Initial D (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
- This product cannot be cancelled or returned after the order has been placed unless the product is defective (see details).
- This product will not be shipped to Hong Kong.
YesAsia Editorial Description
Taiwanese pop icon Jay Chou makes his acting debut as Takumi Fuijiwara, a high-school kid who delivers tofu every morning for his father Bunta (Anthony Wong). During his daily delivery, Takumi unknowingly sharpens up his racing skills by speeding through notorious racing spot Mt. Akina, where some of Japan's greatest street racers venture for glory. After Takumi accidentally bests Night Kids leader Takeshi Nakazato (Shawn Yue) on Akina's downhill, he begins to attract the attention of other street racers. But Takumi is more than just another wannabe racer. Years of delivering tofu in his father's Toyota AE86 Trueno have made him an incredibly skilled driver, and not even Takumi really knows just how good he is! With breathtaking car-racing scenes, a hip soundtrack, and an all-star cast, Initial D is the Hong Kong Cinema blockbuster fans have been waiting for!
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Initial D (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Japan Version) 頭文字D (DVD) (期間限定生產) (日本版) 头文字D (DVD) (期间限定生产) (日本版) 頭文字<イニシャル>D <今だけ!1500円(税込)> THE MOVIE(期間限定生産) Initial D (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Japan Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Suzuki Anne 鈴木杏 铃木杏 鈴木杏 | アンソニー・ウ ォン Suzuki Anne |
| Manage My Personalized Product Alerts | |
| Release Date: | 2009-12-02 |
| Publisher Product Code: | AVBF-29504 |
| Language: | Original Soundtrack |
| Subtitles: | Japanese |
| Country of Origin: | Hong Kong |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it? |
| Publisher: | avex trax |
| Other Information: | DVD |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1021312496 |
Product Information
公道バトルをテーマにした同名人気コミックを、アジアン・スターたちを起用してついに実写映画化! 家業である豆腐屋の配達を手伝ううちに、知らぬ間に高度なドライビング・テクニックを身につけた高校生・藤原拓海。幼なじみの茂木なつきとの交際を始めたばかりの彼の前に、スピードの魔力にとりつかれた峠のスペシャリストたちが次々と現れる。拓海は愛車ハチロク(トヨタ/AE86/トレノ)と、父親・文太から受け継いだ天性の才を武器に、"赤城レッドサンズ"の高橋涼介や"妙義山ナイトキッズ"の中里毅からの挑戦に、果敢に立ち向かっていくのだが…。
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other Versions of "Initial D (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Japan Version)"
-
- Version
- Product Title
- Our Price
- Availability
-
US Version
- Initial D (Blu-ray) (English Dubbed) (US Version) Blu-ray Region A, B
- US$17.99
- Usually ships within 1 to 2 days
- Initial D (English Dubbed) (US Version) DVD Region 1
- US$15.49
- Usually ships within 1 to 2 days
- Initial D (Deluxe Limited Edition) (US Version) DVD Region 1
- US$53.99
- Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
- Initial D (Eng Dub) (UMD Video For PSP) (US Version) UMD, DVD Region 1, PSP
- US$25.99
- Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
- Initial D (Plus Poster Deluxe Limited Edition) (US Version) DVD Region 1
- US$82.99
- Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
- Initial D (US Version) VCD
- Out of Print
- Initial D (US Version) + Movie Soundtrack DVD Region 1
- Out of Print
Search Keywords
YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Initial D (DVD) (Limited Edition) (Japan Version)"
This professional review refers to Initial D
|
Surprisingly straightforward and a little underwhelming considering the prodigious advance buzz that preceded it, Initial D is acceptable fare, which may really be all it had the potential to be. A thoroughly commercial enterprise from the word "Go," Initial D stars untrained Taiwanese pop star Jay Chou, who gets able assist from Hong Kong cinema king Anthony Wong and a cast that will be familiar to Hong Kong cinephiles. The film has an impressive pedigree, being directed by the duo of Andrew Lau and Alan Mak, and written by Felix Chong, the trio having worked together previously on the mega hit Infernal Affairs trilogy. Based on the Japanese manga by Shuichi Shigeno, Initial D follows the (literally) downhill adventures of tofu delivery teen Takumi (Chou), who spends his days in a daze about the flirty Natsuki (Anne Suzuki, Returner), his afternoons working at the gas station of best bud Itsuki (Chapman To), and his nights delivering tofu for his hard drinking (and narcoleptic, one presumes) dad Bunta (Anthony Wong). After Takumi zips past a drift racer (Shawn Yue, Jiang Hu) on a curvaceous hill one night, he becomes known as the racer god of that particular hill. His secret identity blown, Takumi becomes the target of challengers, including Edison Chen and, later, Jordan Chan. At over 100 minutes, Initial D is an easy and brisk sit-through that is mostly entertaining, if ultimately vacant. The film's races are entirely set along the hillside that Takumi traverses on a regular basis, and as a result, once you see Takumi defeat an opponent along the hills for the first time, you've basically seen them all. Different opponents, same hero, and same track. There are new obstacles with each new race, of course, but they're nothing a quick and well-placed musical montage couldn't skip over in a few minutes. To offset the repetitive nature of the races, the script delves into the more cerebral, theoretical side of racing -- that is, if you were interested in such things. Of course my underwhelmed reaction to the film's racing may be due to a general indifference on my part to racing movies and racing in general, so I'll take it at face value that more racing-inclined viewers will get more out of the film's downhill zooms and vrooms. The film certainly has a lot of vehicular action to keep viewers distracted, and directors Lau and Mak use enough visual tricks (a ton of freeze frames, wipes, and gimmicky edits) to keep even the casual audience member like myself from becoming bored. In-between the film's many downhill races, the script busies itself with the idyllic romance of Takumi and Natsuki. The romance is standard stuff, with Nasuki acting a bit more flirtatious than one is used to seeing in a Japanese film. Suzuki does fine, as does Chou in his first starring turn, although it should be said that the script really doesn't require all that much of either young actor. Suzuki in particular has little to do, and the script's insistence on giving her character a dark secret comes across as superfluous. Do we really care? I didn't. As the star, Chou doesn't carry the film, which isn't a knock on the young man, because the film is crafted in such a way that it smartly doesn't require him to. To give him credit, Chou plays the unflappable racer convincingly, and the film's best moments involve Takumi nonchalantly racing downhill, treating the races as another night delivering tofu as fast as he can, or risk another beating from good 'ol dad, who was himself a former racing king. The script provides a clever background for Takumi's superior driving skills, most of it funny exposition courtesy of Anthony Wong, who seems to be literally sleepwalking through the film. Ultimately, Initial D is serviceable PG entertainment for the masses -- the younger, the better. No one dies, there are no serious injuries in any of the races, and the film, like its leading man, was primed and aimed squarely at the squirming little girls and the young guys who like racing movies. The lack of a true villain in the film is not altogether a bad thing, as the presence of one would only muddle up the film's squeaky-clean image. The visuals are interesting and the soundtrack is filled with appropriate tracks, most of them in English, surprisingly, with some Chinese songs toward the end. For Hong Kong cinema, Initial D doesn't represent any major improvement over, say, the last 200 films starring the Twins, but for such a manufactured product, it's probably a lot better than it should have been. Movie Grade: 3 out of 5 stars By Nix - BeyondHollywood.com |
This professional review refers to Initial D (DTS Version) (Hong Kong Version)
|
In the opening minutes of Initial D, we watch as a street legal sports car "drifts" down a narrow mountain road - the driver accelerating into the tight corners, then gliding around the glasslike hairpin bends. All shot under moonlight, this short sequence captures the sublime and surreal beauty of pure auto power. Initial D was originally slated for Tsui Hark to direct, but early in the production he left the project and was replaced by Infernal Affairs directing duo Andrew Lau (A Man Called Hero) and Alan Mak (A War Named Desire). Good choices, as both know their way around fantasy-action flicks, especially Lau with The Storm Riders foremost on his CV. Filmed on location in Japan, it's slightly off-putting to see a cast of Hong Kong actors taking Japanese roles with everyone speaking Cantonese. Taiwanese pop superstar Jay Chou makes his silver screen debut in the lead role of Takumi, the Mt. Akina racing god: a title that promises more than this limited actor can provide. But the reality of manga to film roles is that the audience doesn't expect much more than a live-action comic book performance. In contrast, Chapman To (Golden Chicken) ridiculously overacts as the wannabe street king Itsuki. It's Japanese starlet Anne Suzuki who gives the movie's best performance as the likeable and vulnerable Natsuki. There's a clever generational twist with the film's two father figures played by veteran HK actors Anthony Wong and Kenny Bee. The former is at times hilarious as the drunken, leering, tofu making, Bunta, while Kenny Bee is believable as the hard working owner of the Mount Akina servo. Jordan Chan is along for the ride, literally, as a professional street car racer who suffers a severe case of gravel rash and wounded pride. Shawn Yu and Edison Chen receive a high billing but it's all PR puff, as both have little screen time as competing drivers. The visceral highlight of Initial D is flagged early on and is well worth waiting for. The King of the Mountain duel is an absolute eye-popper and worth the ticket price on its own. Just as director Lau did with his previous auto epic, The Legend of Speed, Initial D raises the bar internationally on CGI action-fantasy sequences. You can bet Jerry Bruckheimer's CGI Hollywood will be putting this fantastic passage of film under the microscope in the very near future. Some will be surprised, maybe even annoyed, with the abrupt ending - it's certainly not subtle - but all it really does is usher in the probable sequel. Andrew Lau seems to have the Midas touch when it comes to Hong Kong filmmaking, from The Storm Riders through Infernal Affairs to Initial D - may his cinematic "driftings" continue to prosper. All power to him! 8.5 Hairpin turns out of 10 Reviewed by John Snadden - heroic-cinema.com |




Bookmark & Share