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Hwang Jin Yi (2007) (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3

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Hwang Jin Yi (2007) (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
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Customer Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8.3 out of 10 (3)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Based on the novel by North Korean writer Hong Suk Joong, Hwang Jin Yi tells the story of a 16th-century geisha with the mindset of a modern 21st-century woman. Raised as an aristocrat in an era when class status dictated one's destiny, Jin Yi (Song Hye Kyo) discovers a shocking secret about her birth: she was born in the lower class. After much thought, she gives up her aristocratic status and becomes a geisha. She spends her first night with a man named Nom Yi (Yoo Ji Tae, Old Boy), and gradually falls for him. Though she is constantly surrounded by an entourage of aristocratic men showering her with gifts and admiration, Jin Yi lives a solitary life of tragic isolation. She finds herself traveling a bumpy road, faced with a dilemma that will alter her destiny forever.

There have been various screen interpretations of Hwang Jin Yi's life, including Bae Chang Ho's 1986 film and the 2006 KBS drama starring Ha Ji Won, but this version by Jang Yoon Hyun (The Contact) strikes a more sobering tone - focusing more on the character's internal struggles. There is no arguing that Song Hye Kyo is loved by many fans around the world, and she takes a huge leap in her career to play a femme fatale that departs greatly from her previous image. Having clearly come into her own as an actress, she successfully captures the character in her inimitable style. Beyond Song Hye Kyo's impeccable beauty, the film is accentuated by a variety of beautiful Joseon era costumes and the picturesque surroundings of the Geumgang Mountains, situated in North Korea.

This edition comes with six postcards and the following extra features:

  • Commentary with Director Jang Yoon Hyun, Song Hye Kyo, and Yoo Ji Tae
  • Making Of
  • Deleted Scenes
  • Production Design: A Fortress
  • Costumes: Color, Style
  • Alternative Color
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • © 2007-2008 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

    Technical Information

    Product Title: Hwang Jin Yi (2007) (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version) 黃真伊 (2007) (DVD) (限量版) (韓國版) 黄真伊 (2007) (DVD) (限量版) (韩国版) 黄真伊 (ファン・ジニ) (2007年版) (限定版) (韓国版) 황진이 (2007) (한정판)
    Artist Name(s): Song Hye Kyo | Yoo Ji Tae | Jang Yoon Hyun 宋 慧喬 | 劉智太 | Jang Yoon Hyun 宋 慧乔 | 刘智太 | Jang Yoon Hyun ソン・ヘギョ | ユ・ジテ | チャン・ユンヒョン 송 혜교 | 유 지태 | 장윤현
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    Region Code: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
    Release Date: 2007-09-21
    Language: Korean
    Subtitles: Korean, English
    Country of Origin: South Korea
    Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
    Disc Format(s): DVD
    Publisher: CJ Entertainment
    Other Information: 2 DVDs
    Package Weight: 200 (g)
    Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
    YesAsia Catalog No.: 1005031763

    Product Information

    * Screen Format : Anamorphic Widescreen
    * Sound Mix : Dolby 5.1
    * Extras :
    - Commentary with 장윤현 감독, 송혜교, 유지태, 류승룡
    - 명월, 진이 (메이킹 필름)
    - 삭제장면
    - 어느 개성 (開城) (프로덕션 디자인)
    - 색(色), 감(感) (의상)
    - 또 다른 색(色) (DI)
    - 예고편

    * Director : 장윤현

    * 구성 : 아웃케이스 + 주연배우 엽서 6장

    원작 : 분단의 벽을 넘다 - 북한 작가 홍석중 원작, 북한작품 최초로 만해 문학상 수상
    기록 : 모두가 불가능하다고 말한 숫자들 - 총 제작기간 4년, 촬영기간 7개월, 총 제작비 71억원
    미술 : 차갑게, 모던하게 보여지고 뜨겁게, 강렬하게 느껴진다
    스펙터클 : 복원은 기본, 스타일은 의무, 스펙터클은 극한까지

    -양반의 영혼
    16세기, 유일하게 인간대접을 받는 양반이 되기 위해 사람들은 돈과 거짓을 서슴치 않았다. 그러나 진이(송혜교)는 출생의 비밀을 듣는 순간 기꺼이 규방의 옷을 벗고 모두가 멸시하는 천민의 길을 선택한다. 노비 ‘놈이’(유지태)를 첫 남자로 삼은 다음 날, 기생들의 거리 ‘청교방’에 들어간다.

    - 천민의 육체
    밤마다 홍등을 걸고 남자들의 노리개가 되어야 하는 기생 명월이 된 진이. 옷감 세 필이면 모두 그녀를 안을 수 있었지만 그 재능과 위엄에 오히려 정복되고 만다. 양반부터 천민까지 모두의 동경의 대상이 된 기생 명월. 사농공상의 신분구별이 목숨처럼 중하게 여겨지던 시대였지만 그녀의 치마폭 앞에서는 한 인간으로서 평등했다. 그러나 이제 그녀는 신분을 버렸던 것보다 더 위험한 선택을 하게 되는데...
    Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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    Professional Review of "Hwang Jin Yi (2007) (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)"

    October 5, 2007

    For his 1986 film about legendary Korean woman Hwang Jin-Yi, director Bae Chang-Ho avoided the usual biopic trappings by employing frustrating, alienating long takes and subtlety (read: slow silence). The latest big-budget retelling of Hwang Jin-Yi from director Jang Yoon-Hyun (The Contact, Tell Me Something) also tries to avoid the same trappings, but he uses action and star-crossed lovers instead of self-indulgent artistic devices to do so. In other words, it's Hwang Jin-Yi for summer at the multiplex. Still, despite its dubious intentions, this latest version is actually mildly successful for what it is.

    For those not in the know, Hwang Jin-Yi was a legendary figure who lived in 1500s Korea. Hwang was forced to become a kiseang - a singing and dancing entertainer much like the Japanese geisha - after she found out that her biological mother was a kiseang. Due to the lack of historical records, filmmakers, television producers and writers have been able to take artistic license with her story over the years. The film and its source material, an award-winning 2002 North Korean novel, are no different. Starring popular Korean drama star Song Hye-Kyo, this version of Hwang Jin-Yi adds a love interest in the form of Nom-Yi (Yoo Ji-Tae from Oldboy), a childhood friend and protector who Jin-Yi has been in love with all her life. After an extended exile, Nom-Yi returns to the Hwang household to help put it back into order. However, Jin-Yi cannot fall in love with Nom-Yi not only because he's born of a different social class, but also because she is set to marry into another rich family.

    Nom-Yi, on the other hand, finds a dirty little secret of his own: Jin-Yi is actually the offspring of a maid who was raped and impregnated. Everyone in town eventually finds out about Jin-Yi's past when the marriage is canceled, forcing her to choose exile to save the family honor and become a kiseang like her biological mother. Nom-Yi, racked with guilt for exposing Jin-Yi's secret, initially agrees to be her protector, but vanishes because of torturous jealousy. Thanks to efficient storytelling, the film also skips five years, wherein Jin-Yi becomes one of the most popular kiseangs in Song Do, attracting the attention of the new magistrate.

    That's when the film begins to go off the rails. Nom-Yi and his merry men have become local Robin Hoods, stealing from the government in order to help the people. By the third act, Hwang Jin-Yi is strangely no longer about Hwang Jin-Yi. Instead, it turns into a period drama about the conflict between Nom-Yi and the jealous new magistrate, with Jin-Yi as someone who happens to get caught in the middle. However, that's also when the film's pace picks up from its sluggish middle section, which is highlighted by random excursions, including the seduction of a well-known scholar (an episode from the history books) and a wise man who lives in the woods and isn't named Yoda. On the other hand, the middle section also appropriately focuses on its titular character and her various exploits as a kiseang, effectively making the fictional additions a double-edged sword.

    While the scene of Nom-Yi literally breaking someone's testicles by hand is nearly worth the price of admission, his existence undermines what is supposed to be Hwang's life story, reducing the film to a melodramatic tragedy of unrequited love. People who enter the theater looking for an empowering “chick flick” about woman who defied the odds to become the most famous kiseang in Korean history will see only half the story. Instead, you're more likely to find an entertaining epic for the masses with action and enough melodrama to fill a night of Korean television.

    In its current form, the film only amounts to a contrived blend of well-known episodes from Jin-Yi's life (some events are depicted in both the 1986 and the 2007 films) and fictitious subplots that deviate too far from its source material. Jin-Yi is supposed to be a famous kiseang, but the film mostly shows her refusing to do what she does best. When making a movie about Korea's most famous kiseang, you should at least show its protagonist doing what made her famous in the first place. If director Jang had wanted to tell the story of a tough woman in a period where women are not known to be tough, plus add in some ass-kicking along the way, then he didn't need to use Hwang Jin-Yi to do it.

    Then again, Jang never insisted that his film intended to be historically accurate in the first place. Instead, the 2007 Hwang Jin-Yi should be seen as just a handsomely produced variation of a legend rather than a faithful retelling of history. It's an aspiring big-budget blockbuster that is nothing like Jang's previous works, which may be both good and bad. While Jang should get credit for trying to inject some excitement into a classic story, is it that difficult to have a movie about Hwang Jin-Yi that actually tells a straightforward story about Hwang Jin-Yi?

    By Kevin Ma

    This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

    Customer Review of "Hwang Jin Yi (2007) (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)"

    Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8.3 out of 10 (3)

    Rhoda
    See all my reviews


    October 22, 2007

    VERY NICE Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9 out of 10
    Never expect much from this film but to my delight, a real good one. Song Hye Kyo acted well as Hwanggini.

    Although the ending is tragic, maybe the true to life is like this... it was well delivered. Worth watching.
    Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
    isabella
    See all my reviews


    October 19, 2007

    almost perfect Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9 out of 10
    I'm an avid Song Hye Kyo fan and I've been waiting for this movie from the time SHK took the role. Since I already knew the basics of the plot before I saw the movie, I was able to follow the story with no problem at all. I guess the main flaw of the movie is that Hwang Jini's life was too colorful to be limited to 2+ hours. By cutting out the other aspects of her persona the storyline appeared choppy. But overall, it is a great movie. The actors gave superb performances (although SHK didn't sing & dance like what some people wanted to see, her mature performance blew me away! You could really feel her anguish just by looking at her eyes. And Yoo Ji Tae was awesome too!) The cinematography was breath-taking and the costumes were simply divine.

    As always, shipping was very speedy and I love the bonus postcards that came with my copy. It's a region 3 though, so I had to play it in my Mac. But if you have a region-free player then you should be alright.
    Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
    MovieCollector
    See all my reviews


    September 30, 2007

    Song Hye-Kyo is worth watching Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7 out of 10
    I thought the movie was average as I had higher expectation when the movie was released in the theater. Being a non-Korean, I had some tough moment following the story with reading the subtitle. I felt the story was on the slow pace side. Song Hye-Kyo kept me awake throughout the movie as she looked more beautiful than ever. I would have given this movie a higher rating if the story was less confusing. In the end, I was able to piece things together to draw a conclusion of the movie.
    Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
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