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Jasmine Women (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region All

Joan Chen (Actor) | Zhang Ziyi (Actor) | Jiang Wen (Actor) | Liu Ye (Actor)
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Jasmine Women (Hong Kong Version)
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All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 1 - 1 out of 10 (1)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Jasmine Women, a film whose release date was put off for 3 years until 2006, stars Zhang Ziyi in three different roles, which is quite a challenge to her. The film features a star-studded cast, including Joan Chen (Saving Face), Liu Ye (Lan Yu, The Promise), Lu Yi (Seven Swords), and Jiang Wen (Devils on the Doorstep, Red Sorghum). The movie is adapted from the novel Women's Life by the famous writer Su Tong, whose literary works have been turned into many films, among them Zhang Yimou's Raise the Red Lantern. Jasmine Women follows a family whose female members from three different generations all experience frustration in marriage, as if the family is cursed.

In the 1930s, Mo (Zhang Ziyi), brought up by her single mother (Joan Chen), develops a romance with the studio manager (Jiang Wen) and is dumped after she gets pregnant. She blames her daughter Li for all her miseries. In the 1960s, Li can no longer put up with her mother Mo (Joan Chen) and marries a construction worker (Lu Yi). Being impotent, Li adopts a child from the orphan named Hua. In the 1980s, Li suspects that her husband has an incestuous affair with Hua. Her husband commits suicide and Li becomes schizophrenic. Hua's marriage is no better than her mother's or grandmother's - her husband (Liu Ye) finds a mistress and she decides to divorce him although she has already conceived his child...

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Technical Information

Product Title: Jasmine Women (Hong Kong Version) 茉莉花開 (香港版) 茉莉花开 (香港版) ジャスミンの花開く (茉莉花開) (香港版) Jasmine Women (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Joan Chen (Actor) | Zhang Ziyi (Actor) | Jiang Wen (Actor) | Liu Ye (Actor) | Lu Yi (Actor) 陳沖 (Actor) | 章子怡 (Actor) | 姜文 (Actor) | 劉燁 (Actor) | 陸 毅 (Actor) 陈冲 (Actor) | 章子怡 (Actor) | 姜文 (Actor) | 刘烨 (Actor) | 陆 毅 (Actor) 陳沖(ジョアン・チェン) (Actor) | 章子怡(チャン・ツィイー) (Actor) | 姜文(チアン・ウェン) (Actor) | 劉燁 (リウ・イエ)  (Actor) | 陸毅(ルー・イー) (Actor) Joan Chen (Actor) | 장쯔이 (Actor) | Jiang Wen (Actor) | Liu Ye (Actor) | Lu Yi (Actor)
Director: Hou Yong 侯詠 侯咏 Hou Yong Hou Yong
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Release Date: 2006-07-28
Language: Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong, China
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 1.78 : 1
Widescreen Anamorphic: Yes
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 5.1
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: All Region What is it?
Rating: IIA
Duration: 130 (mins)
Publisher: Kam & Ronson Enterprises Co Ltd
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1004450087

Product Information

* Screen Format: 16:9 Widescreen
* Sound Mix: Dolby Digital 5.1
* Extras:
- 章子怡拍攝專訪姜文、陳沖及導演候詠訪問專輯
- 加推從未曝光刪剪鏡頭
- 章子怡產子片段全程披露

** 附送: 世界各地版本海報、海照 **

導演︰侯詠
Director: Hou Yong

  《茉莉花開》描繪三代中國女人──茉、莉、花的故事。茉和莉活在舊時代裡,最終沒有逃脫出命運安排的情感陷阱,無奈、絕望和失敗感,充斥著她們本應多姿多采的人生;直到花這一代,才學會選舉自己想要的一切……

  茉,一個由經營著照相館的單親母親養大的18歲少女,遇上孟老闆後,一生命運改變。茉成了明星,同時懷了孟老闆的骨肉。那是上個世紀三十年代發生於舊上海的事……

  茉生下孩子不久就被拋棄了。她失去了明星的光彩。她為這個私生女取名莉,莉要離開這個陰冷的家,很快便嫁給了水泥廠工人鄒傑。他倆決定生個孩子,但莉偏偏不能生育,只能從福利院抱了一個女孩,取名花。莉對生活極度不滿,甚至懷疑自己的丈夫與養女有染,丈夫選擇了臥軌自殺。這是上個世紀五六十年代的事……

  花找了個男友小杜,在結婚後懷孕不久,發現小杜有外遇,她堅決地提出離婚,並把小孩生了下來──這已是80年代的事……

  JASMINE WOMEN is divided into three segments.

  The first opens in Shanghai's pre-WWII heyday. Starstruck, Mo, falls for the slick patter of talent scout "Boss" Meng about becoming a movie star. Though Meng makes good on his promise, he also gets Mo pregnant. Despite her burgeoning career, Mo refuses to have an abortion, moving back home to face recriminations from her mother and other more dire consequences.

  In the second part, Communist China is in full swing in the late '50s and the still movie-obsessed Mo has to contend with the socialist zeal of her daughter, Li. Li's boyfriend, Zou Jie, has troubles with Mo's bourgeois tastes.

  The final section, set in 1978, introduces Hua, the adopted daughter of Li. Hua has been raised under the watchful eye of Mo, but has secretly married a brilliant fellow student, Du. Not knowing they're married, Mo attempts to sway Hua from further romance with Du.
Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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Professional Review of "Jasmine Women (Hong Kong Version)"

May 30, 2006

This professional review refers to Jasmine Women (DVD) (English Subtitle) (DTS Version) (China Version)
When word began to circulate about mainland Chinese drama Jasmine Women back in 2003 and 2004, it seemed the sort of film guaranteed to make waves internationally. It is, after all, based on a well-regarded novel and features an all star cast built around Zhang Ziyi and Joan Chen. But, for whatever reason, the film simply slipped off the radar and has been seldom seen until now with a new Chinese DVD release making the film widely available.

Told in three segments spanning three distinct time periods, Jasmine Women casts both Zhang and Chen in multiple roles as it tells the stories of three generations of an all female family and their very poor choices in men. The first segment casts Zhang as A Mo - the only character who recurs through all three segments - with Chen as A Mo's mother. Chen takes over the A Mo role in both the second and third segments while Zhang playing A Mo's daughter and granddaughter, respectively.

The film opens in the early thirties, the jazz era in full swing. A Mo is a bright-eyed young girl, working with her mother in their family photography shop while obsessing over the movies. When she catches the eye of a lecherous film producer, A Mo moves away from home to become an actress against her mother's wishes. She seems well on the road to success until the Cultural Revolution strikes, effectively destroying the film industry and leaving A Mo abandoned, unemployed, pregnant and with no choice but to move back home with her disapproving mother.

The second segment jumps forward slightly more than twenty years to the early fifties. A Mo - now played by Chen - still lives in the apartment over the photography shop, now with her daughter Lily (Zhang). Chinese Communism is in full swing, and the young Lily has fallen in love with a university classmate, a working class Communist Party member. Following a fight with her mother, Lily, enamored with a wildly over-romanticized view of the working class life, leaves home and marries her young love against her mother's wishes, only to receive a rude awakening on lower class life.

We then jump forward in time again to the seventies with Lily's daughter returning home from an extended time away living in the countryside, during which time she was secretly married to a man about to head to a far away university.

The strength of Jasmine Women is very obviously the attention to period detail and the recreation of these distinct times. The opening segment, in particular, is gorgeously detailed and beautifully shot, many sequences very strongly reminiscent of the old MGM musicals. This was a vibrant time period lovingly recreated, and there are much worse things in the world than looking at Zhang done up in period glam. And while the later two pieces may not be as flashy as the opening salvo, they are also recreated with a remarkable attention to detail.

Unfortunately the film's weaknesses are also immediately evident. As you may gather from the above synopses, the storylines in all three segments are highly repetitive, the film essentially repeating variations on the same scenario in three different time periods. The characters never seem to progress and little effort is made to differentiate the different characters either of the main actresses play. Perhaps lying at the root of this problem is how the film feels less like a coherent narrative - an actual story about actual people - than it does a type of historical tourism, a series of events strung together more to guide you through an era than to introduce you to any particular character. Coming in at forty to forty five minutes each, the individual segments aren't long enough for any sort of extended character development, but are long enough to bloat the total running time to two hours and ten minutes, which is far too long for a film that repeats itself as often as this one does.

The mainland Chinese DVD release is pretty much what you would expect from the Zoke Culture DVD label, which is to say not particularly good. Presented in a letterboxed widescreen format the transfer is soft and noticeably grainy with high contrast elements tending to bleed out somewhat. And while the subtitles give enough to follow the story with little effort, they are definitely of the "Engrish" variety - poorly translated and littered with grammar and syntax errors.

by Todd Brown - Twitchfilm.net

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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.

Customer Review of "Jasmine Women (Hong Kong Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 1 - 1 out of 10 (1)

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December 24, 2006

This customer review refers to Jasmine Women (DVD) (English Subtitle) (DTS Version) (China Version)
1 people found the following helpful

I got bored Customer Review Rated Bad 1 - 1 out of 10
Jasmine Women - touted as star studded movie with "challenging" performances.

Reality - boring, repetitive, and pretty darn slow movie to watch.

Had it not been for Joan Chen's acting, (which is the only worthy performance in the film), this film would be a total waste of time and boring. Joan was the only stand out in the film and she ages pleasantly well too.

Ziyi on the other hand, the 'supposed' star in this film is well, annoying and predictable. Her performance is the usual stuck-up, self-absorbed, tantrum throwing narcissist. Yehh..... I'm getting quite bored of it. So in this film she plays 3 different characters from 3 different generations. All I saw was 3 different characters with the same performance 3 times over (yawn yawn) Challenging?? Please tell me you have something better than that. She has been playing the same role not only in this movie 3 times over, but the same roles in all her other movies.
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