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Love Exposure (2007) (Blu-ray) (Taiwan Version) Blu-ray Region A

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YesAsia Editorial Description

These days, women want it all: good job, hot romance, and incredible sex. Directed by Lee Eon Hee (...ing), trendy and provocative new film Love Exposure explores the very roots of female psychology and women's definition of love and marriage in the 21st century. Lee Mi Yeon (Indian Summer, Typhoon) strips away her usual whispery image and takes on a bold sexy role in what is considered to be a trademark chick-lit film, targeting female viewers in their 20s and 30s. Also starring Lee Tae Ran (Famous Chil Princess) in her silver screen debut, Love Exposure underwent four cycles of censorship review for its sexual content. Taking hold of the baton from predecessors like Singles (2003) and Rules of Dating (2005), Love Exposure peeks into the minds of today's modern women, offering plenty of tongue-in-cheek humor, raunchy dialogue, and eye-opening scenes.

Jung Wan (Lee Mi Yeon) is a 32-year-old fledging photographer who has no desire to get married. When it comes to romance, she holds no illusions nor fairytale fantasies. But lately, she notices that her skin is beginning to look rather dry and dull, and her body stricken with minor aches here and there. She concludes that what she needs is a man, or rather sex to revitalize her aging body. Then there is Hee Soo (Lee Tae Ran), her childhood friend who shocked everyone when she married a homely, pot-bellied man. An attractive housewife with plenty of dating experience under her belt, Hee Soo sees her husband as a security blanket and a lifetime ticket to free spending and no worries. But all hell breaks loose when Jung Won finally meets her Prince Charming and Hee Soo realizes her only insurance in life is about to expire. Love and marriage were never meant to be this complicated - or are they?

© 2011-2012 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: Love Exposure (2007) (Blu-ray) (Taiwan Version) 慾望女郎 (Blu-ray) (台灣版) 欲望女郎 (Blu-ray) (台湾版) Love Exposure (2007) (Blu-ray) (Taiwan Version) 어깨 너머의 연인
Artist Name(s): Lee Mi Yeon | Lee Tae Ran 李美妍 | 李泰蘭 李美妍 | 李泰兰 イ・ミヨン | Lee Tae Ran 이 미연 | 이 태란
Director: Lee Eon Hee Lee Eon Hee Lee Eon Hee イ・オニ 이언희
Blu-ray Region Code: A - Americas (North, Central and South except French Guiana), Korea, Japan, South East Asia (including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan) What is it?
Release Date: 2011-01-20
Language: Korean
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese
Country of Origin: South Korea
Picture Format: [HD] High Definition What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 2.35 : 1
Sound Information: DTS-HD Master Audio, Dolby Digital 5.1
Disc Format(s): Blu-ray
Screen Resolution: 1080p (1920 x 1080 progressive scan)
Video Codecs: AVC (MPEG-4 Part 10)
Duration: 100 (mins)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1023920334

Product Information

導 演:李言熙【貓咪少女】
演 員:李美妍【明成皇后】【中毒】
李泰蘭【好想談戀愛】【順風婦產科】

韓國版《慾望城市》,日本浪漫女作家唯川惠獲直木賞的小說改編,《貓咪少女》編劇李言熙執導。
搶愛情,還是拚事業?這個亙古不解的習題,是女人始終難以理出頭緒的大哉問,也是男人一輩子也不能理解關於女人的赤裸心事。
正婉(李美妍飾)和熙秀(李泰蘭飾)是老朋友,儘管她們默契十足,但個性卻是南轅北徹,正婉帶點兒男孩子氣,常作中性帥氣打扮,與熙秀名牌不離手的貴婦形象截然不同。

兩人的愛情觀也有所差異,正婉除了攝影師的工作外,相當享受戀愛的感覺,與不同的男人約會,嘗試與好男人、壞男人交往,同一個工作室裡的不倫戀情更讓她沉溺於慾望的刺激中,她始終篤定地相信事業重於一切,愛情是場成人遊戲;相反地,熙秀遇到生命中的白馬王子,帶給她安全感的丈夫,讓她放棄工作,以當個名媛淑女為樂。

當正婉與工作室的有婦之夫陷入熱戀,熙秀也正面臨老公外遇的終極考驗,熙秀不能原諒與別人偷情的正婉,正婉也不能理解熙秀態度的突然轉變…。愛情的路反覆顛簸,直到正婉驚覺遊戲人間的愛情觀讓她傷痕累累,熙秀漸漸發現所謂的婚姻並非完全是穩定踏實,兩個好友才終於又走在一塊,互相安慰,替對方加油打氣。

兩位風格截然不同的女性恰好暗示現代女性對生活的理解,女人,究竟是要走進婚姻當個「勝犬」,還是輕鬆自在做自已的「敗犬」呢?愛情,會是永遠華麗的鑽石嗎?
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Love Exposure (2007) (Blu-ray) (Taiwan Version)"

April 7, 2008

This professional review refers to Love Exposure (2007) (DVD) (Korea Version)
A rather serious examination of infidelity and modern relationships is given the slick urban romance treatment in Love Exposure, the latest from …ing director E. Oni. In a rare occurrence, the film is led by an all-female creative team, adding credibility to the process. On the other hand, it also risks being a film made strictly for the female audience because of a view on men that may be analyzed in gender film theory as the "female gaze."

To explain, classical film theory asserts that all films are made from the point of view of men, or the "male gaze." As a result, female characters are often archetypes rather than characters, and are used as objects to serve some kind of purpose in the film. The reverse happens in Love Exposure, where the male characters are tradi archetypes. For example, Hee-Soo (Lee Tae-Ran) is married to a well off but not-very-attractive husband who kisses the ground his wife walks on, while Jung-Wan (Lee Mi-Yeon) is involved with a handsome but married colleague. There's also Marco (using his own name here), the kind and handsome Korean-Italian exchange student/bartender who moonlights as a model. In other words, there is not one multi-dimensional male character in the film. On the other hand, since the film revolves around Hee-Soo and Jung-Wan's friendship, one may argue that there's no such demand for multi-dimensional male characters.

In fact, the central friendship is the only truly developed section of the film, and also creates the film's only credible conflict. Hee-Soo's marriage stalls when her husband has a clumsy affair with a young co-worker, while Jung-Wan continues her affair with a married man in an on-and-off fashion. However, that conflict only comes into play in one scene with little effect on neither the characters nor the plot. The result seems like a conflict for the sake of a conflict to make the film dramatically interesting. Nevertheless, the two Lee's have enough chemistry to make convincing enough best friends that their scenes together are among the best in the film, despite a vibe that seems obviously derived from a certain female-centered TV show about sex in a city.

Meanwhile, the screenplay seems to sputter when it goes off on its individual tangents, as very little happens in the way of plot. Hee-Soo's arc, in which she is forced to work after years of being spoiled as a rich housewife, is the more interesting plot and would make a compelling observation in contemporary upper middle-class females as its own feature film. On the other hand, so little happens in Jung-Wan's story that writers Ko Yun-Hee and Kim Eun-Hee seem to feel the need to integrate Marco into the third act in order to bring it to some kind of conclusion. In fact, Love Exposure seems to be not very sure about what conclusion it wants to make, as it ends on individual voiceovers from the two characters explaining what they respectively learned from their own plots. Oni spreads a fairly broad canvas in her observation of modern relationships, but she doesn't sufficiently express the conclusions she wants to make. In other words, it's two thesis statements without enough evidence to back them up.

It's too easy to simply dismiss Love Exposure as a Korean Sex and the City wannabe. It's a thematically serious female-oriented film (or a so-called "chick flick") made by an all-female team, an extremely rare effort in a male-dominated industry. However, it brings all-too-familiar themes at a time when slick urban romances flood the market. In Love Exposure's case, it's a female fantasy that cares to offer very little incentive for its male audience. While what's on the screen is effective and even enjoyable at points, Love Exposure's biggest crime is neither in quality nor its intended audience, but in timing. While Korea needs more female filmmakers, it doesn't need more sobering and slick urban-set films about adultery.

By Kevin Ma

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 "Love Exposure (2007) (Blu-ray) (Taiwan Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10 (2)

numinair
See all my reviews


March 3, 2008

This customer review refers to Love Exposure (2007) (DVD) (Korea Version)
2 people found the following helpful

A Focus on Affairs Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
"Love Exposure" is quite a decently focused and angled movie (arf), concerning the parallel, although quite differently perceived plights of two women in their 30s, and of their extra marital relations with younger men. Single woman fashion photographer Jung Wan performed by Mi Yeon Lee is having an affair with a younger married guy, and her close friend and confident Hee Soo, played by Tae Ran Lee, is married, but funnily enough also dates (and wants to date) younger men. In fact, both these women on the prowl clash drinking glasses together in celebratory agreement on such affairs (although they both having different attitudes and outlooks). But men situations and girly chumminess get severely tested, complicated and difficult when Hee Soo finds that her own docile husband is also having a fling with a younger girl he works with, too, causing Hee Soo to have a hypocritical fire and brimstone storm session with her husband about it. Problems also begin to occur with close friend Jung Wan, too, when Hee Soo begins to feel ever phased about such relationships when the shoe is on the other foot. So begins a set of frictions between the two women about their mutual ideas of 'on the side' relationships.

From the word go in this movie, you are thrust into a women's eye view of the extra marital affairs world, and of Jung Wan and Hee Soo's personal 'affairs'. Constantly getting together (a bit like when Cagney and Lacey spend 6 hours in the toilet together discussing) these feisty gals talk out regularly all their problems and issues relating to each others affairs, sometimes getting things off their chests by watching a porno movie, but constantly finding their 'love conquests' ever more complicated and uncertain at each turn. Certainly this is more a woman's movie than a fellas (men in this are almost delegated to the dog house, considering Hee Soo's poor hubby), and the focus regarding on the womens friendship, is pretty much a female double act all the way through. Jung Wan and Hee Soo also blow hot and cold with each other when their personal relationship problems emerge, making the (almost) mutually inseparable thinking about affairs with men, become ever more jaded and brittle. For instance, as soon as Hee Soo discovers that her husband is seeing a younger girl he works with, her sisterly mantra with Jung Wan for 'younger men affairs' turns on its head, and Hee Soo begins to demand for a divorce proceeding with her husband. Also, as Jung Wan finds her married 'younger boyfriend' becoming more amenable, Hee Soo gets niggling thorn in the side mirror images by her friends affair to her own local situation - by a younger girl having a fling with her husband. So this causes resentment from Hee Soo's perspective of Jung Wan's own relationship. 'Fireworks' then get let off, metaphorically speaking, as each of these women's preferences for emotionless relationships mix, fizzle, burst and cause all manner of clashing negative energy to bounce off each other and their solid blueprint of extra martial affairs, making them look like tired and tattered old artifacts. (The 'blueprints', not the women of course).

No doubt in this film though, you have two likable and fun filled women, who at heart are well meaning people, but are also quite self driven and overly self focused, exercising their utmost needs to obtain the relationships they require.....until these trysts come crashing to the ground when they nose dive.

This film finalizes with a (somewhat) positive conclusion, though, where the two female protagonists both acknowledge, in sorts, their shortcomings and moving on into the future. There is also a touching scene where Jung Wan goes with her bar server and model Marcus to his mother's grave on the anniversary of her death, and when Marcus breaks down, after having his photo took beside his mother's picture by Jung Wan, she then cradles him in her arms as he sobs - which puts a bit more optimistic and sensitive side concerning these two women, and that its not all just sexual fun on the side here. This film is directed by Eon Hee Lee, and sensitive qualities are added in this mildly caustic, but charming movie.

Still, this movie is lightly farcical and nothing to take too much to heart or (God forbid) too seriously. And its really well acted by the two top quality actresses here, in Mi Yeon Lee and Tae Ran Lee. Although this film chums up with past Korean extra marital films like "A Day for an Affair", "Cheaters" and "Love Now", this is a bit more focused on the female side of things. It was great to see Mi Yeon back in a movie again, too, as I haven't seen her in a film for a while. I first came across her in the film "Addicted" some years ago with Byung Heon Lee (which even got a UK release) and also the quite sad film "Pisces" and the court drama "Indian Summer", and have always liked her and her good acting. I like her in this, too. Certainly she's a lot different here, to her more sombre roles she has played.

Worth seeing if you like these movies.One additional note is this is credited as an 18 movie, although there isn't really anything here to warrant that age rating. The only real exposure in this film is more related to Jung Wan's photographic camera work. Recommended.
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)
trigun
See all my reviews


March 2, 2008

This customer review refers to Love Exposure (2007) (DVD) (Korea Version)
very good film Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
This really is a pretty damn good movie and shows how people tend to stick to what they know. The movie is about two best friends who stick by eachother throughout their relationship trials and tribulations. I enjoyed it and its worth the watch.
Did you find this review helpful? Yes (Report This)

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