Cafe Lumiere : Coffee Jikou (Korean Version) DVD Region 3
- This video product does not have English audio or subtitles.
- This product will not be shipped to Japan, Hong Kong.
YesAsia Editorial Description
Yoko is a freelance writer researching on the Taiwan-born Japanese singer Jiang Ewn-ye. She knows Hajime, the owner of a shop selling second-hand books, when doing research at his bookstore. Since then the two have spent a good deal of quality time together in coffee shops. One day Yoko discovers that she is pregnant and she announces to her parents, whom she has not met for long, that she decides to become an unmarried mother. Her parents are worried; but Hajime feels even worse for he cannot express his love for Yoko. Meanwhile, Yoko's research on Jiang Ewn-ye has inspired her to reexamine her relationships with her family, Hajime, the baby, and many others.
This film is a tribute to the Japanese master Ozu Yasujiro to commemorate the 100th anniversary of his birthday. The spirit of Ozu's films, especially Tokyo Story, can easily be felt in Coffee Jikou. Hou Hsiao-hsien admits that he has been thinking of how Ozu would have shot a film in today's Japan. Coffee Jikou has been selected for numerous film festivals.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Cafe Lumiere : Coffee Jikou (Korean Version) 咖啡時光 (韓國版) 咖啡时光 (韩国版) Cafe Lumiere : Coffee Jikou (Korean Version) 카페 뤼미에르 (한국판) |
| Artist Name(s): | Asano Tadanobu | Hagiwara Masato | Hou Hsiao Hsien | Hitoto Yo | Kobayashi Nenji 淺野忠信 | 荻原聖人 | 侯 孝賢 | 一青窈 | 小林稔侍 浅野忠信 | 萩原 直人 | 侯孝贤 | 一青窈 | 小林稔侍 浅野忠信 | 萩原聖人 | 侯孝賢 (ホウ・シャオシェン) | 一青窈 | 小林稔侍 Asano Tadanobu | Hagiwara Masato | Hou Hsiao Hsien | Hitoto Yo | Kobayashi Nenji |
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| Release Date: | 2006-01-27 |
| Language: | Japanese |
| Subtitles: | Japanese, Korean |
| Country of Origin: | Hong Kong, Japan |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it? |
| Duration: | 104 (mins) |
| Publisher: | Spectrum DVD |
| Other Information: | DVD + Book |
| Package Weight: | 240 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 2 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1004103647 |
Product Information
* Sound Mix : Dolby 5.1 & 2.0
* DVD Type : DVD-9
* Extras :
- 감독 인터뷰
- 예고편
* Director : 허우 샤오시엔
- 오즈 야스지로 탄생 100주년 기념 쇼치쿠 영화사의 헌정 영화
- <비정성시>로 오즈의 뒤를 잇는 아시아의 대표감독으로 떠오른 허우 샤오시엔, <이치 더 킬러>, <자토이치> 등에 출연한 일본의 인기배우 아사노 타다노부 출연
- 소소한 일상 속의 풍경을 담아 도시의 감성적 따스함을 느낄 수 있는 수작
- '정성일, <카페 뤼미에르>를 말하다' 책자 수록
한가롭고도 따가운 여름 햇살 아래 거미줄처럼 얽힌 전철이 지나다니는 동경.. 대만 여행에서 막 돌아온 프리랜서 작가 요코는 타카자키의 부모님댁에 찾아가 자신의 임신 사실을 알리고 며칠을 한가로이 보내다 동경으로 돌아온다. 아이의 아버지인 대만인 남자친구와는 결혼할 생각이 없고 그냥 미혼모가 되겠다는 요코에게 부모는 당황하고 몹시 염려하지만 어떻게 말해야 할지 어색하기만 하다. 2대째 이어 고서점을 운영하는 하지메는 자료를 찾으러 서점을 자주 찾던 요코와 지금은 절친한 친구 사이로 지낸다. 시간이 날 때마다 갖가지 전철 주변의 소음을 녹음하는 취미를 지닌 철도 매니아 하지메를 위해 요코는 대만에서 사온 옛날 철도운전사의 회중시계를 선물한다. 그들은 이제 대만 출신의 일본 음악가 장웬예 에 대해 함께 조사하고 그가 자주 찾던 동경의 옛 장소를 찾아다닌다
Other Versions of "Cafe Lumiere : Coffee Jikou (Korean Version)"
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Hong Kong Version
- Cafe Lumiere (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3
- US$10.99
- Usually ships within 1 to 2 days
- Cafe Lumiere (Hong Kong Version) VCD
- US$7.99
- Usually ships within 7 days
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Japan Version
- Coffee Jikou (Cafe Lumiere) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
- US$54.99
- Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
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Taiwan Version
- Cafe Lumiere (Taiwan Version) DVD Region 3
- Temporarily Out of Stock
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US Version
- Cafe Lumiere (US Version) DVD Region 1
- US$16.99
- Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Cafe Lumiere : Coffee Jikou (Korean Version)"
This professional review refers to Coffee Jikou (Cafe Lumiere) (Japan Version)
|
Hou Hsaio-hsien's Café Lumiere, his plaintive tribute to the incomparable Yasujiro Ozu, is certainly sure to piss off large sections of its audience. I had the curious experience of seeing it with quite a big audience at the Melbourne International Film Festival, and much of this crowd was comprised of people who were only there to ensure themselves good seats for the next session in that cinema: Kung Fu Hustle, introduced live by Stephen Chow himself. Needless to say, with the notoriously slow and static Hou directing a tribute to someone who was not exactly Michael Bay either, there was a great deal of restlessness at the screening. While certain scenes composed from Ozu's legendary "tatami mat" camera angle will definitely bring knowing smiles to the faces of many viewers, the overall style of the film is far more Hou than Ozu. And trains, this movie is all about trains: Ozu's repeated use of them in his work is reborn in Café Lumiere as a more aggressive motif, the constant movement of trains, whether the camera is viewing them from inside or out, is made all the more fascinating by Hou's uncompromisingly static setups. Employing an overtly Ozu-esque theme of generational conflict and disconnection, with all the appropriate subtlety, Café Lumiere is interesting in the light of Ozu's work in that its older characters, specifically Yoko's parents, are essentially the young people of Ozu's films. The result of this is a poignant illustration of how such conflict is universal throughout time, and not just some exclusive product of Japan's post-war Westernisation as is usually ascribed to Ozu's work. Beyond general themes, motifs and references - both stylistic and overtly quotational - to Ozu, this is very much a Hou film. His lack of interest in conventional narrative far exceeds that of his inspirer: if Ozu was happy to use mundane, but nonetheless robust, narratives as clotheslines on which to hang his thematic obsessions and hone his stylistic system, Hou doesn't even see the need for that clothesline. Nonetheless, this movie is gorgeous in its style, and acutely contemplative about the emotional state of a young woman going through the most important time in her life, in a world frighteningly bereft of meaningful connection. It seems particularly appropriate that I don't remember seeing a movie set in modern Japan that is so lacking in big crowds of people as this one. Naturally, many people find this kind of filmmaking alienating at best, and infuriating at worst. Additionally, it is held to be a depressing film even by those who admire it, but personally I found it tranquil and relaxing in a particularly pleasant way. Or at least I would have, if the people sitting around me weren't going on and on about how terrible it was. Each to their own. 9 trains symbolising elegiac lament, or something, out of 10 by Ben Jennings |
Customer Review of "Cafe Lumiere : Coffee Jikou (Korean Version)"
See all my reviews
February 20, 2006
This customer review refers to Cafe Lumiere (Taiwan Version)
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This is my favorite movie by Hou Xiao Xien. I have already watched it several times. Every time, you learn something new and wonderful. This is also Hototo Yo's movie debut. She is superb and a very natural actress. She also has a very interesting and intelligent face. Hope to see many more movies with her in it.(aside from being a great singer). Asano Tadanobu needs no introduction. He is perfect for his role. I love the mood, the details and the pace in which director Hou tells his story. Don't miss this movie. |
See all my reviews
February 12, 2006
This customer review refers to Coffee Jikou (Cafe Lumiere) (Japan Version)
|
Dirtector Hou's films are always interesting. Here, as a homage to the famed Japanese director Ozu, he was invited to do a film. Hence "Cafe Lumiere" happened. The best thing about the movie is in its many little details depicting a young woman (a writer)'s daily life. The cast is perfect. Asano Tadanobu needs no introduction, his quiet and shy demeanor I always find terribly attractive. For her first movie, Yo Hitoto was great. The art of train stations apparently was really the work of Asano Tadanobu. I enjoyed this movie a lot. The interview of director Hou was most interesting. You have to know Chinese to understand it. |












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