Image Gallery Now Loading... Previous Next Close

A Chinese Tall Story Books + VCD + DVD Bundle DVD Region 3

This product is temporarily out of stock
Sign up to be notified when this item becomes available for sale
Name: Email Address:
  
Important information about purchasing this product:
  • This product is accepted for return under certain conditions. For more details, please refer to our return policy.
A Chinese Tall Story Books + VCD + DVD Bundle
Sign in to rate and write review
All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 4 - 4.8 out of 10 (20)

Technical Information

Product Title: A Chinese Tall Story Books + VCD + DVD Bundle 情癲大聖套裝 情癫大圣套装 A Chinese Tall Story Books + VCD + DVD Bundle A Chinese Tall Story Books + VCD + DVD Bundle
Author Name(s): Nicholas Tse | Charlene Choi | Wilson Chen | Kenny Kwan 謝霆鋒 | 蔡卓妍 | 陳柏霖 | 關智斌 谢霆锋 | 蔡卓妍 | 陈柏霖 | 关智斌 謝霆鋒(ニコラス・ツェー)  | 蔡卓妍(シャーリーン・チョイ) | 陳柏霖 (チェン・ボーリン) | 關智斌 (ケニー・クァン) Nicholas Tse | Charlene Choi | Wilson Chen | Kenny Kwan
 Manage My Personalized Product Alerts 
Release Date: 2006-01-26
Format: DVD, CD
Package Weight: 1390 (g)
Shipment Unit: 7 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1004114855

Product Information

此套裝包括:
情癲大聖電影聲大碟 (CD+iVCD) ~ (Original Soundtrack)
情癲大聖電影特集,電影海報套裝
情癲大聖 (普通版) (香港版) ~ (DVD)
情癲大聖電影原著小說
Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

Other Versions of "A Chinese Tall Story Books + VCD + DVD Bundle"

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 "A Chinese Tall Story Books + VCD + DVD Bundle"

August 30, 2007

This professional review refers to A Chinese Tall Story (Hong Kong Version)
When the first images from Hong Kong fantasy blockbuster A Chinese Tall Story began to circulate, the general response went something like this: "What have they done to Charlene Choi?" Choi, one half of pop group Twins, is not what you'd call an ugly woman, but the film's producers certainly gave her their very best beating with the ugly stick, burying her features under layers of facial prosthetics, massive buck teeth, warts, a hunch back and absolutely horrible hair. But lost in the reaction to Choi's makeover for the film was the possibility that it might actually be good. And it is. Based on the popular Chinese folk tale Journey Into The West and a quasi-sequel to Steven Chow's Chinese Odyssey films, A Chinese Tall Story is a bewildering, sometimes inconsistent film, prone to major leaps in logic and an occasional over reliance on CG effects. But it is also visually stunning, well performed, frequently laugh-out-loud funny, and very entertaining.

Populated with monks, demons, magical forces, time traveling space ships, Spider-Man, and malevolent tree spirits, A Chinese Tall Story is a broad, convoluted, slapstick fantasy. Though Chow himself does not appear in this, film director Jeff Lau is a long time collaborator, directing Chow in the Chinese Odyssey films based on the same source, and that same sense of humor pervades the film. Nothing is too absurd, no distance too far to go for a joke, but running beneath the pratfalls is a desire to actually tell a legitimate story based on legitimate emotions.

Nicholas Tse stars as Tripitaka, a monk traveling to the Shache City with his three disciples - the monkey king Wukong, pig monk Wuneng, and sand monk Wujing - to find and translate some legendary ancient sutras that Tripitaka believes will usher the world into a state of peace and harmony. But, you see, not everybody wants peace and harmony and, unknown to Tripitaka, the evil tree spirits are lying in wait to spoil his plans. A massive battle ensues, Tripitaka's disciples are captured and Wukong forces Tripitaka himself to flee. When Tripitaka is captured by a clan of lizard imps, he is placed in the care of Meiyan, an imp outcast from the rest of her clan due to her extreme ugliness. Meiyan's mother advises her to eat Tripitaka to achieve eternal youth but Meiyan falls in love with him instead, and sets off to help him save Wukong and the other disciples. Along the way, they encounter a space princess from another time, join a clan of demons who give Tripitaka evil lessons, and ultimately travel to the heavens.

Personally I wouldn't want the job of taking the lead in a sequel to a Stephen Chow film but Tse - in a different role, as Chow played the monkey king Wukong in the earlier films - proves surprisingly up to the challenge, giving his normal cool tough guy image a break to show a skill for absurd slapstick. Choi, the more talented of the Twins, begins with the barest sketch of a character, and eventually manages to flesh it out into something far more complete and appealing than it has any right to be. As for the rest of the actors, there are simply far too many characters popping on and off screen for any of them other than Wukong and the Princess to get any significant screen time, but everyone acquits themselves well with as much as they're given to do. Observant fans will even spot a good number of cameos from classic stars such as Gordon Liu.

On a technical level, the film is generally fairly impressive. Any film smart enough to hire frequent Miyazaki and Kitano collaborator Joe Hisaishi to write the score obviously has something going on, and the quality of Hisaishi's work is generally matched in other aspects. Production designs are vast and lush and, while the extensive CG work is generally not photo-realistic in any sense, the film is smart enough to turn that potential liability into an asset by using a deliberately stylized approach to composite the images that bolsters rather than distracts from the fantasy elements of the film. The one exception to this is a major sequence that abandons the human characters entirely in favor of a fully CG approach and, with the human element removed, ends up looking like a mid-grade video game.

The Hong Kong DVD release is excellent. The transfer is crisp, clean and anamorphic, the soundtrack pops, and the release is hugely English friendly with every single one of the extensive special features - yes, even the audio commentary in a very rare move - offering good English subtitles. I recommend taking the time to watch the director interview after watching the film, as listening to him discuss the philosophical underpinnings of the film will open up a surprising amount of depth to all the manic goofiness. No, it's not high art but it's not the piece of fluff it appears to be on the surface, either.

A Chinese Tall Story is not without its weaknesses. There are some major leaps of logic and gaps in the plot that will leave viewers scratching their heads from time to time. The script seems to take short cuts, assuming that the audience will already be well familiar with these characters, which may be true in China and Hong Kong where the source story is well known, but is much less the case in the West. That said, it's good fun and well worth a look.

Review By Todd Brown - 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.

Customer Review of "A Chinese Tall Story Books + VCD + DVD Bundle"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 4 - 4.8 out of 10 (20)

THE HURRICANE
See all my reviews


February 3, 2008

This customer review refers to A Chinese Tall Story (Hong Kong Version)
Priority One - Re-edit Customer Review Rated Bad 3 - 3 out of 10
This could have been a very good movie if the director had stayed with the Sci-Fi theme. I suggest re-editing the movie by cutting out all the sad nonsense after the final battle with "The Living Tree" Send the aleins back to their part of the comos and THE END. The silly Buda idea and the Sweetheart turned HORSE really got on my last nerve! Conclusion: Please use a real director and producer next time; if they don't know how to end a story.
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
wahahaha
See all my reviews


December 21, 2006

This customer review refers to A Chinese Tall Story (Hong Kong Version)
ridiculous!! Customer Review Rated Bad 5 - 5 out of 10
okay..i thought this would be a very interesting movie because it was about the journey to the west kidna thing..but this movie..everything was outta proportional..it was so ridiculuos..eveyrthing is a mess..no sense at all..i'm not gonna say too much b/c i've stopped watching the movie after seeing 30 ridiculous minutes of it!

first of all..they've twisted the journey to west to an outta proportional extent..nicholas acts all weird and in a way gay feeling...the other characters had no acting skills..just running around..yelling..arguing..all i can hear from them was yell yell yell..

and then charlene comes in outta no where..her charcter was a bit funny..but the was no plot..eveyrhintg just happen all at the same time..i couldn't evne get what was going on..one minute nicholas is getting killed..the next minute he's with charlene running off somewhere

pretyt much..eveyrthing is a mess..it dones't make any sense..i found it a waste of my time

ridiculous!
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
yin
See all my reviews


October 27, 2006

This customer review refers to A Chinese Tall Story (Hong Kong Version)
mix feelings Customer Review Rated Bad 6 - 6 out of 10
The story line is bad, so hard to follow. You don't need to read or watch the original Journey to the West to follow up with this movie. The story line is just plain confusing no matter what. HOwerver, with a lil bit background of the original come along the way, it would help u understand some jokes in the movie. The graphic is nice but sometimes overdone leaving you with a feeling of wow, this is ridiculous. The ending could have done better. The cast is overall good. I'm not quite impressed with the image of Buddha, I think something is not right.

Overall, I give it 6/10, worth to have it for 2006 HK movie collection though. By the way, this movie kinda reminds me of world of warcraft, AQ20, if anyone know what i'm talking about.
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
Liusing
See all my reviews


August 2, 2006

This customer review refers to A Chinese Tall Story (Hong Kong Version)
Fun and Sad Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
I laugh a lot at the beginning of the movie. Nicholas Tse in the role of Tripitaka was very funny at the beginning. Almost the same for Charlene Choi in the role of Mei Yin. The end was so touching! I almost cry!
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
quyenieee
See all my reviews


May 27, 2006

This customer review refers to A Chinese Tall Story (Hong Kong Version)
goshers. Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
it was the complete opposite almost of the original story, but to me it was quite cute, but in a mindless tv sort of way. knowing the story you would expect so much things to NOT happen, but it does. it was surprising to see a twist on it, but it was enjoyable. the cast&effects were amazing also.
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
20% off 2010 Calendars & Planners Annual Clearance San-X Toys & Gifts 2009 Hong Kong Book Fair Chinese Cookbooks 20% off Toys & Gifts
  • 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