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Ashes of Time Redux (DVD) (US Version) DVD Region 1

Jacky Cheung (Actor) | Leslie Cheung (Actor) | Tony Leung Chiu Wai (Actor) | Charlie Yeung (Actor)
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Ashes of Time Redux (DVD) (US Version)
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Customer Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (2)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Two years after forming his own production company, Jet Tone, Hong Kong director Wong Kar Wai released Ashes of Time, a martial-arts epic based on The Eagle Shooting Heroes, a series of novels by Louis Cha writing under the pseudonym Jin Yong. The film was set in jianghu, an imaginary world with its own views of good and evil. In 2008, unhappy with the many alternate versions of Ashes of Time available, Wong reedited and restored the film, working with the original negative and soundtrack, which were in severe disrepair. The new version, called Ashes of Time Redux, which screened at such prestigious international gatherings as the Cannes, Toronto, and New York Film Festivals, is a breathtaking example of Wong's masterly storytelling technique, combined with the stunning cinematography of Christopher Doyle and gorgeous new cello solos recorded by Yo-Yo Ma.

Leslie Cheung stars as Ouyang Feng, a mysterious man living alone in the desert, where people come to him when they need someone eliminated. He is visited annually by Huang Yaoshi (Tony Leung Ka Fai), who brings him stories from the outside world - and especially his lost love (Maggie Cheung). Meanwhile, Murong Yang (Brigitte Lin) has contracted to have Huang killed, and Murong Yin (also Lin) wants her brother taken care of. For a film that examines the role of memory in people's lives, Wong assembled an all-star cast that also includes Tony Leung Chiu Wai as a blind swordsman, Carina Lau as his wife, Charlie Young as a young girl seeking vengeance, and Jacky Cheung as a poor swordsman looking for work. Ashes of Time Redux is a visual treat, with Doyle (who has also teamed with Wong on such well-regarded films as Days of Being Wild and In the Mood for Love) capturing swirling sands and beautiful, treacherous landscapes, resulting in a stirring sensory experience.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Ashes of Time Redux (DVD) (US Version) 東邪西毒:終極版 (2008) (DVD) (美國版) 东邪西毒:终极版 (2008) (DVD) (美国版) 楽園の瑕 : 終極版 (東邪西毒:終極版) (US版) Ashes of Time Redux (US Version)
Also known as: Ashes of Time Redux Ashes of Time Redux Ashes of Time Redux
Artist Name(s): Jacky Cheung (Actor) | Leslie Cheung (Actor) | Tony Leung Chiu Wai (Actor) | Charlie Yeung (Actor) | Carina Lau (Actor) | Tony Leung Ka Fai (Actor) | Maggie Cheung Man Yuk (Actor) | Brigitte Lin (Actor) | Collin Chou | Christopher Doyle 張 學友 (Actor) | 張 國榮 (Actor) | 梁 朝偉 (Actor) | 楊采妮 (Actor) | 劉嘉玲 (Actor) | 梁 家輝 (Actor) | 張 曼玉 (Actor) | 林青霞 (Actor) | 倪星 鄒 | Christopher Doyle 张 学友 (Actor) | 张 国荣 (Actor) | 梁 朝伟 (Actor) | 杨采妮 (Actor) | 刘嘉玲 (Actor) | 梁 家辉 (Actor) | 张 曼玉 (Actor) | 林青霞 (Actor) | 邹兆龙 | 杜可风 張學友(ジャッキー・チョン) (Actor) | 張國榮 (レスリー・チャン) (Actor) | 梁朝偉(トニー・レオン)  (Actor) | 楊采妮 (チャーリー・ヤン) (Actor) | 劉嘉玲 (カリーナ・ラウ)  (Actor) | 梁家輝 (レオン・カーファイ) (Actor) | 張曼玉 (マギー・チャン) (Actor) | 林青霞 (ブリジット・リン) (Actor) | 鄒兆龍(コリン・チョウ) | 杜可風 (クリストファー・ドイル) Jacky Cheung (Actor) | 장국영 (Actor) | 양조위 (Actor) | Charlie Yeung (Actor) | Carina Lau (Actor) | Tony Leung Ka Fai (Actor) | 장만옥 (Actor) | Brigitte Lin (Actor) | Collin Chou | Christopher Doyle
Director: Wong Kar Wai 王 家衛 王 家卫 王家衛 (ウォン・カーウァイ)  왕가위
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Release Date: 2009-03-03
UPC Code: 043396283374
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, French
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Color Information: Color
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 1 - USA, Canada, U.S. Territories What is it?
Rating: R (MPAA)
Publisher: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Package Weight: 180 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1014013593

Product Information

Director: Kar Wai Wong

DVD Features:

Region 1
Keep Case
Widescreen - 1.78
Additional Release Material:
Featurette: Born From the Ashes: The Making of Ashes of Time Redux
Interviews: Q&A With Wong Kar Wai

Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Ashes of Time Redux (DVD) (US Version)"

July 28, 2009

This professional review refers to Ashes of Time Redux (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Ashes of Time Redux provokes mixed feelings. One immediate emotion is elation, as this is Wong Kar-Wai revisiting one of his classics, restoring the elements to the quality they deserve. Another possible emotion is disappointment, as Wong has tinkered with his original 1994 cut, and the changes are arguably beneficial. In going back to Ashes of Time, Wong chose to modify the film for a post-In the Mood For Love/2046 audience, and one has to wonder if the effort was really necessary. Two action sequences were removed, the remaining one truncated, the music score reworked, and the film reedited for smoother pacing, a more reverent tone, and - one would imagine - more coherent storytelling. Still, the feeling that Redux evokes is largely the same as fifteen years ago. What has really been gained by Wong's tinkering? Aside from the most superficial elements, probably not that much.

Not that the superficial elements aren't reason to applaud, because they are. Wong Kar-Wai's films are critically acclaimed in part because of their stunning way with sight and sound, and Redux is candy for the senses. Wong Kar-Wai and his pals have given Ashes of Time the full A/V workover, easily running rings around the murky prints seen on previous DVDs or laserdiscs. Colors are more vibrant and the sound has been newly remixed and corrected. Gone is Brigitte Lin's Cantonese-dubbed voice, with her sync Mandarin voice restored. Now that Lin's dialogue matches her lips, the film is spared the rushed feel that non-sync sound creates. Ashes of Time was always a quality film, but now it resembles slapped-together Hong Kong Cinema even less.

Furthermore, Frankie Chan and Roel A. Garcia's synthesizer score has been reworked by composer Wu Tong into fully orchestrated accompaniment highlighted by cello solos by Yo-Yo Ma. The original score was bombastic and melodramatic enough that modern audiences may have been put off, but it was, in its own way, the perfect complement to these iconic martial arts characters. Along with the excising of the undercranked martial arts sequences, this change seems to move the film further from the "Hong Kong Cinema feel" and closer to the stately elegance of a 21st century cinema wuxia - albeit with some expressionistic style emphasizing art over narrative.

Since the elegant wuxia is no longer a new thing, Ashes of Time feels less novel than it did fifteen years ago, and only seems to conform to the current trend for big budget martial arts movies. The original work felt like a new and daring take on a popular cinema genre, possessing of more overt thematic depth than commercial fare, and an over-the-top vibe that made the film both kitschy and enthralling. Redux arrives as a less accessible cousin of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, minus the huge set pieces or the overly-balletic Banquet-style martial arts. The film is still riveting and deliriously enthralling, but fifteen years later, the result feels slightly hollow.

Does this mean that Ashes of Time is now a lesser film? No, not at all. Perhaps Redux can be called a lesser endeavor, as the film arguably needed reediting. However, the power of Ashes of Time is hard to deny, Redux or otherwise. The film starts in an alienating fashion, and requires knowledge of Jin Yong's original characters to fully grasp Wong's audacity. However, once the film moves beyond the overwrought Murong Yang/Murong Yin segment and into the story of Tony Leung Chiu-Wai's blind swordsman, the film finds its emotional footing. No matter how you slice it, this is still Wong Kar-Wai being Wong Kar-Wai; the focus is character and emotion over action and story, and there's no mistaking his pained characters and paralyzing emotions. Wong brings these gorgeous martial arts heroes closer to his audience, revering them by making them flawed, deluded human beings. It worked then and it works now.

But Ashes of Time Redux's greatest power is ultimately its most unintentional. What's the main reason to watch Ashes of Time again - and then again and again? It's Leslie Cheung. Wong Kar-Wai's most troubled muse, Cheung gives the cynical, amoral Ouyang Feng multiple layers of felt emotion, and the character's quiet turmoil stands in strong contrast to his more common explosive characterizations. Ouyang Feng is a character that's hurting inside, and despite knowing that, he keeps punishing himself and others. The all-star cast turns in fine work, but Leslie Cheung is the film's wounded heart. In hindsight, one can see how he created his character, and Redux proves haunting and essential because of it.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

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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 "Ashes of Time Redux (DVD) (US Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (2)

Michael
See all my reviews


March 30, 2009

This is such a better edit. Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
This is such a better edit of the film!

Fans should rejoice at the restoration. I'm not certain that "murky" was even good enough to describe what the old print looked like. For those who needed the English subs in the old version, the subs were barely visible (and, of course, they were embedded into the print).

The presentation of the film is still grainy (that was the style of the film), but in no way is murky or even slighly lacking in clarity.

Just great!.
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Kevin Kennedy
See all my reviews


March 18, 2009

1 people found the following helpful

Great Wong Kar Wai film Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
"Ashes of Time Redux" is a kind of visual tone poem loosely based upon Louis Cha's "Eagle Shooting Heroes". I am so happy to have this recut and remastered digital version. It looks and sounds much more gorgeous than the rather murky VHS tape of of the film I'd seen before.

To say the film has a plot may be a bit of a stretch; it tells of Ouyang Feng (Leslie Cheung), who lives on the edge of nowhere and hires renegade swordsmen as hitmen for people who need to have someone bumped off. It also tells intertwining stories of the people who seek Ouyang's services or otherwise pass through his life. The storyline is ineffable, poetic, glancing, rather than a traditional narrative.

The film boasts a dream cast, including, in addition to Leslie, Brigitte Lin, Tony Leung Chiu Wai, Tony Leung Ka Fai, Charley Yeung, Jacky Cheung, Carina Lau, and, in a small role, Maggie Cheung. For me, this is one of Leslie's finest performances; he invests his rather passive character with a wry humor that makes him riveting. Cinematographer Christopher Doyle's imagery is spectacular, delicious, beautiful! You will not be able to turn away from the action sequences, which were directed by Sammo Hung and shot unlike any other action scenes you've ever seen. And the film's music is just splendid.

"Ashes of Time" is not for everyone; those unwilling to savor its poetic approach may simply find the movie to be weird and a bit tedious, particularly during its slower first half. However, if you are willing to play along with director Wong Kar Wai's unique vision, then you will regard this film, particularly in its "Redux" incarnation, to be an unforgettable classic.
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