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Forest Of Death (US Version) DVD Region 1

Shu Qi (Actor) | Li Rain (Actor) | Cheng Ekin (Actor) | Danny Pang (Director)
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Forest Of Death (US Version)
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All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 4 - 4 out of 10 (3)

YesAsia Editorial Description

The Pang Brothers have earned a reputation for making quality horror films, emerging as prominent directors in the Hong Kong film industry. Instead of telling a ghost story again, their latest piece, Forest of Death, unfolds an X-Files-like supernatural tale with some sci-fi elements, something new for a Pang Brothers movie. Produced by both and directed by Danny Pang alone, Forest of Death sees the internationally famous Shu Qi as a female detective investigating a case in a creepy forest. Ekin Cheng plays a botanical scientist who develops a theory about plants being able to feel and talk. The movie also stars Lawrence Chou (Happy Birthday), Rain Li (On the Edge), and veteran Lau Siu Ming (Re-Cycled) who has appeared in other Pang Brothers movies.

Creating an eerie atmosphere in a way quite different from his previous films with his brother like The Eye series and Re-Cycle, Danny Pang sets his new film in a mysterious forest where a lot of suicides occur. Detective Ha (Shu Qi) takes over a case in which Patrick (Lawrence Chou) is suspected to have murdered the Prime Minister's daughter in the forest. With no leads on the case, she enlists the assistance of scientist Steven (Ekin Cheng), who can make plants talk. Steven's TV host girlfriend May (Rain Li also joins their expedition into the forest as her audience loves sensational news. But what secrets will the forest reveal? Will all the mysteries be resolved in the end? Skilled in creating engaging ghost films, the Pang Brothers do not disappoint fans with the tension-filled Forest of Death.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Forest Of Death (US Version) Forest Of Death (US Version) Forest Of Death (US Version) Forest Of Death (US Version) Forest Of Death (US Version)
Also known as: Sum Yuen Sum Yuen Sum Yuen Sum Yuen Sum Yuen
Artist Name(s): Shu Qi (Actor) | Li Rain (Actor) | Cheng Ekin (Actor) Shu Qi (Actor) | Li Rain (Actor) | Cheng Ekin (Actor) Shu Qi (Actor) | Li Rain (Actor) | Cheng Ekin (Actor) Shu Qi (Actor) | Li Rain (Actor) | Cheng Ekin (Actor) Shu Qi (Actor) | Li Rain (Actor) | Cheng Ekin (Actor)
Director: Danny Pang Danny Pang Danny Pang Danny Pang Danny Pang
Producer: Qi Pang Brothers Qi Pang Brothers Qi Pang Brothers Qi Pang Brothers Qi Pang Brothers
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Release Date: 2009-04-14
UPC Code: 014381431421
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Color Information: Color
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 1 - USA, Canada, U.S. Territories What is it?
Rating: Not Rated
Publisher: Image Entertainment, Inc.
Package Weight: 100 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1014350811

Product Information

Director: Danny Pang

DVD Features:

Region [unknown]
NTSC
Keep Case
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.78
Letterbox
Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital 2.0 - Cantonese
Subtitles - English
Additional Release Material:
Trailers:
1. Forest Of Death Trailer
2. Diary Trailer
3. Re-Cycle Trailer

Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

Other Versions of "Forest Of Death (US Version)"

YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Forest Of Death (US Version)"

May 16, 2007

This professional review refers to Forest Of Death (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Forest of Death has plenty of potential talking points. First of all, it's got a hard-boiled starring turn by Shu Qi, who plays a dour cop fixated on a series of deaths occurring in a mysterious forest. Second, we get a wounded, emotional performance from Rain Li, whose acting is usually light, forgettable, or sometimes annoying. Third, we get yet another attempt from the Pang Brothers to move away from just telling ghost stories, and the direction they move here at least seems somewhat new for them. And lastly, we get Ekin Cheng as a guy who can talk to plants. Really. Forget all the good and bad that may come with Forest of Death - it's got Ekin Cheng as a brainy scientist who becomes the Dr. Dolittle of botany. Wow. It's like a Hong Kong Cinema Christmas present in March. Someone pinch me.

Luscious-lipped police detective Ha Chun-Chi (Shu Qi) has problems. Not only does she not take advantage of her obvious glamour, but she's always tense and unhappy, which can't be doing good things for her should-be flawless complexion. Ha's latest case involves a rape/murder that took place in a mysterious forest that's also the location of many creepy suicides. The main suspect of the rape/murder is Patrick Wong (Lawrence Chou), who looks like a young TV evangelist and is as smarmy as your average used car salesman. He also denies the act, leaving Ha with no options besides smoke, surf the net for clues, and continue to furrow her brow, which could lead to premature wrinkles. Enter maverick botanist Shum Shu-Hoi (Ekin Cheng). Shum has been experimenting with plants from the mysterious forest by hooking them up to some old medical equipment and his outdated hi-fi. Shum's girlfriend, entertainment reporter May (Rain Li), is also interested in the mysterious forest, but only as fodder for the gossip television show she works for. Shum is pissed at May because he thinks she trivializes the forest, but she doesn't care because she's a media personality, and it's her job to trivialize everything. Somehow, all these plotlines are supposed to intersect.

They do, and here's how: Shum is able to get a reaction from his plants which implies that they can actually sense human intent. Ergo, they're botanical lie detectors, and when Ha gets wind of this, she thinks she has her ticket to solving the case. She enlists Shum and his crazy experiments to test a reenactment of Patrick Wong's alleged crime. Basically, they'll all head out to the forest, Patrick will talk about his account of the crime (which involves his innocence, natch), and Shum will get the plants to talk. Will they finger Patrick as the bad guy? Or will they stay silent, making Ha and Shum look like idiots for believing that plants will talk? And why all the suicides in the forest? What's with sage park ranger Mr. Tin (Lau Siu-Ming), who dispenses cryptic advice to anyone who happens to be in earshot? And is communication with Shum the full extent of the plants' powers? What's this about ghostly figures hanging out in the woods? And can a workable film be made out of all these ludicrous details?

Forest of Death was brought to you by those ubiquitous Pang Brothers, though it's brother Danny Pang who takes directorial reins here. Pang once gave us the overdone, but sufficiently amusing Leave Me Alone, which mixed black comedy with bizarre characters and over-the-top action. Forest of Death is completely different, and goes for a super-serious plot mixing procedural investigation with X-Files-type plot twists. The mix is intriguing because it's something the Pangs haven't really done. They've done ghosts, delusions, and haunted memories, but they haven't done pseudo science-fiction supernatural mumbo-jumbo like this. Those who are tired of the usual Pang Brothers horror tropes may find something to like in Forest of Death because hey, at least it's different. The forest mystery does lend itself to a certain tension, and though the various plotlines take a while to get going, their eventual intersection at the forest reenactment scene brings everything together effectively.

That is, until the actual scene plays out, after which Forest of Death starts to collapse. First of all, the super-serious tone starts to get laughable, with moments of tension becoming inadvertently funny. The actors start to either overact (Lawrence Chou) or underact (Shu Qi and Ekin Cheng), with nobody really creating compelling characters. Both Shu and Cheng initially seem to be acting according to the film's serious tone, but once the plot details start to get more out there, their underplaying of every scene starts to feel laughable. What we eventually discover is that neither of their characters is terribly likeable of interesting; Cheng comes off as blank, while Shu is so dour that when she pulls her gun for the umpteenth time, one might end up hoping that she shoots herself instead of someone else. Rain Li is the bright spot in that she gets to act emotional and desperate, which is a far cry from her usual cinematic window dressing. However, she isn't terribly likeable either, meaning that actually sympathizing with her distress may prove difficult. That's a large problem, as the film's final act largely hinges on concern for her character's safety. If you get that far and you still don't care, then reaching the end of Forest of Death could be a chore.

That's ultimately the biggest problem: it's hard to really care about any of the characters or their situations. Only one character (Mr. Tin) is given anything resembling a backstory, and when it eventually comes out, that backstory is explained only partially, and the emotional weight it's given doesn't really register. Danny Pang handles the mysteries in Forest of Death well and amps the tension sufficiently, but since he can't get us to really care about the characters or their issues, we may end up simply hoping that the film ends sooner than it does. Answers to the mysteries are given but more questions are also raised, and it's hard to imagine anyone in the audience will be so intrigued that they'll demand even more. Once the big reveal occurs, the reaction may be, "Oh, I get it. That's kind of cool, I guess," if not the dreaded, "What a cop out!" There's the potential for Forest of Death to be seen as one of those deux ex machina films, where everything is solved in an easy contrivance, and because the Pangs can't connect the plot's leaps to the characters, it may all seem kind of cheap. Forest of Death is competently made and has interesting ideas, and is certainly better than the Pang Brothers' recent U.S. outing, The Messengers. But it's still another case of style over substance, which means for the Pang Brothers, there's ultimately nothing new here at all.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.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 "Forest Of Death (US Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 4 - 4 out of 10 (3)

Low
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May 5, 2008

This customer review refers to Forest Of Death (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Forest of boredom Customer Review Rated Bad 1 - 1 out of 10
Yawn.... one lousy movie and one of the worst I have seen. A movie that is selling because of the director's name but definitely not shinning his name for this one. Not recommended to watch at all. Unless if ShuQi had one nude scene here, then you may fast forward to that scene and watch that only.
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numinair
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November 16, 2007

This customer review refers to Forest Of Death (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
2 people found the following helpful

Shadow Aliens in the Trees Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7 out of 10
Oh, my God.....its full of trees! Not that this film is anything remotely about the condition of the Rain forests and its dwindling habitat, but a horror setting of another kind.

Although this Danny Pang film is okay, its pretty much a basic plot and stripped down stereotypical affair, that mentions a lot about the psychology of suicide, unknown phenomena and maybe 'aliens', but never elaborates on any of this to be of any real meaning. It does touch on interesting themes though, and I find the whole preceptive idea of the atmosphere of dark forests quite ironic in contrast, considering their normally accepted tranquility and sublime nature. Plenty of fog and thick dense scary atmospheres in this, though, to contradict all those flower filled glades you may have spent Sunday afternoons in - and all subtly ominous to create a mildly scary film. As well as a ghost/horror this is also a bit of a thriller, 'Nancy Drew' style, with Shu Qi's cop-on-a-mission to find out if a man is guilty or not, in connection with a girl's murder in this weired forest. (So she asks botanical scientist Ekin Cheng, and his tea boy side kick, to talk to the trees for her and her team, and ask the trees if they saw anything!) Its certainly scented with the X Files fragrance of the supernatural, too, and similarly having Shu Qi as Detective Ha here, parallels the X Files Scully type persona. Although these are immediate comparisons with X Files sci-fi, this film mainly touches the nature of passions and lost souls, but amongst this ghosts in the biological machine stuff in a forest. With the latter part, you also get a bit of a UFO ending, in a 'is there sometimes a bigger force in the universe controlling the picture of our personal lives' sort of thing. What is sometimes referred to as the Deux Ex Machina - or invisible movements in things, by a God or angel.

Although a fairly decent watch, its all watered down stuff, but it does touch elements of worth. It seems to have a religiosity of tone about it, concerning the character of Mr Tin, who always tries to warn the would be poor female victims, by carving his signs to 'turn back and think of those you will leave behind', as a sort of religious signifier of salvation to those straying into dangerous territories of the mind, or passions. It even brought, for me, the Hong Kong movie "The Room" to mind (which has absolutely nothing to do with horror or sci-fi - in the conventional sense, anyway), as likewise, the theme was also of a TV reporter (as like Rain Li's character here) losing self worth and control, by the pressures of her career and past, and who also takes drastic measures.

Worth a try. And I did love Danny's tongue in cheek of showing a Sadako type ghost appear at one point, coming into view on a TV screen - Blair Witch style - as an obvious send up! It has got some interesting things to say, too (maybe) and effectual atmosphere (although not backed up by some good significant music), some cogitating intellectual bits, but if you want some real substance in all of this you need to really look elsewhere, or maybe look between the lines of this film, to flesh out the motifs pointed out in it all. Otherwise, Mediocre City, I'm afraid.
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rain
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June 9, 2007

This customer review refers to Forest Of Death (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Forest of Death Customer Review Rated Bad 4 - 4 out of 10
I think this movie had the potential to be much better than it was. Not your typical HK horror, they made it much more subtle. It's watchable, but for horror fans, you may be disappointed, as it isn't scary at all or even have a an interesting plot.
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