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Dead Run Special Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2

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Dead Run Special Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

From acclaimed writer/director Sabu (The Blessing Bell). Shuji is struggling to grow up in a small seaside town that is being redeveloped to become a major resort. He starts going to church with his cynical older brother and there he meets the orphan girl Eri, who is in his class at school. Shuji develops a crush on her and takes up running so that he can spend more time with her. However, when Eri is injured when a truck's cargo falls on her, her relatives whisk her away to Tokyo. Shuji is desperate to go after her, but his journey will not be an easy one as he encounters yakuza, prostitutes and a priest with a shady past. Starring Tegoshi Yuya and Kan Hanae, Dead Run (a.k.a. Shisso) is a desperate teenage adventure, a dark and powerful tale of growing up and first love.

This limited edition includes a bonus disc featuring a documentary about Tegoshi Yuya, hidden footage "Sabu in Shisso", interviews, footage featuring Tegoshi Yuya's appearance at the first annual New Montreal Film Expo, shooting the poster featurette, a special 48-page booklet, deluxe packaging, and picture labeled discs.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Dead Run Special Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version) 疾走 Special Edition (初回限定生產) (日本版) 疾走 Special Edition (初回限定生产) (日本版) 疾走 スペシャル・エディション スペシャル・エディション(初回限定生産) Dead Run Special Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version)
Artist Name(s): Kan Hanae | Nakatani Miki | Toyokawa Etsushi | Terajima Susumu | Sugata Shun | Osugi Ren 韓英惠 | 中谷美紀 | 豐川悅司 | 寺島進 | 菅田俊 | 大杉漣 Kan Hanae | 中谷美纪 | 丰川悦司 | 寺岛进 | 菅田俊 | 大杉涟 韓英恵 | 手越裕也 | 中谷美紀 | 豊川悦司 | 寺島進 | 菅田俊 | 大杉漣 Kan Hanae | Nakatani Miki | Toyokawa Etsushi | Terajima Susumu | Sugata Shun | Osugi Ren
Director: Sabu (Tanaka Hiroyuki) Sabu Sabu (Tanaka Hiroyuki) SABU Sabu (Tanaka Hiroyuki)
Release Date: 2006-05-26
Publisher Product Code: DABA-239
Language: Japanese
Country of Origin: Japan
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it?
Publisher: Kadokawa Pictures
Other Information: 2DVDs
Shipment Unit: 2 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1004152372

Product Information

タイトル:疾走 スペシャル・エディション
出演:手越祐也/韓英恵/中谷美紀/豊川悦司/大杉漣/寺島進
監督:SABU(監督)/SABU(脚本)/重松清(原作)/中堀正夫(撮影)/S.E.N.S.(音楽)

シュウジは出来のいい兄シュウイチのことが大好きな心優しい少年。彼は、幼い頃に両親を自殺で失ったことで、世の中を斜に見ることしかできない孤独な少女エリと出会い淡い恋心を抱くが、エリは東京へ引っ越す。やがて、大好きな兄シュウイチが挫折の後に起こした放火事件から、父は家を出て帰らず、母も姿を消す。ひとりになったシュウジはエリの住む東京へ向かうが、その途中で殺人未遂事件を起こしてしまう。
誰か一緒に生きて下さい

テクニカル・インフォメーション
:カラー
画面:Vista-16:9LB
言語/音声:日本語:ドルビーデジタルステレオ

その他の情報
製作年:2005
備考:2枚組
豪華アウターケース付
封入特典:ブックレット/特典ディスク付/映像特典収録
日本小売価格:¥6300

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 "Dead Run Special Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version)"

August 22, 2006

This professional review refers to Dead Run (Hong Kong Version)
I have only seen one Sabu film before seeing Dead Run, and that was Hard Luck Hero with Japanese pop group V6. The film was a stylistic take on Rashomon, showing several perspectives of several ongoing chases. Considering Sabu's reputation for making chase films, I expected Dead Run to be another stylistic coming-of-age chase film. However, what I got was not as stylistic - nor as pleasant - as I expected. Instead, Dead Run is a thoughtful and sometimes disturbing mediation on crime, punishment, and consequence. At least I got the coming-of-age part right.

Based on the novel by Shigematsu Kiyoshi, Dead Run tells the story of Shuji (Tegoshi Yuya), a perfectly normal kid with a seemingly normal family - a smart older brother named Shuichi and two proud parents. They live in an area near the ocean nicknamed "The Shore," and the area nearby developed on landfills is called "Offshore," whose residents are often looked down upon. One day, young Shuji, lost in Offshore, has a chance encounter with local smalltime gangster Demon-ken and his hostess girlfriend, Akane. Even though Demon-ken is found killed in a brutal fashion soon after that, the memory of the encounter lingers in Shuji's mind over the years.

Years later, a church has moved into Offshore, and Shuichi becomes obsessed with the priest's notorious past. Meanwhile, Shuji become enamored with the only churchgoer, a rebellious young girl named Eri (Kan Hanae) who seems to hate him from the start. However, the two begins to grow closer as Shuji becomes a regular at the church. But a construction deal to redevelop offshore has brought the yakuza over to the church to force a relocation deal, bringing Akane, now attached to criminals higher in the yakuza ladder, back into Shuji's life. At the same time, Shuji's life begins to spiral out of control when Shuichi is caught cheating during an exam as his family slowly but surely disintegrates until Shuji has no choice but to run.

Abandoning much of the efficient storytelling style he's known for, Sabu takes a sober approach in telling Shuji's story possibly due to the serious subject matter. The 124-minute film takes its time to set up the characters and the various themes, so audience won't be able to figure out where exactly the film is going until the end of the first act. But once the darker aspects of the plot arrive, audiences will have a hard time turning away as Shuji places himself in deeper trouble everywhere he goes. Dead Run may be too depressing or frustrating for some, as Shuji sees his journey become gradually more perilous everywhere he goes, but those who stay around may also be compelled by its ideas of sins and responsibility. If one looks at its original Japanese title (Shisso means "to dash.") and its association to the characters, one can get a pretty clear sense of what it wants to say regarding responsibility. The tragedy of the story is that no matter where Shuji runs away to, he finds himself getting closer to sin with every step.

As Dead Run moves to its second half, Sabu lays out all the unpleasant stuff at once, losing a lot of the directorial assuredness of the first half. Nevertheless, there are plenty of beautiful, even touching, moments to be found. One scene in particular shows a storefront gate where an anonymous person has written "please kill me" with the phone number under it. Seeing the message, Shuji writes "Someone please be with me forever" with his phone number. Moments like these offer glimpses of hope throughout, but fail to lift Dead Run out of the pessimism that drives and surround the story. Even the over-the-top perverse nature of one particular sequence is overcome by its permeating seriousness throughout, as if Sabu won't even let his audience indulge in a little bit of exploitation violence because it'll get in the way of the serious messages of his film.

I find it hard to recommend Dead Run - it's a serious and dreary piece of filmmaking that's about as pleasant as a punch to the gut, even though it's really not that painful. At the same time, there's much to admire about it - the performances, the confident direction (at least for the most part), the ideologies of sin and consequences - that I find it hard to not recommend it as well. Among the pessimism, Dead Run is still involving and compelling enough to make it a notable artistic achievement that deserves more attention than it's getting.

by Kevin Ma

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 "Dead Run Special Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9 out of 10 (1)

Bianca
See all my reviews


September 12, 2006

Dead Run Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9 out of 10
Hm...what to say about this movie. The actual story was phenomenal but the directing...I had my doubts. This First Press Limited Edition version is very worth buying because of the many extras. Especially if you are a fan of Yuya Tegoshi.

The thing is I probably would have never watched it if Yuya had not participated in the cast. I liked the story a lot though. Just make sure your mind is ready for some brainwork.
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