My Friend & His Wife (DVD) (First Press Edition) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Best friends since their army days, Ye Joon (Jang Hyung Sung) and Jae Moon (Park Hee Soon) have made very different lives for themselves. Ye Joon is now a successful businessman with perfectly polished manners and appearances. Jae Moon is a struggling cook with a newborn child and a wife, Ji Sook (Hong So Hee, Muoi), who wants more than her husband can provide. Despite their polar personalities and economic states, nothing can shake Ye Joon and Jae Moon's friendship. When Jae Moon's baby dies because of Ye Joon, Jae Moon even covers for his friend, and ends up in prison. Unaware of the circumstances, Ji Sook starts an affair with Ye Joon.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | My Friend & His Wife (DVD) (First Press Edition) (Korea Version) My Friend & His Wife (DVD) (初回版) (韓國版) My Friend & His Wife (DVD) (初回版) (韩国版) 私の友達、彼の妻 (初回版) (韓国版) 나의 친구, 그의 아내 (DVD) (한국판) |
| Also known as: | My Friend and His Wife My Friend and His Wife My Friend and His Wife My Friend and His Wife My Friend and His Wife |
| Artist Name(s): | Park Hee Soon (Actor) | Hong So Hee (Actor) | Jang Hyun Sung (Actor) Park Hee Soon (Actor) | Hong So Hee (Actor) | Jang Hyun Sung (Actor) Park Hee Soon (Actor) | Hong So Hee (Actor) | Jang Hyun Sung (Actor) パク・ヒスン (Actor) | Hong So Hee (Actor) | Jang Hyun Sung (Actor) 박희순 (Actor) | 홍소희 (Actor) | 장현성 (Actor) |
| Director: | Shin Dong Il 申東一 申东一 シン・ドンイル 신동일 |
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| Release Date: | 2009-02-12 |
| Language: | Korean |
| Subtitles: | English, Korean |
| Country of Origin: | South Korea |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it? |
| Rating: | III |
| Publisher: | Premier Entertainment |
| Other Information: | 1 Disc |
| Package Weight: | 110 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1014289346 |
Product Information
* Screen Format : Anamorphic Widescreen 1.85:1, NTSC
* Sound Mix : Dolby Digital 5.1
* Director : 신동일
조그만 레스토랑에서 요리사로 일하고 있는 재문과 동네 헤어샵을 운영하는 미용사 지숙은 신혼부부. 재문에게는 능력 있는 미혼의 외환딜러인 절친한 친구 예준이 있다. 임신한 아내보다도 친구를 더 신경 쓰는 재문이나 그런 재문에게 경제적인 도움까지 아끼지 않는 예준의 우정은 때로 지나칠 정도로 각별하다. 그러던 어느 날, 건강한 남자아이 ‘민혁’을 출산한 지숙. 그리고 해외에서 열리는 ‘국제미용워크샵’ 에 가기 위해 지숙이 집을 비운 사이, 오랜만에 예준이 재문의 집을 찾는다. 기분 좋게 두 사람이 취해갈 무렵 재문이 잠시 집을 비운 사이 예준은 돌이킬 수 없는 치명적 실수를 저지른다.
재문은 예준의 실수에 견딜 수 없는 충격에 휩싸이지만 친구의 실수를 자신이 덮어쓰기로 마음먹는다. 며칠 후, 아무것도 모른 채 집으로 돌아온 지숙은 자신의 가정이 돌이킬 수 없는 파국을 맞았음을 알게 되는데...
그리고 2년 후, 세 사람의 뒤틀린 관계는 예상할 수 없는 국면을 맞아 다시 시작된다.
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "My Friend & His Wife (DVD) (First Press Edition) (Korea Version)"
This professional review refers to My Friend & His Wife (DVD) (Korea Version)
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Sin Dong-Il may be one of Korea's unluckiest working filmmakers; his darkly funny debut film Host & Guest took two years to reach DVD after its initial release in 2006. His second film, My Friend and His Wife, also took two years to see release in Korean cinemas after traveling the worldwide film festival circuit to critical acclaim. Then again, it's even easy to see why My Friend and His Wife received similar treatment. Despite having more well-known actors than Host & Guest, Sin's second film is more of the same detached life observations that can alienate and possibly bore audiences. Also, My Friend and His Wife lacks the dark humor and exaggerated characters of Sin's first film, making for even an tougher sit than Host & Guest. But, My Friend and His Wife is an improvement over Host & Guest in every other aspect, from Sin's script to his visual language. The writer-director knows how to hit viewers in unexpected ways without manipulating them. They just have to get through the first half of the film, in which life slowly unfolds for the film's three characters. Restaurant cook Jae-moon (Park Hae-Soon) and hairdresser Ji-sook (Hong So-Hee) seem to have a happy marriage with a baby on the way, but Ji-sook is sometimes neglected because of Jae-moon's unusually close friendship with old army buddy Ye-joon (Jang Hyeon-Seong). The two are so close that Jae-moon will even leave to attend to his buddy while he's in the process of getting intimate with Ji-sook. Things change when Ye-joon finds success at his job at a foreign currency firm and Ji-sook gives birth to the couple's son. Despite a rocky patch in their marriage due to the baby and their unsuccessful attempt to immigrate to America, Jae-moon and Ji-sook manage to work things out, capping their effort with a sweet moment in the bath. When Ji-sook goes off to Paris for a hairdressing convention, Jae-moon rekindles his friendship with Ye-joon over a night of drinking at home. However, this leads to a tragic accident that changes the lives of these three characters, as well as their relationship with each other forever. Even though much of the film's drama comes in the second half after the story's central twist, Sin Dong-Il chooses to spend the first half revealing the characters in their original state before putting them through the second half's chain of twists and turns. This may mean that viewers have to sit through about 40 minutes of seemingly inconsequential events before getting to the core of the film. However, despite the dry, observational style that Sin employs, Sin's choice enhances the changes these characters go through in the second half. The result is an emotional roller coaster that will keep viewers guessing the final destinations of the characters they have observed so closely throughout. Because of Sin's observational style, much of the dramatic weight is left to the actors. While male leads Park and Jang give commendable performances as the best friends turned estranged friends, Hong So-Hee's Ji-sook really owns the film as its central character. She's the one who drives the characters' conflicts and is also the person most affected by them. Often, Sin simply leaves the camera on Hong's face, fully showing her transformation through multiple emotions in just one shot alone. Despite the film's emotionally turbulent nature, Hong's performance remains surprisingly subtle, masking any kind of full-blown emotional outbreak that would attract an awards committee. Sin's film isn't one that would scream for award attention, anyway. After all, the emotions are too subtle, and the film - with its extended takes and lack of music - would lose impatient viewers by the time it reaches its core. However, My Friend and His Wife shows a dramatic maturation in Sin's storytelling skills. Sin allows his characters to slowly develop while staying away from typical stereotypes, ultimately making the changes in the characters more convincing. Even the film's messages about social class and greed are delivered in such a natural way that they manage to be compelling and don't overshadow the story. It's hard to sense the power of the story while watching My Friend and His Wife because of the film's firm grip on reality. However, that power slowly but surely creeps up on the viewer by the end of the film. Naturally, a work that depends so much on an audience's patience is bound to have a harder time finding the right audience not just in Korea, but pretty much anywhere in the world. Even though My Friend and His Wife didn't succeed in putting Sin on the world cinema radar, he will certainly end up there someday if he continues to churn out works as solid as this. By Kevin Ma |
Customer Review of "My Friend & His Wife (DVD) (First Press Edition) (Korea Version)"
See all my reviews
May 11, 2009
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This movie by director Dong-il Shin as been delayed on DVD for some time and a related movie to the yet unreleased “When the Summer Passes Away” by director Ji-hae Sung, similarly exploring moral trust, self pursuit, extra marital passion and responsibility. If any proviso were needed the most here though it would be ‘moral responsibility’. Of two ex-military friends, who both love the same woman, here the whole crucial nature of an affair is upturned by a situation mid way through when Jae-moon’s wife Ji-sook takes on a needful business vacation trip to Paris relating to her hair dressing business, leaving her husband to look after their recently born baby. As Jae-moon regularly phones and meets up with his friend Ye-joon, they both one evening eat and drink at Jae-moons home, with Jae-moon preparing a culinary feast due to his professional cooking skills. What follows is the pivotal element that will leave you shocked and reeling, and highly challenged by following situations and ‘what comes first’ motivations in daily human conditions. The tragedy is in essence an ‘accident’ due to ignorance and carelessness, but so much is put to question, that even a fatalistic Divine Touch could be mused by the premeditated passions within Ye-joon’s heart for his friends wife. As the film switches to Ji-sook in Paris after the tragedy, I could only feel utmost sorrow to a woman unknowing to what was to befall here when she returned home. All this leads to a more complex and challenging relationship movie. Not just relating to Jae-moon and Ji-sook’s marriage and tragedy, but to Jae-moon’s decision about his friend Ye-joon and of J-sook’s own swaying responsibilities, and of how personal commitments and pursuits for money and love, create hateful dark traits to manifest, having finality both logically sad and destructive. Sex and passion ‘ending in tears’ is an understatement here. No doubt fate was fatally indicated by the symbol of Ye-joon’s blood red tie and Ji-sook’s red dress. In fact when Ji-sook sees ‘beyond the stars’ and her being an hairdresser, I did wonder what she might have done with her scissors. Acting from Hee-soon Park, Hyun-sung Jang and So-hee Honh is class A quality, which you would expect from a film of this pedigree. You’ll certainly get a shock from this richly conceived film. A film requiring a certain amount of looking beneath the surface of the plot with certain motifs implying much more than the film’s plot line. |











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