Brave Story (VCD) (Hong Kong Version) VCD
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Brave Story tells the tale of Wataru, a 10 year-old boy who enters a fantastic world called Vision, where he undertakes a quest to meet a wish-granting goddess. Wataru's adventure involves mastering magic, meeting new friends, and overcoming various obstacles in order to achieve his RPG-like goal. But Wataru has reasons for tackling this quest; back in the regular world, Wataru's mother lies near death, having suffered an accident after losing her husband to another woman. Wataru's life isn't much better; he performs poorly at school, and is bullied by his peers. His quest provides an escape and a possible solution for Wataru's problems - if he can make it through Vision alive. One of Wataru's companions, a neighbor named Mitsuru, is also on a quest in Vision. However, Mitsuru's goals are much different than Wataru's, and could have repercussions on the world of Vision itself.
Technical Information
Product Information
高達20億日元票房
日本動畫史上最豪華聲優陣容
《勇者傳說》(BRAVE STORY)改編自日本文壇天后宮部美幸的同名科幻小說。動畫講述主角為了改變命運,毅然勇闖夢幻世界的冒險旅程。電影由日本富士電視台、動畫公司GONZO和美國華納兄弟聯手傾力打造,製作費高達10億日元。
電影台前幕後陣容強勁,由《最後流亡》(LAST EXILE)的千明孝一執導,《跳躍大搜查線》的龜山千廣監製;主角則由松隆子初試啼聲,其他參演者包括常盤貴子、WENTZ瑛士(WaT)和大泉洋等。影片榮獲2007年度「日本奧斯卡優秀動畫作品賞」,更入圍法國安斯國際動畫電影節競賽長片組別,絕對是不可多得的佳作。
故事簡介︰
父母離異、母親自殺,面對連串打擊,主角亙決心改變命運。穿過神秘大門,走進夢幻世界,能力低下被評為見習勇者的亙接連遇險:碰上怪狼、被控綁架、同伴被虜、身陷殺機……,每次都結識了新的伙伴,化險為夷。另一邊廂,好友美鶴,不惜毀滅夢幻世界也要改變命運。為了好友和伙伴,亙誓要阻止美鶴,劇戰一觸即發,兩個只能活一個……。最後,亙如願以償,登上命運之塔,卻向命運女神許下出人意表的願望!
配音演員︰
松隆子、大泉洋、常盤貴子、WENTZ瑛士、今井美樹、田中好子、高橋克實、柴田理惠、石田太郎、板倉俊之、堤下敦、虻川美穗子
Other Versions of "Brave Story (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)"
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Hong Kong Version
- Brave Story (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3
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Japan Version
- Brave Story (DVD) (Limited Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
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Korea Version
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Taiwan Version
- Brave Story (DVD) (Taiwan Version) DVD Region 3
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- Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
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Professional Review of "Brave Story (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)"
This professional review refers to Brave Story (DVD) (Limited Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)
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In the fourteen years Gonzo Digimation has been around, they've become one of the most commercially prominent production houses in the animation industry, licensing their franchises the world over, many of them serving as the public face of Japanese pop culture broadcast by the Cartoon Network or released on DVD by companies such as ADV, Geneon or Funimation. Since their first major projects almost a decade ago - working on animated sequences for videogames on the Sega Saturn - one criticism levelled at them time and time again is they lack the narrative skill to match their technical ability; that their series are more concerned with the violence, blockbuster atmospherics and/or melodrama mainstream audiences flock to. Their first feature-length production, Gin-Iro no Kami no Agito (known as Origin: Spirits of the Past in the West), was criticised for placing style squarely over substance, skipping past all manner of plot holes, character development and entire sections of narrative in favour of further opportunities to dazzle the viewer with the skill of Gonzo's animators, designers and CG artists. Brave Story is their second such feature within a year, adapted from a novel by Miyuki Miyabe, the author behind (among many other things) the pyrokinetic Japanese horror production Crossfire. A young boy - Wataru - discovers the way into a fantasy kingdom known as Vision, where a series of trials will grant him the right to impeach a goddess for a single wish - through which he plans to return his problematic childhood to "normal". Already adapted into a manga series spanning twelve volumes and counting, Gonzo elects to tell the story in a little under two hours. If one expects anything different from Gonzo's usual approach to storytelling, initial signs are far from encouraging. Barrelling through the pre-title sequence in a matter of minutes (discovering the gateway to Vision in an abandoned tenement building), Brave Story begins at a fairly rapid pace. Characters are sketched in as fast as possible. Our hero's reticent and not especially capable, but basically good-hearted; his mysterious opposite number (the new arrival at school who also seems to be headed through the gateway) is withdrawn, self-centred and nurses a Dark Secret. We have the bumbling sidekick, the amazon, the flower vase and various other predictable supporting roles, all of whom are swiftly sidelined next to the central thread. This being plotting by numbers, Gonzo is content to stick with the video game tropes that made their name - Wataru's initial trial sees his physical attributes scored on points, or more importantly, an audience with the goddess can only be achieved through collecting five jewels to be stored in the "hero's sword" he's awarded. Backstory for the various political, theological and military factions introduced to us, such as they are, is mentioned in passing and just as quickly discarded. Yet basically, what was a source of frustration in Origin is markedly less so here. Obviously not everyone will agree - the film rarely if ever attempts to persuade the viewer to forget this is disposable genre entertainment first and foremost - but where Origin suffered from dour, apocalyptic pretension and a lack of human warmth, Brave Story charges forward with a lightness of tone and an eye for spectacle which never gets in the way of the gist of the narrative, however simplistic that might be. Where Origin tried to floor its audience right from the word go, Brave Story is far more restrained - the journey into Vision proper doesn't begin until just before the twenty-minute mark, and arguably the first attempt to outright wow the viewer doesn't come until twenty-five. Brave Story adopts a far more pastoral aesthetic, where against the rural and urban backdrops, Gonzo plays with downtime, simple comedy, or whole sequences largely for the uncomplicated visual pleasure they afford. The closest the film gets to a femme fatale, feline Meena, may not have much to do in service of the narrative, but her brief trapeze performance is a delight the studio's television output rarely measures up to. Though it still suffers from the impression that it's talking down to anyone over a certain age, Brave Story manages a sense of fun and adventure, a scope and scale which makes a good case for its initial release in cinemas. Though not up to the best of Studio Ghibli's work (the obvious high water mark), the world it presents is often startlingly beautiful - the mid-point time lapse sequence which sums up a long journey by the main party, or the climactic resolution after evil has been overcome to name but two instances. And if it resorts to a crushingly predictable deus ex machina near the end, at least it does so with a thrilling visual flair. Plus, unlike some recent high-profile productions, Studio 4C's Steamboy or Square's Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, it does ground these fantasy pyrotechnics with some degree of consideration for the basic human emotions involved and their physical and emotional costs. The nominal villain's motivation is nothing wildly new or surprising, but it's laid out with more sympathy than one might expect, and the impact of his unleashing ultimate evil - while glossed over to a significant extent - is still given far more real, tangible impact, even a touch of genuine horror, than Steamboy's laying waste to vast sections of Victorian London or Spirits Within's planet-wide devastation. And ultimately, though Brave Story's resolution still simplifies and commercialises certain privations of childhood, it does deserve some applause for not taking Hollywood's way out, firmly avoiding the temptation to insinuate everything can be tidily concluded if we only try. The voice acting is generally of a high standard, never descending to outright histrionics even in those soliloquies or moments approaching moralising afforded by the script; while most of the dialogue is merely serviceable, the film does give people more to do than, say, Takashi Miike's live-action The Great Yokai War, which for all its good points reduced a perfectly capable child lead's performance to little more than impassioned screaming every few minutes. Dance act Juno Reactor's orchestral score has few outright standout moments, but remains more than competent throughout, never grating on the ear or intruding too heavily on the action. Many of Gonzo's television series have suffered frequently from obvious lapses in quality - while Brave Story obviously lacks the same budget as a Ghibli or Production I.G. film, it never seems the producers took the budget from one scene to shore up the animation in another. Overall, while one has to keep in mind that this is a blatant attempt to court a very specific demographic and can be rightly criticised as such, Brave Story is a vast improvement on Origin and one of the highlights of Gonzo's history thus far. Simplistic, flawed and not terribly profound, it is also entertaining, captivating, pleasing to the eye and even somewhat emotionally moving. Mainstream audiences will doubtless eat it up, but there is definitely enough of worth here that anyone who appreciates skilled animation, artistry or even simply top-flight commercial filmmaking should also appreciate it. Most definitely recommended. by Eight Rooks - Twitchfilm.net |
Customer Review of "Brave Story (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)"
See all my reviews
January 7, 2007
This customer review refers to Brave Story (DVD) (Limited Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)
|
It's got a very 'video-game feel' to it. This adventure story would make a perfect back-bone to a video-game. In fact, video games based on this movie are already being made. Swordsmen and wizardry are all in here. However, not much violence actually takes place throughout the whole film: which is rather disappointing. Top-marks, however, to the animation. The artwork and 3d animations are really pretty to look at. Overall, the story is fun but lacks a little kick in the action department. However, the slick animation makes this worth your time. |












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