Aisurutokinihana sukoto DVD Region 2
- This product cannot be cancelled or returned after the order has been placed. For more details, please refer to our return policy.
- This product will not be shipped to Hong Kong.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Aisurutokinihana sukoto Aisurutokinihana sukoto Aisurutokinihana sukoto 愛するときに話すこと Aisurutokinihana sukoto |
| Artist Name(s): | Han Suk Kyu | Kim Ji Soo 韓石圭 | 金知秀 韩石圭 | 金知秀 ピョン・スンウク(脚本) | イ・ヒャンヒ(脚色) | イ・インウォン(撮影) | キム・シファン(音楽) | キム・ミノ(美術) | ハン・ソッキュ | キム・ジス | キム・ソンニョ | イ・ハンウィ | チョン・ヘソン 한 석규 | 김 지수 |
| Director: | Byeon Seung Wook 邊勝旭 边胜旭 ピョン・スンウク(監督) | ピョン・スンウク 변승욱 |
| Release Date: | 2008-02-22 |
| Publisher Product Code: | GNBF-1205 |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it? |
| Publisher: | Geneon Universal Entertainment |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1005176683 |
Product Information
薬剤師のシム・イング(ハン・ソッキュ)は、知的障害者の兄インソプ(イ・ハンウィ)の世話に追われ、自分の恋愛は後回しにしていた。そんなある日、贋物ブランドのデザイナー、イ・ヘラン(キム・ジス)が近所に引っ越してきた。亡父の借金に追われるヘランもまた、人を愛することを知り、落ち込む。そこへヘランが睡眠薬を買うために薬局を訪れ、イングはヘランに薬の代わりに缶ビールを差し出した。こうしてふたりは次第に惹かれあうが・・・。 メイキング/撮影風景/予告編集
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other Versions of "Aisurutokinihana sukoto"
-
- Version
- Product Title
- Our Price
- Availability
-
Korea Version
- Solace (Korea Version) VCD
- Temporarily Out of Stock
- Solace Limited Edition DVD Region 3
- Out of Print
YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Aisurutokinihana sukoto"
This professional review refers to Solace Limited Edition
|
In-ku (Han Suk-kyu) runs his own pharmacy and lives at home with his mother, also taking care of his mentally-ill brother In-seob (Lee Han-wi). While he loves his family he sometimes finds it difficult not to think about living his own life and getting married, but he feels that he's too restricted by responsibility to ever settle down. Hye-ran (Kim Ji-su) runs a clothes store, but also specialises in making imitations of popular brands. She and her sister Mi-ran are heavily in debt, thanks to their late father, and they're finding it tough to move on in life. Mi-ran wishes to marry and escape her troubles, but Hye-ran doesn't want to be left with all the crap. A chance encounter sees Hye-ran run into In-kyu, and soon they form a friendship. They begin to confide in one another and find that their lives aren't so different, and thus they become romantically involved. As they become even closer their burdens begin to grow and they find themselves questioning family values as they seek to find the answers to their troubles. Solace is the directorial debut from Byeon Seung-wook, who also worked from his own screenplay which was five years in the making. A former assistant director of Lee Chang-dong for the 2000 hit Peppermint Candy - which explains his homage to the director during a movie drive-in scene - Seung-wook fuels his picture with simple human insight and real emotions. Solace is a well-grounded feature that doesn't take too many liberties with its material; it even refrains as much as possible from drowning itself in heavy melodrama, rather presenting us with these people and their troubles and letting us decide if they're worth caring about or not. Unsurprisingly, the director can't quite escape the odd musical cue here and there, but overall this isn't a picture that relies on advantageous scoring and manipulative twists, and it doesn't need to. The lives surrounding the film's primary characters are indicative of a real world that Seung-wook is trying to portray: family hardships, acceptance, settling down and social woes, which everyone must try to overcome, if not simply cope with. He gives us people from all walks of life and never is anyone portrayed as being significantly more important than anyone else ("I'm a human being too," proclaims a prostitute at one point). Taking precedence are financial burdens, coupled with family ties. Here we have characters who dream of escaping from their lives, knowing that in reality they can't, but they seek to drown out their sorrow with the likes of alcohol, before realising that the company of another is as powerful as any drug. And this is how Seung-wook builds up his tale, though despite what you might think it's all played quite light-heartedly. There's a lot of fun behind his script, which above all else shows clear love and affection between family members, regardless of frustrations that might often set in. Much of this may seem rather formulaic to a certain extent, and if not for such a likeable cast it might not have worked half as well as it does. We need to be able to follow these characters with our undivided attention, particularly when considering that the picture clocks in at almost two hours, which granted is a good twenty minutes overcooked. There are scenes that unfold over lengthy durations, but with things resting firmly on the shoulders of the ever capable Han Suk-kyu it's difficult not to find comfort within. His bond with his brother, as played by Lee Han-wi is often delicately handled, allowing a strong dynamic to manifest into something truly great by the end, while Kim Ji-su, still relatively fresh from her impressive debut in This Charming Girl, provides an equally subtle performance, which sees the viewer believe in such a blossoming relationship. All of this is encapsulated by Byeon Seung-wook's rather low-key approach. Solace isn't anything more than quietly attractive to look at; it's spread across few locations and feels quite restrained, but it's a well-lit production that manages to admirably balance its change in mood from time to time. A good first effort from a director who will surely stick around for a while longer. Audio/Visual The Korean 5.1 Surround track is a simple offering. This isn't a film that requires a great deal, so don't expect much more than clear dialogue. The score, while pleasant enough, is immediately forgettable, but it's given a bolster across the front and rear channels, while a few ambient effects also kick in 'round the back - during rainy scenes for instance. Optional English subtitles are included and they offer a good translation, with nothing to worry about in terms of grammar and timing. Extras Overall by Kevin Gilvear - DVD Times |
Customer Review of "Aisurutokinihana sukoto"
See all my reviews
October 28, 2007
This customer review refers to Solace Limited Edition
SUBTLE DRAMA
|
THE PREVIOUS REVIEW IS REALLY GOOD SO I WILL JUST SAY THAT THIS IS ONE OF MOST SUBLE KOREAN DRAMA EVER THE ACTING IS BRILLANT AND SOME SCENES ARE EXREMELY MOVING THE STORY IS REALISTIC ALSO THE CHARACTERS. THE SCENARY IS VERY MATURE AND THE END OF THE MOVIE IS ABSOLOUTLY HEART BREAKING.A VERY REFINED AND INTELIGENT REFLECTION OF FALLING IN LOVE AND BEING LOST IN LOVE AND THE DIFICULTIES OF BEING HAPPY IN LIFE. A MUST SEE KOREAN MOVIE |
See all my reviews
April 10, 2007
This customer review refers to Solace Limited Edition
A reward in Solace
|
It seems that with this movie its good food for thought about the question of what life's priorities can be regarding love and commitment. What do you do when you have dependents that need your highest attention and to also fulfill a life that you need of your own? Suk Kyu Han's character deals with all this sympathetically and realistically by the difficulties concerning responsibility to his mentally backward brother and of a possible romantic liaison with lovely clothes designer Hye Ran (Ji Soo Kim), who frequently visits his pharmacy business. The acting by Suk Kye and Ji Soo are high (as to be expected here), but I found the actor's performance of In Ku's backward brother to be excellent. (Apparently, this type of role can be very difficult to perform although seeming quite the contrary). A somewhat serious film considering also Hye Ran's situation of her father's debt, but it does have good humorous and uplifting moments and overall a rewarding watch. I liked the befitting moment where Hye Ran returns to her old school to find out if the song "Home Sweet Home" is still played out there and the parallel of this by the child like nature of In Ku's brother. Maybe a way of saying that we all return one day to childhood natures (unless you never move out of one of course). Where we end is where we begin. This film is about that really - a childlike heart needing a child like home. If anyone who as seen "Christmas In August" and/or "Barefoot Gibong" I think will likewise enjoy this movie. It can be a bit difficult due to the subject matters, but I appreciated its honesty and at times humorous considerations of families with around the clock dependents. |










Bookmark & Share