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Dororo (DVD) (US Version) DVD Region 1

Aso Kumiko (Director, Actor) | Koshun Takami (Director, Actor) | Tezuka Osamu (Actor) | Tsumabuki Satoshi (Actor)
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Dororo (DVD) (US Version)
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All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9.5 out of 10 (4)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Adapted from Tezuka Osamu's popular manga, Dororo is a rollicking period adventure for all ages. A blockbuster success in Japan, with not just one but two sequels already in the works, Dororo features the idol pairing of Tsumabuki Satoshi (Nada Sou Sou) and Shibasaki Kou (Sinking of Japan) as storied demon hunters Hyakkimaru and Dororo. This unabashedly fun comic book actioner may seem like an unlikely entry from acclaimed indie director Shiota Akihiko (Don't Look Back), but the film also touches on serious themes of family, war, and redemption which Shiota underlies with convincing humanity. With action choreography by Ching Siu Tung (Hero) and plenty of CG demons to boot, however, Dororo never gets too serious for the genre, staying fast-paced and swashbuckling from beginning to end.

With the land torn by feudal war, vanquished samurai warlord Daigo Kagemitsu (Nakai Kiichi) cuts a deal with the demons - victory in exchange for his unborn son. His wishes granted, Daigo triumphs on the battlefield, but his son is born barely human, his body having been torn into forty-eight parts and spread amongst the demons. Left in a basket in a river, the infant is picked up by kind-hearted doctor Jukai (Harada Yoshio) who raises the boy like a son and builds him a new body, Frankenstein style. Impervious to pain and injury, the boy possesses unnatural powers and an uncommon will to live, but in order to become truly human, he must recover his body parts. And thus begins the quest of Hyakkimaru (Tsumabuki Satoshi), as he roams the land hunting down the forty-eight demons. With each demon slayed, a part of him is restored, or rather regrown. During his journey, he befriends scrappy street thief Dororo (Shibasaki Kou), who joins him in his epic adventure, an adventure that leads them to Daigo.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Dororo (DVD) (US Version) 怪俠多羅羅 (DVD) (美國版) 怪侠多罗罗 (DVD) (美国版) Dororo (DVD) (US Version) Dororo (US Version)
Artist Name(s): Aso Kumiko (Actor) | Koshun Takami (Actor) | Tezuka Osamu (Actor) | Tsumabuki Satoshi (Actor) 麻生久美子 (Actor) | Koshun Takami (Actor) | 手塚治虫 (Actor) | 妻夫木聰 (Actor) 麻生久美子 (Actor) | Koshun Takami (Actor) | 手冢治虫 (Actor) | 妻夫木聪 (Actor) 麻生久美子 (Actor) | Koshun Takami (Actor) | Tezuka Osamu (Actor) | 妻夫木聡 (Actor) Aso Kumiko (Actor) | Koshun Takami (Actor) | Tezuka Osamu (Actor) | Tsumabuki Satoshi (Actor)
Director: Aso Kumiko | Koshun Takami 麻生久美子 | Koshun Takami 麻生久美子 | Koshun Takami 麻生久美子 | Koshun Takami Aso Kumiko | Koshun Takami
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Release Date: 2008-09-23
UPC Code: 025195041164
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: English
Country of Origin: Japan
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Color Information: Color
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 1 - USA, Canada, U.S. Territories What is it?
Rating: Not Rated
Publisher: Universal Studios Home Video
Package Weight: 150 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1011129262

Product Information

Director: Akihiko Shiota

DVD Features:

Region 1
Snap Case
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85
Full Frame - 1.33
Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround - Japanese
Subtitles - English (SDH)

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 "Dororo (DVD) (US Version)"

September 21, 2007

This professional review refers to Dororo (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
Based on the manga from Osamu "God of Manga" Tezuka, Dororo serves up an entertaining bit of manga-to-multiplex fun despite never finding the right tone. Director Koichi Chigira does a lot of things right but also a lot of things wrong, leading to long patches of boredom and the occasional unintentional laugh. Still, there's fun to be had along the way. Satoshi Tsumabuki stars as Hyakkimaru, a cursed fellow who lacks forty-eight vital pieces of his body. Once upon a time, warlord Kagemitsu Daigo (Kiichi Nakai) traded away forty-eight pieces of his unborn son's body to evil demon gods in exchange for unmatched power on the battlefield. The demon gods agreed, each asking for one part of the boy's body. The reason: the child will one day possess the power to vanquish all demons, and obviously the demon gods don't want to see that happen. This deal looks to make all parties happy - except, that is, the kid himself who's put into a basket and sent down the river like Moses. Unlike Moses, however, this kid has no arms, legs, eyes, ears, and many more body parts.

Fortunately for the incomplete tyke, a crackpot inventor named Jukai (Yoshio Harada) finds the kid, and proceeds to develop fantastic prosthetic limbs that enable him to walk, see, and talk. Sort of. The boy is really blind, deaf, and dumb, but it's his heart, mechanical though it may be, that can see and hear (an artificial voice-box handles the talking). The boy also possesses swords (one of them a famous demon-slaying one) built into his limbs, and prosthetic hands to place over his swords. Now grown to adulthood, the boy has become an incredibly handsome and kick-ass version of Edward Scissorhands, and begins a quest to kill the demon gods who made off with his appendages. Given the name Hyakkimaru, the would-be demon killer takes on a sidekick, a childlike thief named Dororo (Kou Shibasaki of Battle Royale). Together, the two roam the countryside, killing demons and moving closer to the mystery of Hyakkimaru's missing limbs. That mystery: that his father, Kagemitsu Daigo, is responsible for his missing limbs AND he killed Dororo's family AND he's sort of a tyrant who generally treats the common folk rather poorly. What are the odds that Hyakkimaru's demon-slaying blade will taste his father's human flesh before the 141 minutes of Dororo are up?

Why Dororo is called Dororo is a bit of a mystery. After all, the true star of the film is Hyakkimaru, while Dororo is just a glorified sidekick/conscience to the incomplete hero of the story. That said, Kou Shibasaki makes the most of her screentime, acting as annoyingly boyish as a woman of her beauty possibly can. Her performance borders on grating, but she handles her emotional scenes quite well. The same can't be said for Satoshi Tsumabaki, who handles Hyakkimaru's moroseness well, but doesn't bring a lot of inner life to the character. He seems much more comfortable once he gets to stop acting blind, which occurs when he kills the two demon gods who stole his eyes. You see, after killing one of these offending gods, Hyakkimaru doubles over in pain, ejects the synthetic body parts, and regrows his former appendage, complete with chintzy CGI effects. It's actually somewhat amusing to see a tough swordsman cough up a fake liver before growing a new one. During the course of the film, Hyakkimaru also drops a leg, an ear, an arm, and - in the imagination of teen girls in the audience - probably some, uh, more vital body parts that we're not privy to. Thankfully, the movie doesn't go there.

Hyakkimaru also lacks a human heart, which means he can get impaled with no ill effects, but also that he simply cannot feel the true pain of being a human being. Who wants to bet that heartbreak won't be a moment of wonder for this Pinocchio-Tin Man wannabe? You can almost smell the moment in the screenplay, and true to form, the filmmakers deliver. What's surprising is that the moment registers, as do many of the emotions delivered during the climax. Credit the actors for managing to wring some depth out of the pages of static exposition. Dororo clocks in at well over two hours, and a lot of it is people talking, talking, and talking some more. Nearly all the important exposition happens when people are sitting around doing nothing, and seldom does an important revelation occur, say, during an action sequence. Also, some characters in the film seem to exist solely to show up and dispense exposition whenever the script requires it, and sometimes their sudden appearances can cause unintentional laughter.

The action sequences can also cause guffaws. Hyakkimaru faces off against numerous CGI-created or enhanced demons, but some of them are clearly still men in suits. With the bouncy music score and the sometimes subpar CGI chipping in their share of cheap cheesiness, Dororo sometimes resembles one of those wacky Henshin TV series. Veteran Hong Kong action director Ching Siu-Tung provides the sometimes over-the-top action, which only adds to the onscreen silliness. Making things even more uneven is the film's dalliance with the macabre. Jukai's workshop is filled with spare body parts, some of which were collected from dead children on the battlefield. The very notion that Hyakkimaru's prosthetics are made from dead kids is creepy enough to give one the willies, as are some of the creatures, who purportedly feed on kids and talk about it happily. Simultaneously horrific, comic, and dramatic, the concept of Dororo probably works better as a manga or anime than as a live-action film, though the film's cheesiness would seem to indicate that it's some sort of a kid flick. Given the omnipresent blood and gore, that doesn't seem likely.

Then again, the Japanese have a larger tolerance towards violence, meaning the film's copious blood would probably be more disturbing to Mr. and Mrs. Smith than Mr. and Mrs. Tanaka. Besides, genre film is now a thing for adults. It's not just kids who salivate over live-action versions of Spider-Man or Casshern, but ticket-buying adults who get off on seeing their childhood memories rendered in flesh-and-blood big screen form. With that in mind, Dororo has the goods to be fun and enjoyable, albeit a bit messy and slow-paced. Ching Siu-Tung's action is perfectly suited for this sort of acrobatic fantasy film, and the New Zealand location is gorgeous. Plus, watching Hyakkimaru hunt down the thieves of his body parts is kind of fun, in a gotta-collect-them-all kind of way. Whenever Hyakkimaru dispatches his latest demon, there's an undeniable curiosity factor in seeing which body part grows back. Rooting for Hyakkimaru isn't hard. After all, who wouldn't want to see the former incomplete boy become whole once again? Speaking of which, Hyakkimaru doesn't collect all forty-eight parts during the course of the film, meaning Dororo 2 and even Dororo 3 are in the offing. It's an obvious bit of commercialism, but Dororo succeeds more than enough as throwaway fun that the sequels don't seem like a bad idea at all. So to see Hyakkimaru grow back his brain and lower intestine I have to buy a ticket for Dororo 2 AND Dororo 3? Done and done. See you there.

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 "Dororo (DVD) (US Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9.5 out of 10 (4)

Rhonda
See all my reviews


December 21, 2007

This customer review refers to Dororo (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
Its great! Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
I love both Tsumabuki Satoshi and Shibasaki Kou from previous dramas and movies I've seen them in and it was great to see them working together once again. At first I thought this movie would be too weird but it quickly became very cool and interesting! The monsters looked weird but it was awesome to see them fighting them as well as seeing the story behind it unfold. I think it was a pretty good watch and its one that I can watch over which is great!
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Rhoda
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October 29, 2007

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

Something different Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
I wonder by the movie is entitled Dororo when Dororo was played by the girl in this film and the story of the movie revolves around the male lead where played a man who lost his limbs because of his father's pledge to the dark side.
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John Lim
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August 2, 2007

This customer review refers to Dororo (DVD) (Collector's Edition) (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version)
Dororo Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
First of all, I would like to say when I fist purchase this special edition without reading carefully about what this movie all about since I love any movie with samurai. When I get to watch the movie. I dont even understand japanese. It is quickly understood what the movie all about as the movie progress.

All the fighting can tell by hong kong action choreographer and special effect are superb. Well improved since japanese Samurai movies since shinobi.

I would say this the next best dvd collection to put on your coffee table.
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khach khach
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July 30, 2007

This customer review refers to Dororo (DVD) (Collector's Edition) (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version)
Mr. Children (Dororo) Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
An absolute awesome movie since Shinobi. Lots of cool special effects & c.g.i., many sword fightings scenes, great music, wonderful cinematography. If and only if they have the same female character of Shinobi movie to replace the same role actress of this Dororo, then this would be a perfect movie to spend time and money for. Over all, DORORO is A MUST SEE !!!
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