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I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK (Single Disc Edition) (Taiwan Version) DVD Region 3

Rain (Jung Ji Hoon) (Actor) | Lim Soo Jung (Actor) | Park Chan Wook (Director)
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I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK (Single Disc Edition) (Taiwan Version)
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All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 5 - 5.7 out of 10 (18)

YesAsia Editorial Description

With his masterful, multi-award-winning vengeance trilogy, Park Chan Wook won accolades at home and abroad, and became the object of cult for many film fans, from the grindhouse aficionado to the arthouse purist. Following the anger and violence of Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, Sympathy for Lady Vengeance, and Old Boy, however, Park was ready for something new - a romantic comedy, albeit one like no other. For his whimsically titled I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK, the director enlisted versatile actress Lim Soo Jung (Lump Sugar, Tale of Two Sisters) and film newcomer Jung Ji Hoon, better known to fans across Asia as Rain, as his mentally ill romantic leads. A cyborg romantic comedy starring Rain? If anyone can pull it off, it's Park Chan Wook.

After attempting suicide, Young Goon (Lim Soo Jung) ends up in an asylum outfitted with retro accessories, concerned doctors, and plenty of quirky patients. Young Goon's problem? She thinks she's a cyborg. Her bigger problem? A cyborg can't eat human food. Refusing to eat, she spends all her rapidly depleting energy communicating with her machine friends (like the coffee vending machine), plotting against the doctors, and trying to recharge herself with batteries. The cute and quirky Young Goon immediately attracts the attention of asylum mate Il Soon (Jung Ji Hoon), a young man with a knack for stealing. He can steal anything, even Thursday, and his specialty is stealing other people's skills. Recognizing that Young Goon is in trouble, the love-struck Il Soon tries his hardest to help her eat again, bringing both of them onto a path of romance and healing.

Perhaps the most irreverent of all Park Chan Wook films, I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK is a delight for the eyes, and much more than a simple romantic comedy. It features the usual stylish innuendo and eye-grabbing visuals of Park's past works, but with a markedly different, more light-hearted sense of humor. The film is whimsically surreal and often laugh-out-loud funny. Although the talent of Lim Soo Jung is certainly not a surprise, it's Rain who raises eyebrows with this role. One of Asia's biggest pop stars, Rain has also found success and popularity as a television actor with dramas like Sang Doo, Let's Go to School and Full House, but the verdict on his acting skills was still open. If anything, I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK proves that with the right guidance Rain can truly become a fine actor, and that Park Chan Wook still has many more surprises under his belt.

© 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: I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK (Single Disc Edition) (Taiwan Version) 賽柏格之戀 又名: 再造人之戀 (DVD) (單碟精裝版) (台灣版) 赛柏格之恋 又名: 再造人之恋 (DVD) (单碟精装版) (台湾版) I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK (Single Disc Edition) (Taiwan Version) I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK (Single Disc Edition) (Taiwan Version)
Artist Name(s): Rain (Jung Ji Hoon) (Actor) | Lim Soo Jung (Actor) Rain (鄭智薰) (Actor) | 林秀晶 (Actor) Rain (郑智薰) (Actor) | 林秀晶 (Actor) Rain (ピ)  (Actor) | イム・スジョン (Actor) (Actor) | 임 수정 (Actor)
Director: Park Chan Wook 朴 贊郁 朴赞郁 パク・チャヌク 박찬욱
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Release Date: 2008-06-13
Language: Korean
Subtitles: Korean, English, Simplified Chinese
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 1.78 : 1
Sound Information: Dolby Digital
Disc Format(s): DVD-9, DVD
Region Code: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
Duration: 107 (mins)
Publisher: Alpha Music
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1011083520

Product Information

* Screen Format: 16:9
* Sound Mix: DTS, Dolby Digital
* DVD Type: DVD-9

導演︰朴贊郁
Director: Park Chan Wook

第57屆柏林影展Alfred Bauer特別獎
第44屆韓國大鐘賞「海外人氣男演員獎」
2007年香港國際電影節開幕電影
亞洲人氣天王Rain鄭智薰第1部電影作品

噓~ 不要告訴別人,她是個機器人!
一名患有妄想症的少女詠君(林秀晶飾演)因為幻想自己是機器人而被送到精神療養院治療。在療養院裡有著各種奇怪的患者,其中有一個自認為能竊取他人能力和思想的少年病患,奕順(Rain飾演),特別對詠君有著莫名的好奇。奕順常默默地觀察詠君。他發現,詠君認為自己是個機器人,而機器人是不需要食物的,所以她拒絕進食。

機器少女 v.s. 超能力怪盜少年
漸漸地,奕順對詠君的好奇轉變成一種保護的欲望。他逐步走近她,想了解她的內心世界。兩個行為古怪、思想偏執的人,卻又如此相似。當詠君因拒絕進食而越來越瘦,奕順費盡一切所能要讓她吃東西。他不但偷取美麗的聲音為心情低落的她歌唱,甚至還要偷走詠君的同情心,以免她太過傷感。

戀愛充電中!
日久生情法則也適用於機器人?感受到奕順的關懷,詠君也開始對奕順產生好感。更因為奕順承諾成為她的「機器人終生保證書」,兩人逐漸墜入愛河。愛情成了詠君生活的動力。日復一日,詠君仍持續地節食,奕順則持續嘗試以不同的方法幫助她。而這段奇異的戀情,就這麼繼續充電中……

'Young-goon' (IM Soo-jung) enters a mod psychiatric hospital rich with extravagant imagination and fantasies. She scolds the fluorescent lights and worries about the vending machine as she thinks she is a cyborg. 'Il-soon' (JUNG Ji-hoon), a man who believes he can steal other people's traits, keeps a close eye on Yong-goon, the new patient. Both of them are uniquely eccentric, but to each other, the counterpart looks all the more special. Il-soon sets all his abilities into motion to help Young-goon eat, since she becomes thinner and thinner from her diet of batteries. He steals 'the sleep flying method' to help Young-goon move freely about. And he steals the ability to yodel to sing to Young-goon when she feels low. But more specially, he steals Young-goon's sense of 'sympathy' and feels her sadness for her.
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Professional Review of "I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK (Single Disc Edition) (Taiwan Version)"

May 8, 2007

This professional review refers to I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
Tired of the revenge grind? Would you like to see director Park Chan-Wook lighten up? If so, here's your antidote: I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK. Park goes for a change-up with his latest flick, which eschews the overtly dark, intense themes of his vaunted Vengeance Trilogy for something seemingly more warm and fuzzy. Megahot singer-dancer Rain headlines the film, but the real star is Lim Su-Jeong (Lump of Sugar). Lim plays Young-Goon, an odd young lass whose quirks are so extreme that she's been committed to an institution. You see, Young-Goon thinks she's a cyborg, so she talks to the soda machine, fantasizes about using her cybernetic enhancements to slaughter the doctors, and generally eschews normal human activities like, say, eating. Life can be simple when you design your own reality.

Young-Goon isn't the only one lacking a few spark plugs; her fellow asylum residents are also stuck in their own realities. The place is crowded with an amusing menagerie of unbalanced misfits, many of whom get generous screentime to demonstrate their mental maladies. Chief among them is Il-sun (Rain), a young man who supposedly possesses the power to steal another person's soul. Even though it makes absolutely no realistic sense for Il-Sun's "soul theft" to work, he's able to practice it on his fellow patients, stealing a variety of their attributes, including their ping pong abilities, their overdone humility, and more. Young-Goon takes an interest in Il-Sun because she wants him to steal her lingering humanity, so that she'll be able to execute the doctors via her imaginary bullet-shooting fingers. Il-Sun returns Young-Goon's interest for more real-world reasons. Not only does Il-Sun start to show romantic interest in Young-Goon, but Young-Goon's self-proclaimed cyborg status starts to become self-destructive. Can Il-Sun help her before her cyborg fantasies end in her own death?

I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK is a rather obtuse experience, especially in the early going. The film begins like an absurd, Tim Burton-esque fantasy, with the patients and their individual problems given affectionate, entertaining focus. We're introduced to them as people and not as head cases, and their madness seems like something to celebrate and enjoy, in a "haha, these delusional people are funny" sort of way. It's all rather amusing and enjoyable, but after we receive introduction upon introduction to the asylum's patients, the parade of disturbed, but still quite loveable headcases starts to get tiring. There's only so much a person can take of the absurd characters and their situations; before long, the film seems to lose direction. We get that the patients are loveable and messed up, but we don't get that the film necessarily has a point. Sure, Lim Su-Jeong is cute and Rain is charming, but can that carry a whole film? We say no.

However, the film rights itself during the second half once Young-goon's eating issues take greater importance. Young-goon refuses to eat any real food because in her mind, she's a cyborg and only requires a good recharge to get back her mojo. In reality, she's on her way to starvation, and the concern that Il-Sun shows - and his method for getting her to start eating again - is creative and even touching. The film takes some time to get going, but once Park's main characters begin to connect, the film becomes much more affecting. For the most part, Park shows a remarkable handle on his material, managing not to overdo the quirky or slop on the sentimentality. There's still plenty of sentiment and quirkiness in the film, but Park makes it palatable by getting us to care. He shows obvious affection for his characters, and easily conveys that to the audience. The actors help too; Lim Su-Jeong and Rain turn in engaging performances, managing to create real sympathy for their sometimes cloying, overly cute characters.

Despite its abundant comedy and the cuteness, the film possesses dark and even disturbing portions, too. The audience receives many flashbacks where we witness the circumstances that drive the characters to get committed - or sometimes even voluntarily check in - to the hospital. The scenes possess an emotional rawness that make them compelling, and are tough to watch because they portray the emotional suffering of people we've come to care about. Hereditary madness, shock therapy, suicide attempts, vomiting - these things are not warm and fuzzy, and Park doesn't exactly put a happy face on all of it. I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK looks like it'll be a light, romantic comedy, and the warm, sometimes inviting production design and absurd, deadpan comic tone bear that out. But there's stuff underneath the surface that does stick to your guts - that is, when the burgeoning romance between Rain and Lim Su-Jeong isn't making your heart skip a beat. Thanks to the above, plus some clunky existential themes AND some graphic fantasy sequences where Young-Goon shoots up the hospital, we can officially declare this to be true: I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK is a movie that has something for everyone.

What it may not have, however, is a completely convincing mixture of elements. The film is sometimes unfocused and uneven, and doesn't really earn every last one of its thematic or narrative conceits. A large part of Cyborg plays like a fantasy, but clearly, the film takes place in the real world. As a result, one might expect the film to go the direction of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, i.e. there may be a real-life price to pay for being out of touch with reality. That never comes to pass, however, and the film ultimately wheezes to a protracted ending punctuated by the appearance of an obviously symbolic rainbow. Happy tidings get their due, and from an audience standpoint, the warm and fuzzy feelings do make the film immediately enjoyable. However, given all the elements in play - and the cold, hard fact that these misfits are simply unable to care for themselves - the eventual leaning towards the positive doesn't exactly ring true.

Still, there's credit owed here. I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK is a tough movie to sell, as its mixture of surreal fantasy, uncomfortable reality, and too-cute characters can be as alienating as it is enchanting. The whole may not entirely convince, but Park Chan-Wook makes the parts exceptionally effective. Park's deadpan comedy instincts are razor sharp, whether he uses them in the service of black humor or surreal fantasy, and many key moments in the film are undeniably felt. As a director, Park possesses the rare ability to engage the audience in unexpected ways; his films are edgy and entertaining, and always go beyond superficial thrills or laughs for something deeper and more felt. Cyborg is most definitely a change-up, but it's also a welcome one. Frankly, it's refreshing to see a director try something new instead of leaning on the same genres and themes as some suddenly hot international directors (think Wong Kar-Wai) are wont to do. I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK may be one of Park Chan-Wook's weaker efforts, but as another entry in his hopefully rapidly growing filmography, it's a fine little film.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

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 "I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK (Single Disc Edition) (Taiwan Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 5 - 5.7 out of 10 (18)

Rose
See all my reviews


March 31, 2008

This customer review refers to I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Best film ever Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
This is the best film I have ever seen! It's visually stunning and the plot is imaginative. It made me want to run away with Lim Soo Jung into her world and get lost forever.
It made me laugh but it also made me sad. Especially when Jung Ji Hoons tells his story and how he feels. The way he cares for Lim Soo jung is touching. They have a sweet childlike love that's fascinating to watch.
I'd definitely recommend this film to anyone with a good imagination that appreciates art. Well worth the money.
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Kevin Kennedy
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November 17, 2007

This customer review refers to I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
1 people found the following helpful

Love among the ruins Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9 out of 10
For most of "I'm a Cyborg", I watched, slack-jawed but mildly amused, waiting for this movie to make some kind of sense. By the end, I was moved almost to tears. "I'm a Cyborg" ends up being a profoundly moving story about two broken people finding a kind of childlike love for each other, as one mental patient (Jung Ji Hoon) reaches out to save another mental patient (Lim Soo Jung) from her self-destructive delusions.

Both Rain and Miss Lim deliver startlingly fresh and believable performances. Director Park San Wook performs a kins of magic to pull such a touching story from this bizarre setting. With such entirely different films under his belt as "JSA", "Oldboy", and "I'm a Cyborg", I can't wait to see his next concoction.

I recommend "I'm a Cyborg" very, very highly, but I caution you that you must stick with this movie -- it isn't until the final reel that this film brings everything together for its entirely satisfying conclusion.
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Best Review
Kham
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November 6, 2007

This customer review refers to I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Not worth watching Customer Review Rated Bad 0 - 0 out of 10
bought this movie..... got all confused, never actually got to end and finsih.......... end of comments... the title review says it all.
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RedDress007
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August 13, 2007

This customer review refers to I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
Loved this movie! Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
I absolutely loved this movie. It's not your typical love/action movie. I really enjoyed the creativity and imagination this film offers. It is a little silly and goofy but in a comedy sense that tends to lure the audience into another world. I applause the director/producer for an awesome and well done peice of work! I've watched this movie 2x already wouldn't mind watching it again! It's a must see! ***
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winromeo
See all my reviews


July 17, 2007

This customer review refers to I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK (2-DVD Special Edition) (Taiwan Version)
it's a dark comedy Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
After the first time I watched it, I didn't now what to think of it, except it was a nicely shot visual film. Few weeks later, I watched it again last night, and I have to say it grew on me.
Many movies are not supposed to make sense, in this case, i was glad that I was in it for a ride. Through their many emotions, I felt that i was there to share, to experience and to leave a space for my own imaginations. How wonderful is that?
worth to own this dvd.
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