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Bullet In The Head (Blu-ray) (Hong Kong Version) Blu-ray Region A

Jacky Cheung (Actor) | Tony Leung Chiu Wai (Actor) | Simon Yam (Actor) | Waise Lee (Actor)
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All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9.5 out of 10 (11)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Action master John Woo directs Bullet in the Head, a violent, dramatic, and utterly compelling action film set in wartime Vietnam! Ben (Cannes Best Actor winner Tony Leung Chiu Wai), Frank (Jacky Cheung), and Paul (Waise Lee) are three longtime buddies who cruise the Hong Kong streets together circa 1967. But when Ben accidentally kills a rival gang member, the trio of friends decide to leave Hong Kong to make their fortune together...in wartime Vietnam. Entrenched in lawless Saigon, the three find their honor tested, as the twisted reality of a world at war intrudes upon their bonds of childhood brotherhood. Greed, desire, and self-preservation threaten to divide them, and even the best of intentions can go incredibly awry. Ultimately, friend must oppose friend, and a bullet to the head can be the only solution.

Considered John Woo's masterpiece, Bullet in the Head features some of the most powerful, striking images ever seen in a Hong Kong film. At the same time, it possesses Woo's trademark romanticized violence and themes of heroic bloodshed, as well as his penchant for hyper-realistic melodrama. John Woo also delivers standout set pieces, including a harrowing sequence in a Vietnamese prison, and an explosive finale on the streets of Hong Kong. Co-starring Simon Yam as a cool Eurasian assassin, Bullet in the Head is powerful, wrenching, and undeniably affecting Hong Kong filmmaking at its finest!

© 2011-2012 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. 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.

Technical Information

Product Title: Bullet In The Head (Blu-ray) (Hong Kong Version) 喋血街頭 (Blu-ray) (香港版) 喋血街头 (Blu-ray) (香港版) ワイルド・ブリット (喋血街頭) (Blu-ray) (香港版) Bullet In The Head (Blu-ray) (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Jacky Cheung (Actor) | Tony Leung Chiu Wai (Actor) | Simon Yam (Actor) | Waise Lee (Actor) | Fennie Yuen (Actor) | Dita Yan (Actor) 張 學友 (Actor) | 梁 朝偉 (Actor) | 任達華 (Actor) | 李子雄 (Actor) | 袁潔瑩 (Actor) | 甄楚倩 (Actor) 张 学友 (Actor) | 梁 朝伟 (Actor) | 任达华 (Actor) | 李子雄 (Actor) | 袁洁莹 (Actor) | 甄楚倩 (Actor) 張學友(ジャッキー・チョン) (Actor) | 梁朝偉 (トニー・レオン) (Actor) | 任達華 (サイモン・ヤム) (Actor) | 李子雄(レイ・チーホン) (Actor) | 袁潔瑩(ファニー・ユン) (Actor) | 甄楚倩(ディタ・ヤン) (Actor) Jacky Cheung (Actor) | 양조위 (Actor) | Simon Yam (Actor) | Waise Lee (Actor) | Fennie Yuen (Actor) | Dita Yan (Actor)
Director: John Woo 吳宇森 吴宇森 呉宇森(ジョン・ウー) 오우삼
Blu-ray Region Code: A - Americas (North, Central and South except French Guiana), Korea, Japan, South East Asia (including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan) What is it?
Release Date: 2011-04-19
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin, Thai
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Picture Format: [HD] High Definition What is it?
Aspect Ratio: Widescreen, 1.78 : 1
Sound Information: 6.1, 7.1, Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Digital EX(TM) / THX Surround EX(TM)
Disc Format(s): Blu-ray, 25 GB - Single Layer
Screen Resolution: 1080p (1920 x 1080 progressive scan)
Video Codecs: AVC (MPEG-4 Part 10)
Rating: IIB
Duration: 131 (mins)
Publisher: Kam & Ronson Enterprises Co Ltd
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1024273421

Product Information

* Special Features:
- Trailer
- Another Ending
- Film Clips

Director: John Woo

Three childhood friends Ben (Tony Leung, Hero, in the mood for Love), Frank (Jacky Cheung) and Paul (Waise Lee) fight to prove their places in two riotous worlds - the uprising ridden Hong Kong and Viet Cong-infested Saigon in the 1960's. They run into bloody troubles with ruthless gangs, corrupt militia and eventually against each other.
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 "Bullet In The Head (Blu-ray) (Hong Kong Version)"

November 22, 2006

This professional review refers to Bullet In The Head (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Coming as it did in the midst of John Woo's peak period, following the Better Tomorrow films and squarely between The Killer and Hard Boiled, and featuring an all star cast anchored by Tony Leung and Simon Yam, Woo's Bullet in the Head has nonetheless been surprisingly difficult to see in any sort of decent format. While it has received a previous high grade release in the UK, other international releases have been plagued with low grade transfers and incomplete feature sets so the word of any high end release that will help put the film into the hands of more fans is always welcome. Hence the excitement around the new digitally remastered, all region edition from Hong Kong's Fortune Star - the very first opportunity for those outside the UK to see the film with a crisp, clean transfer and the much talked about alternate ending intact.

In many ways Bullet in the Head is the quintessential John Woo film, a picture he not only directed but also wrote, edited and produced for his own company, thus giving himself a level of direct control that he had never had before and would never have again. While the approach to gunplay is substantially different than in his better known films, this nonetheless features all of the Woo hallmarks: friendship, doomed romance, loyalty misplaced and horrible tragedy. Vast in scope and intensely melodramatic, Bullet in the Head embodies, depending on your perspective, both the best and the worst of Hong Kong film. The action is searing and kinetic, the acting first rate, the tragedy and melodrama layered on with strokes so thick that they'd make the most extreme American soap opera writers blush.

Set in 1960s Hong Kong, the film revolves around a trio of childhood friends - the hopeless romantic Ben (Tony Leung), the success driven Paul (Waise Lee) and the intensely loyal Frank (Jacky Cheung). Though very different in terms of personality, the trio are united in their shared experience of growing up poor and have become a sort of surrogate family for one another, constantly watching each other's backs, closer than any brothers could be. It's a difficult time to live in Hong Kong, the economy in the tank and political unrest sweeping the state, but the trio carry each other through. Things turn sour, however, when Ben decides to get married. With Ben unable to pay for his wedding himself, Frank borrows money from a local loan shark and is attacked by a local gang on his way to the reception to pay the bill. Refusing to give up the cash Frank is beaten severely, a fact he tries to hide but when Ben realizes what has happened he flies into a rage and beats Frank's attacker to death.

With Ben on the run from the law, Frank thrown out of his family home for continuing to get into fights and Paul chafing against the lack of opportunity in Hong Kong, the trio band together and agree to leave Hong Kong for a brighter future elsewhere, agreeing to smuggle a shipment of penicillin and other goods into Vietnam where they will fetch a high price thanks to the ongoing war there. Tragedy strikes again, the goods are lost, and the trio are plunged into a world of violence and deception that will pit them against the corrupt military, gangsters, and the Vietcong with their only significant contacts in the country coming in the form of a Hong Kong singer being used as a sex slave in Saigon nightclubs and a Chinese-French hitman/CIA operative played by Simon Yam.

Bullet in the Head is without a doubt the largest of Woo's Hong Kong films and arguably the most epicly scaled film of his career thus far, with the production hopping the globe, violence occurring on a grand scale, and the film itself clocking in well beyond the hour and a half run time that was the defacto standard in Hong Kong at the time. While it draws on elements and themes that have marked Woo's career for decades, Bullet also shows a concerted attempt to draw on larger themes and comment on bigger issues than is normal for Woo and while you certainly can't call the action sequences naturalistic - they are still very heavily stylized - he has made an obvious attempt to use the action to bolster his characters here rather than the other way around. Every major sequence is designed to tell you something about his characters and the world they inhabit. While Woo is not shy about yanking on the emotional strings and does so without restraint his incredibly talented cast, he gives the film a human heart, keeping it from tipping over the edge into raw sentimentality.

One significant flaw aside, this new edition of the film is stellar. The remaster job is excellent, leaving the image clean and pristine and looking as good, if not better, than it would have when first projected. You have the option of watching the feature with a collection of deleted scenes and the alternate - shorter and more brutal - ending intact and reinserted back into the film or in its theatrical version. Sound options include the original Cantonese stereo mix, Cantonese DTS and a Mandarin 5.1 track. The second disc include a lengthy interview with star Waise Lee, the deleted scenes and alternate endings presented in a stand alone version for those who want to see them without having them put back into the full feature, trailers and promo items, and a pair of tongue-in-cheek weaponry infomercials. The entire package is English friendly, with all features including English subtitles and this, sadly, is where the one major weakness lies. The original translation of this film is less than stellar and, unfortunately, that is the translation used here. It is certainly an intelligible translation that you won't have any problems following, but there is obvious room for improvement and, having gone to such lengths to create a quality, export friiendly release already, it is disappointing that Joy Sales hasn't gone the final step and improved the English language options.

by Todd Brown - Twitchfilm.net

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 "Bullet In The Head (Blu-ray) (Hong Kong Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9.5 out of 10 (11)

Kevin Kennedy
See all my reviews


August 6, 2009

This customer review refers to Bullet In The Head (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
A dissenting view Customer Review Rated Bad 6 - 6 out of 10
In "Bullet in the Head", on the night of his wedding, with his beautiful wife waiting in bed to consummate their nuptials, Ben (Tony Leung Chiu Wai) walks away from his bride and beats a man to death because that man had beaten and sought to rob Ben's friend Frank (Jacky Cheung). Ben, Frank, and their pal Paul (Waise Lee) then flee to Vietnam, where they hope to make their fortune smuggling drugs, weapons, and other assorted goodies. However, in Saigon, their plans go awry and they are forced to rely on the assistance of a mysterious hitman named Luke (Simon Yam) as they run for their lives from what seems to be the entire South Vietnamese army and assorted gangsters and crooks, with Paul clinging for dear life to a chest of gold and Ben clinging to a dying saloon singer. Along the way, director John Woo shamelessly borrows from "Apocalypse Now" and "Deer Hunter" and creates as much carnage as his budget would permit.

I don't like "Bullet in the Head". I don't like it at all. I find it an indulgent, pretentious film that keeps its relentless mayhem moving at hyperspeed in order to mask the amoral absurdity of its story. It comes as no surprise that Woo wrote, directed, edited, and produced this movie all on his own; this project clearly would have benefitted from collaboration with cooler heads in order to avoid the offensive silliness of such sequences as (a) the execution of a Communist bomber followed immediately by (b) the image of a statue of the Virgin Mary holding the lifeless body of Jesus. "Bullet in the Head" is an empty exercise in the pornography of violence and is, by far, my least favorite John Woo movie. On the plus side, this remastered DVD looks great!
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Tanzhang
See all my reviews


July 4, 2008

This customer review refers to Bullet In The Head (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
1 people found the following helpful

Bullet in the Head Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
Originally intended by director John Woo as the third installment of the Ying Hung Boon Sik (A Better tomorrow) series, Bullet in the Head is a dark and gritty tale of three friends living in HK during the Mid to late 60's; an era of chaos, poverty and upheaval (Think the Star Ferry riots).

In the John Woo style, the story begins with the lives of three close friends, Ben (Tony Leung Chiu Wai, of Infernal Affairs Fame) Frank (Jacky Cheung Hok Yau) and Paul (Lee Chi Hung, or Shing from A Better Tomorrow).While the three friends are very close, each has their own goals, ideals and ambitions, yet they share the common dream of excitement and adventure, something that 60's HK cannot provide.

However, it is not until Ben's wedding that the three decide to leave HK in search of adventure. At the wedding, Paul meets with a smuggler who tells him that the place to make money is War-Torn Vietnam, and when Frank and Ben get into a fight and kill Ringo, a local thug, the three decide to flee HK and go into the smuggling business, starting with Smuggling goods from HK to Saigon, and then from Saigon into North Vietnam.

However, misfortune (or Justice) strikes hard early on, and during a routine taxi ride in Saigon, a Communist Suicide Bomber blows up their taxi in an attempt to kill a South Vietnamese general. The three are lucky to be alive, but that is little consolation when not only do they lose their goods, but nearly their lives at the hands of the South Vietnamese Police, when they are accused of having something to do with the bombing!

Unable to face their contact without the goods, the three friends head for a Nightclub, where they strike an unlikely friendship with an Eurasian Weapons dealer named Luke (Simon Yam, who was in My Hero with Chow Sing Chi and Project A II with Jackie Chan) and the three friends make a deal with him to save a HK singer who is working at the nightclub.

It is during this fateful night, that the plot is really set in motion, and the true colours of the three brothers is shown. While Battling Triads in the club, Paul is sent to search for a passport belonging to the Nightclub girl, he stumbles across a large cache of Gold (and something even more valuable) something that Paul is reluctant to part with, even at the cost of friendship. The three friends, the Nightclub Singer, Sally and Luke manage to escape the Nightclub, and decide to head for HK together, but fate deals it's hand and Tragedy strikes, a Tragedy which threatens to not only end the 10 year friendship between the friends, but their lives as well...

No review i could write would ever be able to do this film justice, Bullet in the Head is a triumph of John Woo, a moving and brutal drama which shows not only the violence and horror of war, but in trademark John Woo style, the bond between three friends, and how that bond, especially between Ben and Frank, can survive under such adversity. The three main characters are portrayed with true excellence by the actors, who go to great lengths not just to play a character, but to bring three fundamental ideals to the screen, Compassion (Frank), Friendship (Ben) and Greed (Paul) and allow those ideals to be expressed while not taking too much away from the film itself. Bullet also boasts some excellent cinematography and a harrowing score, not to mention some brilliant location shots that seem to bring South Vietnam to life.

As i mentioned earlier, no review i could write would do this film justice, but thankfully the good people at Fortune Star and Joy Sales have, and this two disc edition restore many of the thought to be lost deleted scenes (such as the one where the brothers are forced to drink urine in the Saigon Nightclub) as well as the Theatrical ending, which was thought to be lost from most other prints of the film, (i think a Mei Ah version was the only release that kept this in) as well as yet another Lee Chi Hung interview and another installment of the Code of Bullets featurette, two fascinating insights into the two often underrated characters of these films, the Antagonistic character played by Lee Chi Hung (Paul in this case) and the weapons used by the characters, and how the weapons are an extension of their personality.

All in all, Bullet in the Head is a must own film, and this edition, lovingly restored, will remain the definitive one for many years to come. get it while you can!
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Best Review
George
See all my reviews


February 24, 2008

This customer review refers to Bullet In The Head (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
1 people found the following helpful

HKs finest!! Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
Hands up who doesn't own this movie... Shame on you! This movie is, and always will be, in my top ten (and I have over 3000 Asian movies). Definately John Woo's finest moment, and I only wish he would return to HK to give us more of the same. Stunning performances from all involved, beautifully shot and literally mind blowing. If you haven't already seen Bullet In The Head - I urge you to buy this now!
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Anonymous

April 19, 2005

This customer review refers to Bullet In The Head
Things botched up by blinding greed Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
This story occured back in the sixties. Everything was plain and easy to do, but life seemed to be boring when problems began to rise between the citizens and their offenders. Now there were three ordinary men who were good buddies. They are Ben (Tony Leung Chiu Wai), Frank (Jacky Cheung) and Waise Lee (Paul). All were not too rich. Somehow Ben's mother got ill and problems rose after that which Ben did not want to face his girlfriend Jane (Fennie Yuen) in such a state. And he also needed extra money for their wedding expenses. Based on his helpful character, Frank rushed out to get the money. But he was covered in blood when he came back. Somehow trying to save himself didn't get past the tiger Ben's eyes. Something was wrong, very wrong. So the three friends headed out to Vietnam with some illegal goods. But some accident occured which made them lose their goods. So on the way, they met Luke (Simon Yam Tat Wah), known as a good killer to help them and a club singer Sally, his girlfriend. To plunder some god was Luke's hope. But the sight of all that golden bricks blinded the good character Paul, and therefore he wanted to be the only one to return with all the gold. He tries to dispose of his two good friends, and does something very heartbreaking and terrible to poor Jacky. What could it be? What kind will the ending turn out to be? All I can tell you is that life is not a bed of roses, but a bed of pins and needles along with greediness...
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Anonymous

May 23, 2003

This customer review refers to Bullet In The Head
2 people found the following helpful

excellent Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
(movie spoiler) I actually cried when I watched this film, the scene where Tony Leung had to personally kill Jacky Cheung towards the end of the show. Very very powerful performances by Leung and Cheung. The Vietnam camp scene was also equally moving when they were kidnapped. This is one film you should not miss.
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