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Ticket (DVD) (China Version) DVD Region All

Nicky Wu (Actor) | Cecilia Yip (Actor) | Zuo Xiao Qing (Actor) | Chin Siu Ho (Actor)
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Ticket (DVD) (China Version)
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All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (1)

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YesAsia Editorial Description

Following his acclaimed period blockbuster A Battle of Wits, director Jacob Cheung (The Intimates) returns to the sensitive human dramas that he's best known for with Ticket. A tribute to parenthood, Ticket was shot on location in rural China, with the gorgeous scenery greatly enhancing the film's uplifting and positive message. In the lead is young Mainland drama actress Zuo Xiao Qing (The Great Revival) in her largest film role to date, with supporting roles handled by a host of familiar faces, including Nicky Wu (A Battle of Wits), Mainland actor Fan Wei (Gimme Kudos), and Cecilia Yip, who won a Best Actress Hong Kong Film Award in Jacob Cheung's Beyond the Sunset.

Based on a collection of short stories originally set in Taiwan, Ticket tells three separate but interwoven stories about parenthood. Abandoned as a baby, journalist Yu-Tong (Zuo Xiao Qing) has only resent for the parents she never knew. While covering the tragic story of a young couple (Chin Siu Ho and Liu Si Tong) whose child is born with a rare disease, Yu-Tong receives word that her foster mother (Cecilia Yip) is dying. Her final wish is for Yu-Tong to seek out her birth mother. With only a set of train tickets as clues, Yu-Tong and childhood friend Zhi-Xuan (Nicky Wu) embark on a sweeping journey through China to find her mother and the truth behind her abandonment.

© 2009 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. 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.

Technical Information

Product Title: Ticket (DVD) (China Version) 車票 (DVD) (中國版) 车票 (DVD) (中国版) 車票 (中国版) Ticket (DVD) (China Version)
Artist Name(s): Nicky Wu (Actor) | Cecilia Yip (Actor) | Zuo Xiao Qing (Actor) | Chin Siu Ho (Actor) | Wu Ma (Actor) | Fan Wei (Actor) | Liu Si Tong (Actor) | Jin Ya Qin (Actor) 吳奇隆 (Actor) | 葉童 (Actor) | 左 小青 (Actor) | 錢小豪 (Actor) | 午馬 (Actor) | 范 偉 (Actor) | 劉思彤 (Actor) | 金雅琴 (Actor) 吴奇隆 (Actor) | 叶童 (Actor) | 左 小青 (Actor) | 钱小豪 (Actor) | 午马 (Actor) | 范伟 (Actor) | 刘思彤 (Actor) | Jin Ya Qin (Actor) 呉奇隆 (ニッキー・ウー) (Actor) | 葉童(イップ・トン) (Actor) | 左小青 (ズオ・シャオチン) (Actor) | 錢小豪(チン・シウホウ) (Actor) | 午馬(ウー・マー) (Actor) | Fan Wei (Actor) | Liu Si Tong (Actor) | ジン・ヤーチン (Actor) Nicky Wu (Actor) | Cecilia Yip (Actor) | Zuo Xiao Qing (Actor) | Chin Siu Ho (Actor) | Wu Ma (Actor) | Fan Wei (Actor) | Liu Si Tong (Actor) | Jin Ya Qin (Actor)
Director: Jacob Cheung 張之亮 张之亮 張之亮(ジェイコブ・チャン) Jacob Cheung
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Release Date: 2009-05-26
Language: Mandarin
Subtitles: Simplified Chinese
Country of Origin: China
Picture Format: PAL What is it?
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: All Region What is it?
Publisher: Guang Dong Yin Xiang Chu Ban She
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1020278300

Product Information

  一張車票,連係了三位父母對子女生命的抉擇,為愛而犧牲的偉大。

  改編自臺灣著名作家李家同同名短篇故事《車票》,是導演張之亮繼《墨攻》後,再一次呼喚觀眾對生命的價值,父母對子女的愛。

  曾雨桐自少便被母親遺棄於修道院,被修女曾嬤嬤養育成人。多年後,對母親極之憎恨的雨桐,意外地收到嬤嬤交給的一張過期車票,在好友志軒的鼓勵下,毅然踏上尋根之路,解開當日母親拋棄自己的真相。怎料,她找到的答案竟令自己留下一生一世永不磨滅的烙印……
Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Ticket (DVD) (China Version)"

May 12, 2009

This professional review refers to Ticket (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
If you can't make a sightseeing tour to rural China, then Ticket may be the next best thing. Based on a collection of short stories originally set in Taiwan, Ticket tells the story of Zeng Yu-Tong (Zuo Xiao-Qing), a young reporter whose foster mother, Catholic nun Tsang (Cecilia Yip), raised her after she was abandoned at the nunnery as an infant. When Tsang takes sick, she asks Yu-Tong to fulfill her dying wish: she wants Yu-Tong to find and meet her original birth mother. She also gives Yu-Tong a long-hidden gift: train tickets found when she was initially abandoned. Presumably, following the tickets will lead Yu-Tong back to where her parents came from, though first the question must be asked: does she want to find them?

Showing obvious resentment lingering from her abandonment, Yu-Tong claims that she doesn't need to find her real mother. However, after some gentle prodding from Tsang, she changes her mind and soon embarks on a road trip with handsome childhood friend Zhi-Xuan (Nicky Wu) in tow. The journey takes them from Yunnan to Tibet to other picturesque areas, as they make a few wrong turns while also stopping to argue or admire the gorgeous scenery. Along the way, Yu-Tong continues to question her journey, flipping back and forth between a need to find her parents and fear at the possible truth behind her abandonment. What if she wasn't abandoned due to China's one-child policy? What if the truth is that her mother simply didn't want her?

As Yu-Tong, Zuo Xiao-Qing possesses clean, pretty looks, but the actress doesn't quite summon the emotion or personality needed to make the character truly compelling. Her issues are handed out mostly in dialogue, but there are related characters and events that support the film's themes. Ticket opens with Yu-Tong reporting the birth of a child with a heart disease, and how the parents (Liu Si-Tong and Chin Siu-Ho) are willing to carry the child to term even though the actual chance of survival is slim. Yu-Tong openly questions why the parents don't just opt for the abortion, obviously injecting some of her rueful personal feelings into the conflict. However, her feelings never register that strongly with the audience, making Yu-Tong rather unidentifiable, especially in the film's early going.

Thankfully, director Jacob Cheung manages to close the gap caused by his somewhat distant leading lady. Cheung makes some good decisions with Ticket, and chooses a lighter approach to his sentimental subject matter than some directors might have opted for. Some of his decisions are superficial, but smart; the film is carried in many places by its fine cinematography, wonderful scenery and very enjoyable music. At the same time, the themes and emotions presented are quite pleasant, and should strike a chord with the intended audience. The film's opening is a little flat-footed, but once Yu-Tong and Zhi-Xuan embark on their journey, their search proves more interesting. The journey is remarkably low tension and the minor conflicts that erupt are not really felt, but when Yu-Tong finally finds the truth about her mother, everything seems to fall into place. The filmmakers elicit the intended emotions and manage to earn the expected sentimentality.

There's also a third plotline in the film, involving a Mainland taxi driver (Fan Wei) who's always in the company of his autistic young son. The driver crosses paths with Yu-Tong twice, once in the hospital at the film's opening, and again when he ferries her in his taxi. He shows up again in the film's final reel, when he loses his son on the train and must race to the next stop to get him. That event is rendered in the same low-tension manner as the rest of the film's conflicts, as there's never any sense that anything bad can really happen, and yet the event once again provides reinforcement for the film's positive depiction of parenthood. Ticket is a feel-good movie about the choices faced by parents, and its viewpoint is warm and affectionate. Cheung pushes upbeat, positive emotions, and never really slams us over the head with any lessons or messages. Being a parent is hard, but nobody in Ticket seems to mind at all. Those themes are not challenging or truly dramatic, but the emotions conjured are relaxing, pleasant, and ultimately quite agreeable.

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.

Customer Review of "Ticket (DVD) (China Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (1)

numinair
See all my reviews


July 24, 2009

This customer review refers to Ticket (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Ticket to Motherhood and Reconciliation Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
“Ticket” as such gorgeous China scenery and photography to make it worthwhile for aesthetics alone. But here there’s a more crucial human element than mere sublime landscapes. Of three personal stories weaving into a rural adventure of self-discovery, reconciliation of family pain, the importance of motherhood and the raising of children, this semi-Christian tale of hope and invisible love as volumes of meaningful importance. Especially concerning damaged childhood trusts to a parent that obscure even trickles of compassion and forgiveness to give benefit of doubt. Confusion reigns, plights of a struggling life hinder, as to blur new ways of seeing the better truths of a person. Here “Ticket” is a one way journey to redeem such injured souls.

Tong (Zuo Xiao Qing) is a TV journalist who interviews a woman in labor that could possibly lose her baby to a disease. The woman never considers any form of termination even though odds against her baby being born healthy (or alive) are slim. But by courageous courage and faith the baby is born okay. Although the birth brings happiness to the mother, it simultaneously evokes a deep resurgence of anger within Tong’s heart. The mother never wished abandonment for her child, even though the little life was considered close to death. But Tong had been abandoned by her parents as a child in the full bloom of health and for reasons unknown, left outside a nunnery to be raised by the Sisters there. Hearing news that Sister Zeng (Cecilia Yip), a Sister who’d raised Tong as a surrogate mother, is close to death, Tong rushes to the nunnery. There Tong discovers Sister Zeng has two tickets for Tong to use in finding her true parents and settling her indifference and embittered past by possible reconciliation. With her childhood friend Xuan (Nicky Wu), Tong travels the Chinese mountainside into rural provinces to locate her parents, with much anticipated angst. But angered at the mother who’d abandoned her, only Xuan’s persistence emphasizes Tong to continue her emotional search. But at the end of the road, a revealing truth may free Tong’s soul of unhappiness. Although the finality is familiar, “Ticket” is a good movie. The scenery is breathtaking with excellent cinematography but most important here is love and reconciliation. A worthwhile film that helps to explore the human heart deeper, and of crucial understanding of a mother’s unfailing love.
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