Into The Faraway Sky (DVD) (Taiwan Version) DVD Region 3
- This video product does not have English audio or subtitles.
- This product will not be shipped to Hong Kong.
YesAsia Editorial Description
Grade schooler Ryonosuke (Kamiki Ryonosuke) has just moved to a small town with his father (Miura Tomokazu), a government official overseeing the area's unpopular airport construction project. Ryonosuke finds a new friend in milk delivery boy Kohei (Sasano Yuma) who introduces him to all the local eccentrics including Hiharu (Ohgo Suzuka), a young girl who believes she can communicate with UFOs. Kohei's dad (Kohinata Fumiyo) is also pretty strange himself, a biologist who went off on an endangered species conservation crusade years ago, but suddenly returns to town. His first homecoming project: leading a protest against the airport construction and Ryonosuke's dad.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Into The Faraway Sky (DVD) (Taiwan Version) 囧男孩的異想世界 (DVD) (台灣版) 囧男孩的异想世界 (DVD) (台湾版) Into The Faraway Sky (DVD) (Taiwan Version) Into The Faraway Sky (DVD) (Taiwan Version) |
| Also known as: | Toku No Sora Ni Kieta Toku No Sora Ni Kieta Toku No Sora Ni Kieta Toku No Sora Ni Kieta Toku No Sora Ni Kieta |
| Artist Name(s): | Kamiki Ryunosuke (Actor) | Sasano Yuma (Actor) | Chang Chen (Actor) | Ito Ayumi (Actor) | Ohgo Suzuka (Actor) | Kashiwabara Takashi (Actor) | Miura Tomokazu | Suzuki Sawa (Actor) | Kohinata Fumiyo (Actor) | Tanaka Tetsushi (Actor) | Nagatsuka Keishi (Actor) 神木隆之介 (Actor) | Sasano Yuma (Actor) | 張震 (Actor) | 伊藤步 (Actor) | 大後壽壽花 (Actor) | 柏原崇 (Actor) | 三浦友和 | 鈴木砂羽 (Actor) | 小日向文世 (Actor) | 田中哲司 (Actor) | 長塚圭史 (Actor) 神木隆之介 (Actor) | Sasano Yuma (Actor) | 张震 (Actor) | 伊藤步 (Actor) | 大後寿寿花 (Actor) | 柏原崇 (Actor) | 三浦友和 | 铃木砂羽 (Actor) | 小日向文世 (Actor) | 田中哲司 (Actor) | 长冢圭史 (Actor) 神木隆之介 (Actor) | ささの友間 (Actor) | 張震(チャン・チェン) (Actor) | 伊藤歩 (Actor) | 大後寿々花 (Actor) | 柏原崇 (Actor) | 三浦友和 | 鈴木砂羽 (Actor) | 小日向文世 (Actor) | 田中哲司 (Actor) | 長塚圭史 (Actor) Kamiki Ryunosuke (Actor) | Sasano Yuma (Actor) | Chang Chen (Actor) | Ito Ayumi (Actor) | Ohgo Suzuka (Actor) | Kashiwabara Takashi (Actor) | Miura Tomokazu | Suzuki Sawa (Actor) | Kohinata Fumiyo (Actor) | Tanaka Tetsushi (Actor) | Nagatsuka Keishi (Actor) |
| Director: | Yukisada Isao 行定勳 行定勋 Yukisada Isao Yukisada Isao |
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| Release Date: | 2009-10-31 |
| Language: | Japanese |
| Subtitles: | Traditional Chinese |
| Country of Origin: | Japan |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Aspect Ratio: | 1.78 : 1 |
| Sound Information: | Dolby Digital |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it? |
| Duration: | 146 (mins) |
| Package Weight: | 120 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1021537586 |
Product Information
綠油油一望無際的田野,北海道的馬醉村,座落在沒有高樓阻隔的藍天下。
楠木亮介(神木隆之介飾)從大城市來到了馬醉村,因為父親楠木雄一郎(三浦友和飾)受令前來~推行在馬醉村修建飛機場的計畫。村民們因為反對家園遭到破壞,紛紛提出了抗議,部分居民卻在楠木雄一郎金錢的收買之下,分成對立的兩個族群。
楠木亮介意外地和同班的土田公平(笹野友間飾)成為好朋友,還偶然遇到了總是獨自站在高高的丘嶺上、做著奇怪儀式的女孩柏手緋春(大後壽壽花飾)。緋春身上有許多跟外星人溝通的道具,他們三個人對外星人的存在深信不已,而緋春最大的夢想,則是希望有天能看到綁架她爸爸的外星人,這也是唯一能讓她相信爸爸還在的希望。
在大人們對於蓋機場逐漸失控的爭吵下,外星人的夢想也漸漸地快要被意外受了傷的緋春所放棄。這時候男孩們站出來說:「既然夢想不會自己實現,那就由我們來創造它!」男孩們的最後一個夏天,為了幫助女孩實現夢想,要讓北海道的天空起飛…
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- Toku No Sora Ni Kieta (Into The Faraway Sky) (DVD) (Special Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
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Professional Review of "Into The Faraway Sky (DVD) (Taiwan Version)"
This professional review refers to Toku No Sora Ni Kieta (Into The Faraway Sky) (DVD) (Special Edition) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)
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Nowadays most children's films (especially fantasies) are based on previously published material, so it's nice to see a director like Isao Yukisada make a film like Into the Faraway Sky. Yukisada created the film from scratch, developing it over a period of seven years. Marketed as a children's fantasy, Into the Faraway Sky isn't exactly a fantasy, as it's really about three children in a small town and their friendship. In fact, it isn't really for children, either, as children wouldn't have the patience for a 145-minute film about conservation that features Eastern European influences. Nevertheless, the resulting product does have several bright spots, and parents are likely to have a better time than their children. Mostly told in flashbacks, the film follows Ryusuke (Ryunosuke Kamiki), a young boy who has moved into an unnamed small town (the film was shot on the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido) with his no-nonsense father. However, he becomes unpopular with his new schoolmates when it comes out that his father is there to replace the town with an airport. Nevertheless, Ryusuke strikes up a friendship with classmate Kohei (Yuma Sasano) and Hiharu (Suzuka Ooko), a girl who often stands on top of a hill to ask for UFOs to kidnap her. Meanwhile, the adults of the town are concerned with stopping the airport effort, but only by talking and building a barricade manned by local thugs/bullies who do little in the way of a real solution. There's also the kids' teacher Sawako (Ayumi Ito), who starts a romance of sorts with a mysterious flying man played by Chang Chen. Yes, Taiwanese actor Chang Chen continues his conquest of major Asian cinemas with a strange cameo in his first Japanese film (he also spoke Japanese in The Go Master). In addition to that bit of Pan-Asian crossover, the film's fictional town features signs in Russian, as well as a strange love for Eastern European folk music. Yukisada creates a nation-less land with eccentric characters that can only come from the imagination, and despite his reliance on sometimes-borderline adult humor (kids will likely be asking why some women lift their skirts as a way of greeting), the film works for the first 90 minutes. There may not be much going on in terms of fantasy, but the film has a lighthearted spirit that keeps it entertaining, with its favorite comedy prop being piles and piles of cow poop. However, after that 90-minute mark, melodrama again rears its ugly head. You can almost hear the exact moment when everything goes wrong, as the events leading up to the finale become too dramatic to fit the tone of a children's film. By fitting in these events, Into the Faraway Sky is stretched out to an epic 145 minutes, making it Yukisada's 4th consecutive film to run over 135 minutes (his latest, Closed Note, also runs 138 minutes, making that streak now five films long). While length does not automatically determine a film's quality, the issue here is whether a pseudo-children's fantasy film targeted at family audiences needs to run this long, especially when that length is created by inserting plot twists that clash with the overall established tone of the film. You know a film is in trouble when the audience starts missing gags with exploding cow poop. Nevertheless, Yukisada continues to prove that he's one of Japan's strongest commercial directors; the film features the helmer's usual fluid cinematography (this time by Jun Fukumoto), toning down the Shunji Iwai-influenced bleached-out handheld cinematography that he liberally borrowed for Crying Out Love, in the Center of the World. He also gets believable performances out of his young cast, with Sasano delivering the best performance as the silly Kohei. On the other hand, while Kamiki will probably grow into a handsome star, he demonstrates a lack of acting chops here, as he struggles in some of the film's more dramatic scenes. Despite being a film featuring children as protagonists, Yukisada seems to have made a film that's not exactly for children, but rather an adult film for those who want to be children again. Into the Faraway Sky is best for a teen audience, who can still remember what childhood was like and has yet to reach the pessimism of adulthood. However, it lacks a true sense of wonder as a fantasy, and a true sense of dramatic conflict as a drama (the film's flashback structure opens at the already-built airport, rendering the central conflict an exercise in futility from the start). Yukisada has obviously spent a great deal of effort to create a work that's definitely worthy of admiration. However, it also possesses a self-importance that doesn't belong in a family film. There's no rule in any book that says a family film can't say something - it just needs to say it in a more efficient manner than this. By Kevin Ma |











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