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Yes, I Can See Dead People (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3

Mandy Chiang (Actor) | Steven Cheung (Actor) | Kris Gu | Tang Yi
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YesAsia Editorial Description

Sun Boy'z member Steven Cheung sheds his bandmates to take on a starring role in Yes, I Can See Dead People, a teen horror film about that age-old movie problem: seeing ghosts. As the title might suggest, Yes, I See Dead People has moments of comedy to lighten its otherwise creepy premise, but it still features tense atmosphere and plenty of shock scares that should have teenagers cowering in delighted fear. Though the concept of "seeing ghosts" has long been overused, Yes, I See Dead People manages to separate itself from similar genre entries, managing a fine balance between creepy horror and knowing comedy. Steven Cheung departs from his usual sidekick roles to play the hero, and is joined by Kris Gu (The Eye 10), screen veteran Lau Kong, and fellow EEG singer Mandy Chiang.

Steven Cheung is Nam, a slacker who has the power to see dead people - and he seems to be pretty okay with it. From departed friends to ghostly children, the undead populate the corridors of Nam's housing estate, and he's used to their presence, disturbing though it should be. Things change when his brother Tung (Kris Gu) begins acting distant and wetting himself, and Nam thinks that there may be more going on than just his brother's lack of self control. Estate security guard Fok (Lau Kong) clues Nam in: there are dangerous ghosts too, and one of them is starting to mount his own terror campaign by possessing Nam's neighbors and family. Fok also teaches Nam that those who possess ghost-seeing powers must bear the responsibility to use them properly. But can Nam learn the tricks of the ghost-busting trade before the evil spirits take his brother or the stewardess (Kathy Yuen) that he has the hots for?

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Technical Information

Product Title: Yes, I Can See Dead People (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) 惡男事件 (DVD) (香港版) 恶男事件 (DVD) (香港版) 悪男事件 (DVD) (香港版) Yes, I Can See Dead People (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Mandy Chiang (Actor) | Steven Cheung (Actor) | Kris Gu | Tang Yi Mandy 蔣雅文 (Actor) | 張致恆 (Actor) | 宇 古 | 湯怡 蒋雅文 (Mandy) (Actor) | 张致恒 (Actor) | Kris Gu | 汤怡 蒋雅文(マンディ・チァン) (Actor) | スティーブン・チョン (Actor) | 古宇 (クリス・クー) | 湯怡 (キャシー・トン) Mandy Chiang (Actor) | Steven Cheung (Actor) | Kris Gu | Tang Yi
Director: Lee Kwong Yiu 李光耀 李光耀 Lee Kwong Yiu Lee Kwong Yiu
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Release Date: 2008-03-19
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 1.85 : 1
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 2.0, Dolby Digital EX(TM) / THX Surround EX(TM), DTS Extended Surround(TM) / DTS-ES(TM), DTS-ES Discrete 6.1
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
Rating: IIB
Duration: 91 (mins)
Publisher: Deltamac (HK)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1010019030

Product Information

* Screen Format: 1.85:1
* Sound Mix:
- Mandarin: Dolby Digital 2.0
- Cantonese: Dolby Digital 6.1EX, DTS 6.1ES
* Special Features:
- 製作特輯 Making Of
- 預告片 Trailer

導演︰李光耀
Director: Lee Kwong Yiu

華氏一家四口所住的屋村,一直是全港自殺率最高的地方,到處鬼影幢幢,與人卻是相安無事。但自華冠東(古宇飾)從長洲回來後,怪事卻接踵而來,弟弟冠南(張致恆飾)與冠東的女友Charlie(蔣雅文飾)明查暗訪下發現一切源於一張古舊鈔票。同時間,冠南暗戀的美芝(湯怡飾)因一次熱心助人,竟惹來村內可怕惡靈-村長的騷擾。眼見身邊親人屢遭侵害,生命危在旦夕。自少能與亡靈溝通的冠南,頓成為對抗村長與拯救哥哥的唯一希望。為救冠東與美芝,冠南不惜一切與惡靈對抗!一夜間,村內頓成陰陽兩界的殺戮戰場...

Tragedies and strange happenings seem to dog the estate where Nam grows up. His languis life is shaken when his childhood friends and neighbors inexplicably kill themselves. When Nam's brother and his dream girl Chee also act strangely, Nam reailzes that the estate may be haunted by more than just pure bad luck. In order to help his brother and Chee, who are both possessed by evil spirits, Nam finds out that he has inherited a family talent against supernatural. But time is running out....will his abilities strong enough to save the people the loves?
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Yes, I Can See Dead People (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"

May 8, 2008

It won't make any international waves, but Yes, I Can See Dead People is a surprisingly agreeable local entry into the teen horror genre. Steven Cheung, of the much-maligned boy band Sun Boy'z (It used to be just Boy'z, but Kenny Kwan graduated and Steven got left holding the bag - oh, you don't really care, do you?) stars as Wah Koon-Nam, a slacker who spends his time delivering food, playing his PSP, and bumming around the public housing estate where he and his family reside. Oh, one other thing: Nam sees ghosts. In a rather droll opening voiceover, Nam describes how many of his friends have died - some through glossed over suicide played for gallows humor - and finishes up his prologue by mentioning that yep, he can see ghosts. No exclamation point, no registration of alarm; just the matter-of-fact acknowledgement that he can see the undead. Steven of Boy'z: you're the man.

Nam's ghost-seeing abilities come into play when his brother Tung (Kris Gu) gets seemingly possessed after a night out at Cheung Chau. He starts acting surly and occasionally wets his pants, upsetting both his parents (Amy Chum and Sun Limin), as well as girlfriend Charlie (Mandy Chiang). Nam immediately suspects, but he has other issues on his mind, namely hot stewardess Mei Chee (Kathy Yuen), who starts to take a shine to Nam before she too begins acting mighty strange. Nam thinks that ghosts are benign, but security guard Fok (screen veteran Lau Kong) assures Nam that this isn't the case. The ghost of deranged former resident Ho Tak-Ching (Chow Ka-Sing) still roams the forbidding halls of the housing estate, and he may have a grudge or two to settle. With Fok's counsel, Nam learns that with his great ghost-seeing power comes some form of great ghost-seeing responsibility. But can he get it together in time to help his brother, his crush, plus a group of deceased kids?

Yes, I Can See Dead People would never qualify for a list of essential Hong Kong Cinema, but for what it is - would-be cheesy teen horror - it's surprisingly effective. Director Lee Kwong-Yiu gets the most from his limited budget and cast. The film's look is miles better than Dating a Vampire, despite having nearly the exact same settings, and the shock cuts and loud scares should do a decent job of keeping excitable teens on their toes. The cultural details make the film more interesting than your usual manufactured frightfest, and real effort was put into the film's sound design. The film succeeds at delivering some decent tension and surprise, not to mention a few low-key laughs. The supporting cast fares much better than the leads; Lau Kong and Amy Chum shore up the adult parts well, while the younger cast members range from passable to decent. Neither Kris Gu nor Mandy Chiang makes much of an impact, but Steven Cheung is actually quite likable as slacker-turned-ghostbuster Nam. His performance doesn't signal the arrival of a new Hong Kong leading man, but at the very least you may forget that he's a member of Boy'z. One would hope so, anyway.

Not that Yes, I Can See Dead People is the second coming of Ring, because it most definitely is not. The film is sometimes cloyingly self-referential and in-jokey, and the overuse of tried-and-true scare tactics does take its toll. Once things start getting explained, any sense of dread evaporates, and it's hard to make someone jump after the fiftieth shock scare in the last hour. Also, most of the horror images have been seen a trillion times before, plus the film eventually relies on maudlin moments and weepy devices that prove interminable rather than touching. When a film opens with a guy amusingly finding an eyeball on his shoe, it probably isn't going to be too effective at tugging your heartstrings later. Yes, I Can See Dead People doesn't convince as an emotional tale of ghostly revenge and redemption, but it's a lot better than one would expect from its immediate expectations. How many crappy Hong Kong horror films have we endured over the last 10 years, especially post-Ring? Yes, I Can See Dead People easily rates above most of the pack because it's a Hong Kong horror film that isn't that crappy. Rarity can be worth something.

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 "Yes, I Can See Dead People (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10 (1)

numinair
See all my reviews


December 12, 2008

A Decent HK Ghosty Film Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
Only recently did I get around to watching the Taiwanese film “Shutter”, one of the spookiest Asian movies about the phenomena of disembodied people spirits. But even “Shutter” has amusing moments concerning the ghost elements (like when the female ghost’s head pops up near the passenger seat window in the ghost/car chase). “Yes, I Can See Dead People” as similar funny moments. Stephen Cheung having such a great funny demeanor about him, could make this difficult to anticipate a brooding dark movie here. If you’ve seen Steve before, you could logically anticipate a deadpan comedy and a bit of a daft horror film like the Boyz/Twins combo “The Death Curse”. Right? But place this film about mid way between TDC and “Scared to Die” and that will be about right. Its quite spooky but has far too much droll humor (eye on a shoe?) to be a chilling terror ride. I mean, even Mandy couldn’t help finding Stephen funny on set by merely looking at him - and she had to act terrified and keep a straight face to make the film. But although this does have its mirthful asides - “Yes, I can See Dead People” in truth as a decent spooky and ominous plot, is well acted and is quite an atmospheric ghost movie.

The synopsis. Nam (Steve that is) can see and communicate with the dead and sees ghosts like most other people see each other at shopping malls. He even communicates with ghosts on his PSP Internet connection to obtain info relating to an ominous spirit that seems to have an unhealthy interest in his brother and a female stewardess resident. This ominous ghost was also a past tenant and in spirit as a social score to settle (his facial expression as Grudge written all over it!), and certainly not someone to be hauntingly pressured by in a misty, dank and claustrophobic housing estate where Steve and Mandy are here. In fact being haunted by this fellow in a summer field at sunset would be no lesser option.

But this is a HK horror worth seeing. You certainly get the proverbial ‘jump out of your skin’ horror sound factor throughout. (Groan, I wish they wouldn’t do that, though). Quiet scenes often crescendo into loud ‘throw your popcorn into the air’ surprises often. Especially when the surround sound is a bit too loud due to the quieter bits. Luckily, I wasn’t drinking anything or by the umpteenth ‘jump’ I would have been drowned in beverage by the end of the movie. So, you have been warned.
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