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Shadowless Sword (DVD) (Special Edition) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2

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Shadowless Sword (DVD) (Special Edition) (Japan Version)
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All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7.2 out of 10 (12)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Kim Young Jun, director of 2000's Bichunmoo, helms the exciting new fantasy swordplay epic, Shadowless Sword! Set during the Balhae Dynasty in the tenth century, the film is full of danger and political intrigue. It centers on the fate of Dae Jeong Hyeon (Lee Seo Jin, Damo) who lives a simple life in a Chinese frontier town, but who hides an amazing secret - he is an heir to the Balhae kingdom! Little does he know, however, that he will soon become the last surviving one! When the king and the remaining heirs are wiped out by the murderous Khitan, it's up to Yeon So Ha (Yoon Soy, Arahan), one of Balhae's top female warriors, to accompany the exiled Prince Jeong Hyeon back to his homeland so he can ascend the throne and take his rightful place as ruler of the empire.

Hot on their trail is a band of highly trained assassins, including Khitan chieftain Gun Hwa Pyeong (Shin Hyun Jun, Bichunmoo) and his female companion Mae Yeong Ok (Lee Gi Yong), who are looking to insure that the prince's reign will be cut short...permanently! And to make matters more complicated, it turns out that Jeong Hyeon isn't quite the regal, honorable gentleman that So Ha was expecting, but is instead a man eager to protect himself at all costs with no concern for the well-being of his fellow countrymen. Will Yeon So Ha escort Jeong Hyeon back safely? And if so, will he become the kind of leader that his people long for in this desperate time of need? The truth will be revealed in Shadowless Sword, an amazing swordplay saga also starring Park Seong Woong, Nam Ji Hyun, Han Gang, and featuring cameos by Choi Ji Woo, Kim Su Ro, and Jung Jun Ha!

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Technical Information

Product Title: Shadowless Sword (DVD) (Special Edition) (Japan Version) 無影劍 (DVD) (特別版) (日本版) 无影剑 (DVD) (特别版) (日本版) 無影剣 SHADOWLESS SWORD 特別版 Shadowless Sword (DVD) (Special Edition) (Japan Version)
Artist Name(s): Shin Hyun Jun | Lee Seo Jin | Yoon So Yi 申鉉濬 | 李 瑞真 | 尹素怡 申铉濬 | 李 瑞真 | 尹素怡 シン・ヒョンジュン | イ・ギヨン | イ・ソジン | ユン・ソイ 신 현준 | 이서진 | 윤 소이
Director: キム・ヨンジュン
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Release Date: 2008-01-01
Publisher Product Code: OPSD-S784
Language: Japanese, Korean
Subtitles: Japanese, Korean
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?
Other Information: 2DVDs
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1005067041

Product Information

タイトル:無影剣 SHADOWLESS SWORD: 特別版
出演:イ・ソジン/ユン・ソイ/シン・ヒョンジュン/イ・ギヨン
監督:キム・ヨンジュン

7世紀後半から10世紀にかけて実在したとされる渤海を舞台に、女剣士ホン・ラニョの伝説と渤海の王子の史実に基づき壮大なスケールで描いた歴史アクション大作。テーマはもちろん、韓国史上初めて美しく勇壮果敢な女戦士の活躍を描いたことでも注目された作品である。 運命に翻弄される渤海の王子役に「チェオクの剣」のイ・ソジン。伝説の女剣士ソハ役に「愛していると云って」のユン・ソハ。適役には「アウトライブ〜飛天舞」「達磨よ、遊ぼう!」のシン・ヒョンジュン、「花嫁はギャングスター〜ソウルウェディング」のイ・ギヨン。 また、シン・ヒョンジュンとは「天国の階段」以来の名コンビ、チェ・ジウがゲスト出演し初挑戦となるワイヤーアクションシーンを披露。 更に、キム・ヨンジュン監督作「アウトライブ〜飛天舞」でもアクション監督を務めたマ・オクソン、「グリーン・ディスティニー」の衣装チームを迎え、オール中国ロケで望んだ本作は、総製作費10億円、総製作期間5年をかけてニュー・ライン・シネマが非英語圏初の出資によって完成した米韓合作映画。雄大な中国の風景にキレのあるワイヤーアクションを満載した、エネルギッシュな内容に仕上がっている。なお、本作は本編ディスクに加え、レンタルでは見ることの出来ない貴重な映像をおさめた特典ディスクをセットした2枚組みの特別版となっている。
西暦926年。契丹の攻撃を受けた渤海(古代朝鮮半島の国家)は王子全員を暗殺され、まさに滅亡寸前の危機を迎えていた。一縷の望みは、幼少の頃に政権争いに巻き込まれて追放されたテ・ジョンヒョン王子のみである。最後の王族であるジョンヒョン王子を救出するという重大な任務を与えられたのは、軍営に育ち最高の女剣士となったヨン・ソハ。ソハは女将軍として無影剣を携えて王子の護衛に向かう。 一方、契丹賊軍リーダーのグン・ファピョンと腹心の部下である女剣士メ・ヨンオクもまたジョンヒョン王子を追跡していた。一族の復習と野望のために祖国を裏切り王子暗殺に燃えるファビョンと、女剣士ソハに嫉妬の炎を燃やしファピョンのためなら命を惜しまないヨンオク。二人の執拗な追跡をかわし、ソハは王子と共に無事帰国できるのか?渤海再建のためにすべてを賭けた壮絶な戦いが始まる…。

■映像特典:特典DISC付

テクニカル・インフォメーション
:カラー
画面:16:9/4:3(LB)
言語/音声:韓国語:DD(5.1chサラウンド)/韓国語:DD(ステレオ)/日本語:DD(ステレオ)

その他の情報
製作年:2005
備考:2枚組
日本小売価格:¥4800

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Shadowless Sword (DVD) (Special Edition) (Japan Version)"

January 23, 2007

This professional review refers to Shadowless Sword DTS
Director Kim Young Jun's (Bichunmoo) new project started with a question. What if another 'last Prince' of Balhae existed, other than Dae Gwang Hyun? Another Prince, capable of restoring the Royal line and leading the Balhae Dynasty to a new tomorrow? This time Kim didn't have a famous manhwa to base his story on, and historical records concerning the periods were not only rare, but also filtered through the Chinese world view or too ambiguous to fully trust (especially records from Russian and Japanese sources). The Bichunmoo manhwa might have been a big success, but there weren't really too many scenes you could use in a wuxia, as the difficulties in making the story flow showed. The need to balance traditional wuxia characters with some sort of relation to Balhae created quite a few problems, but Kim was helped by a few legends and historical facts. Dae Gwang Hyun escaped out of the country after its collapse. This created the basis for Dae Jung Hyun (Lee Seo Jin), and the old folk tale of female warrior Hong Ra Nyeo was the perfect foundation for Yeon So Ha's character, played by Yoon Soy. But while the legend is rather well known in Korea, Kim's influences were much closer to home: he always wanted a female warrior protecting our hero, but one of his major inspirations was from the Terminator series, it was as simple as that.

He didn't simply take that concept hook, line and sinker. He adapted it to a more Korean setting: if you look at So Ha and the other 'female warrior protecting a man', Mae Young Ok (Lee Gi Yong), then an interesting contrast emerges. So Ha is clearly the soft on the outside, strong on the inside type. Despite her impressive martial arts skills, she doesn't look intimidating on the outside, something that instead jumps at the viewer instantly, the moment they see Mae Young Ok, with her 180cm frame. She's the opposite, a strong outside, soft inside kind of girl, putting up a very intimidating front, but then suffering inside because of her situation. Shadowless Sword takes these characters - Balhae's last Prince and his female 'protector', the general now working for the Khitan Gun Hwa Pyeong (Shin Hyun Joon) and Mae Young Ok protecting him - and catapults us into 927 Balhae, just one year after the big defeat against the Khitan.

The first piece of the puzzle added to the film was Action Director Ma Yuk Sing, who despite all the difficulties worked well with Kim in Bichunmoo, and what's even more important, the two developed a sincere friendship over the years. Also, to avoid any of the problems which plagued the production of the 2000 film, the actors (Lee Seo Jin, Shin Hyun Joon, Yoon Soy and Lee Gi Yong) trained for four months in Korea before joining the shoot in China. The interesting thing is that director Kim trained with them, not only because he's always been interested in this kind of activity, but to better understand what the actors were going through, help them sharing the same pain and difficulties, and also get that 'rhythm' you only understand after training with professionals in this field. The partnership with Ma is not a case, as Kim had always been more of a Ching Siu Tung than a Yuen Wo Ping fan, and Ching was actually his first choice for Bichunmoo, but his protege Ma joined instead, as Ching was too busy back then. Of course there's plenty of good action directors in Korea, and Jung Doo Hong is certainly world class.

But such intensive use of wires, not only in terms of action made by actors but also 'cinematic action' (think using wires for arrows or similar thing) required people used to the job, not just talented action directors adapting to new experiments through their style. Another interesting factor influencing the making of Shadowless Sword was New Line Cinema of the Lord of the Rings series. After a quick look at the script and a basic promo tape, they liked the idea so much they funded a good 30% of the film, which led to new records in foreign distribution sales, and might actually pave the way for a successful run in the US market. This is when Kim decided to break from the currently accepted norm, and offer something a little different, a sort of throwback to the classic wuxia he grew up with, by focusing on power and speed instead of grace and elegance. This was also reflected in the film's art direction, costumes and the choice of weapons.

It would be silly bringing up historical distortion talking about a wuxia, but the shadowless sword we see featured so prominently in the film is mostly well produced fiction. Closer to Northern European models (Viking maybe?), that kind of sword was never used in Balhae, as before late Goryeo/early Joseon the focus was on smaller, more flexible blades than the imposing longer swords. But then again, the concept wasn't that of recreating historically accurate weapons, but to make something that would fit with the character's personality. And it's not just weapons, even the style of action used by the four major characters (plus Mabul) follows their character traits. Art direction and costumes followed the same concept, as they got closer to road movie sensibilities than anything resembling a wuxia. Since So Ha only wears one costume for the entire film that has to underline her personality and inner strength to protect Jung Hyun at all costs, we focus on lighter colors giving a sense of familiarity. Jung Hyun, who goes from a runaway scoundrel to a King in the making, slowly but gradually changes his image becoming more and more refined. The costumes for Lee Gi Yong's character are particularly impressive, moving away from the usual graceful robes found in leading ladies of the genre.

But of course the calling card of films like these is the action. Although there are a few problems, which tighter editing could have dealt with, the wirework is satisfactory, and the frenetic and powerful pace given to the action scenes fits well with Kim's initial theme. If you don't see too many penetrations or blood flowing it is because Kim is using concepts from the early Wuxias before the kung fu revolution. We are dealing with chi (or Gi, since it's a Korean film) and its tremendous power, not necessarily the action/reaction and technique found in the mano y mano fights of Kung Fu and their subsequent Wirefu offspring. Although editing is only average during the 'rest' of the film, when the action choreographers take over the action scenes, the film turns very powerful, fast and frenetic, effectively supported by Kim Joon Seon's percussion-heavy score. As I said before, I'm not interested in technique for action scenes, and all I care about is maintaining that flow, that rhythm of cinematic action. And on those terms, Shadowless Sword fares quite well.

There are a few problems, things which could have been dealt with given time. The cameos are completely throwaway, especially a wasted Kim Soo Ro and the usual embarrassment from Choi Ji Woo, who in director Kim's mind was going to act out a Brigitte Lin-like figure, but in the end just feels like Choi Ji Woo getting ready for an Andre Kim show, and feeling awkward on some wires. Again, some of the supporting cast stands out for all the wrong reasons. Park Sung Woong's Mabul is quite an interesting character and looks a million dollars, but once he opens his mouth, he looks like an annoying little prick waiting to amuse us with his diabolical laughing ways. Gun Hwa Pyeong's character could be developed a little better, despite Shin Hyun Joon's usual charisma. But those are just minor gripes in a rather accomplished film. First the leading couple, Lee Seo Jin and Yoon Soy, show remarkable chemistry. Lee looks born to act in a Sageuk or Wuxia setting, and I hope he'll continue. And Yoon confirms she's one of the most exciting young talents in the country, if Goodbye Solo wasn't enough. Lee Gi Yong's character could stand on two pages of dialogue, but she handles it impressively, with metric tons of screen presence which will probably land her many more roles in the future (I hope). But my favorite performance is that of Jo Won Hee, a very underrated actor who also recently appeared in Holiday. He's the key to making the final fifteen minutes of the film work.

Kim Young Joon promised an 'upgrade' with this film, and that is exactly what Shadowless Sword is. It's not a great film, but it's a lot of fun, it's reasonably well acted, the action is well choreographed and executed, and production values are predictably very good. Those are all things which Bichunmoo couldn't achieve, so Kim clearly learned something in the last four years. Considering the country's total indifference towards Wuxia, he's one of Chungmuro's last hopes in the genre. I hope it won't take four more years to see another of his films (that's why Shin Hyun Joon jokes he's a 'World Cup director'), and his next film might not even be a Wuxia, but this film has won me over. It's nothing more or less than a very nice throwback to the days when wuxia was a genre and not an excuse to make vapid exotica. The action works, the drama (mostly) works, and it never tries to be more than that. I don't know if he finally fulfilled his but now I can definitely call Kim that: Korean Cinema's 'action kid'.

By X - Twitchfilm.net

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 "Shadowless Sword (DVD) (Special Edition) (Japan Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7.2 out of 10 (12)

Kevin Kennedy
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June 16, 2007

This customer review refers to Shadowless Sword DTS
Eye-popping action Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
"Shadowless Sword" tells of a subjugated people reaching out to their former prince to lead them back to power and glory. The film focusses on a lone warrior, played by Yoon Soy, leading the reluctant prince back to his people and on the challenges they confront along the way.

Yoon Soy delivers a riveting performance, looking absolutely gorgeous and showing some real athletic grace in performing her spectacular martial arts stunts. The rest of the cast looks great and performs well, although the film would have benefitted from a leavening of humor.

Amid the practically unceasing astonishment of the film's jaw-dropping martial arts action, "Shadowless Sword" successfully develops its themes of loyalty, duty, and fulfilling one's purpose in life. Highly recommended for action film buffs.
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Le
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July 15, 2006

This customer review refers to Shadowless Sword (DVD) (DTS) (Director's Cut) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
Director's Cut? Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
I've watched and enjoyed the original version of this film...would someone tell me what is special about this Director's Cut (eg. add'l minutes, development of characters, etc...)...I still don't know the value of purchasing this special version...there's no details of it in the description, nor by any reviewers so far...
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Momo
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June 30, 2006

This customer review refers to Shadowless Sword (DVD) (DTS) (Director's Cut) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
A little too cliche Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7 out of 10
The storyline was really really simple. However the fight scenes were awsome! Especially for a Korean film. However, for some reason Korean Directors are trying really hard to make their movies "stylish". Imagine, Hero + Crouching Tiger + Jack Sparrow(Pirates of the Carribean) + Drama stars = Shawdowless Sword.
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Jesse
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June 26, 2006

This customer review refers to Shadowless Sword DTS
English Speaker Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
... in the style of crouching tiger hidden dragon ...

I really enjoyed Crouching Tiger, and if you did too then you will like this one.

Good acting and Chinese style martial arts. Not too mystical and dreamy with great action. The scene in the water was a bit much.

I am interested in watching Korean movies with English subtitles to help me learn the Korean language. This film is interesting enough to watch over and over in an effort to learn Korean.
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ckid
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June 24, 2006

This customer review refers to Shadowless Sword (DVD) (DTS) (Director's Cut) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
Pretty good Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
The only problem I had with this movie is that the actors did not do a good job on the wires. They did too many unnesessary spins so it looked kind of funny. The actors were were ok and all but I would of prefered real Martial Artist to come and play the roles. Aside from all of this it was pretty good. I like it when Chinese and Korean people work together to make a movie.
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