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Old Miss Diary The Movie (VCD) (Korea Version) VCD

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Old Miss Diary The Movie (VCD) (Korea Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Mi Ja is back! Protagonist of one of the funniest and most beloved sitcoms of recent memory, Ye Ji Won (So Cute) is back with Old Miss Diary - The Movie. The film not only brings back the same characters from the popular sitcom, but also the writers and directors, to deliver the same social satire and hilarious situations. Ye Ji Won plays Mi Ja, an old maid already in her 30s with no foreseeable marriage prospects. Her love life is a failure, her precarious job situation no better, and it seems as if lady luck runs at the sound of her name. But then she meets the young and handsome Ji Hyun Woo (Ji Hyun Woo, Over the Rainbow), and finally the pages of this Old Miss Diary become a lot more interesting.

On top of Ye Ji Won's hilarious performance, another highlight of the film are her three grandmothers, played by veterans Kim Young Ok, Kim Hye Ok, and Seo Seung Hyun with an irresistible mix of charisma, street smarts, and slapstick. Director Kim Seok Yoon has worked for years on KBS as producer, directing everything from variety shows (Happy Together) and music shows (Music Bank) to sitcoms (Cool Friends) and stand up comedy (Gag Concert). His decision to bring back all the people who made Old Miss Diary a success certainly paid off, as despite having no big name stars, the film sold close to a million tickets during its unexpectedly long run.

© 2007-2009 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. 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.

Technical Information

Product Title: Old Miss Diary The Movie (VCD) (Korea Version) Old Miss Diary The Movie (VCD) (韓國版) Old Miss Diary The Movie (韩国版) オールドミス・ダイアリー 劇場版 (VCD) 韓国版) 올드 미스 다이어리 (VCD)
Artist Name(s): Ye Ji Won | Ji Hyun Woo 藝智苑 | Ji Hyun Woo 艺智苑 | Ji Hyun Woo イェ・ジウォン | チ・ヒョヌ 예 지원 | 지현우
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Release Date: 2007-04-18
Language: Korean
Subtitles: English
Country of Origin: South Korea
Disc Format(s): VCD
Publisher: EnterOne
Package Weight: 100 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1004773640

Product Information

최미자. 그녀는 서른 두 살이란 나이에도 불구하고 푼수끼로 따지자면 완전 국가대표급이다. 실수투성이 인생에 불평과 주름만 늘어가던 어느 날, 드디어 지루한 일상에 종지부를 찍을사건이 발생한다. 그건 바로 미자가 성우로 일하는 방송국에서 기럭지도 싸가지도 지존인, 게다가 어리기까지 한 꽃미남 지피디에게 지대로 꽂혀 버린 것!

그 사실을 알게 된 미자네 가족은 이 참에 지피디를 집안에 들이겠다는 희망에 부푼다. 그러나, 미자의 푼수끼가 남다른 것이 어디 괜한 것이랴. 이 가족 역시 심상치 않다. 할머니 트리오, 홀아버지, 노총각 외삼촌까지, 짧은 기럭지에 대책없는 성격까지 꼭 닮은 이들이 모여있으니 아무도 이들을 막을 길이 없다. 바야흐로 온 가족이 미자의 연하남 후리기에 동참하면서, 개성이 심히 넘치는 이 가족의 배꼽잡는 사건들이 시작된다. 어디로 튈지 모르는 그들이 벌이는 무모한 도전, 이번에는 성공할 수 있을까?
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Old Miss Diary The Movie (VCD) (Korea Version)"

April 26, 2007

This professional review refers to Old Miss Diary The Movie (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
Old Miss Diary The Movie sees the graduation of a popular Korean sitcom to the big screen, a risky move which often sees concepts that worked well in small doses flounder when played out at feature length. Thankfully, that proves not to be the case here, mainly since the film features not only the same characters as the television series, but also the same writers and directors, all of whom help to recapture the same offbeat mixture of humour and romance which won over fans in the first place.

The plot revolves around Mi Ja (actress Ye Ji Won, recently in So Cute), a down on her luck, thirty-something woman whose life is going nowhere fast, and who seems doomed to live out her days as a lonely old maid. Things start to look up when she finally manages to land some work as a voice dubbing actress, which brings her back into contact not only with a former crush, but a possible longshot love prospect in the form of handsome young producer Ji Hyun Woo (Ji Hyun Woo, also in the television series Over the Rainbow). This makes for all manner of complications, as does the odd behaviour of her three grandmothers, who seem to be making a late bid for romance themselves.

Old Miss Diary is pretty different for a Korean romantic comedy, mainly due to the fact that instead of a dizzy youngster who looks like she has just stepped out of a cosmetics advert in the lead, it features a thirty-two-year-old woman who is unemployed, lives with her grandparents and who is introduced to viewers via depictions of some less than savoury personal habits, including the plucking of underarm hair to pass time and projectile vomiting in the street after drinking too much. Although such behaviour may not sound particularly ladylike, Mi Ja is a far more believable and human character than usually populates such films, and it is precisely the gambit of her not being a two-dimensional beauty queen which interests the viewer and makes her an appealing underdog figure who it is hard not to root for.

The film's romantic elements are handled with a surprising subtlety and realism, with the road to love being a long and rocky one, peppered with painful mishaps, most of which stem from Mi Ja's all too believable insecurities rather than comical misunderstandings. It certainly helps that beneath his mock-cool exterior Ji Hyun is quite blatantly a social misfit in his own right, and though the viewer never learns much about him beyond a few hints of his inner turmoil, the two do seem to be a good match, and their relationship develops in a convincing fashion. It goes without saying that the film takes the inevitable dive into melodrama towards the end, with some tragedy and shock revelations thrown in for good measure, though there are at least mercifully few tears or cheap tugs at the heartstrings.

Probably the film's greatest strength is in that it is consistently funny throughout, and is so without undermining the central story or degenerating into nonsense. The jokes are a good mix, from the neurotic meandering of Mi Ja's voiceover and her tendency to drift into weird visions, to a healthy amount of broad physical slapstick, most of which involves her falling over or generally making an ass of herself. There are a number of amusing film references, from the opening scene which parodies the recent Korean blockbuster Welcome to Dongmakgol to the Asian horror gags resulting from Mi Ja's work dubbing what seems to be a Ring knock-off, providing the voice for a familiar looking ghost called Sadako.

Director Kim Seok Yoon keeps the film appropriately lively with plenty of imaginative visual touches, usually related to Mi Ja's flights of fantasy and the wacky behaviour of the old folks. The proceedings move along at a pleasingly energetic pace, never dwelling too much on the more downbeat aspects of the story or pausing for unnecessary reflection. The film does betray its sitcom origins in that the plot is episodic, especially in terms of the scenes featuring the grandmothers. Though amusing and interesting in their own right, providing some surprisingly thoughtful ruminations on life and aging, these sequences are for the most part unconnected to the main narrative and at times feel rather scattershot. Still, this is by no means a bad thing, as it does make for a bit of eccentricity and variety, and helps to further differentiate the film from others of the genre.

It is this kind of quirkiness which makes Old Miss Diary a genuine pleasure to watch and which means that it is likely to be enjoyed even by viewers who are not fans of the form. With likeable characters, a strong story, and a certain level of emotional depth, if perhaps not complexity, it offers a welcome change of pace for anyone exasperated by the fact that most Korean romantic comedies seem to revolve around fresh-faced delinquents or hyperactive high school girls.

by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.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.
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