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Breath (VCD) (Korea Version) VCD

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Breath (VCD) (Korea Version)
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All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9 out of 10 (2)

Technical Information

Product Title: Breath (VCD) (Korea Version) 呼吸 (VCD) (韓國版) 呼吸 (VCD) (韩国版) ブレス(VCD)(韓国版)
Artist Name(s): Chang Chen | Kim Ki Duk | Ha Jung Woo | Park Ji Ah 張震 | 金 基德 | 河政佑 | 朴 智娥 张震 | 金 基德 | Ha Jung Woo | 朴 智娥 張震(チャン・チェン) | キム・ギドク | ハ・ジョンウ | パク・チア Chang Chen | 김기덕 | 하정우 | Park Ji Ah
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Release Date: 2008-02-29
Language: Korean
Subtitles: English
Country of Origin: South Korea
Disc Format(s): VCD
Publisher: Daekyung DVD
Package Weight: 110 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1010704943

Product Information

죽음을 선고 받고도 스스로 죽음을 만나려는 사형수가 있다
죽음이 얼마 남지 않은 사형수 장진은 날카로운 송곳으로 자신의 목을 찔러 자살을 시도한다. 죽음을 앞당기려는 그의 노력에도 불구하고 결국 목소리만 잃은 채 다시 교도소로 돌아온다. 돌아온 그곳에서 기다리는 것은 그를 사랑하는 어린 죄수. 하지만 장진에게 이 생에 남아있는 미련은 아무것도 없다.

모자를 것 없어 보이는 삶 안에서 갈 곳을 잃어버린 여자가 있다.
부족함 없어 보이는 연의 삶은 남편의 외도를 알게 되면서 어긋나기 시작한다. 우연히 TV에서 사형수 장진의 뉴스를 본 연은 그에게 묘한 연민의 정을 느끼고 그를 만나기 위해 교도소로 향한다. 자신이 어린 시절 경험했던 죽음의 순간을 장진에게 털어놓으며 닫아 두었던 마음의 문을 열게 되는데….

그들이 쉬는 들숨과 날숨은 각자의 삶을 어디로 데려갈까…
연은 장진을 위해 해줄 수 있는 것을 찾고, 사계절을 선물하기로 마음 먹는다. 죽음 외에는 가진 것이 없던 장진에게 삶의 온기를 다시 불어 넣어주는 연. 계속되는 만남을 통해 둘은 단순한 욕망 이상의 감정을 갖게 되지만 연의 남편은 두 사람의 관계를 알아채고 이들의 사랑을 막기 시작한다.
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Breath (VCD) (Korea Version)"

December 21, 2007

This professional review refers to Breath + Time (DVD) (Special Edition) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
Kim Ki-Duk goes for something a little less extreme with Breath, a spare and potentially less disturbing film than one might expect from the well-known auteur, whose predilection with cruelty and violence have made him a notorious arthouse figure. The film stars Taiwanese actor Chang Chen as Jang Jin, a death row inmate who attempts to hasten his upcoming demise by stabbing himself in the throat with a sharpened toothbrush. The attempt is unsuccessful, only raising the concern of his cellmates, one of whom who carries an unspoken homoerotic crush on the doomed Jang. The suicide attempt also makes the news, reaching the attention of disaffected housewife Yeon (Zia), who passes her days sculpting, doing laundry, and generally looking like she's going to step off her balcony one day.

Yeon has a daughter and a husband (Ha Jung-Woo), but the latter has strayed. Impelled by her anger or perhaps merely her daily monotony, Yeon visits the prison, and asks to see Jang Jin, saying that she's his ex-girlfriend. She's rejected, but is let in soon afterwards by the prison's apparent in-charge, a faceless, nameless individual running the prison's security cameras. This person seems to have an odd and perverse interest in seeing Yeon interact with Jang Jin, first separated by a window, and then within the confines of a visiting room during her later visits. At the first visit, she tells Jang about her own near-death experience, when she held her breath for five minutes underwater as a child. After telling Jang Jin not to hurt himself again, she leaves, returning to her cold, evidently unfulfilling life.

But she returns again and again, bringing a new season each time. During each visit, she wallpapers the visiting room to resemble a season, dresses in the appropriate clothing, and even sings a song, while Jang Jin looks on quietly. He's mute because he stabbed himself in the throat - which helps out the Korean-impaired Chang Chen - and he watches her curiously, intently, and ultimately affectionately. Chang turns in a fine performance, considering that he can only communicate through minute actions and facial expressions, creating a character that's interesting and even sympathetic, though the enormity of his death-row crime seems a little jarring once its revealed. There seems to be a connection between his crime and Yeon's life, as the cold reality of modern life is portrayed as a silent, oppressive weight, suffocating individuals until they can only react, either by forming a bizarre connection with a death row prisoner or, in the case of Jang Jing, something far, far worse.

Kim Ki-Duk is not explicit about the film's message, but the themes are obvious. His settings are cold and unwelcoming, with only Yeon's wallpapered visiting room and colorful outfits and performances providing any spark or life. It seems that the characters in Breath must step outside the norm to find life, and create it for themselves if it's not there. Otherwise, life is a drag, with people seemingly uncommunicative and unsympathetic towards one another. And yet Kim does allow the film its uplifting emotions, bringing unspoken understanding between characters and the promise of accord that seems to indicate better times even outside the visiting room's walls. Meanwhile, other characters take an almost perverse interest in Yeon's activities. The security monitor and even Yeon's husband seem to be okay with watching, almost like they see the benefit and even approve of her extreme playacting. Again, it seems like Kim is sending us a positive message. Maybe what he's saying is we all need a vacation, even if it's to a visiting room filled with colorful wallpaper announcing the arrival of fall. That, and people should let their loved ones have vacations.

Or maybe it's not all rosy, because Kim still has a chance to bring Breath some cynicism. There's complexity and a darkly humorous sensibility in how Kim arranges the film, creating characters that are perverse and unlikable, and yet engaging and sympathetic. Breath involves lots of repetition; each visit from Yeon brings a new season, plus new despair to Jang, and the pattern repeats up until the unexpected, quiet end. When it's all over, it's curious if the film really does make its aims clear, but there's emotional substance in the moments and in the wounded performance from Zia, who adds layers that the sparsely worded script doesn't communicate. Ultimately Breath manages to affect without really doing very much, using its quirky black humor and glimmers of small hope to speak volumes that may not really be there. For audiences - and even for the film's characters - the experience may be more about what is individually taken, rather than what is explicitly given.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

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 "Breath (VCD) (Korea Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9 out of 10 (2)

Rhoda
See all my reviews


May 23, 2008

This customer review refers to Breath (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
1 people found the following helpful

Great!!! Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
Kim Ki Duk did it again. This director is really something. I really like his movies. The story is very unique and is something you get to see everyday. This movie deserves actually an award.

Chang Chen acted well and really cool. It's not for everyone one but that Kim Ki Duk... get your copy.
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numinair
See all my reviews


March 17, 2008

This customer review refers to Breath + Time (DVD) (Special Edition) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
2 people found the following helpful

Yeon's Four Seasons Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
The relation to the title of "Breath", concerns the first words that housewife Yeon describes to death row prisoner Jang Jin, when she first meets him, and of how as a child she had nearly drowned in a childhood prank, and having to hold her breath for 5 minutes, before being rescued to safety. But in that 5 minutes, Yeon had also felt an inner sensation of elated freedom. This is Yeon's way of wanting to empathize with Jang Jin, that she understands his own blocked emotions of prison life, by this incident in her past, alongside her present 'prison' type circumstances of being within a fractured and claustrophobic marriage situation - as her own husband is having an affair with another woman. As Yeon had constantly watched Jang Jin on the daily TV news broadcasts, and hearing of him trying to commit suicide by stabbing himself in the throat, and alongside this stifling atmosphere of her husband's affair, Yeon decides one day to take a taxi to the prison Jang Jin is kept in. Eventually, getting through prison protocol, (as an unseen prison manager constantly watches Yeon from CCTV and affirms her visits) she manages to eventually visit him. This relation to breath, is then shown as an allegorical essay, of how a woman's life courses through the tides of life's seasons and of her attempt to free her desperate and paralyzing situation, regarding her husband's lack of love, and the need for the breath of life and happiness of emotional air to return to her. Although you get a somewhat empathetical feeling for her, you soon realize that Yeon concedes compassion on a similarly projected mirrored circumstance with Jang Jin's imprisonment. Even the house Yeon lives in with her husband, looks like a metal enclosure (like one of those futuristic metal bases in a video game), reflecting her lowered feelings. Its her own needs that are going on here.

Likewise, Jang Jin is locked away in a cell for the murder of his wife and children (which you can surmise could be related to his own wife's adultery. It never mentions it, though), and shares his confinement with three other inmates. One young man gets close to him in love and need, but this is an annoyance to Jang Jin. His need for love and the guilt he suffers at his own fate, produces his own need for a sense of submerged expression from his surroundings, and to let in the breath, cuts into his own throat for air (amidst a mad scurry of silliness), by snatching a toothbrush off a wall artist prisoner, who also needs to scratch nude women onto them. Jang Jin gets 'air', by being taken to the hospital to have his throat injury attended - and is freed momentarily from the inertia of his prison cell.

The main key to this film is the nature of 'imprisonment', 'stifling', 'lack of air', with the literal confinement of Jang Jin and Yeon's entrapment in her marriage and husband's infidelity, and related feelings of her drowning experience as a child. Yeon's own brittle married life is likened to 'holding her breath and needing to come up for air', to feel free and alive again, and finds an expression and mirror of love, when seeing Jang Jin on the TV broadcasts. He needs breath as she does, as he had stabbed himself in the throat to get it. So, Yeon, seeing this, makes a radical assertion, by visiting him in prison. She then testifies herself to Jang Jin, likening it to the cyclical four seasons of renewal and change, of the four main seasonal stages of the year. Yeon relates a projected aspect of each season, by taking large photographic wallpaper posters of fields and sky, and then pasting them onto the walls of Jang Jin's prison interview cell, to make a window into that specific season, and then singing a related song about her life and the season to him. Okay that seems a bit nutty, but that's what her stifled life had done to her. As Yeon is also a sculpture artist, too, this is her artistic means of contending her own blocked emotions, as well as trying to free Jang Jin's own tormented soul. She also relates her own female life cycle, from innocent child to a sexualized woman, by giving Jang Jin photos of herself at each stage of the relevant four seasons. A child picture in spring, a young woman in summer, etc. Jang Jin is immediately touched by what she does, as if Yeon is expressing the nature of change, that his stifling period of prison life is nothing more than a cycle of change in life itself. He also feels he is being loved from a woman, like he had never been before.

The nature of expression if also shown when Yeon returns home at one point, and spots her daughter dancing in front of the television to music. But as soon as she sees her mother, immediately stops her outward expressive dancing. Although Yeon didn't wish for her daughter to do this, this was a sentiment that Yeon could feel in herself. Expression is certainly something she does by singing to Jang Jin in prison, in her seasonal themed visits - to try to avoid the pathologic, this curbing of life humanity by not being able to emotively express. This also relates to circumstances of when people feel disjointed and lack being able to openly show enjoyment in communication. The 'locked breath' of loneliness in a confinement of isolation, by lack of expression, metaphoric here by Jang Jin's imprisonment and Yeon's obedience and unfair marriage situation.

Although this can seem heavy, there is lighter air to this film. It amused me to an extent, that by the time Yeon gets to her winter visit with Jang Jin, their embrace got the most hottest. There is also some humor with the 4 prisoners as a whole, and the routine grabbing of Jang Jin's seasonal photos he obtains from Yeon, and the jealousy of the one young prisoner smitten with Jang Jin. So a jealous prisoner, and even the artistic nude wall scratcher, grab and use JJ's photos to either hide, eat or use as an artist's impression. I wondered, too, that maybe there were 4 prisoners in the cell, because they were also reflecting the 4 seasons in some way. Certainly, like Kim Ki Duk's "Time" this is also symbolic, if not most, by what you see in this. Like "Time", though, this is also quite and easy Kim Ki Duk movie to watch, and by the sprinkling of ironic humor here and there, makes it less of a heavy and somber film. In certain ways, it is related to KKD's earlier movie "Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter and Spring again", considering Yeon's seasonal prison visits. And actress Ji Ah Park as Yeon, also appeared in that film. I imagine there to be a fair bit of multi threaded stuff in this relating to a person's life going through symbolic reflected season's, too. Need more time to think about that, though.

Mainly, "Breath" can showcase the mistakes and pitfalls we can all make, that maybe could be avoided. Jang Jin goes to prison surely over a passionate and emotional circumstance, that he could have been able to control. Yeon's husband finds another woman in a relationship he needs, instead of the woman he married and committed to. Like in Pink Floyd's song "Breathe", about digging a hole by forgetting the sun, and digging another hole afterwards, relates to a repeated and maybe cyclic pattern of emotion and pitfalls. A person's actions become the hole they fall into, which they can raise themselves up again from, but if the sun is blocked and the lesson isn't learned, only fall into the same hole again. Forgetting the sun is like forgetting the rational, the logic and the inner emotional warnings. The film concludes in a befitting way, though, even if these two characters could be viewed as a complete mirror of one person all the way through.

Acting is excellent, no doubt, and even though Chang Chen says absolutely nothing in this film, his acting here is top stuff. Likewise, Ji Ah Park is certainly another excellent Koean actress, in her part as Yeon.

This box set is certainly worth getting to find out what this is all about, and as you do get "Time" and "Breath" together here, its a well worth purchase and food for thought.
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