What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of 5
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- Hail the Judge!
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
I have over a 1000 dvds, so upgrading isn't really an option...boy, I need a life!
bradavon wrote:
but I guess you're more intelligence than me.
but I guess you're more intelligence than me.
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
I wish I only had 1000 mind you I am dumping a shedload soon
- luckystars
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
I only upgrade when I'm 'ready' to rewatch a film...otherwise I never get round to watching the disc! I don't even buy new releases til way after the first viewing. Unless its a treat for myself I don't bother.
2010 - The return of the HK movie industry
- bradavon
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
I used to always buy films then not watch them for months. I still do sometimes but only buy discs every now and again. The cost of Blu-ray's saved me money.
Don't you think if you've got 1000+ discs, you've got to many? I used to own 600 but it was getting silly. I had them in boxes in cupboards. I sold 200 and only one I regret selling (and I cannot now remember what it was ). In honesty I've still got to many but it's manageable.
Don't you think if you've got 1000+ discs, you've got to many? I used to own 600 but it was getting silly. I had them in boxes in cupboards. I sold 200 and only one I regret selling (and I cannot now remember what it was ). In honesty I've still got to many but it's manageable.
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
Ah well, better than wasting money on cigarettes, right?
- HungFist
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
better than cigarettes, yes.
13 Assassins (Japan, 2010) – 3/5
Takashi Miike goes chanbara in a solid but underwritten reimagining of the 1963 Eiichi Kudo classics. The fittingly dark storyline takes its time to build up for the 45 minute non-stop action finale, but falls a bit short as soon as swords start clashing. The massive battle scene is impressive, but relies too much on kamikaze-techniques at the expense of inventiveness. Furthermore, with 13 main characters even 90 minutes is not enough to establish truly memorable characters before the climatic fight begins – only a handful of them come out with recognizable personalities. Nevertheless, the film is an entertaining and well made samurai romp that pushes the Japanese pg-12 rating to the edge with its violent action. “Miike factor” is kept to a minimum, although a few notable touches surface. Koji Yakusho, Takayuki Yamada and Hiroki Matsukata lead the quality cast.
Kunoichi (Japan, 2011) – 2/5
B-action specialist Seiji Chiba helms yet another low budget ninja pic, this time with far less success than his recent sci-fi crowd pleaser Alien vs. Ninja. The 65 minute action film is remarkably low on action – only the final fight between karate girl Rina Takeda and Chiba regular Mitsuki Koga is worthwhile. The screenplay is non-existent, mainly consisting of meaningless dialogue scenes in the forest. Tech credits are modest even by genre standards, and the locations have been used to death in the director’s past works. Yet, with familiar cast and ninja theme it’s hard not to be at least a tiny bit entertained by Chiba’s passionate but sadly underperforming genre work. Lead girl Takeda ought to look for higher profile productions – her previous film K.G. was a step to the right direction.
edit: assassins edited
13 Assassins (Japan, 2010) – 3/5
Takashi Miike goes chanbara in a solid but underwritten reimagining of the 1963 Eiichi Kudo classics. The fittingly dark storyline takes its time to build up for the 45 minute non-stop action finale, but falls a bit short as soon as swords start clashing. The massive battle scene is impressive, but relies too much on kamikaze-techniques at the expense of inventiveness. Furthermore, with 13 main characters even 90 minutes is not enough to establish truly memorable characters before the climatic fight begins – only a handful of them come out with recognizable personalities. Nevertheless, the film is an entertaining and well made samurai romp that pushes the Japanese pg-12 rating to the edge with its violent action. “Miike factor” is kept to a minimum, although a few notable touches surface. Koji Yakusho, Takayuki Yamada and Hiroki Matsukata lead the quality cast.
Kunoichi (Japan, 2011) – 2/5
B-action specialist Seiji Chiba helms yet another low budget ninja pic, this time with far less success than his recent sci-fi crowd pleaser Alien vs. Ninja. The 65 minute action film is remarkably low on action – only the final fight between karate girl Rina Takeda and Chiba regular Mitsuki Koga is worthwhile. The screenplay is non-existent, mainly consisting of meaningless dialogue scenes in the forest. Tech credits are modest even by genre standards, and the locations have been used to death in the director’s past works. Yet, with familiar cast and ninja theme it’s hard not to be at least a tiny bit entertained by Chiba’s passionate but sadly underperforming genre work. Lead girl Takeda ought to look for higher profile productions – her previous film K.G. was a step to the right direction.
edit: assassins edited
- grim_tales
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
I hope the uncut version is released on UK/US BD soon.
- HungFist
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
I doubt it ever will be.
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
13 Assassins 90 minutes!? I thought the uncut version was something like 140 minutes!?
I was there, the big BNB blackout of november, 2008. We lost many that day...
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
I don't mind having em all - keep most in folders. But I want to slow down - need to get out of the habit of chasing OOP titles too.
bradavon wrote:
but I guess you're more intelligence than me.
but I guess you're more intelligence than me.
- HungFist
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
sorry, that was a bit unclear. I meant (approx) 90 minute build up before the 45 min action scene. The international version is approx. 125 min. The JP version is 15 min longer.Yi-Long wrote:13 Assassins 90 minutes!? I thought the uncut version was something like 140 minutes!?
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
Aw ic ic. ThanksHungFist wrote:sorry, that was a bit unclear. I meant (approx) 90 minute build up before the 45 min action scene. The international version is approx. 125 min. The JP version is 15 min longer.Yi-Long wrote:13 Assassins 90 minutes!? I thought the uncut version was something like 140 minutes!?
Anyway, cut releases like that just make it easy on the wallet for me, cause I'd never buy them, but download the uncut versions instead. I believe I have the uncut 13 Assassins. Haven't seen it yet though.
I was there, the big BNB blackout of november, 2008. We lost many that day...
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
VAMPIRE HUNTER D (1985) (straight to video)
I'm quite the anime novice, it must be said.
This is enjoyable, with some excellent design work, but at the same time it does leave me sort of cold. I find the OTT design of everything works against the uniqueness of the supernatural characters.
And funnily enough, that's exactly what I think of the English language theatrical spin-off VAMPIRE HUNTER D: BLOODLUST (2000)!
6/10 for both films
I'm quite the anime novice, it must be said.
This is enjoyable, with some excellent design work, but at the same time it does leave me sort of cold. I find the OTT design of everything works against the uniqueness of the supernatural characters.
And funnily enough, that's exactly what I think of the English language theatrical spin-off VAMPIRE HUNTER D: BLOODLUST (2000)!
6/10 for both films
bradavon wrote:
but I guess you're more intelligence than me.
but I guess you're more intelligence than me.
- HungFist
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
Kichiku dai enkai (Japan, 1997) – 1.5/5
Current top director Kazuyoshi Kumakiri ultra-violent breakthrough toured festivals and eventually made it to UK and US DVD distribution – quite an achievement from a student film. Its popularity may lie more on its extreme depiction of sickeningly violent acts rather than full understanding on the social and political commentary – Kumakiri draw inspiration from the Japanese extreme left student movement of the 70’s, which has also been the topic in various Koji Wakamatsu movies. The excessive bloodletting in Kichiku, however, tends to bury the social and political commentary and leave the viewer numb. Kumakiri has certainly come a long way since, with terrific character films such as Volatile Woman and Sketches of Kaitain City in his more recent filmography.
Life Can Be So Wonderful (Japan, 2007) – 2/5
Five short stories with gorgeus 8mm style visuals. Beautifully shot, but fails to reach a more personal level, mainly offering cinema poetry with cardboard characters and voiceover thoughts on life. The third episode, with Hiromi Katayama, shot almost entirely in one room, is the only one with real depth. Another somewhat successful episode is the last one, with the wonderful Mikako Ichikawa in the lead. The film maybe play better with middle aged audiences it appears to be aimed at.
Current top director Kazuyoshi Kumakiri ultra-violent breakthrough toured festivals and eventually made it to UK and US DVD distribution – quite an achievement from a student film. Its popularity may lie more on its extreme depiction of sickeningly violent acts rather than full understanding on the social and political commentary – Kumakiri draw inspiration from the Japanese extreme left student movement of the 70’s, which has also been the topic in various Koji Wakamatsu movies. The excessive bloodletting in Kichiku, however, tends to bury the social and political commentary and leave the viewer numb. Kumakiri has certainly come a long way since, with terrific character films such as Volatile Woman and Sketches of Kaitain City in his more recent filmography.
Life Can Be So Wonderful (Japan, 2007) – 2/5
Five short stories with gorgeus 8mm style visuals. Beautifully shot, but fails to reach a more personal level, mainly offering cinema poetry with cardboard characters and voiceover thoughts on life. The third episode, with Hiromi Katayama, shot almost entirely in one room, is the only one with real depth. Another somewhat successful episode is the last one, with the wonderful Mikako Ichikawa in the lead. The film maybe play better with middle aged audiences it appears to be aimed at.
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
gasteropod wrote:Ah well, better than wasting money on cigarettes, right?
Times 100000 every few fags some fool smokes could buy me a film
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
Ohh that I did not know! now I will have to seek out a good comparison of the two cuts, as I dont want no hacked version!HungFist wrote:Yi-Long wrote:The international version is approx. 125 min. The JP version is 15 min longer.
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
http://wildgrounds.com/2011/07/07/thirt ... -vs-uncut/romerojpg wrote:Ohh that I did not know! now I will have to seek out a good comparison of the two cuts, as I dont want no hacked version!HungFist wrote:Yi-Long wrote:The international version is approx. 125 min. The JP version is 15 min longer.
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- Markgway
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
Death Note - The Last Name (2006-Japan) **½
Sharp and imaginative follow-up... but too clever for its own good.
Sharp and imaginative follow-up... but too clever for its own good.
Last edited by Markgway on 02 Nov 2011, 20:56, edited 1 time in total.
- Keung
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
The Master - 1/5
I haven't seen this for a long time. It's horrible, haha. I'd give it a 0/5 if it didn't have Jet or Yuen Wah in it.
I haven't seen this for a long time. It's horrible, haha. I'd give it a 0/5 if it didn't have Jet or Yuen Wah in it.
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
The Final Note????Markgway wrote:Death Note - The Final Note (2006-Japan) **½
Pretty cool film, one of Li's better onesKeung wrote:The Master - 1/5
I haven't seen this for a long time. It's horrible, haha. I'd give it a 0/5 if it didn't have Jet or Yuen Wah in it.
- bradavon
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
EDIT: Wrong film. It's Dragon Fight I've seen, which is downright dreadful. I have only seen it in English but I doubt it's much better in Chinese.
Last edited by bradavon on 02 Nov 2011, 16:45, edited 1 time in total.
- Keung
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
I did chuckle a few times. But, the American actors are so bad it's unbelievable.
- grim_tales
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
I didn't think much of The Master. The American actors were really bad.
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Re: What asian film/series have you just seen.. marks out of
Oops. My mistake. I misremembered the title. Fixed now.HungFist wrote:The Final Note????Markgway wrote:Death Note - The Final Note (2006-Japan) **½
Keung wrote:The Master - 1/5
I haven't seen this for a long time. It's horrible, haha. I'd give it a 0/5 if it didn't have Jet or Yuen Wah in it.
I thought it wasn't too bad.HungFist wrote:[Pretty cool film, one of Li's better ones