Image Gallery Now Loading... Previous Next Close

The Hypnotized (DVD) (Special Edition) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3

Kim Hye Su (Actor) | Kim Tae Woo (Actor) | Kim In Sik (Director)
Our Price: US$14.99
List: US$35.99 Save: US$21.00 (58%) Availability: Usually ships within 1 to 2 days
Important information about purchasing this product:
  • This product will not be shipped to Hong Kong.
The Hypnotized (DVD) (Special Edition) (Korea Version)
Sign in to rate and write review
Customer Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7.5 out of 10 (4)
All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7.6 out of 10 (5)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Directed by Kim In Sik (Road Movie), The Hypnotized (a.k.a. Faceless Beauty) breaks down the barriers between dream and reality with a sexually charged tale of love, depression, and obsession. This ambitious movie centers on Jin Su (Kim Hye Su, Tazza), a lonely and suicidal woman who seeks guidance from therapist Suk Kwon (Kim Tae Woo, Woman is the Future of Man). Suk Kwon tries to help Jin Su with hypnosis therapy, gradually unveiling a tapestry of Jin Su's past and present as well as her surreal imaginations. Sok Won's own troubles also join the nightmarish mix as he becomes increasingly absorbed, or perhaps hypnotized, by Jin Su's world.

This edition comes with audio commentary, making of, production design featurette, behind-the-scenes, promotion clips, and other extras.

© 2009 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: The Hypnotized (DVD) (Special Edition) (Korea Version) The Hypnotized (特別版) (韓國版) The Hypnotized (特别版) (韩国版) 顔のない美女 スペシャル・エディション (韓国版) 얼굴없는 미녀 (2디스크)
Also known as: Faceless Beauty Faceless Beauty Faceless Beauty Faceless Beauty Faceless Beauty
Artist Name(s): Kim Hye Su (Actor) | Kim Tae Woo (Actor) 金惠秀 (金慧秀) (Actor) | 金泰佑 (Actor) 金惠秀 (金慧秀) (Actor) | 金泰佑 (Actor) キム・ヘス (Actor) | キム・テウ (Actor) 김혜수 (Actor) | 김태우 (Actor)
Director: Kim In Sik Kim In Sik Kim In Sik Kim In Sik 김인식
 Manage My Personalized Product Alerts 
Release Date: 2009-07-18
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?
Rating: III
Duration: 104 (mins)
Publisher: Spectrum DVD
Other Information: 2 DVDs
Package Weight: 210 (g)
Shipment Unit: 2 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1003845348

Product Information

* Screen Format : Anamorphic Widescreen
* Sound Mix : Dolby 5.1
* DVD Type : N/A
* Extras :
- 김혜수, 김태우, 김인식 감독 음성해설
- 김인식 감독, 김영진 평론가 음성해설
- 제작 과정
- 2가지 해석 (김인식 감독, 김영진 평론가)
- 프로덕션 디자인 (가까운 미래공간)
- 비하인드 씬
- 특별한 카메오 출연
- 프로모션 파일 (예고편, 뮤직 비디오 외)

* Director : 김인식

- 김혜수의 파격적인 전라 베드신 장면으로 화제를 뿌린 작품
- 한국 예술영화의 계보를 이를 수려한 영상미
- <로드무비>의 김인식 감독 작품
- 2004년 국내 개봉 흥행작

“날 사랑하게 만들어 버렸다.”
최면으로 사랑을 가지려는 한 남자의 금지된, 그러나 멈출 수 없는 사랑

“당신은 지금 도움이 필요해요”
아무도 오지 않은 파티의 주인공 지수는 붉은 핏물의 욕조 속에서 발견된다. 그녀는 지적이고 매혹적이지만 천국과 지옥을 오가는 경계선 장애로 정신과 전문의 석원의 상담을 받게 된다. 석원은 지수의 병이 누군가에게 버림받을지도 모른다는 위기감에서 생기는 마음의 병이라는 것을 알고 안타까워하지만, 병원을 떠나게 되고…

“확인하고 싶어, 너도 날.. 사랑하는지…”
남편과의 새로운 출발을 위해 석원에게 작별인사를 하는 지수. 하지만, 최면을 통해 그녀의 몸은 가질 수 있었지만 마음은 가질 수 없는 현실 때문에 괴로워하는 석원은 마지막 만남에서, 다시는 지수를 볼 수 없다는 불안감에 해서는 안될 일을 벌이는데…
Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

Other Versions of "The Hypnotized (DVD) (Special Edition) (Korea Version)"

Customers who bought "The Hypnotized (DVD) (Special Edition) (Korea Version)" also bought

Customers who bought videos directed by Kim In Sik also bought videos by these directors:

Awards

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

Search Keywords

The following keywords are associated with this product. Please click on a keyword to search for similar items.

YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "The Hypnotized (DVD) (Special Edition) (Korea Version)"

August 6, 2009

Originally released back in 2004, The Hypnotized was the second outing from writer director Kim In Sik, who made his debut with the much praised Road Movie. Sadly, it also marks his last film to date, a real shame since it clearly showed him to be one of the more interesting and creative directors to have come from Korea in recent years. Whilst hypnotism has been a popular subject in Asian horror for some time, often being blamed for normal people turning into killers or lying at the root of the usual long haired ghost shenanigans, here Kim uses the theme to craft a far more nightmarish scenario, and one which drags the viewer into the same half-world confusion as to what is real as his poor deluded characters. The film has an ace up its sleeve in the shapely form of actress Kim Hye Su, recently in Tazza: the High Rollers and Modern Boy, who proves unforgettable in the lead role, not least since she spends most of the running time in various forms of undress.

As the film opens, she plays Jin Su, a suicidal young woman with personality disorders being treated by therapist Suk Kwon (played by Kim Tae Woo, also in Woman is the Future of Man, at a psychiatric hospital after being forcibly committed by her husband. After he leaves, mainly due to his own personal problems, he sets up his own clinic to deal with patients privately. A year later, he meets Jin Su in a supermarket and begins treating her again, using hypnosis to try and resolve her deep rooted problems. Despite the fact that she is quite possibly dangerous, he gradually falls in love with her, shaking up deep seated issues and fears from his own past.

Although the plot may sound straightforward enough in a film noir, femme fatale sort of way, The Hypnotized is easily one of the most complex and challenging films of recent years, and is quite impossible to categorise as horror, mystery or even drama. Via the use of hypnotism, Kim spends most of the running time merging reality and the world of what are dreams, visions, or possibly self-imposed delusions, dwelling upon themes of destructive love, obsession and revenge. As such, whilst there is a narrative, and even a Hitchcockian resolution of sorts, these themselves are wholly ambiguous and open to multiple interpretations. Kim's main focus appears to be on creating a genuinely surreal atmosphere, and on submerging the viewer in the wild, fevered imaginings and twisted minds of the characters. Visually, the film is absolutely stunning, with some truly bizarre and seemingly random scenes of gorgeous and disturbing imagery. Things do get gruesome in places, and the film is bloody and violent as well as sexually graphic, marking it as one for adult viewers only in every sense. Kim shows an excellent sense of colour and light, and uses this not only to create a sense of lingering unease, but also to force the viewer the see the film from the perspective of both Jin Su and Suk Kwon at once.

As a result, the film is one which requires a lot of work, and to be honest on the first viewing, the imagery and the very basics of the plot are the only things likely to be absorbed, leaving a great many questions unanswered. This is not to suggest that the film is vacuous in the least, and it is a tribute to Kim's skill that he manages to make it abundantly clear that it is a puzzle which does have an answer, or at least an answer of sorts hidden somewhere within its fractured series of clues. Repeated viewings do indeed yield more suggestions as to exactly what is going on, though the film is likely to frustrate viewers who prefer to be spoon-fed answers and motivations via last act twists or other traditional devices. However, for those with an open mind, it offers a compelling and intellectual experience that stands out as a genuine original likely to haunt long after the credits have rolled.

One thing that is for sure is that The Hypnotized is Kim Hye Su's film. Looking gorgeous in every frame, no matter how much or how little she is wearing, she turns in a commanding performance that captivates the viewer every time she takes to the screen, making the doctor's growing obsession with her easy to understand. Adding a real layer of suggestive psychological depth to what could simply have been an eye candy role, she shows beyond doubt that she is not only one of Korea's bravest, but best actresses.

by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.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 "The Hypnotized (DVD) (Special Edition) (Korea Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7.5 out of 10 (4)
Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7.6 out of 10 (5)

Kevin Kennedy
See all my reviews


January 6, 2009

Nightmarish tale of mental illness Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
In "Hypnotized", Kim Hye Su stars as Jin-su, a woman disappearing into the mental black hole of schizophrenia. Jin-su has been unhinged by submerged feelings of guilt over the death of an ex-boyfriend. Her husband responds to Jin-su's disconnection from reality by disconnecting from the marriage by throwing himself into his high-pressure financial job and into an affair with a co-worker. Jin-su suffers the additional misfortune of ending up in the "care" of psychotherapist Sok-won (Kim Tae Woo), who is himself becoming unraveled over feelings of guilt related to the death of his wife. Sok-won uses the powers of hypnotherapy to manipulate Jin-su in a manner which could prove disastrous for both of them.

The film's story is told in an unhinged manner reflecting the derangements of its lead characters; at times it becomes difficult to discern whether one is watching delusion or reality. Indeed, after the film had ended, I had to spend some time reflecting on "Hypnotized" before its pieces began to fall together for me. Once those pieces came together, I came to acknowledge the film as an accomplished and engrossing depiction of guilt and derangement. Due to the film's intensity and explicit sex scenes, it should be viewed only by mature audiences.
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
Best Review
Anonymous

May 17, 2005

See "Road Movie" instead Customer Review Rated Bad 2 - 2 out of 10
After seeing "Road Movie" I had high expectations for this film since it was also directed by Kim In-sik but I was very disappointed in "Hypnotized". The cinematography and set designs were beautiful & exceptionally well done. But otherwise the movie was on par with a Hollywood B-movie/horror flick from the 1960's, especially Kim Hye-soo's performance when she was under the influence of hypnosis, it was so fake and unbelievable. WARNING! SPOILER FOR "OLD BOY" TO FOLLOW!!! IF YOU HAVEN'T SEEN IT YET SKIP TO THE NEXT PARAGRAPH!!! If you want to see the effects of hypnosis portrayed realistically you should watch "Old Boy".


I did like the idea of the story but it was too hard to follow in the beginning when Hye-soo's character started walking between worlds, it made it so confusing that after watching the movie I had to go back and watch the beginning again just to make sense of it all. And I felt like Kim Tae-woo's character was too much like his character in "Bus Stop". But I have to give him credit because it's great to see a Korean actor tackle such taboo roles.

This movie is a perfect example of what happens after someone, in this case the director Kim In-sik, has struggled to make the movie they really want to make (ROAD MOVIE) and then are handed funding to make big budget commercial picture (HYPNOTIZED). If you want to see Kim In-sik's talents buy ROAD MOVIE instead.
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
Anonymous

May 10, 2005

I read Hye Soo Kim Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
has a couple of nude scenes in this film. Oh I really really want to see Hye Soo Kim. I wish YesAsia would lower the price to under $20. Please YesAsia with cherry on top. I really want to see the beautiful Hye Kim Soo.
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
Anonymous

April 11, 2005

Perfect from beginning till end Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
When I give positive reviews I don't exaggerate. But for a diehard Korean movie fan like me, I simply haven't seen anything like it. It's so artistic from beginning till end, like Old Boy, the movie has style but not as boring. Perfect atmosphere, casts, and storytelling. The only thing negative about it may be the slightly predictable ending. This is the type of movie Hollywood wants to make remakes of.
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
Anonymous

November 22, 2004

This customer review refers to The Hypnotized (VCD) (Korea Version)
this film hipnotizes.. Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
It's not really a horror movie ..more like a mystery movie,and sth deep in man's desire.And the color, music, the storyline, especilly Kim Hye Su's face, it's all so Hypnotizing!!
never see such gore, recommend!!
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
4th Period Mystery Annual Clearance Blood: The Last Vampire (2009) Mother A Blood Pledge Insadong Scandal Secret Couple (AKA: My Girlfriend is a Super Agent)
  • Region & Language: No Region Selected - English
  • *Reference Currency: No Reference Currency
 Change Preferences 
Please enable cookies in your browser to experience all the features of our site, including the ability to make a purchase.
Close