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Castaway On The Moon (DVD) (2-Disc) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3

Jung Jae Young (Actor) | Jeong Ryeo Won (Actor) | Lee Hae Joon (Director)
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Castaway On The Moon (DVD) (2-Disc) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
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YesAsia Editorial Description

Mr. Kim (Jung Jae Young) attempts to commit suicide by jumping into the Han River, but he fails to drown. Waking up on a nature preserve island in the river, he begins a new back-to-basics life on the deserted island. His exploits attract the curiosity of lonely apartment recluse Miss Kim (Jeong Ryeo Won), who watches his comings and goings through a pair of binoculars from her high-rise window. Miss Kim hasn't left her home in three years, but seeing Mr. Kim's strange adventures inspire her to take the first step into the outside world.

Jung Jae Young (The Divine Weapon) and singer-actress Jeong Ryeo Won (The Two Faces of My Girlfriend) star as two lonely social castaways who cross paths in the quirkiest of ways in the charming oddball drama Castaway On The Moon (a.k.a. Kim's Island). Award-winning Like a Virgin co-director Lee Hae Joon injects his first solo feature with the same offbeat, affecting humor and sensitive insight that made his first film a critical hit.

This edition comes with audio commentary, making of, deleted scenes, CG featurette, music featurette, poster shoot, and trailer.

© 2009 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: Castaway On The Moon (DVD) (2-Disc) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version) Castaway On The Moon (DVD) (兩碟裝) (初回限量版) (韓國版) Castaway On The Moon (DVD) (两碟装) (初回限量版) (韩国版) キム氏漂流記 (2枚組) (初回限定版) (韓国版) 김씨표류기 (DVD) (2-Disc) (초회한정판) (한국판)
Also known as: Wandering Mr. Kim / The Adventures of Mr. Kim / Kim's Island 金氏漂流記 金氏漂流记 キムさん漂流記 Wandering Mr. Kim / The Adventures of Mr. Kim / Kim's Island
Artist Name(s): Jung Jae Young (Actor) | Jeong Ryeo Won (Actor) 鄭在詠 (Actor) | 鄭麗媛 (Actor) 郑在咏 (Actor) | 郑丽媛 (Actor) チョン・ジェヨン (Actor) | チョン・リョウォン (Actor) 정재영 (Actor) | 정려원 (Actor)
Director: Lee Hae Joon Lee Hae Joon Lee Hae Joon イ・ヘジュン 이해준
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Release Date: 2009-09-11
Language: Korean
Subtitles: English, Korean
Country of Origin: South Korea
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?
Publisher: Art Service
Other Information: 2Discs
Package Weight: 150 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1021192712

Product Information

김씨표류기 (DVD) (2-Disc) (초회한정판) (한국판)

* Screen format: 2.35 : 1 Anamorphic Widescreen
* Sound mix: Dolby Digital 5.1 & 2.0

* Extra:
Disc1
- Commentary with 정재영, 정려원, 이해준 감독, 김무령 PD,
김병서 촬영, 김홍집 음악, 남나영 편집, 최재천 VFX

Disc2
- 섬, 그리고 두 김씨 (메이킹)
- 다시, 밤섬으로 (이해준+정재영 대담)
- 밤섬 만들기 (CG)
- 삭제장면 with 코멘터리
- Too Much World (음악감독)
- 포스터 촬영
- 예고편

* Director: 이해준


- DVD 패키지 구성: 아웃박스 + 2 Disc (본편, 부가영상)
- 배우, 감독, 스텝들이 참여한 <김씨표류기> 본편 코멘터리 수록!
DVD에서만 공개되는 제작과정 및 삭제장면 등 다양한 부가영상!
- <공공의 적> <실미도>의 강우석 감독 제작
<천하장사 마돈나> 이해준 감독의 두번째 작품
- 개성만점 캐릭터가 선보이는 리드미컬한 전개와 특유의 재치!
코믹한 상황 속에 피어나는 로맨스와 감동의 드라마!


Synopsis
누군가 지켜보고 있습니다. Who Are YOU?
자살시도가 실패로 끝나 한강의 밤섬에 불시착한 남자.
죽는 것도 쉽지 않자 일단 섬에서 살아보기로 한다.
모래사장에 쓴 HELP가 HELLO로 바뀌고 무인도 야생의 삶도 살아볼 만하다고 느낄 무렵.
익명의 쪽지가 담긴 와인병을 발견하고 그의 삶은 알 수 없는 희망으로 설레기 시작한다.


그가 신호를 보냅니다. HELLO!
자신의 좁고 어두운 방이 온 지구이자 세상인 여자.
홈피 관리, 하루 만보 달리기… 그녀만의 생활리듬도 있다.
유일한 취미인 달사진 찍기에 열중하던 어느 날.
저 멀리 한강의 섬에서 낯선 모습을 발견하고 그에게 리플을 달아주기로 하는 그녀.
3년 만에 자신의 방을 벗어나 그를 향해 달려간다.

그와 그녀의 도심표류기


Director
각본/감독 이해준

어느 늦은 밤, 도심 속에 어둑하게 자리잡은 밤섬을 보며 불현듯 이야기가 나올 것 같은 느낌을 받았다는 이해준 감독은 저 곳에 한 남자가 있다면? 이라는 단순한 전제에서 출발, ‘섬처럼 떠있는 인간들의 소통 의지에 대한 영화’ 로 <김씨표류기>를 완성했다. 시나리오 단계부터 그 독특함과 완성도로 충무로를 떠들썩하게 하며 일찍이 강우석 감독의 낙점을 받은 <김씨표류기>는 여러 이면이 있는 이야기를 지향한다는 감독의 말처럼 코미디로 읽히는 동시에 로맨스와 드라마가 한 순간에 존재하면서 리드미컬한 전개와 특유의 재치가 돋보이는 영화로 탄생했다. 한국 최초로 밤섬에서 촬영허가를 받은 것도 정재영과 정려원을 만난 것도 모두가 행운이었다고 말하는 그에게 <김씨표류기>는 <천하장사마돈나>에 이어 그만의 독특한 영화이야기가 될 것이다.


Filmography
2000년 인터넷 디지털단편영화 <커밍아웃> 각본 (감독 김지운)
2001년 <신라의 달밤> 원안 (감독 김상진/주연 차승원, 김혜수)
2002년 <품행제로> 각본 (감독 조근식/주연 류승범)
2004년 <안녕 UFO> 각본 (감독 김진민/주연 이범수, 이은주)
2004년 <아라한장풍대작전> 각색 (감독 류승완/주연 류승범, 안성기)
2005년 <남극일기> 각본 (감독 임필성/ 주연 송강호, 유지태)
2006년 <천하장사마돈나> 각본, 공동감독

Award
대한민국영화대상 신인감독상 / 청룡영화상 신인감독상, 각본상, 신인남우주연상 / 백상예술대상 시나리오상 /
대종상 신인남우상 / 영화지 필름 2.0 선정 2006년 Best5 영화 <천하장사마돈나> <괴물> <가족의 탄생> <사이보그지만 괜찮아> <해변의 여인> / 맥스무비 영화상 신인남우주연상 /
부산영화평론가협회상 신인감독상, 신인남우주연상 / 제57회 베를린국제영화제 제너레이션 부문 초청 /
제31회 홍콩국제영화제 글로벌 섹션 부문 초청 / 제20회 싱가포르국제영화제 NETPAC(아시아영화진흥기구)상 /
2007 Asia Pacific Screen Awards Best Actor nominated
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Castaway On The Moon (DVD) (2-Disc) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version)"

October 12, 2009

Leave it to the co-creator of the eccentric sports film Like a Virgin to make the urban isolation-themed comedy-drama Castaway on the Moon. Writer-director Lee Hae-Joon makes his solo directorial debut with this universal story about a man trapped on a deserted island trying to survive. Thanks to its eccentric Korean humor, the film turns out to be a strange delight that's worth checking out.

The first sign of the film's strangeness is that the deserted island isn’t in the middle of the ocean. – it's actually Bamseom Island, which lies under a bridge in the middle of the Han River in Seoul. Spurred on by mounting credit card debt, Mr. Kim (Jeong Jae-Yeong) tries to commit suicide by jumping into the Han River, only to find that he's floated to Bamseom Island. After trying the usual methods to solve his situation (screaming at passing boats for help, using his cell phone, suicide), he decides that he’s better off living alone on the deserted island, away from his debts and the superficial comforts of modern life.

This seemingly paper-thin plot thickens when Lee introduces another Kim. Played by Jeong Ryeo-Won, Ms. Kim is an anti-social shut-in who's stayed in her room for three years. Ms. Kim follows a strict set of habits that includes taking 3000 steps for exercise daily and running a fake blog with material stolen from other blogs. Also, she won't even glance outside her window until the street clears during civil defense drills (one of the few exclusively Korean references in this otherwise universal story). It's on one of these occasions that she spots Mr. Kim on the island, and believing that he's some kind of lost alien, she begins to habitually watch him from the comfort of her room. However, as she starts to make an effort to change his life on the island, she starts to change her own life as well.

This process of change and indirect interaction doesn't begin until 45 minutes into the film, and the events before that could test the audience's patience. Even though Mr. Kim's introduction isn't boring - it's actually quite amusing in Lee's ability to both borrow and slyly reference Robert Zemeckis' Cast Away - the opening section seems to quickly take the story to a dead end. But then Lee reveals that he is simply taking his time, slowly leading the audience into the core of his story using delightfully odd humor, such as the running joke where a bowl of black bean noodles becomes Mr. Kim's motivation for existence.

And yet, lacking much knowledge about Mr. Kim, we also slowly realize that the central character of the story is actually Ms. Kim. Mr. Kim's challenges drive the film forward, but Ms. Kim's transformation provides the emotional core of the story. Lee's skill with developing eccentric central characters in Like a Virgin is apparent again here. Even though the film leads to a drawn-out third act and an abrupt conclusion, Lee's writing is sharp in that he stops when he has given the audience just enough of what they want. Lee manages to tell a complete story, but he ends things at a point that leaves the audience wanting more.

As one might expect, the film's success is also due to Lee's two main actors, who mostly occupy the screen in solo scenes. Lee contrasts the two Jeong's performances - the male Jeong leans towards overacting while the female Jeong gives a more introverted performance - and Lee uses that contrast instead of the two actors' abilities to keep things interesting. Lee also relies heavily on voiceovers to deliver the characters' thoughts and emotions. The device is used to mostly to good effect though he sometimes leans lazily on the voiceovers too.

While Castaway on the Moon possesses plenty of charm as a comedy, it doesn't quite work dramatically. Lee excels at taking a formulaic story and giving it irreverent comic twists, but he quickly returns to the established formula when the story reveals its dramatic side. Lee seems to run out of steam during the film's dramatic portions, meandering with scenes of character reacting instead of moving the story along. The film recovers slightly by the end when Lee reaches the inevitable conclusion, but the journey plays like a typical romance, despite Lee's effort to give the formula a fresh twist.

Until that point, Castaway on the Moon remains an enjoyably strange comedy that surprises along the way. Even though it feels too light in tone to mark it as a breakthrough in Korean comedy, it's nevertheless refreshing to see genre deviate from its typical low brow formula. At the very least, you'll never view a bowl of black bean noodles the same way again.

By Kevin Ma

Editor's Pick of "Castaway On The Moon (DVD) (2-Disc) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version)"

Picked By Sanwei
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October 31, 2009

Hope is a bowl of black bean noodles.
Seoul's Han River should be familiar to anyone who's watched The Host as the breeding waters for monster entertainment. But did you know there's also a nature preserve island smack in the middle of the river? That's where Mr. Kim (Jung Jae Young) ends up when he attempts to drown himself, and instead wakes up a castaway on the deserted island. The cityscape shines brightly from the opposite bank, but Kim - who can't swim - is preposterously stranded. Desperation and suicidal thoughts, however, give way to glee when he realizes that he's found his escape from all the debt, heartbreak, and worldly problems that drove him to seek death. Enjoying a newfound life of "perfect boredom", he lives by his wits, scavenges for food, converses with inanimate objects, and unrolls his obsessive master plan to somehow make a bowl of jajangmyeon, black bean noodles.

The first third of Castaway on the Moon is almost all Jung Jae Young, and he more than fills up the screen by himself with wacky castaway adventures and hilarious madman rants. The contrast between Jung's dry narration and loud island antics is especially amusing and effective. The film is frequently laugh-out-loud funny and prone to off-the-wall train of thoughts, while never abandoning the less laughable emotional and social subtext that drive people to prefer isolation. Jung got the Daejong Best Actor nomination for The Divine Weapon, but he's even better in Castaway on the Moon, balancing the slapstick and the serious into an empathetic, idiosyncratic everyman.

The other side of the story is quirky hikikomori Miss Kim, which just may be the perfect role for the alarmingly thin Jeong Ryeo Won. The moon-gazing recluse hasn't stepped out of her high-rise apartment in two years and lives vicariously through fake internet identities. Through her telescope, she discovers island alien Mr. Kim, and soon revolves her daily life around observing him. Her growing interest in Mr. Kim motivates her to step out of her home and make contact. The gradual crossover of Mr. and Miss Kim's lonely worlds moves the story forward, and the two protagonists reluctantly back into insecure reality. Behind the eccentric designs and humorous details, there is a genuine emotional urgency to the film when the protagonists' carefully constructed, deceptively charming existences are punctured by outside forces.

There's no sophomore slump for Like a Virgin co-director Lee Hae Joon who again turns social castaways into oddball cinematic heroes in Castaway on the Moon. This uncanny comedy is truly a pleasant surprise - funny, affecting, and unpredictably zany within the confines of its small eccentric world. Don't let the alluring flood of big Korean movies bury this small charmer, because Castaway on the Moon definitely ranks as one of the most amusing, well-written, and lovable pictures I've seen this year in any language.
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 "Castaway On The Moon (DVD) (2-Disc) (First Press Limited Edition) (Korea Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (1)

numinair
See all my reviews


October 6, 2009

When isolated ‘aliens’ touch Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
No doubt this film will bring to mind Tom Hank’s “Castaway”, but here the situation is more farcical as endearing. For one Mr Kim, after attempting suicide by jumping of Seoul’s Han river bridge due to loan shark demands, ends up being washed up only a hop skip and a jump away (well, maybe a super hop, a swim and long jump) from civilization on an island on the Han river itself, instead of stuck on a desolate far away island. Also Miss Kim, a paranoid teenage recluse hides herself in her bedroom due to her terrible lack of confidence and fear of people. So much that her only comfort is looking at the moon with her telescope and scanning Seoul with her camera zoom on civil defense drill day, as both are devoid of people giving Miss Kim the feeling of elated tranquility. But on one specific drill day, she spots (with her trusty zoom gadget) Mr Kim on the island looking rather naked and frustrated and pulling a large metal duck across some sand. She also sees his ‘HELP’ message written in the sand. Miss K deems the man a strange ‘alien’, but is so intrigued that she actually wishes to communicate with him. So donning a motorbike helmet and leathers (her brave concealed step into the outer!) she goes off to send ‘alien’ Mr K a message of ‘Hello’ in a bottle. Mr Kim finds the message bottle and then begins communicating with whoever had sent it by writing more messages in the sand. Miss Kim also learns of the ‘aliens’ fascination for black bean noodles (using her telescope again) and decides to send him some via courier. Thus begins an unusual communication no SMS or Twitter could match.

Mr Kim and Miss Kim are lonely ‘outcasts’ by their decisive rejection of society and people, but who eventually find solace by each other’s kooky, detached worlds. Their spacious island and cloistered room ‘prisons’ suddenly become shared connectivity, which help each to identify the possibility of shared love with another human soul. It’s a likable funny-sad movie with two lovable outsiders and Jea Young Jung and Ryeo Won Jeon are excellent. Characterization may not be fully fleshed out but the script show’s sufficient understanding of this human fragility where integration, acceptance and love is difficult. There’s a sympathetic reflection of ourselves here and, like comedy caricatures, two oddities help us to understand our own idiosyncratic frustrations. You’ll really care for these two and, yes, it does have a nice eye-watering finish. Another good K-film folks.
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