The Actresses (DVD) (2-Disc) (Special Edition) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Six of Korea's most famous actresses from different generations - Choi Ji Woo, Ko Hyun Jung, Kim Min Hee, Kim Ok Bin, Lee Mi Sook, and Yoon Yeo Jeong - star as themselves in the aptly-titled semi-fictional dramedy The Actresses. Gamely assuming exaggerated versions of their media personas, the actresses dish out catfights, gripes, gossip, insider jokes, and insecurities on the set of a hectic magazine shoot. Dasepo Naughty Girls and Untold Scandal director Lee Jae Yong blurs the lines of reality, documentary, and fiction with this amusing, semi-improvisational, behind-the-scenes look at the actresses a la natural. What's real, and what's acting? We may never know!
Korean Wave superstar and certified neat freak Choi Ji Woo swoops in late with her Japanese fans and personal masseuse. Up-and-coming starlet Kim Ok Bin is eager to please but comes across awkward. Veteran actress Yoon Yeo Jeong arrives too early and feels self-conscious about her looks. Smiley and free-spirited Kim Min Hee is insecure about her quiet career. Ko Hyun Jung drinks too much, talks too loudly, and ticks off Choi Ji Woo. Fifty and still beautiful, Lee Mi Sook recalls the tough times divorced actresses face in the public eye. Egos clash, stories spill, snow falls, and everything goes both right and wrong at this unforgettable holiday photo shoot.
This edition includes audio commentary, deleted scenes, interviews, production diary, photo gallery, and trailer.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | The Actresses (DVD) (2-Disc) (Special Edition) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version) The Actresses (DVD) (雙碟裝) (特別版) (初回限量版) (韓國版) The Actresses (DVD) (双碟装) (特别版) (初回限量版) (韩国版) 女優たち (2枚組初回限定版) (韓国版) 여배우들 (DVD) (2디스크) (스페셜 에디션) (초회한정판) (한국판) |
| Also known as: | 六美八陣圖 六美八阵图 |
| Artist Name(s): | Choi Ji Woo (Actor) | Ko Hyun Jung (Actor) | Kim Min Hee (Actor) | Kim Ok Bin (Actor) | Lee Mi Sook (Actor) | Yoon Yeo Jeong (Actor) 崔 智友 (Actor) | 高賢廷 (Actor) | 金敏姬 (Actor) | 金玉嬪 (Actor) | 李美淑 (Actor) | 尹汝貞 (Actor) 崔 智友 (Actor) | 高贤廷 (Actor) | 金敏姬 (Actor) | 金玉嫔 (Actor) | 李美淑 (Actor) | 尹汝贞 (Actor) チェ・ジウ (Actor) | コ・ヒョンジョン (Actor) | キム・ミニ (Actor) | キム・オクビン (Actor) | イ・ミスク (Actor) | ユン・ヨジョン (Actor) 최지우 (Actor) | 고 현정 (Actor) | 김 민희 (Actor) | 김옥빈 (Actor) | 이 미숙 (Actor) | 윤여정 (Actor) |
| Director: | Lee Jae Yong 李在容 李在容 イ・ジェヨン 이재용 |
| Release Date: | 2010-06-11 |
| Language: | Korean |
| Subtitles: | English, Korean |
| 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: | Ein's M&M CO., LTD |
| Other Information: | 2-Disc |
| Package Weight: | 230 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 2 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1022579746 |
Product Information
*Screen Format: Anamorphic Widescreen 1.85:1, NTSC
*Sound Mix: Dolby Digital 5.1 & 2.0
*Extras:
- 감독, 배우 음성해설
-그녀들의 대화(멀티 앵글)
-여배우, 이야기
-제작과정
-촬영장 스케치
-포토 갤러리
-예고편
*Director: 이재용
- 감독, 6명의 여배우들이 말하는 본편 음성해설 수록!
- 대한민국을 대표하는 아름답고 기쎈 여배우들, 그녀들이 처음으로 한자리에 모였다!
- 윤여정, 이미숙, 고현정, 최지우, 김민희, 김옥빈 대한민국을 대표하는 여배우들이 자기 자신을 직접 연기
- 이재용 감독과 주연배우 6명의 공동각본으로 완성
- 누구나 안다지만 실은 아무도 모르는 여배우들의 세계, 이토록 솔직하고 적나라하게 이야기한 영화는 처음이다.
- 한국영화사상 전무후무한 시도로 기록될 <여배우들>DVD 스페셜 에디션으로 출시.
- DVD에만 독점적으로 수록된 ‘여배우들’의 거침없고 적나라한 음성해설 (음성해설 – 윤여정, 이미숙, 고현정, 최지우, 김민희, 김옥빈)
- 영화 속 삭제되었던 여배우들의 수다와 인터뷰 수록 (삭제장면 / 인터뷰 모음)
- 촬영현장을 엿볼 수 있는 메이킹 필름과 여배우들의 풍성한 포토 갤러리 (제작과정/포토 갤러리)
- 초회 한정 디지팩 패키지 및 여배우들의 화보 속지(12p) 수록
줄거리 (Synopsis)
대한민국을 대표하는 아름답고 기쎈 여배우들, 그녀들이 처음으로 한 자리에 모였다!
크리스마스 이브. 패션지 <보그> 특집 화보 촬영을 위해 20대부터 60대까지 각 세대를 대표하는 여섯 명의 여배우들이 한 자리에 모인다. 홀로 받는 스포트라이트에 익숙한 그녀들 사이에서는 예정된 기싸움이 벌어지고 팽팽한 긴장감이 스튜디오를 감싼다. 화보를 찍을 때도 절대 서로 부딪히지 않게 시차를 둔다는 패션계의 불문율을 깬 이 최초의 시도는 시작부터 불씨를 안고 있었던 것. 의상 선택부터 시작된 신경전은 급기야 현정의 도발에 지우가 자리를 박차고 나가버리는 불상사로 이어진다. 여정은 자신이 대타로 섭외된 것 아닌지 찜찜하고 민희는 화보 촬영이 즐겁지만 옥빈은 어디까지 선생님이고 어디부터가 언니인지, 선배들이 부담스럽기만 하다. 주요 소품인 보석이 오지 않자 시작된 하염없는 기다림. 스탭들은 애가 타고 여배우들은 점점 예민해지는데…
그 날 밤, 그곳에선 무슨 일이 벌어졌을까?
눈치보지 않고 솔직하고 또 대담한 그녀들 사이에선 어떤 이야기들이 오고 갔을까?
과연 이들은 무사히 촬영을 끝낼 수 있을까?
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "The Actresses (DVD) (2-Disc) (Special Edition) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version)"
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E. J-Yong's The Actresses can be enjoyed even without intimate knowledge of the Korean Entertainment industry. However, having that knowledge is a huge help. An entertaining and smart cinema verite comedy, Actresses depicts a fictional Christmas Eve Vogue magazine shoot with a who's who of Korean actresses in attendance, each playing themselves. Or are they? Director E. J-Yong and his actresses aren't telling. But that's okay - figuring it out may be half the film's fun. Getting six top actresses for a photo shoot is a score for the magazine - the caveat being that it's not smart to bring six potential rivals together in one place. From the start, drama queen Ko Hyun-Jung (K-drama Sandglass) is sassy and mouthy towards fellow drama queen Choi Ji-Woo (K-dramas Winter Sonata and Stairway to Heaven), who's the biggest star of the bunch thanks to her legions of Japanese fans. Fifty year-old Lee Mi-Sook (E. J-Yong's Untold Scandal) is a calming presence, but remains sensitive about her divorce. Meanwhile, pretty Kim Min-Hee (Wildcats) hides her insecurities behind silent smiles and her dazzling looks. The youngest, Kim Ok-Bin (Thirst), is far too eager to please everyone around her, while the eldest, Yoon Yeo-Jeong (too many works to mention), grouses about a rumor that she was a last-minute replacement for someone else. The five women jockey to see who arrives first or last before subtly and not-so-subtly sizing each other up. The shoot has problems and runs overtime, giving the women time to speak, spar and possibly bond. Will they smooth over their differences or be at each other's throats when Christmas rolls around? Since every actress is willingly playing herself - and indeed, each is listed as one of the film's screenwriters - it's doubtful that you'd see them get into massive catfights. That expectation is neatly met with the actresses achieving détente and accord, if not possibly friendship. What's unexpected about The Actresses is how the film references the women's public personas, and also how it cleverly subverts them. Gags addressing rumored rivals and tabloid chatter add some fun for the initiated, but the actresses play with their own images, sometimes taking the opportunity to confirm, debunk or maybe spin the prevailing opinion. There may be some truth to their spin, but how much? The film is unrevealing in that last aspect, but it hardly matters. Actresses capitalizes on the audience's fascination with the beautiful and famous to play a fun game; the filmmakers effectively use our curiosity with celebrity to tell us that we've been misled by the media, and it does it with its own little game of misdirection! That's kind of like having your cake and eating it too, but the filmmakers achieve that feat handily. The actresses are glamorous and charismatic, the film's free-floating camera captures events in a lively and witty fashion, and E. J-Yong throws in entertainment industry satire to distract from any heavy-handed pulpit-thumping by his stars. The film does go astray during its final set piece, where the actresses commiserate during an impromptu Christmas meal for what seems like far too long. After smarter, lighter digs at their public personas, the topic turns towards divorce, and the actresses clearly start telling us how they really feel. That moment of truth takes away a bit from the film's "are they, or aren't they" fun, where one wonders if the women are dispensing truth or just having a good time skewing it. That, and the predictably feel-good climax end the film on an unremarkable note, but for the most part, Actresses is smart and incisive, and a terrific little satire on the lives of the famous and followed. Fans will naturally have a better time, with every little dropped name and thrown out reference meaning far more to the Korean entertainment faithful. Casual or non-fans of the actresses will have a much tougher time parsing all the jokes, but the film still works on a universal level. The film uses each actress's persona as shorthand, but it also does a fine job establishing them individually; by the end, it's easy to identify one from the other, and to see which place each occupies in the Korean entertainment firmament. In every Hollywood there are actresses - and hey, each is a woman too. Showing audiences that about his actresses was one of E. J-Yong's established goals, and he does so here successfully and smartly. by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com |
Customer Review of "The Actresses (DVD) (2-Disc) (Special Edition) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version)"
See all my reviews
February 7, 2011
What a delight!
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"The Actresses" is a rare treat, a chance to see a gaggle of great actresses in roles that fit each of them to a tee ... because in this film they are playing themselves. Six leading real-life actresses are invited to do a cover shoot for the Korean version of Vogue magazine. The actresses straggle reluctantly into the photo studio, greeting each other with varying degrees of warmth and affection (or, in one case, with not particularly well-suppressed hostility). The photo shoot doesn't go particularly smoothly and gets greatly prolonged when jewels being shipped from Japan to be featured in the shoot fail to show up on time. Patience wears thin and tensions grow both among the actresses and between the actresses and the Vogue staff. Just when it appears that the shoot will end in failure, the actresses witness a private moment of perfect beauty, a moment that transports them out of their skins and bonds them together. They then sit to chat, gossip, and nosh while awaiting the arrival of the jewels. Of course, the jewels truly arrived at the beginning of the movie -- the actresses themselves are the real jewels. If you've ever met any actual actresses, then you will find that this film captures wonderfully the vanities, the insecurities, the sincerity, and the insincerity of this peculiar tribe. Particularly charming are the crusty grande dame Yoon Yeo Jeong, who worries about her aging looks and convinces herself that she was a last-minute substitute for someone else, and perky Kim Min Hee, who fears that she has been insufficiently aggressive in pursuing her career and has let too many opportunities pass her by. It would have been fascinating to see how this film was made. I suspect that the filmmakers simply gave the actresses certain themes to discuss and then let them improvise. The movie certainly plays very naturally and never feels stagey. I was captivated and revelled in every minute of "The Actresses". |
See all my reviews
June 29, 2010
Fad Conduct Actresses (part one)
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“The Actresses” is a parody of 6 media personas, whose unscripted dialogue blends natural emotion with exaggerated public media image, but also reflecting the actress’s personal issues about themselves. The ‘plot’ surrounds a photo shoot for Vogue magazine on Christmas Eve with a theme of women as beautiful gems throughout the spectrum of age and fashion. So enter six intrepid actresses who devoid of a top-billing slot decide to let loose on each another as they prepare to have some fancy pics taken. Made as a ‘behind the scenes’, ‘fly on the wall’ docu-drama the decorum is somewhat more dramatic than the conduct of a Korean film making of (although two actresses got squirted with water in a photo shoot for Korean movie “Blossom Again” if I remember!). Director Jae Yong Lee (Desapo Naughty Girls) apparently began this project whilst talking with drinking chums Yeo-jeung Yoon and Hyun-jung Ko and wanted them to act in a movie together to show how actresses have as much charm than normally perceived. With four more actresses added to the mix, the film was born using little script and letting the six differing personalities address their emotions to given situations. Due to media perception the actresses would surely clash egos and the scenario was meshed in such a way for the ladies to digress on themselves and their rivalry situations through partially camouflaged personas (please note: no ‘clash helmets’ were ever provided in this film, it was all done with pure emotion). Well it sounds serious, but this film is so ironically funny. Veteran actress Yeo Jeong (Yeo Jeong Yoon) arrives early for the Vogue shoot and worries after hearing a rumour that she wasn’t first choice for her age group. Trying to calm her nerves with a cigareete (but told she cannot smoke in the studio) constantly phones friend Hyun-jung (Hyun-jung Ko), a Vogue photo shoot regular, to hurry up and get to the studio. Drama queen Ji Woo (Ji-woo Choi) as adoring Japanese fans waiting at the studio car park (well 3 anyway) and a private female masseur in tow (well, JWL was in “Winter Sonata”, so should have a masseur and 3 Japanese fans! ^_~) and gets paranoid about who the other actresses are for the shoot, so hides with her masseur and tries to spot the other contenders like a woman in a spy movie. Hyun Jung (Hyun Jung Ko) arrives but gets drunk a lot and even argues with Ji-woo due to jealousy over JW’s looks! (continued in part B) |
See all my reviews
June 29, 2010
Fad Conduct Actresses (part two)
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Ok Bin (Ok-bin Kim) tries to keep things on even keel although her shyly vivacious, nervous and naturally motivated nature gets the better of her (endearingly of course). Wearing heart on sleeve Ok Bin coyly shares a cigarette moment with Yeo Jeong and asks Min-hee (Min-hee Kim) to ‘make a movie together’. Min Hee and Mi-Sook (Mi-sook Lee) are together again after being in “Hellcats”, although here the hellcats are Hyun Jung and Ji-Woo, having their ‘ladies emotional disagreement’ together. Maybe HJ and JW were craftily vying for parts in a possible Hellcats 2 movie! Min-hee arrives in her leopard skin, shades and rock chick look and staggers around as if she’d borrowed lots of booze off Hyun-jung (actually it was jet lag!) and all sensitive about herself. Never a dull moment. Even Ok Bin scares the knickers off Ji-woo in the ladies toilets at Christmas mealtime! And when Hyun-jung ‘magically’ conjures a chiselled jawed German speaking Korean hunk into the mix, you conclude an actor’s life is rarely boring. I found the last part where the actresses have their Christmas feast the most revealing, funny, endearing, emotional and interesting. Previous scenes in dressing rooms et al seem more artifice with the actresses mindful of the director’s persona play. But some genuine emotion seems to be spilled at mealtime, especially relating to the stigmas of divorce (I know there’s more back ground where three of the ladies are concerned, but I’m sticking to their persona versions). Min-hee, Ok Bin and Ji-woo listen intently, cry and laugh amusingly like little kiddies at a party soaking up all the personal nostalgia that Yeo-jeung, Mi-sook and Hyun-jung discuss concerning the changing attitudes of the acting profession, the ‘stardom’ adjuration syndrome and their own personal ‘me-ness’ and of course their personal divorce situations (if only men were wives?). Yeo-Jeung and Mi-sook’s no nonsense talk is endearing and certainly the mentors here. Min-hee Kim’s envious thoughts about Wonder Girl So-hee’s fan adoration at premiers of “Hellcats” was interesting. Hurrah Min-hee Kim! (Blows a whistle with two fingers in mouth). Remember, all yo three arm-in-arm in “Hellcats”. A good film idea this. I liked the jibes, tongue in cheek banter, individuality…the actresses! ^^ Shame the commentaries aren’t English subtitled as probably more revealing than the film’s main dialog. But absolutely worth seeing! A film about actresses for actresses. |










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