Hatsukoi (Blu-Ray) (Japan Version) Blu-ray Region A
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Directed by Hanawa Yukinari, First Love, a.k.a. Hatsukoi, is based on Nakahara Misuzu's fictional autobiography in which she claims responsibility for the robbery. As much a meditation about coming of age in the chaotic 1960s as it is an account of the heist, the film features Miyazaki Aoi as a conflicted teenager. Co-starring for the third time as her brother (previously in Eureka and Riyu) is Miyazaki Aoi's real-life older brother, Miyazaki Masaru.
Amidst the sweeping social unrest of the 1960s, troubled high school student Misuzu (Miyazaki Aoi) finds company with her rebellious brother Ryo (Miyazaki Masaru) and his friends. Their meandering days are spent around bars, finding happiness through drugs, alcohol, and casual sex. Misuzu becomes particularly close with Kishi (Koide Keisuke, Pacchigi), who hatches a plan to rob a bank car. The plan goes remarkably well, but as their relationships and the world around them change, what they find is not success, but sorrow.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Hatsukoi (Blu-Ray) (Japan Version) 初戀 (Blu-Ray) (日本版) 初恋 (Blu-Ray) (日本版) 初恋 【Blu-ray Disc】 Hatsukoi (Blu-Ray) (Japan Version) |
| Also known as: | First Love First Love First Love First Love First Love |
| Artist Name(s): | Miyazaki Aoi | Miyazaki Masaru | Fujimura Shunji | Komine Rena | Emoto Tasuku | Koide Keisuke | Aoki Munetaka 宮崎葵 | 宮崎將 | 藤村俊二 | 小嶺麗奈 | 柄本佑 | 小出惠介 | 青木崇高 宫崎葵 | 宫崎将 | 藤村俊二 | 小岭丽奈 | Emoto Tasuku | Koide Keisuke | 青木崇高 宮崎あおい | 宮崎将 | 藤村俊二 | 小嶺麗奈 | 柄本佑 | 松浦祐也 | 小出恵介 | 青木崇高 Miyazaki Aoi | Miyazaki Masaru | Fujimura Shunji | Komine Rena | Emoto Tasuku | Koide Keisuke | Aoki Munetaka |
| Director: | Hanawa Yukinari 塙幸成 塙幸成 塙幸成 Hanawa Yukinari |
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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: | 2008-03-21 |
| Publisher Product Code: | GABLY-1272 |
| Language: | Japanese |
| Country of Origin: | Japan |
| Disc Format(s): | Blu-ray |
| Publisher: | GAGA Communications |
| Other Information: | Blu-Ray Disc |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1005172273 |
Product Information
【この商品はBlu-ray Discソフトです。対応プレイヤー以外では再生できませんのでご注意ください。】 ■映像特典:予告編
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- First Love (AKA: Hatsukoi) (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3
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- First Love (DVD) (Special Edition) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3
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Taiwan Version
- First Love (DVD) (Taiwan Version) DVD Region 3
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Hatsukoi (Blu-Ray) (Japan Version)"
This professional review refers to First Love (AKA: Hatsukoi) (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
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To be sure, Yukinari Hanawa's First Love is a heist film like no other. The title of the movie itself is perhaps the first hint that the big robbery is less important than the resolution of the love plot. Really, when a movie begins with a teenage girl asking, "What's the time limit on a wounded heart?" you know you're not in Ocean's 11 territory anymore. And yet even though budding teenage romance ends up trumping the thrills of cinematic grand larceny, the film's heist isn't a throwaway plot device. It's actually based on a real-life crime famously known in Japan as "Sanoku-en jiken" ("The 300 Million Yen Affair").
On December 10, 1968, three-hundred million yen was stolen from bank employees transporting the money in an unmarked car. The robbery occurred in only a matter of seconds and not a single person was hurt. The crime was the biggest heist in Japanese history, leading to the largest manhunt ever undertaken in the country. The statute of limitations on prosecuting the crime has since expired, and even until this day, no one knows for sure who pulled off this legendary crime. First Love, however, speculates as to the identity of the real criminal. Based on Misuzu Nakahara's autobiography, First Love stars Aoi Miyazaki (Nana, Su-ki-da) as Misuzu, a quiet, alienated teenager who seeks out the company of local heartthrob Ryo (Masaru Miyazaki) and his band of misfit friends. This tight-knit group spends most of their days hanging around a jazz bar called "B," and the introspective Misuzu slowly, although not completely, starts to come out of her shell. As the film develops, we begin to understand Misuzku's true connection to Ryo as well as her reasons for seeking his company. Eventually, she begins to fall for his friend, Kishi (Koide Keisuke), who in many ways seems like an anomalous figure in the group. When tragedy strikes this once-merry band of friends, Kishi hatches a plot to strike back at the government with a huge, unprecedented robbery, but he needs Misuzu's help to see it through to the end. The two begin practicing for the heist, and through the multiple rehearsals, they begin to fall even more deeply in love. Of course, history would suggest that the heist was a success, but was it really? What happened to these two alleged accomplices? That is the story that First Love seeks to trace in its final moments. First Love is a bit of an odd duck. The romance is palpable, but it's awkward and buried just under the surface. It's all about what isn't said between the two leads, rather than the depiction of any huge declarations of love or fits of passion between the main protagonists. In a sense, that makes the film a variation on the "Pure Love" subgenre, although First Love spools out in a decidedly non-formulaic manner. In some ways, such restraint is commendable and it was nice to see a romance shown in a more awkward, realistic way. But in other ways, that is perhaps the most frustrating part of the movie. One may end up hoping for a payoff that the film never quite delivers. Still, without the benefit of much dialogue, Aoi Miyazaki turns in another fine performance as Misuzu, able to convey in facial expressions what few actors could with pages of dialogue. Standout scenes include an unconventional, yet entirely welcome and joyous motorcycle lesson from Kishi's elderly mechanic friend (Shunji Fujimura, from Death Note) and her character's last act discovery of a crucial piece of information involving Kishi. Overall, Koide Kesuke is fine, but is unremarkable as the object of Misuzu's affection. It's Miyazaki's real-life brother, Masaru Miyazaki who turns in the more charismatic performance as Ryo, the consummate rebel without a cause. The heist aspect of the film becomes increasingly important in the film's later portions, and the rehearsals are definitely fun to watch. Naturally, they don't come across in the slick, professional manner that typifies most heist movies, but that's part of the charm. History says that they'll pull it off, but somehow, the filmmakers are able to make us doubt even a foregone conclusion such as that. For a while there, the depiction of the consequences of the heist came across as a bit too protracted and narratively frustrating, but it's eventually resolved (kind of) by the aforementioned last act discovery. Ultimately, First Love is part-romance, part-heist movie, and part-snapshot of an era. It's not exactly an overwhelming success in any of these three different categories, but somehow, the parts add up to a fairly satisfying whole. By Calvin McMillin |











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