GOTH (DVD) (Taiwan Version) DVD Region 3
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| Product Title: | GOTH (DVD) (Taiwan Version) GOTH斷掌事件 (DVD) (台灣版) GOTH断掌事件 (DVD) (台湾版) GOTH (DVD) (Taiwan Version) GOTH (DVD) (Taiwan Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Hongo Kanata (Actor) | Takanashi Rin (Actor) | Matsuo Toshinobu | Natsuo Yuna | Torihada Minoru | Yamanaka Satoshi | Nagatsuka Keishi | Nakada Kei 本鄉奏多 (Actor) | 高梨臨 (Actor) | 松尾敏伸 | Natsuo Yuna | 鳥肌實 | 山中聰 | 長塚圭史 | 中田圭 本乡奏多 (Actor) | 高梨临 (Actor) | 松尾敏伸 | Natsuo Yuna | 鸟肌实 | 山中聪 | 长冢圭史 | 中田圭 本郷奏多 (Actor) | 高梨臨 (Actor) | 松尾敏伸 | 夏生ゆうな | 鳥肌実 | 山中聡 | 長塚圭史 | 中田圭 Hongo Kanata (Actor) | Takanashi Rin (Actor) | Matsuo Toshinobu | Natsuo Yuna | Torihada Minoru | Yamanaka Satoshi | Nagatsuka Keishi | Nakada Kei |
| Director: | Takahashi Gen 高橋玄 高桥玄 高橋玄 Takahashi Gen |
| Release Date: | 2009-12-10 |
| Language: | Japanese |
| Subtitles: | Traditional Chinese |
| Country of Origin: | Japan |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it? |
| Duration: | 97 (mins) |
| Publisher: | Himalaya Records Corporation (TW) |
| Package Weight: | 120 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1021713081 |
Product Information
被裝扮得美麗動人
但手腕以下卻被整齊的切割開來…
GOTH 指的是對屍體、拷問、殺人犯的心理等等有關人類的黑暗面有興趣的人們的簡稱。成績優秀、品行良好的高中生神山就是這樣的人,然而在同學和家人面前,他從不顯露出自己GOTH 的一面,唯一看穿他內心的是也擁有同樣嗜好的同班同學森野。某天,森野偶然撿到了一本筆記本,上面紀錄著最近發生的斷掌殺人事件的來龍去脈。森野和神山兩人出發前往尚未被人發現的兇案現場,循著筆記本上的線索,他們果然見到了那被裝扮得宛如藝術品般的美麗屍首…
Other Versions of "GOTH (DVD) (Taiwan Version)"
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Japan Version
- GOTH (DVD) (Deluxe Edition) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
- US$61.49
- Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
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US Version
- Goth (DVD) (English Subtitled) (US Version) DVD Region 1
- US$19.98
- Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
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Others
- Goth: Love Of Death (DVD) (English Subtitled) (UK Version) DVD Region 2
- US$29.99
- Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
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inubaka 21 inu baka yangu jiyampu komitsukusu 44267 85
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Professional Review of "GOTH (DVD) (Taiwan Version)"
This professional review refers to Goth: Love Of Death (DVD) (English Subtitled) (UK Version)
|
Goth is director Takahashi Gen's live-action adaptation of the award-winning novel by Japanese author Otsuichi, which had previously been adapted into a popular manga by artist Kendi Oiwa, and which has apparently been optioned for a Hollywood version. Thankfully, despite its title, the film is not concerned with depressed, makeup wearing vampire wannabes, but is a far more interesting affair, following a couple of outsider, death-obsessed teenagers who become entangled with a series of bizarre murders. Unsurprisingly given such potentially grim subject matter, the film is pretty bleak, though at the same time is engaging and even oddly moving. As such, it offers something very different to the usual Asian horror shenanigans, and has more in common with the Death Note films than anything else. The film is set in the faceless suburbs of Tokyo, where a serial killer has been murdering young women, severing their left hands and leaving their bodies artistically posed in easy to find locations. His antics catch the eye of two high school students, the beautiful loner Morino (Takanashi Rin, recently in Rookies) and the popular, outwardly happy seeming Kamiyama (played by rising star Hongo Kanata, also in K-20: The Fiend with Twenty Faces), both of whom harbour a disturbing fascination with death, murder and human cruelty. After Morino finds what they believe to be the killer's notebook, the two attempt to track him down, not to bring him to justice, but so that they can see the corpses for themselves before the police. Inevitably, the closer they come to their quarry and his victims, the more they put themselves at risk, testing the limits of their shared obsession. Goth is hard to categorise, as although utterly morbid it is not really a horror film as such, making no attempt to scare, or even to really gross out the viewer. There are a few gruesome scenes scattered throughout, though much like its protagonists, the film is fixated on death and the act of murder from an aesthetic and philosophical point of view rather than for cheap thrills. This makes the premise far more interesting than it might otherwise have been, as does the fact that the constantly shifting relationship between Morino and Kamiyama genuinely feels like the hesitant bonding of two fringe dwellers rather than the kind of conventional teenage romance that would certainly not have rung true. Although the plot meanders, with most of the running time being taken up with the two talking in Morino's gloomy cafe hang out spot or wandering around in search of dead bodies, it does work in a few twists along the way, and director Takahashi Gen manages a fair amount of tension once the question of the killer's identity becomes a pressing issue. Even then, the film chooses not to take the easy route, and it never falls into traditional thriller territory, with a climax whose somewhat needless revelations are aimed at catharsis rather than narrative resolution. Morally, the film is bold and fascinating, with the characters clearly being uninterested in notions of right and wrong. This makes their quest all the more engaging and keeps the viewer guessing as to how far they are willing to go and what choices they will eventually make. The film is beautiful in a fittingly ethereal fashion, with cinematographer Ishikura Ryuji making excellent use of light and shade to create an almost surreal world. Clearly seen from the point of view of its characters, the film exists in a space hanging on the edge of death, subtly filled with quietly sinister imagery, making for an ominous atmosphere throughout. The soundtrack complements this perfectly, being creepily ambient and nicely underscoring the growing tension with a disturbing mixture of innocence and threat. This air of ambiguity pervades every aspect of Goth and makes it one of the most intriguing and original Japanese genre films of recent years. Morally challenging and visually striking, it draws the viewer into the morbid world of its alienated, emotionally complex characters, and is sure to be enjoyed by all fans of the macabre. by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.com |













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