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Handphone (DVD) (Single Disc) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3

Uhm Tae Woong (Actor) | Park Yong Woo (Actor) | Park Sol Mi (Actor) | Kim Han Min (Director)
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Handphone (DVD) (Single Disc) (Korea Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Want it back? Even if there's a price to pay?

After topping the Korean box office and earning awards with his island-set mystery Paradise Murdered, director Kim Han Min raises the stakes with Handphone. This ripped-from-reality thriller plays on our modern fears and insecurities, with the film's rising tension built upon the whereabouts of a single lost mobile phone. Uhm Tae Woong (Forever the Moment) stars as a deep-in-debt individual who enters a state of panic when his mobile phone falls into the hands of a mysterious blackmailer (Park Yong Woo, Blood Rain). Also starring Park Sol Mi (Paradise Murdered), Handphone spins a tense, unnerving yarn about how an ordinary circumstance can become something much, much worse.

Talent manager Seung Min (Uhm Tae Woong) is struggling to make it big but owes debts to loan sharks. His hopes rest on up-and-coming actress Jin A (Lee Se Na), but before Seung Min can sign her to a lucrative commercial, Jin A's boyfriend sends a sex video of Jin A to Seung Min's mobile phone and asks for a large sum of money. Seung Min races to resolve the threat, but loses his phone in the process. It ends up in the hands of Lee Gyu (Park Yong Woo), who seems amenable to returning the phone. However, he asks Seung Min for three things: one, be courteous; two, be respectful; and three, carry out Lee Gyu's instructions by performing certain actions against a series of unknown individuals. Seung Min agrees, but soon comes to regret his decision. Lee Gyu's demands escalate beyond reason, driving both men towards an inescapable confrontation.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Handphone (DVD) (Single Disc) (Korea Version) Handphone (DVD) (單碟裝) (韓國版) Handphone (DVD) (单碟装) (韩国版) 携帯電話 (韓国版) 핸드폰 (DVD) (1디스크) (한국판)
Artist Name(s): Uhm Tae Woong (Actor) | Park Yong Woo (Actor) | Park Sol Mi (Actor) 嚴泰雄 (Actor) | 朴埇佑 (Actor) | 朴率美 (Actor) 严泰雄 (Actor) | 朴埇佑 (Actor) | 朴率美 (Actor) オム・テウン (Actor) | パク・ヨンウ (Actor) | パク・ソルミ (Actor) 엄태웅 (Actor) | 박용우 (Actor) | 박솔미 (Actor)
Director: Kim Han Min Kim Han Min Kim Han Min Kim Han Min 김한민
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Release Date: 2009-11-23
Language: Korean
Subtitles: English, Korean
Country of Origin: South Korea
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
Rating: III
Publisher: Planis
Other Information: 1Disc
Package Weight: 90 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1021542894

Product Information

핸드폰 (DVD) (1디스크) (한국판)

* Screen Format : Anamorphic Widescreen 2.35:1
* Sound Mix : Dolby Digital 2.0 & 5.1 DTS

* Director : 김한민

잃어버린 순간, 표적이 된다!
연예계 밑바닥부터 시작해 오직 성공만을 향해 달려 온 매니저 승민(엄태웅). 매일 밤 끊이지 않는 술자리 접대 때문에 사채업자에게 가족의 신변마저 위협당하고 있는 승민에게 여배우 진아(이세나)는 마지막 희망이자 전부다. 그런 승민에게 진아의 억대 CF 계약을 목전에 두고 진아의 섹스동영상을 갖고 있다는 진아의 남자친구 윤호(김남길)이 협박을 해온다. 승민의 핸드폰에 문제의 동영상을 전송하고, 돈을 요구하는 윤호. 승민은 사태를 해결하기 위해 고군분투하다, 핸드폰을 실수로 잃어버리고 패닉 상태에 빠진다.

돌려받고 싶어? 어떤 대가를 치르더라도?
초조해진 승민은 핸드폰을 주운 누군가가 핸드폰에 담긴 문제의 섹스동영상을 봤다고 직감한다. 몇 차례 시도 끝에 드디어 핸드폰을 습득한 이규(박용우)와 통화를 하게 된 승민. 자신의 정체를 숨긴 채 이규는 핸드폰을 되돌려 주는 조건으로 세 가지 조건을 내건다. 첫째, 전화를 공손하게 받을 것. 둘째, 반말하지 말 것. 셋째, 자신이 지목한 누군가를 손 봐 줄 것. 자신의 인생을 송두리째 뒤바꿀 수 있는 치명적 비밀이 담긴 핸드폰을 되찾기 위해 승민은 이규의 요구대로 꼭두각시처럼 움직인다. 하지만 점점 더 걷잡을 수 없이 위험해지는 요구에 승민은 이규를 잡기 위한 목숨 건 추적을 시작한다.
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Handphone (DVD) (Single Disc) (Korea Version)"

View Professional Review:
November 3, 2009

Mobile phone related films have been pretty popular of late in both Hollywood and Asia, with the likes of Connected and Cellular manipulating the modern over-reliance on technology for tense thrills. Thankfully, Korean director Kim Han Min, previously responsible for the offbeat mystery Paradise Murdered takes a different, somewhat more interesting route, exploring how the simple loss of a phone can lead to a series of wildly escalating events that push two very different men over the edge. The result is a thriller which is not only fast moving and gripping, but which has a fascinatingly amoral edge, with no clear cut heroes and villains.

The film begins with sleazy talent manager Seung Min (Uhm Tae Woong, also in Gorever the Moment) seemingly on the edge of hitting the big time and clearing off his debts after his young actress model charge Jin A (Lee Se Na) lands a high profile commercial. Unfortunately, immediately after getting the good news, he receives a video message from one of her former boyfriends showing her in a very compromising series of positions. Although Seung Min manages to strong-arm the video back, he accidentally looses his phone with the message still on it, sending him into a panic. The phone is found by a mysterious man called Lee Gyu (Park Yong Woo, Blood Rain), who seems friendly enough, but who is soon blackmailing Seung Min into a series of violent tasks, not to mention showing an unhealthy interest in his frustrated wife (Park Sol Mi,).

Like The Chaser before it, Handphone really benefits from having an immoral protagonist, with the lines between hero and villain increasingly blurred as the plot progresses. It is clear from the start that Seung Min is, though likeable enough thanks to a charismatic performance by Uhm Tae Woong, not exactly a nice guy, having affairs and being brutally ruthless when his career requires it. Whilst Lee Gyu initially seems as if he will be a traditional heavy breathing phone-psycho, director Kim subtly and gradually pulls a clever reversal of characters, generating sympathy for him whilst revealing more disturbing truths about Seung Min. This gives the film a definite Hitchcockian feel, and as things progress and the two start behaving in an increasingly crazed and violent manner, it really is a toss up as to who the viewer is more likely to be rooting for and as to who will cross the line of no return first. The supporting cast are also quite different to the usual bunch of one note plot furniture, with Seung Min's wife having secrets of her own, and with both men having encounters with a series of amusing oddballs.

The film is thrilling and exciting throughout, with Kim showing an expert talent for gradually notching up the tension. His direction is slick without being overtly flashy, and he keeps the viewer on the edge of the seat with a number of set pieces that go far beyond the usual scenes of characters desperately searching for phone chargers or running across crowded streets that usually make up this kind of film. Things do get pretty violent in places, especially towards the end, and this helps to give the proceedings a satisfyingly visceral edge and toughness.

The film is genuinely quite unpredictable right through to the inevitable, though still surprising final confrontation, and although a couple of the later twists are somewhat hard to swallow, the film is very engaging. At the same time, it has a certain sly sense of gallows humour, and also works well as a bleak comedy of errors, with pretty much everything possible going wrong to ensure that the two men end up on a collision course. Without either Seung Min or Lee Gyu being an obvious hero figure, it is easy to laugh or groan at their never ending runs of bad decisions and mistakes. This may make things a little mean spirited in places, though the film is never nihilistic and has an oddly cheerful air, as did Kim's Paradise Murdered.

This again helps Handphone to stand out not only from other mobile phone related efforts, but from other thrillers in general, and it certainly has a winningly different feel. Fast paced and more complex than its simple premise might suggest, it veers from the usual safe route to offer exciting and challenging viewing. Kim Han Min is rapidly proving himself to be one of the more interesting and talented new Korean directors, and one of the few willing to take risks and play around with the usual genre formats.

by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.com

July 20, 2009

This professional review refers to Handphone (DVD) (First Press Edition) (Korea Version)
Mobile phone related films have been pretty popular of late in both Hollywood and Asia, with the likes of Connected and Cellular manipulating the modern over-reliance on technology for tense thrills. Thankfully, Korean director Kim Han Min, previously responsible for the offbeat mystery Paradise Murdered takes a different, somewhat more interesting route, exploring how the simple loss of a phone can lead to a series of wildly escalating events that push two very different men over the edge. The result is a thriller which is not only fast moving and gripping, but which has a fascinatingly amoral edge, with no clear cut heroes and villains.

The film begins with sleazy talent manager Seung Min (Uhm Tae Woong, also in Gorever the Moment) seemingly on the edge of hitting the big time and clearing off his debts after his young actress model charge Jin A (Lee Se Na) lands a high profile commercial. Unfortunately, immediately after getting the good news, he receives a video message from one of her former boyfriends showing her in a very compromising series of positions. Although Seung Min manages to strong-arm the video back, he accidentally looses his phone with the message still on it, sending him into a panic. The phone is found by a mysterious man called Lee Gyu (Park Yong Woo, Blood Rain), who seems friendly enough, but who is soon blackmailing Seung Min into a series of violent tasks, not to mention showing an unhealthy interest in his frustrated wife (Park Sol Mi,).

Like The Chaser before it, Handphone really benefits from having an immoral protagonist, with the lines between hero and villain increasingly blurred as the plot progresses. It is clear from the start that Seung Min is, though likeable enough thanks to a charismatic performance by Uhm Tae Woong, not exactly a nice guy, having affairs and being brutally ruthless when his career requires it. Whilst Lee Gyu initially seems as if he will be a traditional heavy breathing phone-psycho, director Kim subtly and gradually pulls a clever reversal of characters, generating sympathy for him whilst revealing more disturbing truths about Seung Min. This gives the film a definite Hitchcockian feel, and as things progress and the two start behaving in an increasingly crazed and violent manner, it really is a toss up as to who the viewer is more likely to be rooting for and as to who will cross the line of no return first. The supporting cast are also quite different to the usual bunch of one note plot furniture, with Seung Min's wife having secrets of her own, and with both men having encounters with a series of amusing oddballs.

The film is thrilling and exciting throughout, with Kim showing an expert talent for gradually notching up the tension. His direction is slick without being overtly flashy, and he keeps the viewer on the edge of the seat with a number of set pieces that go far beyond the usual scenes of characters desperately searching for phone chargers or running across crowded streets that usually make up this kind of film. Things do get pretty violent in places, especially towards the end, and this helps to give the proceedings a satisfyingly visceral edge and toughness.

The film is genuinely quite unpredictable right through to the inevitable, though still surprising final confrontation, and although a couple of the later twists are somewhat hard to swallow, the film is very engaging. At the same time, it has a certain sly sense of gallows humour, and also works well as a bleak comedy of errors, with pretty much everything possible going wrong to ensure that the two men end up on a collision course. Without either Seung Min or Lee Gyu being an obvious hero figure, it is easy to laugh or groan at their never ending runs of bad decisions and mistakes. This may make things a little mean spirited in places, though the film is never nihilistic and has an oddly cheerful air, as did Kim's Paradise Murdered.

This again helps Handphone to stand out not only from other mobile phone related efforts, but from other thrillers in general, and it certainly has a winningly different feel. Fast paced and more complex than its simple premise might suggest, it veers from the usual safe route to offer exciting and challenging viewing. Kim Han Min is rapidly proving himself to be one of the more interesting and talented new Korean directors, and one of the few willing to take risks and play around with the usual genre formats.

by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.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 "Handphone (DVD) (Single Disc) (Korea 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


June 30, 2009

This customer review refers to Handphone (DVD) (First Press Edition) (Korea Version)
Dial H for Handphone Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
Although I’m one of the few on the planet that hasn’t got a mobile phone, I’ve always wanted to say ‘Yoboseyo’ when it rang if I had one. ^O^. Still, asset or bane, TV talent manager Seung Min (TaeWoong Uhm) certainly finds his lost handphone a curse with a compromising sex video on it. Not that fate would smile kindly; he’s cheated on his wife by having a sexual liaison with an actress-model Jin-ah so both can ‘get on’ (a fatal charm of ‘professional talent elevation’ that always rightfully fails) and also pays an hit contract on a fella his wife’s having an affair with. Seung Min forgets his handphone while paying a ransom to one of Jin-ah’s former boyfriends, who sent the dodgy love tryst video to Seung Min’s phone in the first place. But a video copy still lurks on Seung Min’s lost phone. Things further escalate when disturbed store manager Yi-Gyu (Yongwoo Park) finds Seung Min’s phone and seeing this sexual misdemeanor oppresses Seung Min by blackmailing him to seek revenge on Yi-Gyu’s irksome and annoying store customers. To get his phone back Seung Min as to smash a car and beat up a man jogging, all ‘grudges’ from Yi-Gyu’s convenience store.

I don’t like elaborating what this film suggests, as I mistrust scandals and cruel half-truths. Mobile phones are a modern inventory and when lost can produce fatal circumstances in the wrong hands. But “Handphone” is certainly an excellent movie thriller with psychological and fast paced characteristics. Seung Min’s manic panic as he attempts to get his phone from Yi-Gyu also shows much black comedy absurdity and buffoonery. However the final outcome features a very nasty and violent confrontation between these two men, and a very tragic and sad it is, too. I felt sorry for the troubled wife Jeong Yeon. Who could blame her want for happiness with a good man when Seung Min was falling into greed and arrogance? She surely only wanted compassionate love. Yi-Gyu is psychotic but his daily life pressures, paying for his sick mother’s hospital operations, made him silently snap and use revenge via Seung Min as a way to kick back at society as a whole. Yi-Gyu is very wrong, but stifling circumstances cause him to press wrong buttons. Acting is brilliant and both TaeWoong Uhm and Yongwoo Park are top-drawer talents. “Handphone” is no doubt one of the best hard thrillers this year. A tense and electric ride, mixed with frenetic visuals that is sure to keep you watching till the end.
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