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The First 7th Night (DVD) (US Version) DVD Region All

Julian Cheung (Actor) | Gordon Lam (Actor) | Michelle Yip (Actor) | Fung Hak On (Actor)
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Customer Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10 (1)
All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9 out of 10 (2)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Director Herman Yau continues his streak of unheralded Hong Kong films with the horror-thriller The First 7th Night. Flying well under the radar at Hong Kong cinemas, the Category III-rated film only received limited theatrical play but was well received by local Hong Kong critics. Yau's cast reads like a who's who of under-appreciated Hong Kong actors, starting with Gordon Lam (Mad Detective) and including Julian Cheung (Heavenly Mission), Michelle Ye (Moonlight in Tokyo), Eddie Cheung (Throwdown) and Tony Ho (The Longest Summer). Possessing solid acting, an unexpected story, some tense scenes and even some surprising emotions, The First 7th Night easily qualifies as one of the year's most underrated Hong Kong films.

A cab driver nicknamed "Map King" (Gordon Lam) leads a lonely existence, living out of the trunk of his cab and shunning connection with anyone. One evening, he's asked to lead a truck driver named Pony (Julian Cheung) to the remote Moon and Sun Village – a place that only Map King knows how to get to. Map King is hesitant at first, but changes his mind when he's paid a sizable tip. The drive is a long one, so Map King tells Pony a ghost story, about a fire that consumed a now-derelict inn at the Moon and Sun Village. The owner was a widow (Michelle Ye), who received some armed bandits as her guests on the "First 7th Night" – exactly seven days after the passing of her husband. Unaffected by Map King's chilling tale, Pony reveals his own ghost story, and it's curiously about the same inn, the same widow and the very same night...

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Technical Information

Product Title: The First 7th Night (DVD) (US Version) 頭七 (DVD) (美國版) 头七 (DVD) (美国版) 頭七 (US版) The First 7th Night (DVD) (US Version)
Also known as: 1st 7 Day 1st 7 Day 1st 7 Day 1st 7 Day 1st 7 Day
Artist Name(s): Julian Cheung (Actor) | Gordon Lam (Actor) | Michelle Yip (Actor) | Fung Hak On (Actor) | Tony Ho (Actor) | Eddie Cheung (Actor) 張智霖 (Actor) | 林家棟 (Actor) | 葉 璇 (Actor) | 馮克安 (Actor) | 何華超 (Actor) | 張兆輝 (Actor) 张智霖 (Actor) | 林家栋 (Actor) | 叶璇 (Actor) | 冯克安 (Actor) | 何华超 (Actor) | 张兆辉 (Actor) 張智霖(チョン・チーラム) (Actor) | 林家棟(ラム・カートン) (Actor) | 葉璇 (ミッシェル・イップ) (Actor) | 馮克安 (フォン・ハクオン) (Actor) | 何華超(トニー・ホー) (Actor) | 張兆輝(チョン・シウファイ) (Actor) Julian Cheung (Actor) | Gordon Lam (Actor) | Michelle Yip (Actor) | Fung Hak On (Actor) | Tony Ho (Actor) | Eddie Cheung (Actor)
Director: Herman Yau 邱禮濤 邱礼涛 邱禮濤(ハーマン・ヤウ) Yau Lai To
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Release Date: 2009-07-10
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 1.78 : 1
Widescreen Anamorphic: Yes
Close Caption: Yes
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 5.1
Disc Format(s): DVD-5, DVD
Region Code: All Region What is it?
Rating: IIB
Duration: 92 (mins)
Publisher: Tai Seng Video (US)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1020418112

Product Information

Director: Yau Lai To

A helpless Taxi driver, A mysterious delivery boy, A 30 years abandoned motel, a touching past, all stitches up to form a strange tale.

One day, a strange passenger “Xiao Ma” hires a taxi driver “Map King”, paying him a huge sum of money to fetch him to an abandoned old motel “Chun Lei motel”. This motel was mysteriously burnt 30 years ago, and was abandoned since. Nobody knows about its existence and nobody talks about it. To Xiao Ma’s surprise, the taxi driver Map King actually knows how to get to the motel.

Ah Fang, being the only female character in this story, is the owner of the Chun Lei motel. She started off her peaceful life with her only son until the day where “The 4 Thieves” visits her motel, on the seventh day after her husband’s death.. Mysteriously the motel was on fire right after the meeting and everyone had gone missing after the fire incident, and the motel was abandoned for 30 years. What actually happened to the motel? What’s the reason behind the fire? What strange things happened on and after the seventh day of Ah Fang’s Husband’s death?...
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 "The First 7th Night (DVD) (US Version)"

July 13, 2009

At first glance, The First 7th Night looks like a horror movie, but the film surprises, becoming both less and more than one would expect. Director Herman Yau adds to his incredibly varied filmography with this languid suspense drama that succeeds thanks to good performances and some sly changes in tone. Gordon Lam stars as a taxi driver who goes by the nickname "Map King" because he knows how to get to any destination imaginable. One evening, he's charged with guiding a cargo truck driver to the mysterious Moon and Sun Village - a place that only he knows how to get to - and he reluctantly agrees after being promised a sizable fee.

The client is Pony (Julian Cheung), an implacable, black-jacketed individual who's cagey about his cargo but giving with his cash. They set off with a CB radio connecting the two so they can talk, but it's soon clear that more is going on than just a trip to some remote village. Besides Pony's tight-lipped attitude, Map King is more than a little jumpy. Something about the Moon and Sun Village gives him pause, and before long Pony is needling him on the subject. Map King finally offers up a ghost story set in the Moon and Sun Village's distant past, about a widow named Fong (Michelle Ye), her chubby young son, and a group of armed bandits who turn up at her inn seeking refuge after a bloody robbery.

Unfortunately for them, they've shown up on the "First 7th Night" after the passing of Fong's husband. Superstition states that the deceased will return that evening to settle affairs with their loved ones, and the event makes the bandits nervous. The most freaked out should be Keung (Eddie Cheung), who made some ill-advised advances towards Fong before he found out that her dead husband was expected – and that indiscretion could ultimately doom the four bandits. Herman Yau is able to get good performances from his actors, with the bandits (essayed also by Tony Ho, Fung Hak-On, and Xiao Hei) creating distinct characters through their casual dialogue and individual personalities. The details of Map King's story are rather light for a horror movie, but Yau milks the situation and his rural village location for the requisite tension.

However, this is only the first act in a three-act film, not including a prologue that introduces Map King and an epilogue that sheds light on yet another character. Act two takes Map King and Pony to a rest stop where they eat some food, drink some alcohol, and further discuss their lives in an oblique, borderline existential manner. Up until this point, the film still feels like a horror film, and even gets coy about it with harmless shock reveals and some over-aggressive sound cues that scream, "Oh no! A guy is at the window!" Loud sounds aside, the score from Brother Hung is atmospheric and remarkably varied in its moodiness. The score also gets sentimental when it needs to, and is a fine accompaniment to Herman Yau's low-budget, low-tension film.

The First 7th Night mixes its genres effectively. Map King's story hints at horror and Pony possesses a near-spectral countenance, but the horror portion of the story fades during the third act, which presents a different take on the story at the Moon and Sun Village. That flashback represents the first of the film's multiple twists, but it's an effectively presented one, with the actors playing the same characters in a remarkably different fashion. Yau's direction kicks it up a notch here, with the film going from minor horror to minor crime thriller, and that's not the end of the twists that Yau delivers. Some details prove predictable but others don't, and the film wraps up in a satisfying, if oddly upbeat manner that brings its details full circle. A note for extreme movie fans: the film possesses a Category III rating, but the content barely qualifies for such. Gong Tau this is not.

The final reveal may appear a bit silly to some audiences. What Yau reveals at the close of his Twilight Zone-like tale is perhaps a bit out there, but he sells it with such low-key sentimentality that it manages to affect, if not totally convince. Ultimately, The First 7th Night is a welcome update of the numerous Troublesome Night movies (of which Yau helmed six), taking a cheap genre and making it engaging in an unpretentious and unassuming manner. Unfortunately, the film is too minor to get much press ink, and its limited theatrical play in Hong Kong (piecemeal screenings at less than ten locations) will likely doom it to forgotten status. That's a shame because The First 7th Night and Herman Yau deserve more than that.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

Editor's Pick of "The First 7th Night (DVD) (US Version)"

Picked By dian
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October 30, 2009

A worthwhile little horror flick
Is there any film director working in Hong Kong nowadays who is more prolific than Herman Yau? Just in the last 12 months alone, he's got five films released theatrically: the award-winning prostitute pic True Women For Sale, horror drama The First 7th Night, Shaw studio reviver Turning Point, thriller-comedy Split Second Murders, and gangster actioner Rebellion. Despite being small low-budget quickie fare, Yau's films are often well crafted and original, but some do slip off the radar of the cinema-going public. The First 7th Night unfortunately was doomed to such undeserved oblivion, as it is actually one of the better Hong Kong horror films out there most filmgoers have never seen.

An old hand at the horror genre, Yau isn't content just making a straightforward scarefest. The film serves up some chilling scenes to live up to its billing, but there is more real substance to it. Gordon Lam plays cab driver Map King, so named because he knows places other drivers don't. He leads a lonely rootless life and the cab is where he works, eats, and sleeps. One day, he is hired by a mysterious man called Xiao Ma (a black-clad Julian Cheung) to lead the way to a remote, deserted inn called Spring Thunder Hotel, which was already burnt down some thirty years ago. Why would anyone want to go to a place like that? Who in the hell is this guy anyway, and what exactly is inside the cargo of his truck?

The suspenseful road movie setup soon gives way to a tale of terror as Map King begins to relate to Xiao Ma the legend of Spring Thunder Hotel over the long overnight drive. Once upon a time, the inn is tended by a beautiful woman named Fong (Michelle Ye), who lives with her young son. Her seemingly calm and peaceful life is threatened one fateful day when the inn is visited by a quartet of armed robbers on the run. Tension rises. One of these fugitives (Eddie Cheung) lusts for Fong, leading him to commit a very big mistake that night, the 7th night after the passing of Fong's husband, when the dead is supposed to come home to see their family.

Fear is an emotion inherent in the human psyche, and it is often manifested in stories people tell, because by coding it in narrative form, the storyteller (and the audience, too) creates an inner sense of security. For Map King, his scary story about the Spring Thunder Hotel serves as his defense mechanism against the skeleton in his closet. This becomes apparent when the film is given a Rashomon-like twist, as Xiao Ma counters with an alternative take of the story - the same setting, the same characters, but a different outcome - and this one may hit closer to home. Fortunately, the director gives the film a satisfactory ending that allows our hero the chance to confront and exorcise his demon.
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 "The First 7th Night (DVD) (US Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10 (1)
Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 9 - 9 out of 10 (2)

Rhoda
See all my reviews


September 26, 2009

This customer review refers to The First 7th Night (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
SOMETHING DIFFERENT. Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
IT'S DIFFERENT. WHEN YOU WATCH IT, FROM THE BEGINNING EVEN UNTIL THE END YOU THOUGHT THAT THE GHOST..... IS THE DRIVER... HAHAHA. QUITE INTRIGUING.. YES THATS EXACTLY THE WORD. BUT YOU DON'T GET TO KNOW THE REAL STORY UNTIL THE VERY END. NICE MOVIE. GOOD THRILL. WATCH IT.
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Kevin Kennedy
See all my reviews


September 21, 2009

Intriguing ghostly mystery Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
"The First 7th Night" is the cinematic equivalent of sitting around a campfire with your friends and swapping ghost stories. It is fun, it is gripping, it serves up lots of plot twists and turns, and it yields a surprising and entirely satisfying ending. Featuring loads of gritty action, a haunting, and Rashomon-like multiple perspectives on the same story, director Herman Yau's latest offering delivers great entertainment and interesting insights. I recommend it highly.
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