Heaven's Soldiers (DVD) (Special Edition) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
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YesAsia Editorial Description
But when the two Koreas decide to hand over the warhead to the United States, North Korean military officer Kang Min Gil (Kim Seung Woo) decides to take matters into his own hands and not only steal the weapon with the help of a band of private soldiers but kidnap the female South Korean scientist (Kong Hyo Jin) who helped create it as well! Things get even more difficult for Kang as South Korean Navy Officer Park Jeong Woo (Hwang Jung Min) is sent by his superiors to capture the rogue soldier and reclaim the weapon. In the midst of a battle on the DMZ, the soldiers are suddenly transported through time thanks to the appearance of a mysterious comet.
In a blink of the eye, the soldiers find themselves trapped in the 16th century, a dark time in Korean history, which saw its countrymen spending most of their time battling off the advances of foreign invaders. After defeating a band of looters with their high-powered machine guns, the time displaced soldiers are hailed as conquering heroes by the locals. Dubbed "Heaven's Soldiers," the group ends up meeting Yi Sun Shin (Park Joong Hoon), the real life admiral who led Korea to victory against the Japanese. However, the legendary Yi isn't quite what the soldiers expected. Rather than the mythical hero of legend he's thought to be in the present day, the Yi the soldiers encounter is actually a thief and a rascal, one who can't even pass the officer's exam! Shocked that their hero could be so lax in his studies, the soldiers give Yi a crash course in military education, all in the hopes he'll fulfill his destiny! But will Yi discover his true calling in time or will he doom both himself and his beloved country? Find out in Heaven's Soldiers, a crowd-pleasing time travel epic!
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Heaven's Soldiers (DVD) (Special Edition) (Japan Version) 天軍 (DVD) (特別版) (日本版) 天军 (DVD) (特别版) (日本版) 天軍 特別版 <韓流Hit!> 特別版 Heaven's Soldiers (DVD) (Special Edition) (Japan Version) |
| Also known as: | General Of Heaven General Of Heaven General Of Heaven General Of Heaven General Of Heaven |
| Artist Name(s): | Park Joong Hoon | Kong Hyo Jin | Kim Seung Woo | Hwang Jung Min 朴重勳 | 孔 孝珍 | 金承佑 | 黃政民 朴重勋 | 孔 孝珍 | 金承佑 | 黄政民 パク・チュンフン | コン・ヒョジン | キム・スンウ | ファン・ジョンミン 박 중훈 | 공효진 | 김 승우 | 황 정민 |
| Director: | ミン・ジュンギ |
| Release Date: | 2010-03-26 |
| Publisher Product Code: | OPSD-C057 |
| Language: | Japanese, Korean |
| Subtitles: | Japanese |
| Country of Origin: | South Korea |
| 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: | SPO |
| Other Information: | DVD |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1022092668 |
Product Information
南北の歴史的和解(金正日と金大中が手を握り合う報道映像)を経て5年後の2005年。核弾頭「飛撃震天雷」の共同開発に成功するも、その威力を恐れた米国からの引き渡し要求に屈する。それに反発した北の軍人が開発者の女性物理学者を拉致し核弾頭を持ち逃げ、南の軍人たちが追跡、鴨緑江流域で銃撃戦となる。その瞬間、433年ぶりの巨大彗星の飛来によって核弾頭ごと彼らは433年前にタイムスリップ!そこは挑戦の戦国時代、彼らが出会ったのは恐ろしい蛮族に搾取される村人たちと挑戦の英雄・李舜臣(イ・スンシン)の若き日の姿であった。現代に戻る時間(=彗星が地球を離れるタイミング)が刻一刻と迫る中、幾つもの問題と直面し対決を迫られる南北の軍人たち。まさに彗星最後の日が、個々の運命をかけた決戦の日となる。 インタビュー映像/オリジナル予告篇/メイキング映像/劇場版予告篇
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Heaven's Soldiers (DVD) (Special Edition) (Japan Version)"
This professional review refers to Heaven's Soldiers
|
It's inevitable that the South Korean movie machine would eventually get around to contributing to the shaping-history time travel movie genre, this time in the form of rookie writer/director Min Joon Ki's Heaven's Soldiers. As films in the genre usually go, contemporary characters wind up somewhere in the past, where they happen upon a critical juncture in history alongside one or two significant figures of the time. The protagonists soon discover that the truth doesn't quite jibe with history, and are forced to lend a hand in fulfilling that history. The subject of revision in Heaven's Soldiers is Lee Soon Shin, a name that holds little meaning outside the Korean peninsula, but is arguably the most well-known (if not most respected) figure in Korean history. Lee was a savvy tactician who beat back the Japanese invaders at the end of the 16th century, employing a perfect combination of skill and luck. Presently, an obscenely large statue of the man stands in Seoul, and his likeness appears on numerous denominations of South Korean currency. But Heaven's Soldiers gets fanciful on us even before the time-hopping starts. According to the movie, by 2005 the North and South Korean governments have secretly joined forces to create a nuclear warhead. When the leaders of both nations decide to hand over the nuke to the American military, North Korean officer Kang Min Gil (Kim Seung Woo) goes rogue and hides away with the nuke along with nuclear physicist Kim Su Yeon (Kong Hyu Jin, Volcano High). It's up to South Korean Navy Officer Park Jeong Wu (Hwang Jung Min, A Bittersweet Life) and a team of commandos to retrieve the scientist and the warhead. But, during a heated firefight, the nuke, the scientist, and both groups of soldiers are swept up in the wake of a passing comet (don't ask) and dumped into the late 1500s -- right in the middle of a battle between Korean peasants and marauding Chinese barbarians. Not surprisingly, the soldiers handily dispatch the barbarians with their modern weaponry, and are thus dubbed Heaven's Soldiers by the startled onlookers. It's not long before the unwitting time travelers run afoul of a brazen thief who turns out to be no other than the legendary Lee Soon Shin (Park Joong Hoon), looking very un-legendary at the moment. To their horror, the travelers discover that the real Lee is a selfish, thieving lay-about, more concerned with the money in his purse than the future of his country. It's up to hero worshipper Park to mentor his personal hero onto the greater things written about him in history. Meanwhile, Kang and his men task themselves with retrieving the warhead, as scientist Kim tries to figure out how they're all going to get back home. Being that Heaven's Soldiers is very much a Korean film, it is of course schizophrenic in tone, swinging across great distances of broad comedy and intense melodrama and back again. This results in the filmmakers milking their admittedly derivative concept for the full spectrum of emotions. It's a good thing, too, since the "everything but the kitchen sink" approach of Heaven's Soldiers is what makes it a unique and mostly entertaining movie in the first place. Even before the time-travel element is introduced, Heaven's Soldiers walks in the realm of the fantastic with its suggestion that both Koreas would cooperate to develop a nuclear weapon in secret. Keep in mind that just five years ago JSA stirred up a ridiculous amount of controversy when it offered a story featuring fraternization between enemy soldiers along the DMZ. Taking that into consideration, time travel via near-earth comet fly-by seems almost mundane, at least from a South Korean perspective. Heaven's Soldiers indulges in the expected fish-out-of-water gags when the soldiers first arrive in the past, but there are also humorous asides about life in the 16th century. More unique to the setting is director Min's sly dig at the current state of affairs on the Korean peninsula. In particular, the fact that the North and South soldiers insist on maintaining their separate nationalistic ways, leading to pointed scenes where the characters create and enforce a miniature DMZ-esque barrier in front of the dilapidated forest hovel that serves as their base of operations. In fact, it's the film's numerous subtle jabs at modern life and politics that sets Heaven's Soldiers apart from other films with a similar premise. Expectedly, Heaven's Soldiers takes a decidedly dark turn at roughly the halfway mark, embarking on a detour to Melodramaramaland with gusto. The sub-plot about the Chinese barbarians, which had been sitting at the peripheral edges, finally comes to the fore when the invaders embark on a bloody vendetta against our displaced heroes. The result is a fairly jarring segue into a period war film as Lee finds his strengths as an emerging leader and our time-displaced soldiers set aside their differences for the Cause (and that's definitely deserving of a capital "C") with all traces of comedy evaporating from the story. Despite its flaws, Heaven's Soldiers holds up well as a whole. As was the case with the recent A Bittersweet Life, Heaven's Soldiers writer/director Min Joon Ki is well aware he's not reinventing the wheel, and plays with audience expectations at every opportunity. It's probably no accident that the time travelers land in the time of the revered Lee Sun Shin, considering the political shakeups the Korean Peninsula has undergone since the end of World War II. If anything, Heaven's Soldiers serves as a calling card to a simpler time, before demilitarized zones and foreign influences split the country. Ultimately, this is where Heaven's Soldiers shines - it starts off as a routine time-travel story, only to finish up as a nationalistic male-empowerment/brotherhood movie. Movie Grade: 4/5 By Erick - BeyondHollywood.com |
Customer Review of "Heaven's Soldiers (DVD) (Special Edition) (Japan Version)"
See all my reviews
September 24, 2006
This customer review refers to Heaven's Soldiers
|
ANOTHER ALL STAR CAST FOR ME. THIS IS ALSO QUITE ENTERTAINING. NORTH AND SOUTH KOREA LOST IN TIME, TIME WHEN PARK JOONG HOON WAS GENERAL AND WAS THE ONE WHO LIBERATED JAPAN. THE ENDING IS QUITE SAD BUT YOU'LL LOVE IT. |
See all my reviews
February 24, 2006
This customer review refers to Heaven's Soldiers
|
This story was funny...sad...and...historical...i think that the movie was not that bad but to be honest i was really bored and just wanted to watch son=mething to watch...if your looking for something grat this wont be it... |










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