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Memories Of Tomorrow (DVD) (English Subtitled) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version) DVD Region 3

Watanabe Ken (Actor) | Higuchi Kanako (Actor) | Tsutsumi Yukihiko (Director)
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Memories Of Tomorrow (DVD) (English Subtitled) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version)
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All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (2)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Watanabe Ken swept the Best Leading Actor statuettes from all of Japan's major film award ceremonies with Memories of Tomorrow, and it's not hard to see why. Internationally famous for his performances in The Last Samurai, Memoirs of a Geisha, and Letters from Iwo Jima, Watanabe is an actor who effortlessly exudes command and stature, as evident in his previous roles. In Tsutsumi Yukihiko's Memories of Tomorrow, however, he shows a completely different side of himself. Portraying a humble middle-aged salaryman prematurely struck with Alzheimer's Disease, Watanabe captures with heart-aching precision the strength and fragility of a man as his health deteriorates. Based on an Ogiwara Hiroshi novel, Memories of Tomorrow is both sobering and inspiring, telling a gentle, heartwrenching tale of hope and humanity.

Marketing chief Saeki Masayuki (Watanabe Ken) has given most of his life to his company. He bows low and deep, puts in long hours, and takes fervent pride in his work. Over the years, he has perhaps given less time to his loving wife (Higuchi Kanako) and rebellious daughter (Fukiishi Kazue) than he should have, but such is the life of the working man. Lately, however, he has been getting easily flustered and increasingly forgetful, the early signs of Alzheimer's Disease it turns out. For this man who has known only work and pride, he must face himself and his family as the life he knows slowly slips away.

This edition comes with making of and interview with director.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Memories Of Tomorrow (DVD) (English Subtitled) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version) 明日的記憶 (DVD) (雙碟版) (台灣版) 明日的记忆 (DVD) (双碟版) (台湾版) Memories Of Tomorrow (DVD) (English Subtitled) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version) Memories Of Tomorrow (DVD) (English Subtitled) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version)
Artist Name(s): Watanabe Ken (Actor) | Higuchi Kanako (Actor) 渡邊謙 (Actor) | 樋口可南子 (Actor) 渡边谦 (Actor) | 樋口可南子 (Actor) 渡辺謙 (Actor) | 樋口可南子 (Actor) Watanabe Ken (Actor) | Higuchi Kanako (Actor)
Director: Tsutsumi Yukihiko 堤幸彥 堤幸彦 堤幸彦 Tsutsumi Yukihiko
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Release Date: 2008-02-04
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Japan
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 1.78 : 1
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 5.1
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
Publisher: DS
Other Information: 2DVDs
Package Weight: 140 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1005201729

Product Information

* Screen Format: 16:9
* Sound Mix: Dolby Digital 5.1
* Special Features:
- 幕後花絮
- 導演訪談

導演︰堤幸彥
Director: Yukihiko Tsutsumi

日本奧斯卡最佳影片、男女主角、配樂、劇本五項大獎提名
渡邊謙榮獲日本奧斯卡男主角獎、日本藍絲帶男主角獎、等五項電影最佳男主角獎
日本票房勇破25億日幣;超過250萬觀眾感人推薦

如果過了明天 我連你都忘記了 可否還是緊握我的手 陪我繼續走下去…

佐伯雅行(渡邊謙)是知名廣告公司主管,工作賣力認真,不但受老闆肯定,也備受下屬愛戴。他能無憂地在職場打拼,是虧得溫柔體貼的妻子枝實子始終默默支持,兩人甜蜜的感情羨煞許多人。而女兒梨惠也即將出嫁,還有個未出世的小外孫,幸福似乎始終圍繞在他身旁。直到某日,他因為不堪長期頭痛暈眩的困擾而就醫,這才驚覺原來自己的健康早在不知不覺中流逝。

他開始想不起來每天一起工作的同事長什麼樣子,
每天上班都要經過的街道,卻變成了陌生的風景,
上一秒鐘才訂好開會的時間,下一秒卻完全忘記……

直到有一天,佐伯不知不覺來到當年與枝實子相識的地方,他想起年輕時候彼此承諾相愛一生,想起了那時她說「我願意」的溫柔語調,卻怎麼也想不起她的模樣。枝實子回家找不到佐伯的蹤影,無助之餘,便也來到這個回憶之所。看到佐伯從前方走過來,她好想上前給丈夫一個擁抱,只是佐伯看著眼前這位眼中盈滿淚水的女子,覺得既熟悉又陌生……

Saeki, a sales manager of an advertisement agency, turned 50 this year. Active in nature and always leading others, he is loved by his subordinates. He had confidence in and never doubted his health, having been undertaking a demanding job. Lately becoming rather forgetful, he blamed it on his age. His only daughter's wedding is coming up, and he is to become a grandfather, although rather a little earlier than he had expected. He is looking forward to enjoying his Golden years as this new chapter of his life was to begin......

One day, however, he is struck with a sudden physical downturn which started impeding his work. He went in for a precautionary checkup where, to his surprise, the doctor diagnosed him with "early on-set Alzheimer's disease"! Saeki and his wife, Emiko, are daunted with unspeakable fear and sorrow for him gradually but certainly losing his memory.
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 "Memories Of Tomorrow (DVD) (English Subtitled) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version)"

January 21, 2008

This professional review refers to Memories Of Tomorrow (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
After three years in Hollywood and an Academy Award nomination, Japanese actor Ken Watanabe could've chosen to star in any high-profile blockbuster he wished. Instead, he used his star power to bring the novel Memories of Tomorrow to the big screen as not only its star, but also its executive producer. A project like this does require that level of star power - a heartbreaking story about a middle-aged man succumbing to early-onset Alzheimer's, Memories of Tomorrow is not quite like your typical movie-of-the-week illness film. It does induce tears, but it rarely does so manipulatively; it offers a great leading performance, but rarely at the expense of solid supporting performances; and best of all, it offers hope, but rarely does so at the expense of reality.

Watanabe was 46 years old when he made Memories of Tomorrow, making the subject even timelier for the actor, who once fought and won his own battle against leukemia. Here, he plays the 49-year-old Masayuki Saeki, a successful middle-management ad executive who has spent half his life devoted to his work. However, his career comes at the expense of his family, particularly long-suffering wife Emiko (Kanako Higuchi) and daughter Rie (Kazue Fukiishi). Just as his team gets a big account, the symptoms start showing: a headache here and there, forgetting who starred in Titanic, and missing a highway exit. When he forgets an important business meeting for the first time in his career, he starts looking at medical books and the symptoms seem to point to depression, possibly on the account that his daughter is pregnant out of wedlock.

But when Emiko starts noticing his forgetfulness, she takes him to a doctor, who tells him that he has early-onset Alzheimer's, which shares the same symptoms as depression. At first, Masayuki is devastated, but his hard exterior will not let him fall victim to it. Hiding the truth from his company, he stubbornly continues to go to work, drawing his co-workers' faces on their name cards and cramming little notes into his pockets. However, he is eventually forced to take a lower position with a smaller pension package because of his refusal to retire before his daughter's wedding. Meanwhile, Emiko sticks by him every step of the way, even taking a full-time job for the first time in her married life to support the family. Despite her selfless care, there's no cure for the disease, and Masayuki will eventually lose all his memories as time goes on, no matter how hard he tries to hang onto them.

Director Yukihiko Tsutsumi (working with writers Hakaru Sunamoto and Uiko Miura, who adapted from Hiroshi Ogiwara's novel) thankfully tones down the overwrought drama most of the time, rarely resorting to long-winded drama-style monologues. The drama largely comes from the raw emotions displayed by stars Watanabe and Higuchi. This is Watanabe's movie, and he shows it with a brave performance (worthy of five acting awards and counting) that blends the usual masculine stubbornness with a gradual, bitter resignation and guilt. While he does overact at times, his performance is undeniably powerful. Just watch the scene in which he undergoes a memory test that he slowly fails; the fear and frustration that he displays in that 5-minute segment easily shows how he earned so many awards. Faring equally well is Higuchi, who convincingly portrays Emiko as a fighter who stands by her husband regardless of his condition, even though the character sometimes seems too good to be true.

Along with the performances, the script is also well structured. By starting in the year 2010, when Masayuki has already succumbed to his disease, the film offers the audience no illusions of some type of miracle. Instead, the film asks us to grow as his character does, learning to appreciate the discoveries he makes in his new life and to sympathize with his challenges as well. While the script does go into Masayuki's past neglect of his family, it stays in reality, presenting familial relationships that have nothing to do with reciprocity. In Emiko's mind, she has to support her husband, no matter what he has done in the past. Despite the potential for melodrama in the premise of the film, Tsutsumi dramatizes events only to depict their effect on the person, not to push for audience reaction. As a result, Memories of Tomorrow is a heartbreaking drama not because it knows how to make audiences cry, but because it knows how to make audiences feel. The film could've easily been an acting showcase for Ken Watanabe, who has never had a true starring role before this film. Fortunately, the resulting product ended up being so much more.

By Kevin Ma

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 "Memories Of Tomorrow (DVD) (English Subtitled) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (2)

ChoSoo
See all my reviews


January 26, 2008

This customer review refers to Memories Of Tomorrow (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
One of the best movies!! Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
Wow.. I have to say that is movie is one of the best I've seen.. I can really understand why Ken Watanabe won "best actor" for this one.. I cried several of times, because of all emotional parts..!!
If you haven't seen this yet.. BUY IT!! It's worth it.
Alzheimer's Disease is nowadays a "common" disease and to see how hard it is, not only for the person who has it but also for the people around them..

Memories of tomorrow is a MUST see!!
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lexi
See all my reviews


October 14, 2007

This customer review refers to Asu no Kioku (Memories Of Tomorrow) (DVD) (Japan Version)
A must see Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
Just saw this in the theater and I want to own it. It is a must see for those approaching their golden years and for those who are dealing with a parent with the early signs of Alzheimers. Slightly depressing, but very real. Mr. Watanabe put on a stellar performance.
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
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