Bye June (DVD) (Korea Version) DVD Region All
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Director Choi Ho seems to put out one film every four years. After participating in the cult masterpiece The Night Before The Strike when he was still at Joongang University, he left for Paris to study film, and came back in 1998 with Bye June, an ode to angry youth, much different than what the genre was presenting at the time (such as Kim Sung Soo's Beat and Our Sunny Days). Mixing music video sensibilities with controversial topics, Choi made a distinctive debut with a low budget and nearly unknown actors - Bye June marked the film debuts of both Yoo Ji Tae and Kim Ha Neul, who would later collaborate again in Ditto. Choi came back after four years with the coming-of-age drama Who R U (2002), still dealing with the same problems but with an improved script, better direction, and more experienced cast (headlined by Jo Seung Woo and Lee Na Young). Finally, 2006 brought him to the attention of the masses with the hit noir Bloody Ties, showing once again the immense talent of Ryoo Seung Bum in a super-gritty, Pusan-based critique of the drug underworld, which in some ways reconnected him with what he started with, Bye June.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Bye June (DVD) (Korea Version) Bye June (韓國版) Bye June (韩国版) バイ・ジュン "さらば愛しき人" (韓国版) 바이 준 |
| Artist Name(s): | Yoo Ji Tae | Kim Ha Neul 劉智太 | 金荷娜 刘智太 | 金荷娜 ユ・ジテ | キム・ハヌル 유 지태 | 김 하늘 |
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| Release Date: | 2007-01-22 |
| Language: | Korean |
| Subtitles: | Korean, Japanese, English, Simplified Chinese |
| Country of Origin: | South Korea |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | All Region What is it? |
| Publisher: | Deok Seun Media co. Ltd |
| Package Weight: | 150 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1004614697 |
Product Information
* Sound Mix : Dolby 5.1 & 2.0
* Director : 최호
19살의 준과 채영은 애인 사이이고 그들의 친구 도기는 홀로 채영에 대한 짝사랑을 품고 있다. 그러나 도기는 말할 수 없는 사랑에도 불구하고 지금 이대로가 가장 행복하다고 생각한다. 그러던 어느 날 성인식을 기념할 노래를 작곡한다며 헤어진 준이 까맣게 타죽은 시체로 발견된다. 고등학교 졸업식 날, 학교 뒷산 나무 아래에서 준의 소지품을 태우며 자신들만의 장례식을 치루던 도기와 채영은 키득거리며 올라오는 두 명의 남자아이와 여자아이를 만난다. 준이와 닮은 병찬과 그 아이의 여자친구 리라. 도기와 채영에게는 새 친구들이 생겼다.
2년후, 21살이 된 도기와 채영, 병찬과 리라는 매일같이 어울려 다니며 술과 대마초와 섹스로 시간을 보낸다. 그러나 여전히 준을 잊지 못하는 채영과 도기는 잘 되지 않는다. 어느 날 여느 때처럼 마스터베이션을 해주던 채영은 도기에게 한동안 만나지 말자고 말한다. 떨어져 있는 한 달, 병찬과 함께 헌팅을 나선 도기는 처음 만나는 여자애 유나와 함께 첫 섹스를 경험하고, 채영은 도기에 대한 자신의 생각을 정리해본다. 어느 날 아이들이 가면 항상 쫓아내기만 하던 대마왕으로부터 원하는 만큼 대마초를 준다는 연락이 온다. 대마왕의 일장연설을 꾹 참고 듣던 아이들은 병찬이네 형 집에서 수급된 대마초를 들고 파티를 열기로 한다. 그리고 그날밤 채영과 도기는 처음으로 잠자리를 함께 한다.
일주일만에 죽은 아기 베이비와 죽은 준의 대화가 시작된다. 베이비는 일주일 전의 이야기를 건넨다. 도기와의 첫 섹스 이후 임신한 채영은 산부인과를 찾아가지만 수술이 시작되려는 순간 병실을 나와버린다. 그곳에서 채영은 고등학교 때의 친구 지영을 만난다. 알약을 모으고 있는 지영은 언젠가가 되면 우주에서 혼자 떠돌아다닐 것이라고 말한다. 락바에 모인 도기와 채영, 병찬과 리라. 채영으로부터 병원에 다녀왔다는 말을 들은 도기는 어쩔 줄 몰라하고 채영은 그런 도기에게 실망한다. 한편 채영이 낙태한줄 안 리라는 병찬과 함께 파티를 준비한다. 우유로 욕조를 채워놓은 병찬이네 형 집. 채영과 함께 도착한 도기는 집을 아수라장으로 만들어 놓는다. 목욕탕에 홀로 있는 도기에게 환영처럼 준이 다가온다. 도기는 이제 자신들에게 새로운 삶이 시작될 때가 되었다고 느낀다. 도기와 함께 병원에 간 채영은 낙태수술을 받고 도기는 그런 채영의 손을 잡는다.
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Bye June (DVD) (Korea Version)"
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Bye June I'm going to the moon I hope you make it soon 'Cause I'm waiting on this moon --The Smashing Pumpkins' Bye June Youth is hip, dangerous, and self-destructive. At least that's what writer/director Choi Ho wants you to learn from his directorial debut all the way back in 1998 with Bye June, a dark drama about four reckless youngsters who indulge in drugs, sex, and rock 'n' roll. It also marks the first pairing of Yoo Ji Tae and Kim Ha Neul, both of whom would later become two of Korean cinema's most prolific actors. Despite the presence of these talented actors, Bye June is also a relentlessly unpleasant but impressive piece of art cinema that foreshadows the coming of three very talented individuals. The thing that causes Bye June to drag is its self-importance - the film opens during the high school era for Doo Gi (Yoo Hi Tae), Chae Young (Kim Ha Neul), and their seemingly musical spiritual leader/Chae Young's boyfriend June, who spouts philosophical speeches about techno music. However, on the last day of high school, June dies in a fire, and nothing will be the same again. Two years later, Doo Gi and Chae Young continue to live their lives with no real direction, going on drug-fueled trips and having pseudo-sex (apparently, Chae Young never got to lose her virginity to June, and she hasn't felt like losing it to Doo Gi). Doo Gi is finally with Chae Young, but he knows that she hasn't moved on, and he might simply be a replacement for June. Then they have some more drugs, and some of them have some more sex. But finally, EVERYTHING GOES TO HELL. Needless to say, the strongest element of Bye June isn't the plot. It vaguely follows a three-act structure, but director Choi also tells his story with loads of experimental technique and a hip techno soundtrack (at least it's hip for 1998). It's fused with a lot of American rock and, unfortunately, the usual angst that comes with it (I knew the title was from a Smashing Pumpkins song because a character quotes another one of their songs in one scene). The final product, using both film and blue-tinted video footage, feels at times infused with the energy of a 70s experimental film, but it sometimes also drags when even supporting characters get their chance to say something profound. And Bye June does want to say a lot - youth, life, future, responsibility, destruction, death, and the list goes on and on. But it feels like a crapshoot, as if Choi just threw out all these themes at the wall and waited to see which ones stuck. When it works, Bye June can be undeniably powerful stuff and very effective in provoking a response with its visuals; but when it doesn't, including its vague ending which seems to be teaching an oxymoronic lesson, the film meanders in its "youth is woe" theme in the form of a third act twist from out of left field, as if even Choi had realized the "moving on" lesson was getting thin. Even though both the film's two leads would move on to become high-profile actors, only one of them really delivers an effective performance. In his debut, Yoo Ji Tae is missing the intensity found in his later performances in One Fine Spring Day and Oldboy. He spends much of the film seemingly wandering around, which is convincing since he plays a drug addict looking for some kind of direction. But by the time the climax comes around, his supposed anger and intensity are unconvincing, and ultimately doesn't make much of an impression as the protagonist. On the other hand, Kim Ha Neul brings an interesting dark side to Chae Young; while her high-strung character doesn't get any over-the-top moment to shine, Kim is able to go to places that she will never get near again in her later performances. It may not be a standout performance, but it's safe to say that you will never see Kim go anywhere close to a character like Chae Young again, and it's a performance worth treasuring. The biggest star of the film, however, is really director Choi Ho (although not Choi Ho the screenwriter). Educated in Europe, Choi gets to flex his directorial muscle everywhere in the film, whether it's setting up a wide shot of a wrecked department, or using blue-tinted video to represent an alcohol-fueled rush, or even employing the obvious technique of the fisheye lenses for a wild party. Despite all of its unpleasantness, the inconsistent pace, and the self-indulgent post-film school stylish interludes, it's a promising debut for Choi, who would finally find his big hit with 2006's Bloody Ties. It may not be an entirely successful film (post-film school debut films rarely are), but it's an interesting discovery from the Korean film time capsule, and an example of a solid Asian art film. by Kevin Ma |
Editor's Pick of "Bye June (DVD) (Korea Version)"
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October 28, 2007
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Choi Ho's 1998 debut feature is an edgy post-film school experimental exercise in self-conscious filmmaking. There's sex, there's drugs, there's death, there's violence, and there's oh-so-much anger and angst. Most importantly, there's Yoo Ji Tae and Kim Ha Neul in before-they-were-stars mode.
Two years before Ditto, Yoo Ji Tae and Kim Ha Neul starred together in Bye June as aimless youth who can't get over the passing of their high school pal June. Their relationship is complicated, as Kim's chirpy, confused Chae Young continues to live in suddenly departed boyfriend June's shadow, while Yoo's sullen Do Ki hopes to move on but can't let go of Chae Young. After June's death, they lose their lives to rebellious inertia, living out pathetically laggard existences revolving around sex, drugs, cruising, and giggling. They hook up, they don't hook up. They love each other, they hurt each other, but mostly they don't do anything. Both Yoo Ji Tae and Kim Ha Neul would rise to stardom soon after Bye June. Yoo had an eye-catching turn in Attack the Gas Station the following year, and Kim starred in the television dramas Happy Together and Into the Sunlight. In 1998 though they were still new faces and acting novices, and it's interesting to see how they started out. Yoo Ji Tae is really one of the few Chungmuro leading men of his age group who is an actor before a star (I don't think he'll be holding a fan meeting in Japan next week), and here, he's clearly a work-in-progress. Slim, lanky, and oddly BFG-like, Yoo Ji Tae is rather impenetrable: the squinty-eyed pensiveness is there, but the inner life isn't yet. Kim Ha Neul, meanwhile, seems to have started with breakthrough and settled with safety. Her straightforward charm and cuteness is applied to a role that one can't imagine her taking now given the cookie cutter image. Bye June certainly wears on the patience at points, what with the busy camera, dim lighting, techno beats, alienating story, frustrating characters, and raw acting. And yet, that is exactly the film's draw. This dark and depressive depiction of directionless youth angst screams hope and promise, not for the film's characters but for the film's staff. From the experimental direction to the gritty aesthetics to the non-story, this is a promising, completely uncommercial, low-budget indie that was made with heart. The film industry needs films like Bye June - bold, interesting, and respectable stepping stones, flawed works that pave the way for bigger and better things. After all, Choi Ho would go on to make more accomplished films, Yoo Ji Tae and Kim Ha Neul would go on to become big stars. And this is where they began. |
Customer Review of "Bye June (DVD) (Korea Version)"
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February 6, 2007
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When I first saw this retro DVD release was available I jumped at obtaining it due to it being another film that featured Ji Yae Yoo and Ha Neul Kim together, as their highly popular film "Ditto" is quite a favorite of mine (as are the actors). But as to be expected by its brief synopsis, this movie is so far removed from the genteel nature of "Ditto" as to be its polar opposite. If "Ditto" could be thought of as a sweet blossom tree in a misty field, "Bye June" in contrast, would be a craggy old tree with a night sky and lightening flashing in the background. Okay, thats only regarding the connection of the two main actors and these two films are completely different, but expect "Bye June" to be a very gritty affair concerning society ills amidst a very confusing and sometimes frighting backdrop of the world we live in - especially to young vulnerable teens depicted in this. Its a dark mix of a movie concerning a group of dispossessed young adults who fall into drug addiction, sexuality and self abuse as their only means, due to the difficulty of their angst filled lives after leaving high school, intensified by the death of one of their number, a charismatic musician named June. With its hyper 'out there' visual style (pop video/Velvet Underground type chic), I felt that I had entered a Pink Floyd album cover at times, watching this retro (or nitro!) Korean movie and this is a predominate style of the film throughout. It also portrays adolescent trials of abortion and sexual matters that are limiting to mention here, but are at times quite disturbing. There is a romance with Ha Neul's and Ji Tae's characters, fractured concerning each of their own personal fragility they harbor due to the Kurt Cobain type death of the guru character June. Yet through all of this film's dark quagmire of anti-social idioms and the self destructive nature of the main characters, it does have a light at the end of its tunnel - that the possibility that something good other than life's banal trials (or perpetual pretensions?), can be experienced if only by overcoming the blind and dazed realities these characters destructively peruse. But, whether these characters found that, I'm not sure. Verdict : Very dark movie. Spaced out visuals. Not for the usual Ha Neul Kim fan. Similar to Korean films like "Bad Movie" and "Tears". Although, interesting to see a (very) young looking Ji Tae Yoo and Ha Neul Kim. |






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