Blood Brothers (2007) (DVD) (Taiwan Version) DVD Region 3
- This product will not be shipped to Hong Kong.
YesAsia Editorial Description
Fung (Daniel Wu) and his best friends, brothers Kang (Liu Ye) and Hu (Tony Yang), leave the countryside together to make it big in Shanghai. Things aren't so easy in the city, however, and the brothers stumble and toil until opportunity brings them to Club Paradise and ruthless mob boss Hong (Sun Honglei). While Kang embraces his newfound power in the Shanghai triad, Fung and Hu are less comfortable with the crime and violence, sending the brothers slowly but surely down opposite paths. Fung falls for Hong's woman, sassy nightclub singer Lulu (Shu Qi) who is also involved with Hong's top henchman Mark (Chang Chen). When Hong catches scent of the betrayal, he sends Kang to finish off business, leading the brothers to meet at gunpoint on a cold Shanghai night.
This edition comes with cast interview, making of, photo gallery, and theatrical trailer.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Blood Brothers (2007) (DVD) (Taiwan Version) 天堂口 (DVD) (台灣版) 天堂口 (DVD) (台湾版) 天堂口 (DVD) (台湾版) Blood Brothers (2007) (DVD) (Taiwan Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Shu Qi (Actor) | Daniel Wu (Actor) | Chang Chen (Actor) | Liu Ye | Jacqueline Li | Sun Hong Lei | Tony Yang 舒淇 (Actor) | 吳彥祖 (Actor) | 張震 (Actor) | 劉燁 | 李小璐 | 孫紅雷 | 楊祐寧 舒淇 (Actor) | 吴彦祖 (Actor) | 张震 (Actor) | 刘烨 | 李小璐 | 孙红雷 | 杨佑宁 舒淇(スー・チー) (Actor) | 呉彦祖 (ダニエル・ウー) (Actor) | 張震(チャン・チェン) (Actor) | 劉燁 (リウ・イエ) | 李小璐 (リー・シャオルー) | 孫紅雷 (スン・ホンレイ) | 楊祐寧(トニー・ヤン) 서기 (Actor) | Daniel Wu (Actor) | Chang Chen (Actor) | Liu Ye | Jacqueline Li | Sun Hong Lei | Tony Yang |
| Director: | Chen Yi Li 陳 奕利 陈 奕利 陳奕利(チェン・イーリー) Chen Yi Li |
| Producer: | John Woo 吳宇森 吴宇森 呉宇森(ジョン・ウー) 오우삼 |
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| Release Date: | 2007-11-02 |
| Language: | Mandarin |
| Subtitles: | English, Traditional Chinese |
| Country of Origin: | Hong Kong |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Aspect Ratio: | 1.78 : 1 |
| Widescreen Anamorphic: | Yes |
| Sound Information: | Dolby Digital 5.1 |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it? |
| Rating: | IIB |
| Duration: | 95 (mins) |
| Publisher: | Deltamac (Taiwan) Co. Ltd (TW) |
| Package Weight: | 120 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1005067325 |
Product Information
* Sound Mix : Dolby Digital 5.1
* Special Features:
- 演職員專訪
- 片場紀實
- 劇照集錦
- 預告特輯
導演:陳奕利
Director: Chen Yi Li
監製:吳宇森
Producer: John Woo
台港中巨星演技狂飆 吳宇森監製 最新情義力作
吳宇森 監製 陳亦利 作品
斥資千萬美金打造暴力美學動作鉅片
紙醉金迷的30年代上海灘,對於自小在鄉下長大,情同手足的窮小子們來說,上海就像是天堂,他們一直嚮往可以前往這個富裕迷人的城市,但是當願望終於實現後,卻發現暴力和黑幫早已不知不覺的滲入了彼此的生活之中,而一位絕世美女的出現,將會對這些原本情義深重的好兄弟們帶來無法想像的衝擊……自此開始,朋友依然是朋友?天堂還會是天堂嗎?
Blood Brothers is the story of three close friends, Fung, Kang, and his little brother Hu. They begin the story as poor fishermen from Zhujiajiao, a small village on the outskirts of Shanghai. They are young and trapped by unfortunate circumstances; they decide to move to Shanghai in search of whatever opportunities the big city may have in store for them.
Once in Shanghai, they are tempted by riches they once could only imagine, but they never expected to become involved with the criminal underworld. They are quickly drawn into the vicious and seductive life provided by the most infamous nightclub in Shanghai, the Paradise Club, a place where the dance stage sparkles with beautiful women such as Lulu, the resident songstress and object of every man's desire. Behind the bright lights, a stream of blood flows deep and wide as Boss Hong, owner of the Paradise Club and a powerful figure in the crime world of Shanghai, discovers that Mark, his right-hand man, is having an affair with Lulu. All the while, both his enemies and his allies are plotting to wrestle control of local gangs away from him.
As the three brothers rise to power, Fung has to make a choice between this life of crime and unrequited love, or a return to the man he once was. Hu has been struggling with his own weakness and reconcile himself to the dangers of his new life in Shanghai while Kang, blinded by a lust for power, pursues his own ambitions at any cost.
By the end, lives will be lost, though redemption may still be within reach.
Other Versions of "Blood Brothers (2007) (DVD) (Taiwan Version)"
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Hong Kong Version
- Blood Brothers (2007) (VCD) (Hong Kong Version) VCD
- US$9.99
- Usually ships within 1 to 2 days
- Blood Brothers (2007) (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3
- US$20.49
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Japan Version
- Blood Brothers (2007) (DVD) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
- US$42.75
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Awards
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Taipei Golden Horse Film Festival 2007
- Best Original Film Song Nomination
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Hong Kong Films Awards 2008
- Best Art Direction Nomination, Qiu Wei Ming
- Best Costume & Make Up Design Nomination, Tim Yip
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Blood Brothers (2007) (DVD) (Taiwan Version)"
This professional review refers to Blood Brothers (2007) (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
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Blood Brothers marks the debut of Alexi Tan, and has drawn attention not only for its all star cast but for being heralded as a reworking of John Woo's classic Bullet in the Head with the legendary action director himself acting as co-producer. Managing to score a high profile spot as the closing film of the 2007 Venice Festival, the film was one of the year's biggest Chinese blockbuster releases, and perhaps as such it is unsurprising that its main selling point has been its high production values and glamorous recreation of 1930s Shanghai. The film follows two brothers, Kang (Liu Ye, from the 2006 hit Curse of the Golden Flower) and Hu (Tony Yang, also in Ming Ming), and their best friend Fung (Daniel Wu, who recently impressed in Derek Yee's Protege), who leave the romantic and picturesque idyll of their small country town for the promise of making big money in Shanghai. Here, they soon start working for gang leader Boss Hung (played by Sun Honglei, Seven Swords) under the tutelage of top killer Mark (Chang Chen, Silk). Unfortunately, although all goes well at first, the cracks soon start to show, as Fung unwisely but inevitably starts making puppy eyes at Hung's moll, the nightclub singer Lulu (Confession of Pain star Shu Qi, seeming somewhat out of her depth with the role) and Kang becomes intoxicated with power and violence. Needless to say, the three are soon pointing guns at each other with tragedy looming large on the horizon. The main strength of Blood Brothers is without a doubt its visuals, and on this score the film is a resounding success. Impeccably stylish and hard to fault as an exercise in old Shanghai glamour, the film has a gorgeous, luxurious, glossy sheen and it is obvious that great effort has been put in to recreate the period, or at least a vision of its imagined dreamy decadence. Tan's prior experience as a photographer certainly comes in handy, as every frame is meticulously composed, though without giving an impression of excess in the manner of Zhang Yimou, and the film is easily one of the best looking from China in recent years. Interestingly, by keeping a large part of each shot in darkness, director Tan gives the production an oddly theatrical air, a feeling echoed by his use of light and shadow to emphasise the shadiness of the criminal underworld, and in these respects, Blood Brothers recalls Sam Mendes's Road to Perdition far more than anything by John Woo. Whether or not Blood Brothers is a remake of Woo's Bullet in the Head is largely irrelevant, as the plot itself is pure cliche and populated entirely by unlikeable vacuous genre stereotypes. Although the three male leads rise from being three lowly peasant boys to being top gangsters and bosses, there is nothing whatsoever in the way of character development, and none of them change significantly during the course of the drama - though this is arguably down to the fact that none of them actually have any identifiable characteristics to begin with. Whilst the protagonists in Woo's own films are undeniably drawn with broad, broad strokes, they have always had heart, something which has gone a long way to making the ensuing melodrama easier to swallow. Unfortunately, this is painfully lacking in Tan's film, and as a result it feels emotionally distant, especially since most of the eye candy cast obviously faced an uphill struggle from the very beginning thanks to some truly risible dialogue and unbelievable character motivations. Whilst not exactly pretentious, the film is incredibly overblown and self important, an impression not helped by the grandiose soundtrack which has a tendency to soar and swell at decidedly inappropriate moments. Thanks to this, the drama never quite convinces, and the viewer is nagged throughout by a suspicion that the film may in fact be some kind of spoof despite its determined poker face. Of course, this in itself is quite entertaining, though obviously not in the way intended - but since when has that mattered? In lieu of proper characters, Tan complements the visuals with plenty of bloody action and violence, and the film is surprisingly brutal in places. Whilst this is no real replacement for the human factor, it does help to keep things entertaining and exciting, if not particularly engaging. Also in its favour is the fact that it is relatively short and moves along at a brisk pace, with Tan managing to avoid too much wallowing and thankfully eschewing Woo's preponderance for slow motion and doves. At the end of the day, film is a visual medium, and Blood Brothers certainly offers a feast for the eyes, with pretty much every frame screaming "look at me". As such, whilst it is a shame that not as much effort went into providing it with substance as with style, it still manages to impress on several levels, and stands as one of the more entertaining of the recent big budget blockbusters of Chinese cinema which should be enjoyed by all viewers willing to switch off their brains for an hour and a half. by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.com |
Customer Review of "Blood Brothers (2007) (DVD) (Taiwan Version)"
See all my reviews
December 11, 2007
This customer review refers to Blood Brothers (2007) (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Memorable gangster drama
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"Blood Brothers" tells an effective, engrossing tale of the dehumanizing effects of life in Shanghai's underworld in the glamorous and decadent 1930s. Brothers Kang (Liu Ye) and Hu (Tony Yang), together with bosom friend Fung (Daniel Wu), decide to leave their small town behind to make their fortunes in Shanghai. Hu and Fung end up pulling rickshaws, while Kang waits tables in the nightclub of underworld honcho Boss Hong (Sun Honglei). Hong notes Kang's ambition, so he enlists him to steal weapons from a rival gang. Kang, Hu, and Fung undertake the theft, but it goes awry, with Fung forced to gun down several of the rival mobsters. Like it or not, the small town boys now have cast their lot with Boss Hong. The movie really gains momentum as we see Kang's rise within the gang, Fung's qualms about the blood on his hands, and Fung's growing feelings for Lulu (Shu Qi), Boss Hong's girlfriend. Liu Ye gives a magnetic performance as the ferocious embodiment of raw, ruthless ambition. Shu Qi is equally remarkable in her complex, subtle depiction of the world-weary girl torn between her dreams of stardom and her feelings for her suitors. Eventually the conflicting ambitions of the central characters generate a series of bloody shoot-outs, culminating in a final vengeful hale of gunfire that resembles nothing so much as the most violent moments of executive producer John Woo's "Hard Boiled". The film looks great, featuring lavish sets, sumptuous costuming, and atmospheric cinematography. The story will keep you glued to your seat, as you root for the better natures of Fung, Hu, and Lulu to rescue them from their dire circumstances. My only quibble with the film is first-time director Alexi Tan's heavy-handedness with the climactic moments; he needs to learn to trust his audience more. "Blood Brothers" provides a moody thriller that I recommend highly. |












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