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Tokyo Sonata (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3

Koizumi Kyoko (Actor) | Kagawa Teruyuki (Actor) | Yakusho Koji (Actor) | Igawa Haruka
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Tokyo Sonata (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
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Customer Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (1)
All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7.3 out of 10 (3)

YesAsia Editorial Description

A departure from acclaimed director Kurosawa Kiyoshi's (Retribution) usual psychological horrors, Tokyo Sonata unsettles on a deeper level with the story of an ordinary Japanese family that is slowly falling apart. Winner of the Un Certain Regard Jury Prize at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival and Best Film at the 2009 Asian Film Awards, the film begins tracing the family's downward spiral after the father gets downsized, but the roots for disintegration have long been laid in dinner table apathy, generation gap, and midlife-crisis malaise. Kagawa Teruyuki (Sway) and Koizumi Kyoko (Kuchu Teien) lead the cast as the married couple wearing a fragile guise of normalcy. Frustratingly human and darkly humorous, Tokyo Sonata starts sedate and culminates in an absurdist second-act spin involving Kurosawa regular Yakusho Koji, breaking down the male complex and middle-class myth in the process.

The Sasakis are your typical middle-class family of four headed by salaryman Ryuhei (Kagawa Teruyuki). When he suddenly loses his job, Ryuhei ashamedly hides the truth from his family and passes each day in lies. He becomes increasingly estranged from his two sons, each with secrets of his own. Disillusioned and angry at the world, older son Takashi (Koyanagi Yu) makes the drastic decision to join the US army. Younger son Kenji (Inowaki Kai) is secretly taking piano lessons with his lunch money despite his father's disapproval. Quietly watching her husband and children drift apart, housewife Megumi (Koizumi Kyoko) is too tired to stop her family from unraveling.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Tokyo Sonata (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) 東京奏鳴曲 (DVD) (中英文字幕) (香港版) 东京奏鸣曲 (DVD) (中英文字幕) (香港版) Tokyo Sonata (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) Tokyo Sonata (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Koizumi Kyoko (Actor) | Kagawa Teruyuki (Actor) | Yakusho Koji (Actor) | Igawa Haruka | Tsuda Kanji | Koyonagi Yu | Inowaki Kai 小泉今日子 (Actor) | 香川照之 (Actor) | 役所廣司 (Actor) | 井川遙 | 津田寬治 | Koyonagi Yu | Inowaki Kai 小泉今日子 (Actor) | 香川照之 (Actor) | 役所广司 (Actor) | 井川遥 | 津田宽治 | Koyonagi Yu | Inowaki Kai 小泉今日子 (Actor) | 香川照之 (Actor) | 役所広司 (Actor) | 井川遥 | 津田寛治 | 小柳友 | 井之脇海 Koizumi Kyoko (Actor) | Kagawa Teruyuki (Actor) | Yakusho Koji (Actor) | Igawa Haruka | Tsuda Kanji | Koyonagi Yu | Inowaki Kai
Director: Kurosawa Kiyoshi 黑澤清 黑泽清 黒沢清 Kurosawa Kiyoshi
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Release Date: 2009-07-23
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese
Country of Origin: Japan
Picture Format: PAL What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 1.78 : 1
Widescreen Anamorphic: Yes
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 2.0
Disc Format(s): DVD-5, DVD
Region Code: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
Duration: 115 (mins)
Publisher: Mega Star (HK)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1020549835

Product Information

Tokyo Sonata is a portrait of a seemingly ordinary Japanese family. The father who abruptly loses his job conceals the truth from his family; the eldest son in college hardly returns home; the youngest son furtively takes piano lessons without telling his parents; and the mother, who knows deep down that her role is to keep the family together, cannot find the will to do so. From the exterior, all is normal and the same. But somehow, a single, unforeseeable chasm has appeared within the family, only to spread ever so quietly and quickly to disntegrate them.
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Tokyo Sonata (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)"

July 20, 2009

The latest from hugely acclaimed Japanese director Kiyoshi Kurosawa has been hailed as a major departure for the man behind existential horror gems such as Cure and Kairo (Pulse). And in most ways it is, Kurosawa seeming to have wrapped up the horror phase of his career with Sakebi (Retribution). Tokyo Sonata leaves the genre trappings behind entirely, operating instead as a low key family drama but if you leave the genre issue aside it is pure, one hundred percent recognizable Kurosawa and a sort of spiritual successor to Bright Future - a more mature, farther down the road of life look at the same issues of identity and purpose (or lack thereof) that drove his earlier hit film.

The Sasaki family is, in many ways the typical Japanese family. Father has a good job as a lead administrator for a major corporation. Mother stays home to take care of the children and keep an orderly house. Elder son seems to be drifting somewhat but is good natured and will surely sort himself out, younger son is preparing for his coming qualification exams. It’s a typical Japanese family unit living a seemingly ideal life until the day that Dad is unceremoniously downsized and dumped from his company.

Surprise? Anger? Depression? Dad experiences them all while carrying the contents of his desk out of the office where he was worked for years in a pair of paper bags, but what he mostly seems to feel is shame. Shame that prevents him from telling his wife or children that he is out of work, shame that gets him out of bed every morning to put on his suit and tie and pretend to be heading to the job he no longer has when he is really spending his days at an employment office being offered insultingly menial jobs for horrible pay and hanging out in the park and library with scores of similarly suited and tied downsized executives.

Perhaps it is that shame that leads to him to overcompensate by becoming overly controlling of his children. After complaining that his eldest son lacks discipline and focus Dad throws his child out of the house for saying he wants to join the US military - the first concrete plan he’s had. And when the younger son decides he’d like to learn to play the piano, the answer is a blunt no for seemingly no reason other than the fact that Dad was able to say no.

But kids are kids, right? And just because your father won’t let you do what you want doesn’t mean that there aren’t other ways of doing it, such as using your lunch money to pay for lessons yourself and cutting classes in the afternoons to attend music lessons instead. It all comes out in the open of course, and the resulting explosion leaves the younger son unconscious at the bottom of the stairs and Mother wondering why the hell she’s still in this marriage at all.

Kurosawa’s films have always had a sort of existential edge to them, a sort of concern with the ennui that grips society in general and the Japanese in particular. In Bright Future he explicitly tackled this issue in the younger generation, exploring the aimlessness and lack of purpose that grips so many in their twenties who have simply lost faith or interest in the lifestyle that their parents pursued and idealized before them. In Tokyo Sonata he does the exact same thing but instead of characters in their twenties he instead looks at the issue from the perspective of fully grown adults who have spent their lives serving a sort of social ideal only to find themselves failed, abandoned and forgotten by it. How do you respond when you have lived your entire life believing that making certain choices, living a certain way, will lead to certain desired ends only to arrive in your forties or fifties and discover that you were wrong?

A quiet and subtle film, Tokyo Sonata is unlikely to find much of an audience outside of the festival circuit simply because nobody out there will know how to sell a movie about an unemployed fifty (or so) year old man, which is a shame because this is an elegant, insightful piece of work that stands among the best films he has made throughout his career. For my own selfish ends I hope that Kurosawa hasn’t left his genre roots permanently but this is a much needed change of pace for a man whose skills clearly run wider than the confines of the film that built his name.

by Todd Brown - 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 "Tokyo Sonata (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (1)
Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7.3 out of 10 (3)

Kevin Kennedy
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October 26, 2009

Finding a reason to hope Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
"Tokyo Sonata" is an artful and moving existential drama about a family in crisis. The head of the family, Ryuhei (Kagawa Teruyuki) is the administrative manager at a sizeable Tokyo company who loses his job when the company shifts its back-office operations to China. Ryuhei quickly learns that finding a comparable position is impossible for a man in his mid-forties. Ashamed of his fate and filled with a suppressed rage, he conceals his unemployment from his family.

Eldest son Takashi (Koyanagi Yu) meanwhile leads a directionless life; against his parents' wishes, he seeks some purpose for his life by joining the US Army. Younger son Kenji (Inowaki Kai) rebels against his regimented school life and yearns to express himself through learning to play piano, but, when his father learns that he has been sneaking piano lessons, he forbids it and demands that his son concentrate on his schoolwork. Housewife Megumi (Koizumi Kyoko) quietly despairs at her lonely and unappreciated life. Each of the family members rebels against their own private hells -- and their rebellions lead them variously to the gutter, to jail, to war, and to the empty edge of the world.

On a lonely beach, Megumi has an epiphany: "You're the only person who can be you. That's all we have to hold onto." With this existentialist cul-de-sac, Megumi latches onto the only empty solace that remains when one embraces a God-less worldview. The movie ends on a more hopeful note, a hope that suggests the possibility of transcendence. Graced with skillful filmmaking and honest performances, "Tokyo Sonata" should appeal to lovers of arthouse cinema.
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eccoboy
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October 1, 2009

This customer review refers to Tokyo Sonata (Blu-ray) (English Subtitled) (UK Version)
Almost Perfect Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
Tokyo Sonata has everything I like in a movie but is almost completely ruined by the inclusion of a certain story element (the director added this part which was not in the script, according to the liner notes. But still, I enjoy the feel of this movie so much that I watched it 4 or 5 times within a week, so it's definitely worth watching.

But is the overpriced Blu-Ray worth it? Maybe not. This transfer is good but not on par with other quality Blu-Rays. I haven't seen a DVD release for this movie but with many properly mastered DVDs looking fantastic these days, I'm awfully critical of Blue-Ray transfers that aren't pristine. Now, this could be from the source film, but in general the resolution is not very sharp and actors in long shots seem blurred or fuzzy. The night shots on the beach are grainy like something you would see from an inexpensive digital camera. Anyway, the Blu-Ray is probably better than the DVD, but I don't know if paying double the price is worth it, unless you are like me and need maximum quality. So I'm a little disappointed with the transfer and the horrible inclusion of a particular plot point, but I really do like the movie.

*the packaging and booklet are quite nice, by the way
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Steve
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May 30, 2009

This customer review refers to Tokyo Sonata (DVD) (Japan Version)
Depressing Look into Japanese Culture Customer Review Rated Bad 4 - 4 out of 10
This is overall a depressing movie, however there is a glimpse of light, hope and acceptance at the end of the movie. It's interesting to see the way Japanese society reacts to unemployment and the family culture. This is a big contrast to the reaction of the younger generation of people in the USA, where the youth do not identify themselves with their jobs.

The beginning of the movie attributes cheaper Chinese employees to be a main reason for the lay-offs. To what extent is this credible, especially if it's already difficult for the average Chinese to even go to Japan? Chinese youth will actually spend their youth learning Japanese in hopes of one day working for a Japanese company? I actually see that the 2nd language learned in China is English and as for career, the goal is to move up the corporate ladder domestically or become an entrepreneur.
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