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Monga (DVD) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2

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Monga (DVD) (Japan Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Five youths come of age the hard way in the Taiwanese gangster blockbuster Monga. Beating even Avatar at the local box office in its opening day gross, the youth gang epic takes audiences back to 1980s Taiwan, to a time of rousing fistfights, loud floral shirts, and good old-fashioned brotherhood. Following his award-winning What on Earth Have I Done Wrong, Doze Niu spins his experience as an idol drama director into a big-budget, hot-blooded gangster actioner that's gritty, glossy, and completely entertaining. Television idols Ethan Ruan (Exit No. 6) and Mark Chao (Black & White) lead the cast, with Rhydian Vaughn (Winds of September), former Super Idol contestant Cai Chang Xian, variety show stars Huang Deng Hui and Chen Han Dian, and actress Alice Ke (Miao Miao) rounding out Monga's awry youth. Veteran actor Ma Ju Lung (Cape No. 7) and Doze Niu himself also co-star in the nostalgic gangland drama.

Loner teen Mosquito (Mark Chao) has just moved to Taipei's gang-ridden Monga district, and he gets picked out immediately at school for some roughing up. Dragon (Rhydian Vaughan), the swaggering son of mob boss Geta (Ma Ju Lung), swoops in to save Mosquito and invites him into the "Prince Gang" alongside Monkey (Cai Chang Xian), A-Po (Huang Deng Hui), and Monk (Ethan Ruan), the true brain and brawn of the group. The five friends live it up together amid backalley brawls and brothel excursions, even as they get pulled deeper and deeper into a brewing gang war that threatens to upturn their youth and their brotherhood.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Monga (DVD) (Japan Version) 艋舺 (DVD) (日本版) 艋舺 (DVD) (日本版) モンガに散る Monga (DVD) (Japan Version)
Artist Name(s): Ma Ju Long | Ethan Ruan | Alice Ko | Mark Chao | Rhydian Vaughan 馬如龍 | 阮經天 | 柯 佳嬿 | 趙 又廷 | Rhydian Vaughan 马如龙 | 阮经天 | 柯 佳嬿 | 赵 又廷 | Rhydian Vaughan 馬如龍(マー・ルーロン) | 阮經天(イーサン・ルアン) | 柯佳嬿 (アリス・クー) | 趙又廷 (マーク・チャオ) | リディアン・ヴォーン Ma Ju Long | Ethan Ruan | Alice Ko | Mark Chao | Rhydian Vaughan
Director: Doze Niu 鈕承澤 钮承泽 鈕承澤 (ニウ・チェンザー) Doze Niu
Release Date: 2011-08-02
Publisher Product Code: BIBF-8055
Language: Mandarin
Subtitles: Japanese
Country of Origin: Taiwan
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: Happinet
Other Information: DVD
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1024187443

Product Information

タイトル:モンガに散る
出演:イーサン・ルアン/マーク・チャオ/マー・ルーロン/リディアン・ヴォーン/クー・ジャーヤン
監督:ニウ・チェンザー[鈕承澤](監督)/ニウ・チェンザー[鈕承澤](脚本)/ツォン・リーティン(脚本)/ニウ・チェンザー[鈕承澤](編集)/ツォン・リーティン(編集)/リン・ユンイー(編集)/ジェイク・ポロック(撮影監督)/サンディ・チェン(音楽)

黒社会に翻弄される、若者達の友情と絆。そして待ち受ける哀しい運命—。/1986年。台北一の歓楽街・モンガに越してきた高校生の“モスキート”は、校内の争いをきっかけに、モンガ一帯の権力を握る、廟口(ヨウカク)組の親分の一人息子“ドラゴン”とドラゴンの幼馴染で頭の切れる“モンク”に気に入られ、彼らが率いるグループの5人目として迎えられる。最初は極限の世界に戸惑いつつも、生まれて初めてできた友達とケンカに明け暮れながら、モンガの街で青春を謳歌していくモスキート。次第に彼らは固い絆で結ばれ、義兄弟の契りを交わし、仲間のために戦うことを誓う。そんな中、街の利権を狙う新たな勢力がモンガに乗り込みはじめる。激しい抗争と陰謀に巻き込まれた5人は、それぞれの思いを抱えながらも、この街を守ろうと戦っていた。しかし、その争いは、やがて彼らに哀しい運命をたどらせていく…。
アジアの巨匠(ジョン・ウー、ピーター・チャン、ホウ・シャオシェン)が、こぞって絶賛!数々の快挙を成し遂げ、社会現象を巻き起こした衝撃作!!/この街で誓った友情は、永遠に続くと信じていた—。

PG−12

テクニカル・インフォメーション
:カラー
画面:Cinemascope-squeeze(16:9LB)
言語/音声:台湾語:ドルビーデジタル5.1chサラウンド

その他の情報
製作年:2010
著作権:(C)2010 Green Days Film Co. Ltd. Honto Production
備考:1枚組
映像特典収録
日本小売価格:¥3800

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Monga (DVD) (Japan Version)"

June 29, 2010

This professional review refers to Monga (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
You've seen Monga before - but not exactly like this and that makes all the difference. Director Doze Niu's (What on Earth Have I Done Wrong?) youth gang film possesses solid situations and characters, and does a fine job of walking the thin line between glamorizing and criticizing the gang lifestyle. The story does seem familiar, but that's because every culture has their version of the youth gang saga. Sometimes a regional film industry will even produce new versions for successive generations. Well, Monga is the Taiwanese gangster film for the now generation, tapping into nostalgia and nationalism while also representing the country's reinvigorated commercial film industry. Well made and very entertaining, Monga is only a miss if you absolutely abhor this genre. I'm guessing that you don't.

Mark Chao of hit Taiwan drama Black and White stars as Mosquito, a lonely teen who's just moved to Taiwan's Monga (Wanhua) district circa 1986. When bullied by the local toughs - they're after, of all things, the roasted chicken leg in his lunchbox - he fights back instinctively. Mosquito isn't a rebel nor is he trying to upset the status quo - he just dislikes being pushed around. Soon, Mosquito is threatened with a five-on-one beatdown, but he's saved by the intervention of another gang led by the mullet-sporting Dragon Lee (Rhydian Vaughn of Winds of September). Dragon's group is composed of your standard youth gangster types - Monkey is short and a scrappy fighter, A-Po is the dopey comedy relief, and Monk (drama idol Ethan Ruan) is strong, stalwart and easily the most charismatic of the bunch. Together, the five friends form the "Prince Gang", reveling in their newfound camaraderie and the shared joy of running around the streets and getting into fights. It's all so precious.

Monga starts in sharply entertaining style, with smart black comedy, fantastic camerawork (from cinematographer Jake Pollock of The Message), and some lyrical, imagined touches that take place in the mind of neophyte gangster Mosquito. The character serves as the audience's touchstone, introducing the Monga gang life in an engaging manner. Mosquito's attraction to this life is easily understood; he has no father and few friends, and his mother maintains ties with a former mainland boyfriend (director Doze Niu) who Mosquito instinctively dislikes. Getting the audience to buy into Mosquito's character is easy; Mark Chao is innately identifiable, and Ethan Ruan so adeptly inhabits the charismatic (and possibly homosexual) Monk that it's easy to see why Mosquito idolizes him. As Mosquito's scarred love interest, Ke Jia-Yan (Miao Miao) is quietly alluring. For Mosquito and the audience, joining the gang seems like good times all around.

That is, before reality crashes in, sending the boys' idealized life hurtling towards a tragic end. As time passes, Mosquito finds a new parental figure in Dragon's father, ebullient gang boss Geta (Ma Ju-Lung of Cape No. 7), but there may be hell to pay in his growing affiliation to the gang. Director Niu lays the groundwork for that theme in one potent scene - involving a Taiwan-style breakfast, a pair of chopsticks and a severed finger - that wordlessly conveys the black reality of the gangster life. Being a part of jiang hu means establishing a reputation but also making potentially disastrous mistakes. The Prince Gang inadvertently plants seeds for later grudges, while also uncovering older, hidden secrets that could be more dangerous than anything they cause themselves. These plot points don't deviate from expected genre clichés, but the human emotions strike the proper chords. Who hasn't been young, flawed, and looking to belong? Surely most of us, and in those themes, Monga easily affects.

Monga sputters a bit when it enters its third act. Some narrative points are predictable and labored, and the film runs a bit too long at two hours plus. Still, by the time Monga trends towards convention, the film has earned the goodwill to satisfy and even impress. The Wanhua District setting helps; the storied location is home to Taipei's oldest temple, possesses numerous bustling night markets, and was formerly the city's red light district. Monga gives the district a distinct personality, making it the perfect cultural backdrop for these familiar characters and their well-worn struggles. Honor, friendship, family, loyalty and brotherhood - these themes are incredibly common for this genre, but Monga allows them the appearance of freshness. Perhaps after the third or fourth iteration of this new style Taiwan gangster film, Monga won't impress as greatly. Right now, however, Monga sharply and entertainingly gives audiences something that feels like a discovery. It's a pretty good feeling.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

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.
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