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Forever the Moment (VCD) (Korea Version) VCD

Moon So Ri (Actor) | Kim Jung Eun (Actor) | Kim Ji Young (Actor) | Uhm Tae Woong (Actor)
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Forever the Moment (VCD) (Korea Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

They dared to dream the impossible...

One of the best surprise hits of 2008 and Best Film winner at the 29th Blue Dragon Awards, Forever the Moment is a fictionalized account of the real-life Korean women's national handball team which against all odds reached the finals at the 2004 Athens Olympics Game. The world witnessed a true miracle as these fierce underdogs strode past the nonbelievers and proudly battled it out against the powerhouse Denmark team in a decisive game. Director Lim Soon Rye (Waikiki Brothers) presents an inspirational saga that travels beyond the typical sports film, weaving a touching humanistic tale about ordinary women and their remarkable journeys. The first film in history to revolve around the sport of handball, Forever the Moment hit the wall during its initial phase because of the lack of reference material and investors, but the film's real-life story served as an inspiration for the film's production team.

Anchored by a high-caliber cast that includes Moon So Ri (Bewitching Attraction), Kim Jung Eun (Marrying The Mafia), Kim Ji Young (Old Miss Diary), and Uhm Tae Woong (Devil), Forever the Moment illuminates with its realistic portrayal which includes interview footage with the real-life heroines and the appearance of the Danish women's handball pro-league team who spared no effort in acting out their part for the crucial final match scene. Three and a half years in the making, Forever Moment is a stirring testament to the power of human spirit.

Japanese pro-league handball coach Hye Kyung (Kim Jung Eun) is suddenly called in to salvage the Korean women's national team. To improve the team, Hye Kyung recruits her old teammate, two-time Olympic winner Mi Sook (Moon So Ri), and a few other older players. But trouble looms when Hye Kyung's aggressiveness causes ripples in the team, eventually leading her to be replaced by famous handball star Seong Pil (Uhm Tae Woong), her former lover. After much consideration, Hye Kyung decides to remain as one of the team players, but now Seong Pil is in the hot seat as his European-style training regiment and diet does not sit well with the older players. To make matters worse, the team loses to a high school boys handball team in a qualifying match! But where there's hope, there's a way...

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Technical Information

Product Title: Forever the Moment (VCD) (Korea Version) Forever the Moment (VCD) (韓國版) Forever the Moment (VCD) (韩国版) 私たちの生涯最高の瞬間 (韓国版) 우리 생애 최고의 순간 (VCD)
Also known as: 我人生中最精彩的瞬間, 發球線上 我人生中最精彩的瞬间, 发球线上
Artist Name(s): Moon So Ri (Actor) | Kim Jung Eun (Actor) | Kim Ji Young (Actor) | Uhm Tae Woong (Actor) 文 素利 (Actor) | 金政恩 (Actor) | 金智英 (Actor) | 嚴泰雄 (Actor) 文 素利 (Actor) | 金政恩 (Actor) | 金智英 (Actor) | 严泰雄 (Actor) ムン・ソリ (Actor) | キム・ジョンウン (Actor) | キム・ジヨン (Actor) | オム・テウン (Actor) 문 소리 (Actor) | 김 정은 (Actor) | 김지영 (Actor) | 엄태웅 (Actor)
Release Date: 2008-09-09
Language: Korean
Subtitles: English
Country of Origin: South Korea
Disc Format(s): VCD
Publisher: Daekyung DVD
Package Weight: 110 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1011936266

Product Information

전반전>> 노장 선수들, 올림픽의 영광을 재현하기 위해 코트로 귀환하다!

대한민국 올림픽 2연패의 주역인 최고의 핸드볼 선수 미숙(문소리 분). 그러나 온 몸을 바쳐 뛴 소속팀이 해체되자, 그녀는 인생의 전부였던 핸드볼을 접고 생계를 위해 대형 마트에서 일하게 된다. 이때 일본 프로팀의 잘나가는 감독으로 활약하고 있던 혜경(김정은 분)은 위기에 처한 한국 국가대표팀의 감독대행으로 귀국한다. 팀의 전력을 보강하기 위해 그녀는 자신의 오랜 동료이자 라이벌인 미숙을 비롯한 과거의 영광을 재현할 노장 선수들을 하나 둘 불러모은다.

후반전>> 여자라서 안돼?!

혜경은 초반부터 강도 높은 훈련으로 전력 강화에 힘쓰지만 그녀의 독선적인 스타일은 개성 강한 신진 선수들과 불화를 야기하고 급기야 노장 선수들과 신진 선수들간의 몸싸움으로까지 번진다. 이에 협회위원장은 선수들과의 불화와 여자라는 점을 문제 삼아 혜경을 감독대행에서 경질시키고 세계적인 스타 플레이어 안승필(엄태웅 분)을 신임 감독으로 임명한다. 무엇보다 자존심이 중요했던 혜경이지만, 미숙의 만류와 일본으로 돌아갈 수도 없는 상황에서 감독이 아닌 선수로 팀에 복귀해 명예 회복에 나선다.

연장전>> 나이가 많아서 안돼?!

화려했던 선수 생활을 뒤로하고 이제 감독으로의 성공적인 전향을 꿈꾸는 승필. 그는 선수들을 배려하지 않은 과학적인 프로그램과 유럽식 훈련 방식을 무리하게 도입해 한국형 핸드볼이 몸에 익은 노장 선수들과 갈등을 유발하고 오히려 대표팀의 전력마저 저하시킨다. 심지어 혜경과의 갈등으로 미숙마저 태릉을 떠나버리고 대표팀은 남자고등학생 선수들과의 평가전에서도 졸전을 펼친다.

승부 던지기>> 넌 안돼 라고 말하는 세상에 함께 맞선 그녀들, 마지막 코트 위의 꿈에 도전하다!

미숙의 무단 이탈을 문제 삼아 엔트리에서 제외하겠다고 공표하는 승필. 안타까운 혜경은 불암산 등반 훈련에서 자신이 먼저 완주하면 미숙의 엔트리 자격 박탈을 철회해 줄 것을 요구한다. 혜경은 미숙을 위해 죽을 힘을 다해 달리고 승필은 그런 그녀에게 지지 않으려고 이를 악물고 뛰는데… 결국 혜경을 비롯한 노장 선수들의 노력으로 미숙은 다시 대표팀에 합류하게 되고, 승필과 신진 선수들도 그녀들의 핸드볼에 대한 근성과 마지막까지 자신들의 꿈에 도전하려는 투지를 인정하게 된다. 마침내 최고의 팀웍으로 뭉친 그들은 다시 한번 세계 재패의 위업을 달성하기 위해 아테네로 향한다.

세계의 이목이 집중되었던 순간!
그녀들은 끝까지 포기하지 않았다!
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Awards

This film has won 2 award(s) and received 1 award nomination(s). All Award-Winning Asian Films

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Forever the Moment (VCD) (Korea Version)"

January 19, 2009

This professional review refers to Forever the Moment (DVD) (Korea Version)
Based on the true story of the 2004 Korean Women's Olympic Handball Team, Forever the Moment succeeds as an entertaining sports film with enough humanity and crowd-pleasing heart to satisfy. Director Lim Soon-Rye doesn't attempt a slavishly faithful dramatization of the real events, confining the film's accuracy largely to the set-up and climax, which sees the team enter the final round at the 2004 Athens Olympics with a shot at Korea's third Gold Medal in Women's Handball. That game is regarded as a classic, as the Korean team fought valiantly against the favored Danish team, sending the game into several tense and exciting overtime periods. A screenwriter couldn't come up with a more dramatic climax to a sports film.

The set-up is in many ways just as compelling. In real life, the team was led by veterans of previous Olympics, who banded together to reestablish Korea's dominance in the event (they previously won Gold Medals in 1992 and 1996, before faltering in 2000). The fictionalized film expands upon the situation, establishing the athletes as aging women dropping their unsatisfying post-Olympics lives in order to once again pursue Olympic Gold. Their obstacles to renewed glory include marginalized personal lives, disregard due to their age, and conflict with team's young-uns, who don't respect their experienced elders. Even though these women are winners, they're treated like losers because they're older and come with too much baggage, like families, debts, and presumably breaking-down bodies. Sure, they want to win the Gold, but they also want to display their mettle and answer all the naysayers. It's like the distaff sports version of Space Cowboys.

Well, maybe not. Forever the Moment isn't so egregiously commercial that it gets on a pulpit to sing the praises of the older generation. This is a film with standard, agreeable, and very winning sports themes, and the aging athlete angle makes for some juicy conflict as well as some interesting twists. Mi-Sook (Moon So-Ri) played professionally until her team dissolved, and finds little joy at her job (she's a clerk at a supermarket) or at home (her husband is in debt and on the run from the loan sharks). She's dragged back into the game because her old rival/friend Hye-Kyung (Kim Jung-Eun) is coaching the 2004 Olympic Team, and could use the team's previous best player on her side. Besides Mi-Sook, the team boasts two other veterans, goalie Soo-Hee (Cho Eun-Ji) and crazy-permed firecracker Jeong-Ran (Kim Ji-Young). The rest of the squad is young and undisciplined, and don't seem to care for Hye-Kyung's strict, traditional training methods.

The conflict reaches a head when Hye-Kyung is removed as coach in favor of Seong-Pil (Uhm Tae Woong), an ex-Olympic and professional handball player who played in Europe. He shows up with scientific, hi-tech training methods and a hidden bias against the team's veterans, including ex-flame Hye-Kyung, who chooses to remain with the team as a player despite her demotion. Multiple emotions and storylines crisscross, involving friendship, pride, and that age-old issue, teamwork. Forever the Moment finds multiple ways - some well-developed and affecting, and others hackneyed and glib - to maximize the sports movie formula. The team starts fractured, but finds harmony; friends come into conflict, but reach understanding and affirmation; people ditch their foolish pride and find a common, greater goal. Nothing here is new or original - and frankly, that would be hard to accomplish. A formula exists because it's tried-and-true, and Forever the Moment hits its marks in a solid and entertaining manner.

The film does take some shortcuts on the way to its finale. The low point for the team comes when they lose an exhibition to a high school squad, but the fallout to that is barely felt. One minute they're down, but after another montage, they're back on top, streaking to the Gold Medal game versus Denmark. The rise of the team during the Olympics is handled quickly, and the filmmakers miss an opportunity for solid sports drama by glossing over the team's turnaround. Some subplots and details are still a bit too commercial, but when the film reaches its final moments, it earns its crowd-pleasing status. Though the outcome is known, the final match successfully creates suspense, and rooting for the women becomes very easy. The actresses help a great deal, sporting largely deglamorized makeup and costumes, and managing their roles with appropriate dignity and heart. The end-credit inclusion of actual footage and clips of the real-life gives the subject an added emotional impact, especially if one is already familiar with the events. Korean audiences will undoubtedly get more out of Forever the Moment than the rest of the globe, and the film's blockbuster status confirms its local appeal. However, the message here is universal, and well-earned.

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 "Forever the Moment (VCD) (Korea Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9 out of 10 (3)

numinair
See all my reviews


May 27, 2008

This customer review refers to Forever the Moment (DVD) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
3 people found the following helpful

The Rewarding Moment Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9 out of 10
Well, I've never watched this type of sport before, and the closest I've ever got a game of ladies handball, would probably be when I 'hand balled' in a soccer match I played in at school. And due to that, got referred to the girl's netball team (well, not exactly - but nearly though). But after watching "Forever the Moment", I'm certainly more enlightened to what ladies handball is all about now, and also awed at yet another gem of a S Korean movie. This is brilliant! The acting and game choreography is superb, and if ever anyone has enjoyed some of the other recent K-films with competitive edge and achievements about them, you just have to get this one! I know that competition is hard, and sometimes has its negative traits, but when you watch the sheer determination of this women's handball team here and of their endeavors to win the 2004 Olympic title, certainly justifiers their hard efforts- and a great healthy reward for the soul to those involved by that achievement. Okay, this is all a bit dampened here, though, and "Forever the Moment" certainly isn't a gung ho 'heroes' type film, or in any way a self congratulatory sentiment of endeavor (although in small doses, a bit of self praise doesn't do much harm). But totally a film concerning the endeavors and emotions of the human spirit (for Everyone) of winning over many parallel adversities that can be endured alongside competitive sport, as well as receiving that crucial medal or cup at the end of it all. Its exhilarating to win (I think, I've never won much myself), but also a fantastic realization to additionally see what as been achieved by it all, whatever the outcome. This film's ending (and reflecting the actual event), puts that important picture over extremely well.

The one crucial benefit about this film on all counts, is that although this is about S Korea's showcase of the women's final against Denmark in Athens at the 2004 Olympics, all of these women's trials and tribulations to get there and win, can be equally identified and appreciated by anyone from any country doing the same thing. The passion, the universal love of sport and emotions packed into all of this, and whether it be the Olympics, Football, Soccer, track racing, tennis or any other of the multitude of sports, this film universally reflects every sports person's plight of competing through the gauntlet towards that final win for their country. Its Every Sports Persons challenge on display here. In fact if anyone is within a sports competition at this very moment (2008 - befitting year) should absolutely relish this film!

The bulk of the movie is regarding the team's training. Initially, the veteran players in the team which are Hye Kyung (Jeung Eun Kim - looking nothing like her "The Lovers" character here), Jeong Ran (Ji Young Kim) and Mi Sook (So Ri Moon!) and who were the main force together, are dropped from the team in the first instance, due to their various home related life problems. But the present team is a mix of young and older players, with varying degrees of play tactics and skills, and overall don't have the original advantage of win taking this team once had. So, Hye Kyung once the key player of the team, becomes a temporary coach to the younger players to pull them into shape (and there is a nice interesting situation between a younger team member Jin Joo, who Hye Kyung first gives a hard time to, but eventually bonds with her in the latter part...awe!). All until Hye Kyung is then dropped as coach, as Seung Pol, a previous romantic flame of Hye Kyung takes over the training program, and using systematic techniques to teach (and annoy) the women's own preferred training methods. Seung Pol (played really well here by Tae Woong Eom), though, becomes the main element to the teams success in reaching Athens to compete, and with an hate-love realtionship that he gets from the female team. Seung Pol is a task master and egocentric, that causes inevitable rifts with the women by his methods. For instance, the women have to eat special dietary foods (which Mi Sook hates),watch their game play moves and reactions on a computer screen and also have to do vigorous marathons - and by all these 'additional' sport methods makes all the women wish they had a dart board with Tae Woong's face on, so to distress themselves with after their training sessions.

The film, however, is additionally a social one. It isn't just about these women training to reach that quality edge, but also concerning their various social concerns; the ways that they support one another, with laughter, tears and heartache along the route. Soon Rye Yim is mainly a woman director who reflects this type of social format in film (and this film was thought of to be a more indie type success, than a mega hit), of social ills and the like in such other films as "Waikiki Brothers" (which is really difficult to get on DVD at the moment) - and this aspect is also evident in the lives of the women here. Jeong Ran, who is one of the team's main quality players and a crucial team mate of Hye Kyung, after an initial training session at the beginning, is told to quit the team due to her edge being blunted by her home life concerns. She has money worries, a young child to support and because of her husband's business debts, could have her house re-possessed. Not ideal circumstances to promote team spirit. Jeong Ran cannot even afford to return to the team at first, having to make ends meet by earning immediate money as a food Mart seller, and help pay off her husband's debts. But Jeong Ran is eventually convinced to reconsider, when she accepts a loan from stable mate Hye Kyung and returns to the team. Hye Kyung is estranged from her past flame Seung Pol, who becomes problematical to her, when he becomes the team's male training coach. Hye Kyung as affectionate concerns and feelings with her team mate Jeong Ran, and tries to help her financially to get her back in the team. The lighter parts to this film are provided by the feisty Mi Sook, performed by Si Ri Moon, and Eun Ji Jo's character Soo Hee. These two could almost be the comedy duo of the team. Si Ri plays one stands no messing type, and who being the third of the top players in the team, carries the 'torch' here with her personality and verve. She even ticks off (that's putting it lightly) a bunch of women athletes at one point, who bully some of the handball team at a food table. Along with Eun Ji Jo as the team's goal keeper, this movie is filled with great quality actors and charisma. Although having a large mix of social aspects, comical camaraderie, hard nosed training and the fulled emotions of the women as they cope with all their shared problems and circumstances, you don't get short changed when you eventually reach the Athens 2004 S Korea v Denmark handball tournament final itself. You get thorougher game play, excellently replicating the actual event, and that moment, the best game of these women's lives ever, will keep you on the edge of your seat to the finish. Especially, if you, maybe, don't know the winning outcome to this.

As mentioned, the acting is excellent, and its interesting to see Jeung Eun Kim in a very different character role here (and I'm finally getting around to seeing her in the TV drama "The Lovers" at long last, ironically), and you will be quite pleasantly surprised at what else she can do, I think. Si Ri is funny, brilliant and also quite different here to her usual roles, and her being alongside that very funny and equally charismatic Eun Ji Jo is a great mix here (wait till you see how Soo Hee / Eun Ji saves a goal at the end, too). Really, though like team effort and contribution, the cast are all brilliant in there own ways - just like the actual women's team must have been in 2004.

One final note. In case you don't know the outcome win between S Korea and Denmark from this women's actual tournament final, then resist checking it out on the Internet - just buy this film and watch is as if you would wait to see who will win, and I can tell you now, the impact of it all be electric. In fact, by the ending of whoever wins, someone as to lose, and all this makes it a more relevant movie, because of this final. Everyone's arrow can fall short of a goal at sometime in life (whatever that goal maybe), even for those who can be winners. After all winning is 'for the moment'. There is also something to be learned from losing. Anyway, you'll love this, its fantastic, and I'm sure that it will be a movie to reap more than mere plaudits - as its a masterpiece of human endeavors and hardships on all counts. I'm sure that "Forever the Moment" will be also released everywhere eventually, and I'm sure that many who haven't ever seen a Korean movie before, would find this a great film to watch. And maybe even get into women's handball. Brilliant!
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masterpiece85@...
See all my reviews


May 9, 2008

This customer review refers to Forever the Moment (DVD) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
2 people found the following helpful

Watched at a Film Festival Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
.. here in Italy and I have to say that the movie is very good.
A mix of relationship drama, sports freaks (handball in this case) and some comedy. Well acted and well directed. Worth It.. ah one last thing: do not turn off your dvd player as soon as the final match ends cause there is something very interesting at the end right before the credits .
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tuesday
See all my reviews


April 19, 2008

This customer review refers to Forever the Moment (DVD) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
2 people found the following helpful

i cannot wait for this DVD Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
i know that this movie will show me a different Kim Jung Eun and i am already in great anticipation of its DVD release. even though i have not seen the movie yet, i am giving it 10 stars.
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