The Magic Hour (DVD) (Special Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
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The Witch of The West is Dead (DVD) (Normal Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
YesAsia Editorial Description
In deep waters for stealing the boss's girlfriend (Fukatsu Eri), nightclub manager Bingo (Tsumabuki Satoshi) has been ordered to find legendary hitman Togashi Della, or face a very painful death. With time running out, Bingo desperately hires failed stunt actor Murata Taiki (Sato Koichi) to pose as the hitman. Strolling casually into town for his big break, Murata thinks he's shooting a gangster movie, but he's actually walked into a gang war.
The Special Edition of The Magic Hour includes the following special features:
Technical Information
| Product Title: | The Magic Hour (DVD) (Special Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) 黑幫有個荷里活 (DVD) (特別版) (英文字幕) (日本版) 黑帮有个荷里活 (DVD) (特别版) (英文字幕) (日本版) ザ・マジックアワー スペシャル・エディション The Magic Hour (DVD) (Special Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Sato Koichi | Tsumabuki Satoshi | Fukatsu Eri | Nishida Toshiyuki | Ayase Haruka | Kohinata Fumiyo (Actor) | Toda Keiko | Terajima Susumu | Terawaki Yasufumi | Suzuki Kyoka | Nakai Kiichi | Ibuki Goro | Yahara Shosuke | Toshiaki Karasawa | Amami Yuki | Kagawa Teruyuki 佐藤浩市 | 妻夫木聰 | 深津繪里 | 西田敏行 | 綾瀨遙 | 小日向文世 (Actor) | 戶田惠子 | 寺島進 | Terawaki Yasufumi | 鈴木京香 | 中井貴一 | Ibuki Goro | 谷原章介 | 唐澤壽明 | 天海祐希 | 香川照之 佐藤浩市 | 妻夫木聪 | 深津绘里 | 西田敏行 | 绫濑遥 | 小日向文世 (Actor) | 户田惠子 | 寺岛进 | Terawaki Yasufumi | 铃木京香 | 中井贵一 | Ibuki Goro | 谷原章介 | 唐泽寿明 | 天海佑希 | 香川照之 佐藤浩市 | 妻夫木聡 | 深津絵里 | 西田敏行 | 綾瀬はるか | 小日向文世 (Actor) | 戸田恵子 | 寺島進 | 寺脇康文 | 鈴木京香 | 中井貴一 | 伊吹吾郎 | 谷原章介 | 唐沢 寿明 | 天海祐希 | 香川照之 Sato Koichi | Tsumabuki Satoshi | Fukatsu Eri | Nishida Toshiyuki | Ayase Haruka | Kohinata Fumiyo (Actor) | Toda Keiko | Terajima Susumu | Terawaki Yasufumi | Suzuki Kyoka | Nakai Kiichi | Ibuki Goro | Yahara Shosuke | Toshiaki Karasawa | Amami Yuki | Kagawa Teruyuki |
| Director: | Mitani Koki 三谷幸喜 三谷幸喜 三谷幸喜 Mitani Koki |
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| Release Date: | 2008-12-03 |
| Publisher Product Code: | PCBC-51426 |
| 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: | Fuji TV |
| Other Information: | 2DVDs |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1011912200 |
Product Information
三谷幸喜が贈る、ノンストップ・コメディ。特典ディスクつきの『スペシャル・エディション』。 ボスの愛人に手を出してしまった備後は、命の代償として、伝説の殺し屋"デラ富樫"を連れて来るように命じられる。だが、期日が迫っても"デラ富樫"は見つからない。窮地に陥った備後は、無名の俳優・村田を雇い、殺し屋に仕立て上げることにした。まるで映画のセットのような不思議な街・守加護に連れてこられ、すべては映画の撮影だと信じて振る舞う村田。そんな村田を、本物の殺し屋だと思ったボスは…。 ■映像特典:特典DISC付
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Other Versions of "The Magic Hour (DVD) (Special Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)"
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Hong Kong Version
- The Magic Hour (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3
- US$14.49
- Usually ships within 7 days
- The Magic Hour (VCD) (Hong Kong Version) VCD
- US$8.49
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Japan Version
- The Magic Hour (Blu-ray + DVD) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) Blu-ray Region A, B, DVD
- US$92.99
- Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
- The Magic Hour (DVD) (Standard Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
- US$44.99
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Korea Version
- The Magic Hour (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3
- Temporarily Out of Stock
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Taiwan Version
- The Magic Hour (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Taiwan Version) DVD Region 3
- US$19.99
- Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
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Awards
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Asian Film Awards 2009
- Best Screenwriter Nomination
- Best Production Designer Nomination, Taneda Yohei
- Best Actor Nomination, Fukatsu Eri
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "The Magic Hour (DVD) (Special Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)"
This professional review refers to The Magic Hour (DVD) (Standard Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)
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Writer-director Koki Mitani has a knack for making classy commercial cinema. His Suite Dreams (a.k.a. The Unchouten Hotel) was a charming, if slightly labored farce that recalled classic Hollywood comedies, and it was as delightful as it was innocuous. Mitani improves upon his crowd-pleasing formula with The Magic Hour, which shows a love of cinema both in style and subject matter. Not only is the film a guileless screwball comedy like the work of Mitani's inspiration, the peerless Billy Wilder, but it features moviemaking as one of its themes. The film shows us that make-believe can be a worthy art, and does it in a manner that's more fun than it probably should be. Lives won't change, but The Magic Hour qualifies as one of the most enjoyable movies from any country this year. Satoshi Tsumabuki (Dororo) is gang member Bingo, who gets into hot water when he sleeps with showgirl Mari (Eri Fukatsu of the Bayside Shakedown movies), the girlfriend of his boss Teshio (Toshiyuki Nishida). Bingo gets fitted for cement shoes, but some timely name-dropping stays his execution. Bingo says that he knows notorious hitman Della Togashi, and if he can bring Togashi to Teshio, then he'll avoid a watery death. The problem: Bingo doesn't really know Togashi. He does, however, know that nobody knows what Togashi really looks like. Also, Bingo knows about Taiki Murata (Koichi Sato), a tough-looking and ridiculously earnest B-actor whose career has dwindled to walk-ons and stunt doubling. Nevertheless, Murata's love for acting keeps him hopeful, and Bingo takes advantage by pretending to be an indie film director with a script about a feared underworld figure named Della Togashi. After hiring Murata to be his Togashi, Bingo figures that one meeting will satisfy Teshio and get him off the hook. Bingo figured wrong. True to screwball comedy form, events spin wildly out of control. After their hilarious first meeting, Teshio decides to hire Murata/Togashi to aid him in an escalating turf war with rival gangster Jun (Teruyuki Kagawa). Also, Murata's agent Hasegawa (Fumiyo Kohinata) begins to get suspicious of Bingo and his self-described "indie film", and Teshio's top man Kurokawa (Susumu Terajima) also starts getting in the way. The most unpredictable factor, however, is Murata himself, who throws himself so fully into his role that nobody - Bingo, Teshio, and most especially the audience - knows what he'll do next. In the film's showiest role, Koichi Sato is winning and exceptionally funny, hamming it up as Togashi while earning tremendous sympathy when he's just plain 'ol Murata. Taiki Murata is a struggling actor who finds purpose while at his lowest professional point - a character type that is not new. But, in the hands of both Sato and Mitani, this previously-seen character feels fresh and funny. Mitani seems to be going for old-style entertainment here. There's darkness lurking at the corners of his screenplay, but he keeps things light and agreeable. The bad guys never seem that bad, and are willing to sacrifice everything to chase after dreams, or perhaps just women that they love. Likewise, material wealth takes a backseat to personal fulfillment, and people are always willing to recognize the effort and honor of others. The characters and situations are hardly plausible, but in Mitani's make-believe world, that doesn't matter. This is a film about simple values and a simpler time; the film takes place in the present day, but the setting is an old-style town made up to look like the early twentieth century. Characters dress in period garb, and they act like they're from that time, too. The Magic Hour is essentially a talky sitcom that possesses the wit and clever staging of an English stage play - except it's in Japanese and features close-ups that allow actors to emote silently. Some things are still best done in the movies. The Magic Hour is not without flaws, but they're minor ones, and are easily forgiven considering how entertaining the whole is. The film is slightly overlong, and some characters don't register very well when compared to Sato Koichi's scene-stealing Murata. Still, the comedy is never labored, and all the elements - story, script, characters - come together well. Koki Mitani doesn't seem to be missing much here. Could he develop some characters and situations better? Sure he could. But he doesn't need to. This isn't a realistic film, and is instead wonderfully filmed theater, managing to earn exceptional goodwill through fun situations, snappy pacing, agreeable comedy, and a sentimental warmth that never feels pandering. The film manages a hallowed and seemingly forgotten movie trick: it convinces instead of manipulates its audience. For glorious, engaging four-color fun, The Magic Hour is hard to beat - in this or any other moviemaking era. by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com |
Editor's Pick of "The Magic Hour (DVD) (Special Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)"
See all this editor's picks
November 27, 2008
|
From the delightful mind of Mitani Koki comes the clever and crowd-pleasing comedy The Magic Hour which had the entire theater up in stitches when I saw it during the Hong Kong Asian Film Festival. I can't remember the last time I had that much fun at the movies. Though more ambitious, over-the-top, and narrative-driven than Mitani's previous slice-of-life Suite Dreams, The Magic Hour starts from a similar foundation. Again, he places eccentric characters in a limited space and lets them roam free on the set, crossing paths and lighting fires through comical coincidences, quirky set pieces, and smile-tugging dialogue - but this time a hotel just isn't enough. Mitani built his own quaint little town in Toho that harks back to another place and another era with its elegant buildings, handsome streets, and old-time glamour. Mitani's theater roots are clear in just about every frame of the film, from the nostalgic set and wardrobe to the dramatic acting to the deliberately staged scenes and camerawork. And yet, so charming and self-contained is Mitani's creation, when the film ventures out of the town of Sucago, it is the "real world" that seems fake rather than Mitani's world of suspended reality. The Magic Hour's all-star cast goes along for the ride with theatrical bravado. Tsumabuki Satoshi exercises his full range of goofy facial expressions from Waterboys, 69, and Haunted Samurai to play desperate nightclub manager Bingo who's been caught sleeping with the boss's girl (Fukatsu Eri, as a selfishly sassy cabaret singer). To save his hide from hitting the bottom of the harbor, Bingo pretends to know legendary hitman Della Togashi whom his boss (Nishida Toshiyuki) is trying to find. Bingo lives only if he can bring Della, so he hires stuntman Murata (Sato Koichi) to act as the hitman under the guise of shooting a movie. Uproarious scenes of yakuza wheeling and fake filmmaking follow as Bingo flounders around trying to keep both parties under wraps about each other's identities. Sato Koichi, in particular, acts up a storm as Murata acting up a storm as Della Togashi, and the results are utterly hilarious. Mitani Koki said he wanted to make the audience laugh three times a minute with The Magic Hour. I wasn't keeping count, but he can't be far from the mark. With earnest characters, clever direction, intelligent slapstick, and jazzy snazz, The Magic Hour is simply a wildly entertaining film that makes you laugh from the heart. Perhaps what makes The Magic Hour most affecting and enjoyable of all though is that it's a film that loves film. The director's passion for the medium is apparent in the premise and characters: the movie within a movie, the accidental director, the bit actor with oh-so-much heart, the production crew that deliver the final bang. Mitani Koki celebrates cinema and the people who create cinema in the best possible way - by making a great film. |
Customer Review of "The Magic Hour (DVD) (Special Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)"
See all my reviews
December 17, 2008
This customer review refers to The Magic Hour (DVD) (Standard Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)
| Writer/director Mitani Koki is a treasure. His films manage to feel both nostalgic and fresh; they have a timeless quality driven by Mitani's wonderfully good-natured sense of humor. "The Magic Hour" tells of a young hotel manager who becomes entangled with the local crime boss and, to save his skin, tells the crime boss that he can hook the boss up with a legendary hit man. The boss takes him up on the offer, leaving the hotel manager in a terrible bind, since he has no idea how to reach the hit man. The manager cooks up a wild scheme to try to extricate himself from the mess -- he will hire an actor to play the hit man, will pretend with the actor that he is being hired to act in a movie, and inject the actor among the crime boss and his gang without telling the actor that these are actual thugs. The scheme soon spins comically out of control, with the situation becoming ever more desperate. The film's wonderful ensemble cast brings this wild premise to vivid life. This is brilliant stuff! Very highly recommended. |











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