so many children, in fact, that he actually made a name for himself. But that's all in the past now. The family's third brother joined the family later on. It's probably not correct to number him the "third" brother but, as he joined last, he is numbered as such. "Whatchuma-call-it" is his name. He is a good-for-nothing guy, and chanced upon his father and brothers when he was running a racket in Hwanghak-dong. A new member joins this lively family: a girl. Thinking that his father looked lonesome, Gae-ko picked the girl, Sun-i, up off the street. She has extraordinary skill in attracting men's interest: when a man looks at her, he cannot escape. All the men in the household are bewitched by her schoolgirl-like charms. Their father, unable to perform sexually, sleeps in the same bed with Sun-i, merely holding her hand. The oldest son writes inappropriate things about Sun-i in his diary. The second son, seeing that things aren't going his way, gives up on having Sun-i, altho