Ad Lib Night (DVD) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
- This product cannot be cancelled or returned after the order has been placed unless the product is defective (see details).
- This product will not be shipped to Hong Kong.
YesAsia Editorial Description
Now back with his third feature film Ad Lib Night, Lee Koon Ki seems to go back to what brought him fame, once again narrating the tale of a normal woman (a little younger this time) and her inner pain - but the style is a little different. Adapted from Daira Azuko's quirky short novel, Ad Lib Night stars Han Hyo Ju (Spring Waltz and My Boss, My Teacher) as Bo Kyung, a girl in her early twenties approached by men from the countryside who seem to know her. After learning that she resembles the woman they'd been looking for all that time, she agrees to become a stand in, impersonating a dying man's daughter and fulfilling her acquired father's last wish. But as time goes by, her new role starts fitting her like a glove - so much so that she slowly forgets she's playing a part. First presented at the 11th Pusan International Film Festival, Ad Lib Night is a low-budget HD film produced to commemorate the 5th Anniversary of Cable Channel KBS Sky. Han Hyo Ju won the Best Actress award at the Singapore International Film Festival for her performance.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Ad Lib Night (DVD) (Japan Version) Ad Lib Night (DVD) (日本版) Ad Lib Night (DVD) (日本版) アドリブ・ナイト Ad Lib Night (DVD) (Japan Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Kim Young Min | Kim Joong Ki | Han Hyo Ju Kim Young Min | Kim Joong Ki | 韓孝珠 Kim Young Min | Kim Joong Ki | 韩孝珠 キム・ヨンミン | キム・ジュンギ | ハン・ヒョジュ | キ・ジュボン 김 영민 | 김 중기 | 한효주 |
| Director: | Lee Yoon Ki 李胤基 李胤基 イ・ユンギ 이윤기 |
| Manage My Personalized Product Alerts | |
| Release Date: | 2008-09-03 |
| Publisher Product Code: | PCBG-51190 |
| Language: | Korean |
| Subtitles: | Japanese |
| Country of Origin: | South Korea |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it? |
| Other Information: | 2DVDs |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1011106763 |
Product Information
ソウルの雑踏で突然見知らぬ男たちから声をかけられた"彼女"。「君はミョンウンかい?」というので「違う」と返答すると、ミョンウンの父親の葬儀に立ち会って欲しいと頼まれる。むげに断ることも出来ず、ついに彼らについて郊外の知らない家に行くことになった彼女だったが…。 ■映像特典:特典DISC付
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other Versions of "Ad Lib Night (DVD) (Japan Version)"
-
- Version
- Product Title
- Our Price
- Availability
-
Korea Version
- Ad Lib Night Limited Edition DVD Region 3
- Temporarily Out of Stock
Customers who bought "Ad Lib Night (DVD) (Japan Version)" also bought
Foxy Lady (DVD) (Boxset 2) (End) (Multi-audio) (English Subtitled) (MBC TV Drama) (Hong Kong Version)
US$39.99
Foxy Lady (DVD) (Boxset 2) (End) (Multi-audio) (English Subtitled) (MBC TV Drama) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3
Our Price: US$39.99Usually ships within 7 days
Foxy Lady (DVD) (Boxset 1) (To Be Continued) (Multi-audio) (English Subtitled) (MBC TV Drama) (Hong Kong Version)
US$39.99
Foxy Lady (DVD) (Boxset 1) (To Be Continued) (Multi-audio) (English Subtitled) (MBC TV Drama) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3
Our Price: US$39.99Usually ships within 7 days
My Tutor Friend 2 (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
US$15.99
My Tutor Friend 2 (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region All
Our Price: US$15.99Usually ships within 7 days
Tazza: War of Flowers (DVD) (End) (Multi-audio) (English Subtitled) (SBS TV Drama) (Malaysia Version)
US$35.99
Tazza: War of Flowers (DVD) (End) (Multi-audio) (English Subtitled) (SBS TV Drama) (Malaysia Version) DVD Region 3
Our Price: US$35.99Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
Yesterday (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
US$10.99
Yesterday (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region All
Our Price: US$10.99Usually ships within 7 days
Customers who bought videos directed by Lee Yoon Ki also bought videos by these directors:
YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Ad Lib Night (DVD) (Japan Version)"
This professional review refers to Ad Lib Night Limited Edition
|
Imagine two people walk up to you in the street and call you by a name you have never heard of. They try to convince you that they're your childhood friends, but you have no idea who they are. When they realize that you're not who they're looking for, they instead ask you to take up this missing girl's identity for her dying father. This is what happens to our anonymous protagonist in Ad Lib Night, the third film by director Lee Yoon Ki, who found arthouse fame with 2004's This Charming Girl. Shot in ten days on digital video and originally for a cable television station, Ad Lib Night is a subdued comedy-drama about mistaken identity, solitude, and family that is also pleasant thanks to its methodical yet light approach to the subject matter. Too bad commercial audiences won't have the patience for small gems like this. Based on a short story by Taira Azuko, Han Hyo Yu (playing a considerably more difficult role than her My Boss My Teacher character) plays the mysterious girl, who asserts that she's not who the men are looking for, but keeps mum about who she really is. However, she agrees to go with them to the rural village anyway, even when she finds shovels in the back of the car (apparently these guys are farmers). Upon arriving, the dying father becomes the least of her problems. With the father lying unconsciousness thanks to the morphine, both his neighbors and his brother, who conveniently shows up right on time, sit around eating, drinking, talking, smoking, grieving, and deciding whether this stranger can pass for a daughter that neglected her family long ago. And when they have any time left over, they also break down into petty arguments. Meanwhile, the girl tries to pass the time by doing absolutely nothing, and finds herself beginning to literally slip into her new identity. The brilliance of Ad Lib Night is how subdued it is. Lee eliminates the mistaken identity theme right away because everyone already knows that the girl is only pretending to be the daughter. It subverts convention by not making any space for unnecessary twists, but still manages to keep the audience guessing as to who this mysterious girl is. However, Ad Lib Night is just as much about this pseudo-family as it is about the girl; the middle section is devoted mostly to the people around the dying man, and while it moves slow without any real direction (they sit, they eat, they talk, they drink, and not always necessarily in that order), but I can argue that the subdued approach Lee uses to show this family brought together by tragedy slowly unravel feels more gripping than any other family argument on screen in recent years. Han Hyo Yu, however, also gets her chance to shine. When the mystery behind her character is finally solved, the big reveal scene is shot in a quiet way, with only the girl and the moving scenery outside the car moving past her as she tells the truth that she's been hiding all along. It may be the singular most important moment of the film, but Lee doesn't treat it as such. Han has very little dialogue and maintains a poker face throughout, so when the truth comes out and the emotions finally begin to show on her face, it's a powerful moment, though there's no outburst or dramatic music to elevate it. Lee's twist, in fact, isn't even all that surprising; instead, it sticks with the set up. The explanation follows basic logic without having to piece too much together, and it ties the theme of the film together. However, Lee's choice to reveal everything about the girl in the last 15 minutes does feel slightly contrived, because there's no real reason that nobody there would not know her name until just before she leaves the house, and it becomes the only aspect of the film that feels false. Despite the presence of a female protagonist and the potential for lots of family drama, Ad Lib Night is not really a melodrama; in fact, I would call Ad Lib Night an anti-melodrama; the emotions are so muted throughout that when there's a moment where characters burst out in sobs and tears, it's so exaggerated that it slyly reveals small bits about the family and its members rather than provoking any true emotions. Despite its settings being a house surrounded by death, director Lee keeps the proceedings light - the family interactions are often intimate, but do little to drive its minimalist plot, and even the family knows that petty arguments only distract them from the real reason everyone is under the same roof in the first place. Meanwhile, the girl, despite being told about the "important" role she plays, ultimately plays a very small part in the scheme of things. Everything that happens to the girl happens within her thoughts, but Lee amazingly manages to make her a character to identify with through small moments that speak so much about her state of mind without using any verbal exposition. This, folks, is called visual storytelling. Of course, there will still be people who can't help but ask those burning questions such as, who the girl is, why she really decided to go along with the whole thing, what the point of all that stuff with the dying man's family is, and just why does the movie move so darn slow? To those people, I can only say: look closer. by Kevin Ma |












Bookmark & Share