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Ge Li Wei Xi Gu Huo Zi 2 (DVD) ( Tai Guo Ban) DVD Region All

Jung Jun Ho (Actor) | Jung Woong In (Actor) | Jung Woon Taek | Kim Dong Won (Director)
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Ge Li Wei Xi Gu Huo Zi 2 (DVD) ( Tai Guo Ban)

YesAsia Editorial Description

My Boss, My Teacher, the follow up to the hit 2001 comedy My Boss, My Hero, continues in the same vein of crazy comedy. This time around, our hero Doo Sik (Jung Jun Ho) is a senior in college, where he is studying to become a teacher(!). During the day he works hard teaching morality and ethics; at night he continues to work as a gangster. He gets placed at a local high school as a student teacher, but then trouble rears its ugly head. Always determined to keep him studying hard, Doo Sik's boss has also returned to high school to complete his own education. Now Doo Sik has to face his boss at school too!
© 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: Ge Li Wei Xi Gu Huo Zi 2 (DVD) ( Tai Guo Ban) 隔離位係古惑仔 2 (DVD) (泰國版) 隔离位系古惑仔 2 (DVD) (泰国版) マイ・ボス マイ・ヒーロー2 リターンズ (タイ版) 투사부일체
Also known as: My Boss, My Hero 2 My Boss, My Hero 2 My Boss, My Hero 2 My Boss, My Hero 2 My Boss, My Hero 2
Artist Name(s): Jung Jun Ho (Actor) | Jung Woong In (Actor) | Jung Woon Taek 鄭俊浩 (Actor) | 鄭雄仁 (Actor) | 鄭雲宅 郑俊浩 (Actor) | 郑雄仁 (Actor) | 郑云宅 チョン・ジュノ (Actor) | チョン・ウンイン (Actor) | チョン・ウンテク 정 준호 (Actor) | 정 웅인 (Actor) | 정 운택
Director: Kim Dong Won 金 東元 金 东元 Kim Dong Won 김동원
Release Date: 2011-12-29
Language: Korean, Thai
Subtitles: English, Thai
Country of Origin: South Korea
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: Letterboxed, 1.78 : 1
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 5.1
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: All Region What is it?
Duration: 125 (mins)
Publisher: Thai CD Online
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1029732253

Product Information

Director : Kim Dong-won

Finally has its sequel. This time our hero Doo-sik has become a senior in a college, studying to be a teacher himself. Doo-sik is now a student-teacher teaching ethics during the day while working as a gangster at night. His boss is still very determined to make Doo-sik keep on studying, while he has also gone back to high school as a student. Now Doo-sik finds out that he has to follow his boss during the night as well as during the day at school.
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Ge Li Wei Xi Gu Huo Zi 2 (DVD) ( Tai Guo Ban) "

July 8, 2006

This professional review refers to My Boss, My Student Limited Edition
When we last saw Gye Doo-Shik in the hit Korean gangster comedy My Boss My Hero (2001), he was a second-in-command gangster who was forced by his boss to get a high school diploma in order to move up in the mob ladder. There, he was subjected to bullies, rival gangs, and various forms of corporal punishment. The film became a mega-hit and was etched forever into Korean pop culture history as one of the films that led the popular gangster comedy genre in South Korea. Five years later, Doo-Shik and company return for more of the same in the sequel My Boss My Student. This time, everything is bigger - larger cast, more subplots, more violence, more gangsters, even the screen is wider. The result is a true blockbuster that brought twice the box office gross of its predecessor (as of now, it is the second highest-grossing Korean film of 2006), but is the rise in box office gross reflected in quality as well?

For newcomers who will find themselves lost in the first 10 minutes, you should know that Jeong Jun-ho is returning as Gye Doo-Shik, now a gangster with a high school degree. However, after being pressured to deliver a college degree by his boss, he sends his right hand man Sang-Do in instead, who plays Doo-Shik as a charming college student. Meanwhile, dumb-but-loyal lieutenant Dumb-Garl (this is only according to the subtitles, the character's actual name is Dae Ka-ri) is coming up with new ways to embarrass his boss while remaining loyal despite constant punishment from both Doo-Shik and his bossy wife for his stupidity. Perhaps inspired by the hit Japanese manga franchise Gokusen, Doo-Shik is discovered by his boss and is forced to finish the degree himself via a student teacher program at a local high school, teaching a class on none other than ethics.

On the first day of class, Doo-Shik realizes that his boss, looking to complete his own high school education, has unknowingly enrolled in the class as a student. Ordered to treat his boss the same as his fellow students, Doo-Shik now has to not only protect the boss from other bullies, but also dish out various forms of corporal punishments to his boss. As if teaching high school isn't enough, he has to worry about a deal with the Hong Kong triads being constantly disrupted by Sang-Do and Dumb-Garl due to their incompetence. To add even more to the mess, there's the tough female teacher smitten with Doo-Shik, a troubled female student that Doo-Shik befriends, and a staple in all gangster films - the rival gang. If you think reading that was exhausting, try writing about it.

My Boss My Student is essentially a 90-minute film trapped in a 120-minute one. Director Kim Dong-Won (taking over directorial and co-screenwriting duties from original director-writer Yun Je-Gyun) crams as much subplots into the film as possible. The result may be a slightly more enjoyable experience than the brutal original, but also a more unnecessarily convoluted one as well. My Boss My Student, in fact, becomes so stuffed that you may forget the existence of a plot halfway through. Fans of Jeong Jun-ho may be glad to see him dishing out the punishment this time rather than taking it, but that's what he spends the whole movie doing - being boss and teacher while punishing people left and right - rarely does the audience ever see him teach. Considering that Doo-Shik would rather get drunk with his ethics tutor than being taught by him, one might wonder why he isn't fired by the second act, let alone becoming a well-liked teacher.

Then again, forget logic and plot, My Boss My Student is out to make people laugh, and that it does every once in a while. If you are a fan of people getting punished in all kinds of humorous ways, then My Boss My Student is the ticket. It indulges in finding out new ways to beat someone up, and in true Korean comedy style - no one ever seems to need any medical attention after getting hit repeatedly. But that's ok, the film is filled with funny, if not somewhat redundant, gags. Rather than following a coherent plot, each scene simply becomes a new excuse for someone to get punished for something. While the idea that a student, an underling, and a child being the same thing (the franchise's slogan is that one must always respect his boss, father, and teacher) is an interesting concept, it's replaced by another slogan - being in Korean high schools and the mob can both suck equally.

Nevertheless, Kim and the cast do have impeccable comic timing, which must've been one of the deciding factors in its success. The Korean verbal humor may get lost in translation every once in a while' the physical humor, in most part, is the highlight of the film. Apart from a strange out-of-nowhere parody of The Classic in the beginning and a somewhat strained extended finale, Kim is not afraid to wait, pushing comedic tension far enough that each laugh comes at just the right moment. Kim may not have his pacing down right yet, as several unnecessary subplots brings the film to a halt (not to mention the two-hour mark), but he definitely has a future in comedy.

A film like My Boss My Student is essentially critic-proof - it's utterly absurd and overlong, the plot is more complicated that it needs to be, and the third act dramatic twist is as contrived as they come, but it features familiar characters in familiar situations, and it actually makes the audience laugh more often than most Korean comedies do these days. It may not become a classic like the first film, but as far as Korean comedies go, it's recommendable as a flawed, but enjoyable ride.

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.
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