Life Track (DVD) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3
- This product will not be shipped to Hong Kong.
YesAsia Editorial Description
Comes with making of and interviews.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Life Track (DVD) (Korea Version) 軌道 (DVD) (韓國版) 轨道 (DVD) (韩国版) 軌道 (韓国版) 궤도 (DVD) (한국판) |
| Artist Name(s): | Chui Jinghu (Actor) | Jang So Yeon (Actor) 崔金浩 (Actor) | Jang So Yeon (Actor) 崔金浩 (Actor) | Jang So Yeon (Actor) Chui Jinghu (Actor) | Jang So Yeon (Actor) 최금호 (Actor) | 장소연 (Actor) |
| Director: | Jin Guang Hao 金光浩 金光浩 Jin Guang Hao 김광호 |
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| Release Date: | 2009-06-08 |
| 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? |
| Publisher: | Indie Story |
| Other Information: | 1 Disc |
| Package Weight: | 90 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1020274943 |
Product Information
* Screen Format : 1.85:1 Anamorphic Widescreen
* Sound Mix : Dolby Digital 2.0
* Extras :
- Making Of
- 주연배우 최금호 인터뷰
- 제작진 인터뷰
* Director : 김광호
- 중국 연변 최초의 장편 독립영화!!
- 제12회 부산국제영화제 뉴커런츠상 수상작!!
- 제62회 에딘버러국제영화제
- 제37회 로테르담국제영화제
- 제10회 바르셀로나 아시안영화제
바라본다...기다린다...바라본다...기다린다...
어릴 적 사고로 두 팔을 잃은 철수는 산나물 채취로 연명하며, 홀로 고요한 나날을 보낸다. 그러던 어느 날 갑자기 벙어리 여인 향숙이 나타나 그의 집에 머물게 되고, 초라하고 보잘것 없던 외톨이 철수의 집은 그녀의 손길로 어느새 아늑한 온기가 스민다. 말이 닿지 못하고, 손이 닿을 수 없는 두 사람은 그 침묵의 공간 속에서 서로에게 교감을 느끼지만, 철수는 향숙에게 그리워진 죽은 제 어미의 그림자 때문에 혼란에 빠진다. 향숙과의 나날은 점점 사랑으로, 사랑은 자책감으로, 자책감은 자멸로 치닫고 마는데...
재중동포 김광호 감독의 인상적인 데뷔작. 육체적, 정신적 천형(天刑)을 안고 살아가는 한 남자의 이야기를 그리고 있다. 두 팔을 잃고 혼자 살아가는 철수는 벙어리 여인 향숙과 살게 되면서 아늑함을 느끼지만, 어머니에 대한 죄책감이 떠올라 괴로워한다.
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Life Track (DVD) (Korea Version)"
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Be sure to take a few film classes before watching Korean-Chinese director Jin Guang-Hao's Life Track. The film challenges multiple cinematic conventions that you might not know exist, and would even serve as a nice film class textbook. From the extended opening shot, showing an armless man rolling and lighting a cigarette with only his feet, one will realize that Jin has taken the idea of shot-reverse shot to the ultimate extreme - every single shot represents the point-of-view of a character in the scene. If the camera is staring at someone, Jin will take that someone's point-of-view for his next shot, turning the camera around to show you whose shoes you just stepped in. There are no establishing shots, no close-ups, and no fourth wall to break. There's not even that much dialogue. In a way, Life Track is the ultimate docudrama; it literally turns the camera into the characters themselves, seeing what they see through their eyes. This technique forces the audience to pay attention to every single shot just to figure out who's actually in the scene. The reason for this technique is obvious: Life Track's two protagonists – an armless man and a deaf-mute woman – have so little dialogue or notable character development that the only way the filmmakers can get us to understand their lives is to actually put us in their lives, hoping that we will somehow know the feeling of being both armless and deaf-mute within the film's running time. The story is simple and paper-thin: the armless man (Chui Jing-Hu) lives alone in a countryside cabin and goes about his life using only his two feet. His physical deformity earns strange looks from everyone he runs into, including the locals and an amorous couple who take drives into his neighborhood. One rainy night, the deaf-mute woman (Jang So-Yeon), seemingly on the run from something, arrives at the armless man's house and he kindly takes her in. The two never speak to each other – one doesn't like to talk, and one can't talk back anyway – but this unlikely couple stuck in the desolate countryside eventually find some kind of non-verbal understanding. It's no surprise that Life Track was produced by Zhang Lu, the Chinese-Korean independent filmmaker who directed Desert Dream - which is also coincidentally about two souls who can't communicate with each other and find a non-verbal understanding in a desolate environment. Like Zhang, Jin uses a gimmicky visual technique, and it communicates his intentions effectively. However, Jin milks his technique for all it's worth; some scenes run for parody-worthy length just to show how each character sees others within the same scene, giving the film a very slow, almost too patient dramatic pacing that seems to exist only for its own sake. Also, only Jang seems to have an opportunity to actually act as the deaf-mute woman, and with very little facial expression, Chui seems to have only been cast for his physical ability to use his two feet as four limbs. As expected, Jin relies heavily on visuals to tell the story. One wonders if he emphasized his visual technique during the pitching process, since one can probably imagine that his script was fairly thin. In fact, I would not be surprised if he worked without a complete script, or just drew the whole film on storyboards. He doesn't even explicitly divulge where the film takes place (the most probable location being China's Yanbian Prefecture, known for its large population of ethnic Koreans), nor does he reveal the characters' names (perfectly sensible since the two characters only have about two lines combined). Characters come and go, with some serving some kind of use to the plot, and some just showing up to add scenes to the film. An audience paying avid attention may find themselves searching for information and relevance in the film's events, and some may end up feeling cheated when they find out that they're not meant to get it. Like most art films of its kind, Life Track will likely have extremely divided reactions. Some will be the aforementioned audience - frustrated and possibly even bored by what they see but don't know. However, some will applaud the film for its strong use of visual storytelling and its somewhat kind portrayal of the physically handicapped. It's easy to see why the Korean Film Council would award the film with its overseas production grant - a praise-worthy decision, considering the film's zero chance at huge financial success. Regardless of whether one actually likes the film or not, Life Track is nevertheless an achievement in cinematic storytelling worth admiring and even studying. I even have some anticipation for what Jin will do for his follow-up. Will he make the point-of-view technique his visual niche? Or will he instead try to develop an entire film with just characters and exposition, and nearly no visual technique? By Kevin Ma |











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