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Blue Swallow DVD Region 3

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Blue Swallow
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Customer Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 5 - 5 out of 10 (1)
All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 6 - 6 out of 10 (2)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Take to the skies in writer/director Yoon Jong Chan's Blue Swallow, a film inspired by the life of Park Kyung Won, credited as one of Korea's first female civilian pilots! The Sorum director reunites Singles co-stars Jang Jin Young (Over the Rainbow) and Kim Joo Hyuk (When Romance Meets Destiny) in telling its fictionalized account of the life of Park Kyung Won (Jang), a woman pilot living under Japanese colonial rule who bravely puts everything on the line in order to achieve her dream of flying the friendly skies!

Born and raised in Daegu, Kyung Won believed that aviation school in Japan was her ticket out of poverty. To achieve her dream, she spends her days studying, while at night, she works tirelessly as a mechanic and taxi driver to save enough money for tuition. For five long years, Kyung Won attends aviation school, eventually graduating at the top of her class. But even as she earns her pilot's license, there's one thing she hasn't planned for - being forced to choose between her job and her love, as she falls for Han Ji Hyuk (Kim), a weather officer.

With a story so unique, several questions arise. What inspired her to choose such a dangerous occupation? What was her relationship with the Japanese, if any? And what kind of anti-Korean prejudice did she have to encounter in Japan? These questions and many more will be answered in Blue Swallow, an exhilarating tale of one woman who dared to dream! Shot in the United States, Japan, China, and Korea, the film also stars Nakamura Toru (Tokyo Raiders, Gen X Cops, 2009 Lost Memories), Yu Min (Bad Wife, All In), Han Ji Min (Revenge, Dae Jang Geum), and Kim Tae Hyun (All for Love, Spin Kick).

Michael Staudacher received the Best Music Award at the 43rd Daejong Awards for his work in Blue Swallow.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Blue Swallow Blue Swallow Blue Swallow 青燕 (韓国版) 청연
Artist Name(s): Nakamura Toru | Jang Jin Young | Kim Joo Hyuk | Han Ji Min 仲村亨 | 張真英 | 金柱赫 | 韓智敏 仲村亨 | 张真英 | 金柱赫 | 韩智敏 仲村トオル | チャン・ジニョン | キム・ジュヒョク | ハン・ジミン 나카무라 토오루 | 장 진영 | 김주혁 | 한지민
Director: Yoon Jong Chan 尹宗燦 尹宗灿 Yoon Jong Chan 윤종찬
Release Date: 2006-03-17
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?
Duration: 133 (mins)
Publisher: Bitwin (KR)
Package Weight: 100 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1004116208

Product Information

* Screen Format : Anamorphic Widescreen
* Sound Mix : Dolby 5.1
* DVD Type : DVD-9
* Extras : 뮤직비디오-이승철 <서쪽하늘>

* Director : 윤종찬

- 시대에겐 가장 놀라운 여자, 한 남자에겐 가장 아름다운 사랑, 우리나라 최초의 민간 여류 비행사 박경원의 아름다운 비상!
- <소름> <오버 더 레인보우> <국화꽃 향기> <싱글즈>의 장진영, <싱글즈> <홍반장>의 김주혁, <2009 로스트 메모리즈>의 나카무라 토오루, 드라마 <올인> <불량주부>의 유민 등 최강의 캐스팅!
- <진주만> <고질라> <인디펜던스 데이> 등을 담당한 최고의 할리우드 촬영팀, 6개월간의 CG 작업기간, 기체제작비용에만 2억원이 투입된 복엽기 재현!
- 한 여자의 일생을 사로잡은 하늘을 향한 꿈! 죽음을 넘어 시대의 어둠을 넘어 하늘조차 넘어선 사랑! 감동의 스펙타클 드라마가 펼쳐진다!
- 라이브의 황제 이승철의 감미로운 주제가 <서쪽하늘> 뮤직비디오 수록! 영화 <인디안썸머><이중간첩>으로 음악성을 인정받은 독일 영화음악가 '미하엘 슈타우다허'의 웅장한 OST!

... 새가 되고 싶었다
제비가 가득한 고향의 들판, 푸른 새의 꿈
1925년, 모두가 꿈보다 생존을 좇던 시절, 박경원(장진영)은 고향의 들판에서 하늘을 나는 커다란 새 한마리(비행기)를 목격한다. 사람들은 기계덩어리가 떨어질 거라며 두려워하지만 경원은 새처럼 날아오르고 말겠다는 당찬 꿈을 품는다. 하늘을 향한 꿈 하나만으로 혈혈단신 일본으로 건너온 경원. 학비를 위해 밤마다 택시를 몰던 중, 경원은 우연히 택시 손님으로 태운 한국인 유학생 ‘한지혁’(김주혁 분)을 만나게 된다. 지혁은 당당하고 열정에 가득찬 여자 경원에게 끌리게 되지만, 아버지의 호통으로 군에 입대하게 된다.

... 더 높이 날고 싶었다
꿈을 향해 날아오르게 해 준, 사랑이라는 날개
틈틈이 모은 돈과 노력으로 마침내 최정예 엘리트만이 입학할 수 있다는 다치가와 비행학교에 입학한 경원. 자신의 꿈을 향해 한발씩 다가가던 중, 경원은 다치가와 군 기상장교로 돌아온 지혁과 다시 만나면서 서로에 대한 특별한 감정을 확인한다. 그러나 매순간 경원에게 닥치는 위기는 순조로울 것만 같던 사랑에도 위기를 가져오고, 그럴수록 지혁은 자신의 모든 것을 희생하면서 끝까지 경원을 지켜주려고 애쓴다.

... 마침내, 세상 끝까지 날아오르다
눈이 부시도록 푸른 하늘, 모두가 불가능이라 불렀던 꿈을 향해
어려움을 딛고 비행학교 최고의 조종사로 명성을 날리게 된 경원. 그러나 비행대회의 대표자격을 내무대신이 후원하는 일본인 스타 기베(유민)에게 빼앗기고, 어렵게 출전권을 따냈던 경원은 학교의 일방적인 출전 불가 방침에 거세게 반발한다. 기베와 단독경연을 벌이며 가파른 절벽을 활강하는 경원. 시대 전체와 맞선 경원을 안타깝게 바라보는 지혁. 그러나 그들은 알지 못했다. 이 시련 이후에 더 엄청난 역경이 기다리고 있다는 것을...
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Awards

This film has won 1 award(s). All Award-Winning Asian Films

YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Blue Swallow"

June 25, 2007

Written and directed by Yoon Jong Chan, Blue Swallow is a pre-World War II era bio-pic based on the life of Park Kyung Won, a woman cited as one of the first female Korean pilots ever to fly the friendly skies. Although that accomplishment alone should make her a hero in the eyes of Koreans, Park is, in some circles, considered a traitor to her country, as she was alleged to have happily endorsed a number of pro-imperialist causes for the Japanese. Director Yoon Jong Chan tapped Jang Jin Young, the leading lady from his previous film, Sorum, to portray this famous, if not outright infamous figure from Korean history. While Jang successfully humanizes Park, shedding light on what may have influenced her pro-Japanese stance, the film's politics end up being the least problematic aspect of the finished production.

Raised in rural poverty, Park Kyung Won flees Korea and heads to Japan in pursuit of her dream of becoming a pilot. Early on, she works as a taxi driver/mechanic in order to build up enough cash to attend a prestigious Japanese flight academy. While on the job, she meets a fellow Korean named Han Ji Hyuk (Kim Joo Hyuk), who she befriends not long before he is shipped off to the military by his disapproving father. In the meantime, Kyung Won enters the academy and comes under the tutelage of a respected flight instructor (Toru Nakamura) before inching her way up to the top spot among the other pilots. There, she butts heads with Gibe Masako (Yu Min), a daring Japanese pilot who also happens to be a woman. Of course, as one might expect, the two rivals become fast friends in dramatic fashion, as Gibe transforms overnight into a trusted ally in Kyung Won's fight to earn the respect of her superiors. And soon enough, Ji Hyuk returns from the military as a weather officer and is stationed in the same base as the flight academy. After introducing her to his adoring, adopted "sister" Lee Jung Hee (Han Ji Min), Ji Hyuk and Kyong Won embark on a secret affair. But when the young couple find themselves implicated in a pro-Korean conspiracy that results in the deaths of several prominent Japanese men, their whole world comes crashing down upon them.

Blue Swallow beautifully re-imagines 1930s Japan with the use of splendid art direction and snazzy CGI-wizardry. The obviously high production values give everything in the film a glorious golden sheen, which at least from a purely visual standpoint, makes it a joy to watch. However, the computer enhanced biplane scenes are a bit embarrassing by modern standards, as they seem to resemble the now obvious fakery of similar sequences in early twentieth century Hollywood films, especially in close-up shots of Jang Jin Young that look conspicuously as if they were shot on a soundstage. This lack of attention to detail is jarring, immediately taking the viewer out of the moment.

This artificiality wouldn't matter as much if the story and the characters themselves had been more intricately drawn, but despite likeable performances from Jang and Kim, the movie moves at such a brisk pace that it's hard to get a sense of either the characters internal lives or their struggles. In fact, Kyung Won's ascendancy from mechanic to flight student to full-fledged pilot moves at such breakneck speed that the achievement of such a revolutionary progression gets glossed over. It's as if the film is more or less a summary of Park Kyung Won's career, rather than an attempt to replicate her actual lived experiences. Later in the film, the two leads are given a chance to flex their acting muscles as events turn dire, and as involving as that turn is, it's more or less too little, too late in terms of offering the viewer anything substantial by way of plot or characters. The film begins and ends with a sepia-toned frame detailing Kyung Won's childhood love of planes. The finale is supposed to be operating in full tearjerker mode, but in flashing back between memory and reality, this overly-sentimental coda comes across as manipulative and downright cheesy, especially since many of the memories were withheld from the viewer until these final scenes. As a result, the memory invoked might actually have been better placed at the film's beginning since it would give a much clear sense of why Kyung Won was so obsessed with flying in the first place. In the beginning, it would have come across as amusing rather than corny, as it is in its current position.

In order to defuse the controversy surrounding its main character, the film posits that the allegedly pro-Japanese Park was not really a traitor to her people, but instead an apolitical person forced into a severely compromised situation. Within the fictionalized context of the film itself, her decision to continue to pursue her dream in the face of adversity seems entirely justified. What's curious, however, is how the anti-Korean, anti-female aspect of the narrative comes across as somewhat muted. Both are obstacles she has to overcome and we as audience members understand that completely from our modern vantage point, but as depicted, these "negatives" seem more or less like road bumps in her path to glory. As with the issue of pacing, without a more concentrated effort to show her struggles on the part of the filmmakers, her accomplishments seem far less important than they should be.

Considering the speed in which the narrative flows and the near absence of the anti-Korean fervor that one would expect to be directed at Kyung Won, one wonders if the film was truncated considerably for theatrical release. As negative as this review sounds, there's actually a lot to like about the movie – the leads, the supporting cast (including an always cool Toru Nakamura and the charming Han Ji Min), its occasional dip into comedy, and the basic structure of the storyline. However, there's an unnecessarily lean feel to what should be an epic film, a fact that leads me to wonder if a longer, more substantial director's cut exists somewhere. As backhanded as the compliment is, there are enough good things about Blue Swallow in its current form to suggest that there might be a better film out there, perhaps one left on the cutting room floor.

By Calvin McMillin

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 "Blue Swallow"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 5 - 5 out of 10 (1)
Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 6 - 6 out of 10 (2)

Rhoda
See all my reviews


September 1, 2006

This customer review refers to Blue Swallow Limited Edition DTS
Tragic with feeling Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7 out of 10
This is a very moving film. Its so sad to see Hyuk suffer for the lady who only wants to fulfill her dream flying. It also shows history that there were many koreans at the time migrated to Japan during World War II and was considered a second class citizen. Quite sad but it is definitely a movie you should not miss.
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Tenette
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June 5, 2006

1 people found the following helpful

all she wanted to do was fly. Customer Review Rated Bad 5 - 5 out of 10
The movie "blue swallow" is a fairly good story of a woman who wanted to fly and was taught in japan. Though they didn't develope some of the characters through enough so that what they did impacted you more deeply than what you recieved. I would of liked to see more of the struggle that Park Kyung Won goes through as this would make her accomplishments more fulfilling, but towards the end you can't help but to cheer her on and hopes she will make it through to acomplish her goal. Some of the special effects in the movie seemed well, not so real and it took me out of the moment. I can't help but to agree with the professional review by Calvin McMillin .
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