Giniro no Season (DVD) (Standard Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Slacker extreme skiers Gin (Eita), Yuji (Tamayama Tetsuji), and Juro (Aoki Munetaka) live life at top speed on the snow white peaks of Hakuba. Other than skiing and more skiing, the three "Alpine Handymen" run odds jobs, ruffle feathers, and make reckless fun, often all at the same time. Gin lands himself a ski instructor gig when city girl Nanami (Tanaka Rena) shows up at the Dogwood Ski Lodge to prepare for her lavish ice chapel wedding. A crash course is in order since her groom-to-be is an expert skier, and she can't even take the bunny hill without, well, crashing. Impatient speed freak Gin and perennially clumsy Nanami couldn't be more different at first gander, but they're both struggling to let go of the past, looking for answers that can only be found on two skis.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Giniro no Season (DVD) (Standard Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) 銀色季節 (DVD) (Standard Edition) (英文字幕) (日本版) 银色季节 (DVD) (Standard Edition) (英文字幕) (日本版) 銀色のシーズン スタンダード・エディション スタンダード・エディション Giniro no Season (DVD) (Standard Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) |
| Also known as: | Season of Snow Silver Season Season of Snow Silver Season Season of Snow Silver Season Season of Snow Silver Season Season of Snow Silver Season |
| Artist Name(s): | Tanaka Rena | Eita | Tamayama Tetsuji | Aoki Munetaka | Sato Eriko | Tanaka Yoji | Sugimoto Tetta | Kunimura Jun 田中麗奈 | 瑛太 | 玉山鐵二 | 青木崇高 | 佐藤江梨子 | 田中要次 | 杉本哲太 | 國村準 田中丽奈 | Eita | 玉山铁二 | 青木崇高 | 佐藤江梨子 | 田中要次 | 杉本哲太 | 国村准 田中麗奈 | 瑛太 | 玉山鉄二 | 青木崇高 | 佐藤江梨子 | 田中要次 | 杉本哲太 | 國村隼 Tanaka Rena | Eita | Tamayama Tetsuji | Aoki Munetaka | Sato Eriko | Tanaka Yoji | Sugimoto Tetta | Kunimura Jun |
| Director: | Hasumi Eichiro 羽住英一郎 羽住英一郎 羽住英一郎 Hasumi Eichiro |
| Release Date: | 2008-07-02 |
| Publisher Product Code: | PCBC-50905 |
| Language: | Japanese |
| Subtitles: | English, 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: | Fuji TV |
| Other Information: | DVD |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1010748217 |
Product Information
雪山でやりたい放題の日々を過ごしている≪雪猿≫たち—城山銀(瑛太)・小鳩祐治(玉山鉄ニ)・神沼次郎(青木崇高)の3人組は寂れた町営スキー場の“雪山の何でも屋”。個人レッスンからスキーのチューンナップ、駅への送迎まですべてを商売にしている。しかし時には、賭けスキーに興じたり、スキー場で当たり屋を演じたりと、まわりの人々に迷惑を掛け続けている困ったヤツら。そんなある日、東京から結婚式を3日後に控えた全くスキーのできない花嫁・綾瀬七海(田中麗奈)が彼らの前に現れる……この偶然の出会いが、≪雪猿≫たちの心を揺り動かし、新たな一歩を踏み出す勇気をもたらした! 【音声特典】コメンタリー/砂猿メイキング/予告編
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Giniro no Season (DVD) (Standard Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)"
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How does a director top himself after making the highest-grossing film of that year? Isao Yukisada, after his surprise hit Crying Out Love, in the Center of the World, expanded to ambitious commercial films while also indulging in more intimate projects at the same time. Katsuyuki Motohiro began making kinder and more high-profile projects after his super successful Bayside Shakedown films, though none of those films matched Bayside's success. Meanwhile, director Eitaro Hasumi decides to stick to the same things that made his mega-blockbuster Umizaru 2: Limit of Love such a success with his follow-up Season of Snow (Giniro No Season), i.e. pretty people in visually spectacular situations. While the film does deliver on that crucial element, it's also made from a formulaic script that fails to lift the film beyond its commercial trappings. Featuring the first use of the American-developed Spydercam, the film delivers on the spectacle, vividly capturing the film's characters weaving around the majestic white mountains of Hakuba. However, for the female audience, their spectacle may be the film's central characters, the so-called "Yukizaru" (Snow Monkeys). Composed of Gin (the singular-named Eita), Yuji, (Tetsuji Tamayama), and Jiro (Munetaka Aoki), the Snow Monkeys run around their ski resort town with their "boys will be boys" mischief, much to the annoyance and forced tolerance of the townspeople. Meanwhile, the town is attempting to reinvent itself in the face of competition from the trendier next-door resort, which boasts a new snow-made chapel. Their first customer is Nanami (Rena Tanaka), who arrives at the town without her groom. The town's biggest worry is realized when troublemaker Gin, who runs a handyman business in town, meets Nanami and offers to teach her to ski for a considerable fee. Eventually, Nanami will discover Gin's past as a professional skier, but she herself holds her own reason for going to the resort. Season of Snow is unabashedly a sports melodrama, and the script by Kenji Bando (Midnight Sun, Heavenly Forest) has no problem sticking to the formula. This means that everyone has an unspeakable past, there will be a love story at the center, and there will be a sports climax with lots of applause and cheers. Of course, a formula is often repeated because it works, and that's thankfully the case here. The characters are likable, the emotion works, and some of the Snow Monkeys' ways are amusing. However, over the years one would hope that technology is not improvement in films of this genre. Besides its impressive production values, Season of Snow is little more than a rehash of sports films that you've probably seen more. Nevertheless, the film is also more likely to remind you of a good sports film you've already seen. The filmmakers replace Japanese cinema's favorite formula of lovable-but-incompetent underdogs with three troublemakers who are good at what they do. This means Samu Fujishio's cinematography and its ability to capture the Snow Monkeys doing their thing is easily the most visually appealing part of the film. In a close second is Rena Tanaka, who exudes a radiant beauty that should also be partially credited to Fujishio as well. Eita, whose popularity is on the rise after hit drama Last Friends, gives off plenty of leading man charm as the tortured Gin. If seeing pretty people and pretty sights is what gets you to the movies, then Season of Snow provides plenty of motivation. However, you'll likely forget everything within hours of leaving the theater, as the situations and characters will probably blend into your collective memory of all the other sports films you've seen. Except for the aforementioned Spydercam, Season of Snow really brings nothing new to the existing pantheon of sports films. However, that doesn't mean that it's not an agreeable commercial film. In fact, the visuals themselves are worth the price of a ticket, even though the script is strictly TV drama-quality, with silly youth shenanigans, monologues of self-realizations, and backstories of tortured pasts. Audience who demand little more than the usual TV drama fodder will likely enjoy Season of Snow the most. Coincidentally, that may just be the audience that the filmmakers were going for. Keep those expectations in mind, and everyone will go home happy. By Kevin Ma |
Editor's Pick of "Giniro no Season (DVD) (Standard Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)"
See all this editor's picks
July 16, 2008
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Considering I didn't even particularly like Hasumi Eiichiro's box office-topping Umizaru films, my expectations were fairly modest as I walked into the theater, wondering why I got up early on a Saturday morning to catch the Hong Kong Film Festival's screening of Giniro no Season. Thankfully, Giniro proved to be every bit as entertaining as it is lightweight. The people are pretty, the snow is fluffy, the scenery is beautiful, and skis fly high into the sky for an enjoyable commercial sports film with an undemanding story and high rewatch value. I'm glad I woke up early to see the skiing and snowscape on the big screen. Eita, who got an extra shot of popularity after Nodame Cantabile, gets top billing for the first time as a troublemaking skiing prodigy with a very blue coat and slightly better hair than usual. Eita's Gin lives it up on the powdery slopes with his slacker buddies (Tamayama Tetsuji, Aoki Munetaka) as they wreak havoc on skis and live day to day on odd jobs. Gin's latest job is teaching cute bride-to-be Nanami (Tanaka Rena) how to ski for her ice chapel wedding, but her two left feet lead to more falling than skiing. As the wedding date draws near, Gin and Nanami gradually learn about the less rosy past that lies behind their carefree appearances. Cue affecting life lessons. Giniro no Season is a popcorn movie through and through, and thank goodness for that. The film pulls all the cheesy strings and melodramatic stops the genre asks for, and does it in a beautiful setting with a likable, photogenic cast and fun skiing segments. The story is formulaic - screwball youth hijinks in the first half, teary inspirational turns in the second half - but never feels less than sincere, with the romance angle kept admirably subtle. There's plenty of snow to go around, and both the soaring ski stunts and snow-covered mountains look gorgeous onscreen. Check deep thoughts at the door, and fun will be had. Since Giniro no Season didn't exactly repeat the box office success of Umizaru 2, the jury is still out on whether Eita gets to graduate from the bloated club of trendy, popular, good-looking young Japanese actors who can't quite squeeze into the top tier (some fellow members: Narimiya Hiroki, Tsukamoto Takashi, Hiraoka Yuta, Koide Keisuke, and co-star Tamayama Tetsuji). Eita's latest drama Last Friends will do more for his local popularity than Giniro, but he does show here that he can convincingly carry a big film just by being his usual likable self. And Tanaka Rena can lift any film a few notches just by looking adorable in a winter cap. |











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