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The Show Must Go On (DVD)(Korea Version) DVD Region 3

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The Show Must Go On (DVD)(Korea Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

The Show Must Go On swept two of the most prestigious categories at the 2007 Blue Dragon Film Award, winning both Best Picture and Best Actor for Song Kang Ho. Song takes on his first leading role after his award-winning performance in record-breaking blockbuster The Host. The versatile actor again takes on the role of a concerned father in The Show Must Go On, but this time he also happens to be a gangster. In his first gangster role since 1997's No. 3, Song Kang Ho is as impressive as ever, convincingly balancing his character's tired, laconic nature with the emotionally escalating plot. A gangster melodrama with unflinching violence and uncommon depth, The Show Must Go On packs a hard punch with its witty dialogue, raw emotions, and wrenching narrative. At the helm is Han Jae Rim, who previously wrote and directed Rules of Dating.

Kang In Gu (Song Kang Ho) just wants the best for his family, working hard to support the household and save money for a house. Slightly harried in a dark business suit, he looks like yet another anonymous middle-aged salaryman as he sets out for work every morning from his housing estate apartment. But In Gu's line of work is bloody and messy. As a mid-ranking gang leader, he tries to balance work and family, but things aren't going too well. His wife (Park Ji Young) and rebellious teenage daughter (Kim So Eun) are not happy about his job and, at times, embarrassingly rough demeanor. Meanwhile, a dangerous power struggle is brewing in the organization, and In Gu is caught in the middle of it all.

This 2-disc edition includes the following special features:
Disc 1

  • Commentary Track 1 (Director, Song Kang Ho, Park Ji Young, Yoon Je Moon
  • Commentary Track 2 (Director, Cinematographer, Lighting Director)
  • After Commentary
    Disc 2
  • Making Of
  • Interview with Cast & Crew
  • Rehearsal Clips
  • Interview with Kanno Yoko
  • Press Conference
  • Automatic Dialogue Replacement
  • Deleted Scenes
  • Music Video
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • Photo Gallery
  • © 2007-2012 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 Show Must Go On (DVD)(Korea Version) The Show Must Go On (DVD) (韓國版) The Show Must Go On (DVD) (韩国版) 優雅な世界 (韓国版) 우아한 세계 (일반판)
    Also known as: 優雅的世界 优雅的世界
    Artist Name(s): Song Kang Ho | Han Jae Rim | Oh Dal Soo 宋 康昊 | 韓在林 | 吳達庶 宋 康昊 | 韩在林 | 吴达庶 ソン・ガンホ | ハン・ジェリム | オ・ダルス 송 강호 | 한재림 | 오달수
    Release Date: 2007-07-30
    Language: Korean
    Subtitles: English, Japanese, 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: KD MEDIA
    Other Information: 2 Discs
    Package Weight: 140 (g)
    Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
    YesAsia Catalog No.: 1004777040

    Product Information

    * Screen Format : Anamorphic Widescreen
    * Sound Mix : Dolby 5.1
    * Extras :
    Disc 1
    - 본편
    - Commentary Track 1 (한재림 감독 & 송강호, 박지영, 오달수, 윤제문)
    - Commentary Track 2 (한재림 감독 & 촬영 감독, 조명 감독)
    - After Commentary

    Disc 2
    - 아름답다, 아름다워 - 메이킹 필름
    - 우아한 삶 - 배우, 스텝들, 자신들의 우아한 세계 인터뷰 영상
    - 퍼펙트 하다, 퍼펙트 해! - 촬영전 배우들에 앞서 스텝들의 리허설
    - 칸노 요코와 함께 - 칸노 요코 인터뷰 및 음악작업 영상
    - 이제 어떻게 할꺼야? - 제작 보고회
    - Automatic Dialogue Replacement - ADR 현장 영상 (후시 녹음 현장)
    - 삭제 장면
    - 뮤직 비디오
    - 예고편
    - 포토 갤러리

    * Director : 한재림

    한국형 느와르의 탄생
    대한민국을 살아가는 사람들을 위한 생활 느와르

    <우아한 세계>의 장르인 ‘생활 느와르’는 한국형 느와르의 탄생을 알리는 함축적인 단어이자 영화가 표현하고자 하는 주제이다.‘느와르’의 사전적 의미는 범죄와 파멸, 암흑가를 그린 영화의 한 장르. 때문에 느와르라는 장르로 관객들과 마주했던 숱한 영화들은 조직 폭력배인 주인공들이 한 방 인생을 꿈꾸다 스러져 가는 모습을 담아냈다. 그러나 한국형 느와르를 표방하는 <우아한 세계>는 다르다. 기존의 느와르가 폼에 살고 폼에 죽는 남자들의 세계를 그렸다면 <우아한 세계>는 가족에 살고 가족에 죽는 대한민국 가장들의 세계를 그린다. 비 내리는 거리, 어둡고 무거운 화면 이미지로 대변되는 느와르 영화들이 대부분이었지만 <우아한 세계>는 오히려 메마름 속에 간헐적으로 목을 축여야만 하는 각박함 속에서 살고 있는 우리의 현실을 그린다. “현실과 동떨어져 멋있게만 보이는 느와르가 아닌 일상의 눈으로 보는 느와르를 보여주고 싶다”는 감독의 말처럼 영화는 보통 사람의 시선에 맞춰져 있다. 사고사(死)가 아닌 과로사(死)로 죽을 가망성이 높은 ‘조폭 가장’을 통해 여느 샐러리맨들과 마찬가지로 자신은 버린 채 가족들을 위할수록 가족들과 어긋나고 소외되는 대한민국 가장들의 비애를 담아 공감대를 형성한다. 바로 내 이웃일 수도 있는 가장의 생활 느와르 <우아한 세계>을 마주하는 순간, 가정이 곧 치열한 전쟁터이자 생활이 곧 느와르라는 비범한 진실을 깨닫게 될 것이다.

    가족들과 오순도순 평범한 가장이 되고 싶은 특별한 아버지

    ‘과장’, ‘부장’이라는 직급 대신, ‘형님’ 소리를 듣는 남다른 직업을 가졌지만, 가족 사랑만은 남다르지 않은 대한민국 가장 ‘강인구’(송강호). 오늘도 그는 공기 좋은 전원주택에서 가족들과 우아하게 살고 싶은 소망을 이루기 위해 조직 일도 열심, 아빠 역할도 소홀히 할 수 없다.

    특별한 남자의 평범한 꿈, 그 남자가 꿈꾸는 우아한 세계

    그러나 하루가 멀다 하고 조직 일을 그만두라는 가족들의 냉대와 그리고 조직의 2인자 노상무와의 껄끄러운 관계는 그의 인생을 전혀 우아하지 못한 곳으로 끌어 내리는데…

    대한민국을 치열하게 살아가는 우리들의 특별한 아버지 이야기

    평범한 가장이고 싶은 특별한 아버지, 직업만 남다른 강인구의 치열한 일상은 오늘도 계속된다.
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    Awards

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

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    YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

    Professional Review of "The Show Must Go On (DVD)(Korea Version)"

    July 13, 2007

    Glossy gangster films are a staple of the South Korean film industry. Whether it is the noir stylings of A Bittersweet Life or full blown comedy of the My Wife is a Gangster films, audiences definitely have a taste for the perceived glamour of the lifestyle thrown up on screen, time after time. So along comes director Han Jae-Rim and Korean superstar Song Kang-Ho to let the air out of the balloon and subvert the entire sub-genre. I wish I could say that they were 100% successful in their effort. The Show Must Go On is a frustrating affair filled with moments of greatness. The end of the film, when we finally make it there after several false-endings, is a piece of perfection that is not entirely earned by the journey which works in fits and starts (and a healthy suspension of disbelief in the screenplay's many contrivances). The film is hindered by underwritten supporting characters and questionable pacing but glued together with real magic from Song Kang-Ho who is on screen 98% of the time and is simply a joy to watch.

    The film opens with In-Gu commuting to work and falling asleep at a red light while the traffic honks and tries squeeze around his stationary vehicle. Arriving to his place of business, a produce front, a tad late, he has to take over for his underlings who have nearly botched the coercion of a building contractor to sign over a large construction deal to their gang. Middle aged, slowing down and overwhelmed, In-Gu is hoping this "big deal" will be his ticket out of gangs and provide the capital to move out to a well-to-do suburb so he can put his family life back together and live happily ever after in domestic bliss. His wife is currently sick of his gangster life, even though she has lived off it for years, and has him sleeping on the couch until he quits the lifestyle. His youngest daughter is rebelling in full force and raises the "I Hate You" to 11 when In-Gu tries to bribe her schoolteacher to give her special treatment. His son is studying (expensively) abroad in Canada. His brother, also a midlevel gangster, works for a rival gang with direct conflicts of interest. And, finally, while he has the respect of his boss (he is treated like a son in fact), this creates serious complications with the boss's ambitious young brother who gets less respect and authority. Freshly diagnosed with Type-2 diabetes, more than a little lumpy, and just plain slowing down, In-Gu turns the effort of balancing all these spinning plates into a sort of comic futility.

    The pathos in film is generated by In-Gu's nostalgia for a time when he was young (and things were much simpler) whilst trying to please everyone and doing all the dirty work. The film could have easily been called The Good Lieutenant as Song Kang-Ho is the mirror opposite of Harvey Keitel from Abel Ferrara's film (where the circumstances were built by selfish forces rather than selfless ones). Replace the Catholic guilt with salary-man domestic expectations and you have a feel for where the film is going in the final chapter when the comedy is discarded and the screws are tightened quite mercilessly.

    Large comic set-pieces (In-Gu's lack of business acumen in the construction business results in a burly brawl between gangsters and subcontractors) switch tone on a heartbeat to desperately realistic knife fights photographed in the colourful way that should be familiar to anyone who watches South Korean film. Equally numbered trips to the hospital (for sustained injuries) and the realtor (to sustain his desire for family life) set the narrative rhythm. That rhythm is often disturbed by underperforming supporting roles which come off as types, not people. This is probably a script problem as much as an acting one. I understand the desire for the filmmakers to keep the focus on Song Kang-Ho's emotionally-chameleon central performance but short-changing his boss, wife, daughter and rival with little to do but just move along the subplots sully the affair somewhat. However, In-Gu's brother is wonderfully realized with just a small amount of screen time. The two of them verbally sparring while reminiscing about the old days ends in a childish water bottle fight that sums up In-Gu's yearnings in one beautifully crafted scene.

    It is worth staying for the final moments of the film (despite two or more awkward false endings) which will make the picture a memorable one. The package may be a bit too shiny and events resolve a bit too facilely to earn its punch, but the central performance does wonders. To these western eyes, The Show Must Go On is also an interesting comment on the pressures of middle-aged men in modern South Korea and the sacrifices that have to be made along the way. It is a solid attempt to take something decidedly mainstream and stretch its audience.

    by Kurt - Twitchfilm.net

    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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