Summer Time Machine Blues Standard Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version - English Subtitles) DVD Region 2
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YesAsia Editorial Description
It's summer break, and the SF Study Circle are playing baseball, while the cutesy Ito (Maki Yoko, from The Grudge) is taking photographs. At the same time, another shutterbug named Shibata (Ueda Juri, from Swing Girls) is developing pictures in a darkroom next to the SF Study Circle's base of operations. One member, the shy Komoto (Eita, from Waterboys), has a thing for Shibata, so he buys two tickets to a sci-fi movie in the hopes he can convince her to come along. When he returns to the clubhouse, however, things start to get strange when the air conditioning remote goes on the fritz.
The next day, a stranger (Honda Isao) appears, as does an oddly familiar-looking device. The stranger abruptly vanishes, but the time machine he leaves behind remains! One club member (Nagano Munenori) decides to hop aboard, sets course for the previous day, and begins his journey into the past, a move that will no doubt alter the future and rip the very fabric of the space time continuum. Can the SF Study Circle boys get everything back the way it was? Find out in Summer Time Machine Blues, a freewheeling time travel comedy much in the tradition of Back to the Future trilogy!
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Summer Time Machine Blues Standard Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version - English Subtitles) Summer Time Machine Blues Standard Edition (初回限定生產) (日本版 - 英文字幕) Summer Time Machine Blues Standard Edition (初回限定生产) (日本版 - 英文字幕) サマータイムマシン・ブルース スタンダード・エディション(初回限定生産・特別価格版) Summer Time Machine Blues Standard Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version - English Subtitles) |
| Artist Name(s): | Ueno Juri | Eita | Yoza Yoshiaki | Kawaoka Daijiro | Nagano Murenori | Muro Tsuyoshi | Maki Yoko | Honda Chikara 上野樹里 | 瑛太 | 與座嘉秋 | 川岡大次郎 | 永野宗典 | Muro Tsuyoshi | 真木陽子 | 本多力 上野树里 | Eita | Yoza Yoshiaki | Kawaoka Daijiro | Nagano Murenori | Muro Tsuyoshi | 真木阳子 | 本多力 上野樹里 | 瑛太 | 与座嘉秋 | 川岡大次郎 | 永野宗典 | ムロツヨシ | 真木よう子 | 本多力 Ueno Juri | Eita | Yoza Yoshiaki | Kawaoka Daijiro | Nagano Murenori | Muro Tsuyoshi | Maki Yoko | Honda Chikara |
| Director: | Katsuyuki Motohiro 本廣克行 本广克行 本広克行 Katsuyuki Motohiro |
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| Release Date: | 2006-02-24 |
| Publisher Product Code: | PCBE-51941 |
| Language: | Japanese |
| Subtitles: | English, Japanese |
| Country of Origin: | Japan |
| 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: | Toshiba Entertainment |
| Other Information: | DVD |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1004115249 |
Product Information
本広克行監督が演劇とコラボレーションして贈る、SF青春アドベンチャー。お得な初回限定生産・特別価格版。 暑すぎる夏の、とある大学のSF研究会の部室。そこにはSFの研究などまったくせず、ただぐったりと夏休みを過ごす5人の男子学生と、2人の女性写真部員がいた。前日にクーラーのリモコンが壊れ、あまりの酷暑に悩まされるなか、突然、部室の片隅にタイムマシンが現れる。「ためしに昨日に戻って、壊れる前のリモコンを取ってこよう」と思い立った部員たちは、軽い気持ちでタイムマシンに乗り込む。だが、そこから想像もつかないような事態が次々に巻き起こって…。 ■映像特典:予告編(ティザー、本予告)/TVスポット
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- Summer Time Machine Blues Premium Collector's Edition (Japan Version - English Subtitles) DVD Region 2
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Summer Time Machine Blues Standard Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version - English Subtitles)"
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Filmmaker Motohiro Katsuyuki takes a breather from helming the mega-popular Bayside Shakedown series to direct 2005's Summer Time Machine Blues, a hilarious sci-fi comedy about the wacky complications that always seem to arise whenever time travel is involved. Based on a stage play by theatre troupe Europa Kikaku, this big screen adaptation revolves around five college geeks - Komoto Takuma (Eita, from TV's Waterboys), Niimi Masaru (Yoza Yoshiaki), Koizumi Shunsuke (Kawaoka Daijiro), Soga Atsushi (Nagano Munenori), and Ishimatsu Daigo (Muro Tsuyoshi) - who all belong to the same college sci-fi club, although none of them seem to know the least bit about science fiction. The film kicks off with the five club members playing a game of three-on-three baseball (the club's cute-as-a-button dog serves as one team's third player), while the bespectacled Ito Yui (Maki Yoko, from The Grudge) stands nearby, snapping photos of the boys at play. After returning to their otaku-styled clubhouse, the boys head off to the public bathhouse to freshen up, leaving Yui and her shutterbug pal Shibata Haruka (Ueno Juri, from Swing Girls) alone to develop their pictures in the nearby darkroom. During their bathhouse trip, the pudgy Niimi loses his cool when he discovers that his prized Vidal Sassoon shampoo has gone missing (plot point!). This proves to be just one of many strange occurrences that will plague the young men during this fateful day. For example, after breaking off from the group, Takuma sneaks off to the local movie theatre to buy tickets for a sci-fi B-movie, hoping that Haruka will agree to a date. When he returns to the clubhouse to ask her, his friends are shocked to see him and begin acting inexplicably strange. But before they explain their behavior to him, a hilarious chain reaction causes one of them to accidentally spill Coke on the air conditioner's remote control. As a consequence, the remote malfunctions, as does the air conditioner! Immediately, the boys and girls find themselves sweating bullets in the sweltering summer heat. As the sci-fi geeks rush to fix the remote and find a replacement fan the next day, they soon find the answer to their prayers in the unlikeliest of sources. Out of nowhere, a time machine appears, complete with a traveler from the future, an equally geeky Tamura Akira (Honda Riki), who looks as if he's stepped out of the 1950s, rather than 2030 as he claims. As the boys come to grips with the fact that the device in front of them is an honest-to-goodness time machine, they decide to make good use of it. But instead of venturing into the distant past or the far-flung future, the boys have more practical aims, as they choose to go back in time to the previous day to bring back the AC remote control before it's ruined! It seems like a sound plan, but of course, what the kids don't realize is that any change made to the past will alter the very fabric of time-space continuum, and thereby blink them out of existence, a la Back to the Future! But each time the boys go back in time to fix things, they encounter mishap upon mishap, as they must correct their mistakes without coming in contact with their "past selves" and altering the past any further. Half send-up, half homage, Summer Time Machine Blues is a matchless delight, as it gently pokes fun at the subgenre of time travel movies, while at the same time delivering probably one of the better sci-fi stories in the last few years. It's certainly the funniest. Although there are gags galore, the self-aware nature of the film's comedy is in full force during a scene in which the club members debate the issue of time travel. The local theatre manager (Mikami Ichiro), who also happens to be a Trekkie who bears more than a passing resemblance to Star Trek's Commander Riker, steps in to clarify matters, saying that time will basically fix itself and paint over the imperfections. This uninformed response is countered by Professor Hozumi (Sakaki Kuranosuke), who also comes out of nowhere, to haul everyone to his classroom for a lengthy lecture on the dire consequences of time travel. The sci-fi club members' reactions are priceless. The film is full of great comic bits like this, including some funny jokes that pay off later in the film. As a result of the situational time travel-centric humor, Summer Time Machine Blues is one film that merits a second viewing, as the viewer will begin focusing on the background details in later screenings, discovering events they didn't notice the first time around. Even better, with all its time travel complications, it's a movie that not only holds up to repeated viewings but actually stays true to its own internal logic. As a lighthearted farce, it had no obligation to "make sense," but the fact that it does - or at least acknowledges its own paradoxes for additional comic effect - make it an even smarter film, all the more worthy of acclaim. Of course, it's not just the crackerjack plot and the humor that work, but the actors involved as well. What's most refreshing about the actors is that, even though they are playing somewhat exaggerated characters, they all come across as actual friends, in no small part due to the fact that they are all intensely likeable, even though some of them aren't exactly the sharpest tools in the shed. To say any more about the film would probably do it a disservice. A joke is best heard firsthand, not explained by a third party. And when it comes to sci-fi comedy, Summer Time Machine Blues is, quite possibly, one of the funniest time travel movies ever made. Sure, maybe later, I'll want to go back in time and reverse such an overwhelmingly positive endorsement, but somehow, I doubt it. Summer Time Machine Blues is a fun movie - for any era. By Calvin McMillin |
Editor's Pick of "Summer Time Machine Blues Standard Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version - English Subtitles)"
See all this editor's picks
August 7, 2007
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Anyone who digs time travel comedies should check out Summer Time Machine Blues. Based on a stage play and directed by Katsuyuki Motohiro (the Bayside Shakedown movies), this winning and surprisingly fun flick delivers a high-concept tale in a refreshingly low-tech style. A group of college kids chance upon a time machine when it shows up in their summer clubhouse on a sweltering summer day. Of course, a time machine allows for the kids to explore both the past and the present, but they use it to do completely minor things, like travel back in time one day to retrieve the remote control to their air conditioner before it gets ruined by a spilled Coke. They also use their new time-travel powers to spy on themselves, steal shampoo, and double up on items like the cute mascot at the local convenience store. The Terminator this is not. But it is enormously fun. Summer Time Machine Blues plays with the concept of time travel in very clever ways, exploring paradoxes and multiple perspectives, and delivering a well constructed narrative that can prove more rewarding on a second run-through. There's a minor relationship subplot between two of the kids (played by Eita of Waterboys and Juri Ueno of Swing Girls), but that's about all the extra baggage that the film possesses, downplaying soul-searching filler for nifty time-traveling hijinks and the sheer amusement of seeing the kids jaunt all over one day's worth of history. As time-travel movies go, this is probably one of the least ambitious ones out there, but its creativity, low-key charm, and sheer entertainment value make it absolutely worth seeking out. |
Customer Review of "Summer Time Machine Blues Standard Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version - English Subtitles)"
Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: (3)
See all my reviews
September 16, 2007
Gem of a film!!
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Katsuyuki Motohiro's break from the Bayside Shakedown films is Summer Time Machine Blues, a wonderful, upbeat, and hilarious time travel comedy featuring a promising group of young performers. After a wacky string of events results in the destruction of the Sci-Fi club's AC remote control, the sudden appearance of a time machine proves to be their saving grace. All they have to do is travel back to yesterday, steal the remote from themselves, and their problem is solved. Or is it? The allure of time travel proves too much for some of the group, and they deviate from their mission to relive yesterday while trying to avoid coming into contact with their past selves. The result if hilarity, energy, and near 2 hours of good fun. As if that wasn't enough, the film makes sense! Thanks to some excellently delivered exposition/dialog from some of the characters, the concept of time travel and its possible disadvantages are made hilariously clear. Featuring members of the comedy troupe Europa Kikaku (also seen in Katsuyuki Motohiro's film Udon) and Swing Girls star Ueno Juri, Summer Time Machine Blues is a little seen gem of a film. With a brisk pace, energetic performances, and inventive concept, you can't go wrong with this film. |
See all my reviews
June 26, 2007
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This is, by far, one of the cutest movies I've seen in the past year. The acting is fairly well, and I love the cinematography! It has a very upbeat feel to it, and I guarantee you'll be smiling by the end! Good storyline, and interesting approach. The main object, though absolutely outrageous, plays a big role in this hilarious adventure with a group of Teenagers. |
See all my reviews
April 21, 2006
This customer review refers to Summer Time Machine Blues Premium Collector's Edition (Japan Version - English Subtitles)
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Great film for fans of Time Traveling adventures. Unlike most time traveling adventures, this doesn't go into the distant past or the distant future. It only goes back one day, which can be a lot more fun. This is definately one of those films you'll want to watch several times to try to spot all the hints of future events that happen in the background -- easily missed flashes of light and other events that are merely confusing at first. The creators were definately big fans of Back to the Future. Not only does a poster and a Delorean appear, but the theories developed that were crucial to the Back to the Future plot are also discussed. Definately a must see! |












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