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Life is Cool (DVD) (First Press Edition) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3

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Life is Cool (DVD) (First Press Edition) (Korea Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Korean animation takes a big step forward with Life is Cool (a.k.a. She Was Beautiful), the first Korean film to make use of rotoscoping, the animation over live-action technique pioneered in Waking Life and A Scanner Darkly. A labor of love for writer and director Choi Ik Hwan (Voice Letter) who was inspired to make his own rotoscoped film after watching Waking Life, Life is Cool creates a surreal animated world with dark strokes, thick shading, and earthy colors painted over familiar people and places. The animated visual environment is balanced by the achingly realistic and heartily good-humored tale of three grown men - funnyman Kim Jin Soo, character actor Kang Sung Jin (Missing Possible: Kidnapping Granny), and the always entertaining Kim Su Ro (Vampire Cop) - with schoolboy hearts looking for love, and living on friendship in the big city. The live-action shooting for Life is Cool was finished in one month, but the rotoscoping by local animation house DNA, which also worked on The Animatrix, took almost two years to complete.

All in their 30s and none of them settled, friends Il Kwon (Kim Su Ro), Tae Yeong (Kang Seo Jin), and Seong Hoon (Kim Jin Soo) have a lot to catch up on when they meet again for the first time in ten years. Disillusioned by work and life, teacher Tae Yeong holds on fiercely to the memories of his first love, the woman he can never forget. With better cooking skills than most housewives, Mr. Nice Guy Seong Hoon gets on just fine by himself, even as he pines after the girl of his dreams. Playboy Il Kwon is looking for the perfect wife, and he's got it down to two candidates, one rich and dumb, the other sickly and beautiful. Against his better judgement, he finds himself falling for the poor girl (TV actress Park Ye Jin, Something Happened in Bali), but she turns out to be Tae Yeong's first love and Seong Hun's dream girl.

This edition comes with audio commentary, making of, deleted scenes, outtakes, and other special features.

© 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: Life is Cool (DVD) (First Press Edition) (Korea Version) Life is Cool (DVD) (初回版) (韓國版) Life is Cool (DVD) (初回版) (韩国版) 彼女はきれいだった (初回限定版) (韓国版) 그녀는 예뻤다 (초회판)
Also known as: She Was Beautiful She Was Beautiful She Was Beautiful She Was Beautiful She Was Beautiful
Artist Name(s): Park Ye Jin | Kang Sung Jin | Kim Su Ro 朴藝珍 | 姜成辰 | 金秀路 朴艺珍 | 姜成辰 | 金秀路 パク・イェジン | カン・ソンジン | キム・スロ 박 예진 | 강 성진 | 김 수로
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Release Date: 2008-10-09
Language: Korean
Subtitles: Korean, English
Country of Origin: South Korea
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
Publisher: Art Service
Other Information: 1 Disc
Package Weight: 90 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1012022356

Product Information

* Screen Format : Anamorphic Widescreen
* Sound Mix : Dolby 5.1
* Extras :
- Commentary with 최익환 감독, 김수로, 강성진, 김진수, 박예진
- Life is Cool (실사판 그녀는예뻤다, 멀티앵글 지원)
- 선의 안밖 (메이킹)
- 삭제장면
- NG 컷

* Director : 최익환

- 국내 최초! 실사와 애니메이션의 환상적 결합!
- 실제를 더욱 빛나게 하는 애니그래픽스 영화 탄생!!
- 570일, 140명의 애니메이터들이 뭉친 거대 프로젝트!
- 실사 영상이 애니메이션으로 변신하는 과정! DVD에서 최초 공개!
- 바람둥이 김수로, 로맨티스트 강성진, 한평생 첫사랑 김진수!? 이름만 들어도 배꼽 잡을 이들이 뭉쳤다!
- 통찰력 있는 공감 러브코미디! 남자들에 관한 놀라운 보고서!!

※ 참고 : 애니그래픽스 무비란? 실제 촬영한 영상을 바탕으로 각각의 프레임 위에 선과 색을 덧입히는 ‘로토스코핑’기법 과정을 거친 애니메이션. 실사의 생생함과 애니메이션 효과의 장점을 선택적으로 도입, 한층 진화된 애니메이션 장르의 하나로, 국내에서는 <그녀는 예뻤다>가 최초이다.

남자가 여자를 사랑하는 세가지 방식
바람둥이 VS 로맨티스트 VS 한평생 첫사랑
여기 서로 죽고 못사는, 하지만 달라도 너무 다른 죽마고우 세 친구가 있다. ‘뒷돈’ 벌기로는 경찰이 최고라는 어머니의 뜻을 받들어 파출소 소장이 된 백일권(김수로)은 더 이상 뒷돈이 통하지 않는 민주화 세상이 도래하자 범죄심리학 석사 과정을 밟기 위해 미국 유학길에 오른다. 돌연 귀국한 그의 유일한 목표는 한달 안에 빌딩 두 채 가진 최고의 신부감을 골라 미국으로 돌아가는 것! 한때 절절했던 연애에 실패하고 아프리카 외교관을 향한 꿈까지 포기해야 했던 태영(강성진)은 허구헌날 어설픈 자살소동을 벌이는 영어 보습학원의 강사이자 과격한 로맨티스트다. 첫사랑이었던 중학교 영어선생님의 이름이자, 대학시절 우연히 맺은 에로틱한 인연(?)으로 ‘제니퍼’란 이름을 가진 여자에 대한 환상을 서른 넘도록 간직한 성훈(김진수)은 오직 영어특기 하나로 프로농구 용병 통역사가 된 순정파.

세 친구 인생 최고의 그녀가 나타났다!
과연, 누가 그녀의 마음을 차지하게 될 것인가?
그러던 어느날, 일권은 연우란 여자와 맞선을 보게 되고 세 남자의 과거를 모두 공유한 듯한 완벽한 그녀의 등장은 세 남자의 마음에 일생일대의 불을 지른다. 이제 결혼적령기를 앞둔, 사랑에 대해 너무나 다른 방식을 가진 세 친구와 모든 걸 다 갖춘 듯이 보이는 연우라는 한 여자. 이제 세 남자 사이의 우정은 서서히 금이 가기 시작하고 각자의 표현방식으로 연우에게 고백을 시도한다. 그들이 꿈꾸는 사랑은 어떤 사랑이며 과연 연우는 세 친구 중 누구의 마음을 받아들이게 될까?
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Life is Cool (DVD) (First Press Edition) (Korea Version)"

October 30, 2008

Life is Cool opens with an English-language theme song that proclaims that "life is so cool from a different point of view". Writer-director Choi Ik-Hwan tries to push that point hard by using rotoscoping, a process that involves animating every frame of a film after it's been shot in live-action. While Richard Linklater used the technique in A Scanner Darkly and Waking Life to manipulate reality in a hypnotic fashion, Life is Cool is more like a Korean male version of Sex and the City, featuring the trials and tribulations of three lifelong friends in the big city. This kind of story isn't likely to come to anyone's mind as one that needs the animation treatment, especially considering that the film is good enough even without the rotoscoping.

Despite the two years needed to complete the process, rotoscope animation also has its advantages. Since everything will be animated later on, the film's physical shoot becomes much easier. On the DVD, one can see a side-by-side comparison of the animated version and the live-action version. It shows that even though the filmmakers did physically shoot almost every single shot in live-action, the live shots often show crew members, other cameras, and boom mics on the set. The toughest job goes to the animators then, who not only have to remove objects and people that don't belong in the film, but they also have to animate everything else that's in them.

Mainly, what the technique does successfully is add a bit of color to lives that wouldn't normally be considered as colorful. This applies to the three central characters: Il-Kwon (Kim Soo-Ro), a police officer who is also an aspiring womanizer; Tae-Young (Kang Seong-Jin), an English teacher with a troubled romantic past; and Seong-Hoon (Kim Jin-Soo), an interpreter whose only talents are speaking English and cooking. The three are reunited when Il-Kwon returns from studying abroad in America and immediately begins a search for a wife before he's due to return to America for his phD. Being the womanizer that he is, Il-Kwon finally narrows his choice down to the young Mi-Yeong (Lee Chae-Young) or the older-and-wiser Yeon-Woo (Park Ye-Jin). The trouble is that he doesn't know that Yeon-Woo was Tae-Young's college sweetheart and their break-up left a prolonged effect on Tae-Young that hasn't quite gone away yet. To add to that mess, Seong-Hoon also falls for Yeon-Woo when he finds out that her English name is Jennifer, a name that he's been obsessed with since his teenage years.

Despite a plotless first act with constant digressions into character backgrounds, Life is Cool deserves to be more seen as more than just "that rotoscoping movie". Even without the technique, Choi has crafted an interesting set of characters that feel authentic despite their physical appearance suggesting otherwise. Instead of encountering the usual terminal illnesses or violent gangsters seen in Korean films, these three men actually have problems that the audience can identify with in real life. However, Yeon-Woo's final choice in the romance plot feels too perfunctory and too simple for the romantic entanglement Choi has set up. It's the only sour note in the story.

The strengths of the script and the story don't mean that the rotoscoping process is simply a gimmick. The technique allows Choi to pull off things that would seem absurd in real life, but can be made believable in the animated world (Is that Jennifer Aniston?!). Other scenes, such as Yeon-Woo gliding along a basketball court floor (shot in live-action with actress Park Ye-Jin navigating the court on rollerskates) and a mid-air group waltz at the end of the film, even add a touch of magical realism that one might not expect from such a film.

But the animation sometimes undermines the actors' performances. While the antics of the expressive Kim Soo-Ro remain intact in animated form, most of the other actors' expressions aren't felt after the rotoscoping process. Perhaps due to the technology's infancy in Korea, the strange animated "acting" takes some time to get used to. The biggest victim of this is actually Park Ye-Jin. As the central object of affection, the three men always refer to Yeon-Woo's mature beauty. However, the animated modification fails to carry over her beauty in real life (seen in the aforementioned side-by-side comparison), possibly leaving causing some head scratching over these men's obsession with such an average-looking rotoscoped human being. On the other hand, the animators actually improve upon Kang Seong-Jin's appearance, making Tae-Young a more believable romantic lead.

Fortunately, looks aren't everything in Life is Cool. Even though the rotoscoping adds an attractive layer (and an extra selling point) to the proceedings, Choi doesn't forget that his primary goal is to tell a story. The title and the central message of the film may hinge on the use of rotoscoping, but Choi would've made a fairly strong indie film even in live-action. Life is Cool is really a double-edged sword; it doesn't need the fancy animation to be a good film, but not having it would make it an indie film with no investors. Choi should have had enough faith in his script to realize that life is already cool even without seeing it from a different point of view. Then again, looking at it from this point of view really is pretty damn cool.

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.
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