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Genghis Khan: To the Ends of the Earth and Sea (Blu-ray) (Special Edition) (US Version) Blu-ray Region A

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Genghis Khan: To the Ends of the Earth and Sea (Blu-ray) (Special Edition) (US Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Genghis Khan conquers the big screen with the epic biopic Genghis Khan - To the Ends of the Earth and Sea (a.k.a. The Blue Wolf: To the Ends of the Earth and Sea)! Helmed by Sawai Shinichiro, the award-winning director of Kadokawa classics Tragedy of W and Early Spring Story, Genghis Khan is a grand production in every sense of the word. Shot entirely on location in the vast grasslands of Mongolia, this unprecedented co-production, made in commemoration of the 800th anniversary of the founding of Mongolia, employed a whopping 30 million yen budget and thousands of extras to stunningly recreate the spectacular battles and military feats of Genghis Khan. Five thousand real-life Mongolian Army soldiers appeared as extras for an epic battle scene, and 27,000 people were mobilized to shoot the enthronement ceremony.

Sorimachi Takashi, who also starred in Kadokawa's 2005 blockbuster Yamato, plays with furious gusto the young warrior Temujin who would become the greatest khan Mongolia and the world has ever known, leaving behind him a legacy that would long outlast his empire. Adapted from a Morimura Seiichi novel, the film takes historical liberties but stays true to spirit in its depiction of the complicated figure that is Genghis Khan. Genghis Khan details both the khan's brave military exploits, his ruthless political machinations, and the personal episodes that shape his life - his friendship and eventual rivalry with Jamuqa (Hirayama Yusuke, Limit of Love: Uzimaru), his courtship of tribal princess Bolte (Kikukawa Rei, Install), his obsession with origin and lineage. One of the biggest titles of 2007, Genghis Khan is a larger-than-life film befitting a larger-than-life historical figure.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Genghis Khan: To the Ends of the Earth and Sea (Blu-ray) (Special Edition) (US Version) 蒼狼 (Blu-ray) (特別版) (美國版) 苍狼 (Blu-ray) (特别版) (美国版) Genghis Khan: To the Ends of the Earth and Sea (Blu-ray) (Special Edition) (US Version) Genghis Khan: To the Ends of the Earth and Sea (Blu-ray) (Special Edition) (US Version)
Also known as: 蒼狼 直到天崖海角, 成吉思汗: 征服到地與海的盡頭 苍狼 直到天崖海角, 成吉思汗: 征服到地与海的尽头
Artist Name(s): Kikukawa Rei (Actor) | Sorimachi Takashi | Shoichi Maruyama 菊川怜 (Actor) | 反町隆史 | Shoichi Maruyama 菊川怜 (Actor) | 反町隆史 | Shoichi Maruyama 菊川 怜 (Actor) | 反町隆史 | Shoichi Maruyama Kikukawa Rei (Actor) | Sorimachi Takashi | Shoichi Maruyama
Director: George Kee Cheung George Kee Cheung George Kee Cheung George Kee Cheung George Kee Cheung
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Blu-ray Region Code: A - Americas (North, Central and South except French Guiana), Korea, Japan, South East Asia (including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan) What is it?
Release Date: 2009-04-21
UPC Code: 704400096020
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: English
Country of Origin: Japan
Color Information: Color
Disc Format(s): Blu-ray
Rating: R (MPAA)
Publisher: FUNimation Entertainment, Ltd.
Package Weight: 200 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1014463790

Product Information

Director: Shinichiro Sawai

Blu-ray Disc Features:

Region [unknown]
NTSC
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.78
Audio:
(Unspecified) - Japanese
Subtitles - English - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Featurette: Great Plains of Mongolia
Additional Scenes: Uncut Battle Scenes
Behind the Scenes:
1. Premiere Screenings
2. Peek Behind the Scenes
Text/Photo Galleries:
Additional Text: Filming Journal

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 "Genghis Khan: To the Ends of the Earth and Sea (Blu-ray) (Special Edition) (US Version)"

September 28, 2007

This professional review refers to Genghis Khan - To The Ends Of Earth And Sea (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
The title of this Japan-made retelling of Mongolian conqueror Genghis Khan's story is To the Ends of the Earth and Sea, and it's actually a rather misleading one. The film chronicles only his rise from Temujin the clan leader into ruler Genghis Khan, ending before his conquest started and without ever showing any body of water. If the existing biographies are correct (and there are very few ways of knowing), Genghis Khan's life was indeed a very rich one and probably deserves two 136-minute movies instead of just one. However, producer Haruki Kadokawa and ex-Kadokawa Films director Shinichiro Sawai could only afford to make one 136-minute film, ending the film just before Genghis's world conquest began in hopes that the US$30 million production would earn enough to justify a sequel. However, the film was a commercial failure in Japan despite being sold to 60 territories around the world. While Genghis Khan does have its share of problems, it's nostalgic old-school filmmaking that may actually still thrill some people. It was just made in the wrong era.

Takashi Sorimachi (GTO, Fulltime Killer) leads a mostly Japanese cast as the adult-aged Temujin/Genghis Khan, the son of a tribal leader who is forced to live in poverty with his family when his father dies and the tribe abandons them to fend for themselves. Born in the period when Mongolia was comprised of warring tribes, the film's central plot involves Temujin's dream, shared with best friend Jamuqa (Yusuke Hirayama), to unite the Mongols into one nation and end the bloodshed. However, like the Highlander, there can be only one Khan, and we already know how that story will turn out. Luckily, we have other plots to follow along the way including Temujin's obsession with his birth origins, his strained relationship with his son (Kenichi Matsuyama from the Death Note films), who may not be his biological offspring, and his relationships with the women around him. Oh, and he conquers a couple of tribes too.

Shot entirely in Mongolia, Genghis Khan evokes the days of the old Kadokawa blockbusters with its beautiful cinematography, classical dialogue (all the actors speak like they're in a movie about samurais), and spectacular overacting. Sorimachi does his best to imitate a macho seventies actor, over-delivering his dialogue in the gruffest way possible to give off the vibe of a great warrior. Sorimachi succeeds, possessing great screen presence as the big honcho. In fact, Genghis Khan plays like a sixties commercial film straight from beginning to end; things are made to look as real as possible, which makes the insertion of some obvious cgi shots even more obvious. Furthermore, not everyone will buy the exaggerated actions of every character, including some of the most awkward hugs between a man and a woman in the history of Japanese cinema. If you haven't been through sex education, you might get from this movie the idea that babies come from a man "embracing another as a woman".

Old-fashioned melodrama aside, Kadokawa spared no expense for the film, employing real-life Mongolian soldiers for the battle scenes. However, the bloodless battles are staged with little excitement and usually involve lots of people running into each other with deadly weapons. That would be acceptable if Sawai wanted to show that war is not meant to excite, but composer Iwashiro Taro's score actually suggests that Temujin's various murderous conquests are glorious and honorable. However, it's hard to get excited again and again about charging soldiers running across a green field, kicking up lots of cgi dust.

Despite Sawai's ability to move things along at a brisk pace, Genghis Khan lacks the memorable scenes that a successful blockbuster needs. Instead, the film moves along quickly in order to cover as much territory as possible. For instance, the introduction of Temujin's second wife/warrior Kulan (played by underacting Korean newcomer Ara) happens so quickly that Temujin comes off as naïve, as he immediately believes that someone who just tried to assassinate him can be a loyal fighter. The film is filled with similar such scenes; Temujin becomes blood brothers with Jamuqa after a quick arrow competition, and he even gets a small clan to join him because he wants to return a favor. Things work quickly in Sawai and Kadokawa's world, and the line between efficient storytelling and lazy exposition is often blurred.

Nevertheless, Genghis Khan is an entertaining spectacle. Every dollar spent is captured by the camera, and the film would probably only look better on the big screen. While the film's flaws can be painfully obvious, and it doesn't even corroborate with known history, the film is a likable old-fashioned epic that never meant to work with a hip 2007 audience. Calling the film "good" may border on overrating it, but it's a worthwhile retro trip back to a time when real people were used for battle scenes, directors actually shot movies at attractive locations rather than in the front of a green screen, and dense biopics moved way too fast. It's just a shame that they ended the film where they did. While the first half of Genghis Khan's life can be considered more dramatically intriguing and politically correct (some nations' histories still see Genghis Khan's rule as brutal and oppressive.), I would've really liked to see what Sawai and co. would do with Khan's journey around the world. At least then the film would've lived up to the its title.

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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