One Shining Day (DVD) (Korea Version) DVD Region All
- This product will not be shipped to Hong Kong.
YesAsia Editorial Description
Directed by Kim Sung Ho, The Treasure Island follows a Japanese girl (Mori Yukie) who travels to Jeju Island in search of an old family keepsake that her grandfather left behind in Korea after the liberation. In director Kim Jong Kwan's Good-bye, a trouble-making Korean youth (Kim Dong Yong) runs an online scam in hopes of raising enough money to visit his mother in Japan. A Japanese man (Shiota Sadaharu) and a Korean woman (Lee So Yeon) meet by chance at the airport, and strike up a conversation in different languages in Min Dong Hyun's The Beautiful Strangers. Leaving history and politics behind, One Shining Day presents one day in the lives of ordinary young people, and how their experiences and identities are shaped by the relationship between Korea and Japan.
This release comes with other short films and music videos by the directors as extras.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | One Shining Day (DVD) (Korea Version) One Shining Day (DVD) (韓國版) One Shining Day (DVD) (韩国版) まぶしい一日 (韓国版) 눈부신 하루 (DVD) (한국판) |
| Artist Name(s): | Shiota Sadaharu (Actor) | Mori Yukie (Actor) | Lee So Yeon (Actor) | Seo Young Hwa (Actor) | Kim Dong Yong (Actor) | Jung Dae Hoon (Actor) Shiota Sadaharu (Actor) | 森透江 (Actor) | Lee So Yeon (Actor) | Seo Young Hwa (Actor) | Kim Dong Yong (Actor) | Jung Dae Hoon (Actor) Shiota Sadaharu (Actor) | 森透江 (Actor) | Lee So Yeon (Actor) | Seo Young Hwa (Actor) | Kim Dong Yong (Actor) | Jung Dae Hoon (Actor) 塩田貞治 (Actor) | 森透江 (Actor) | イ・ソヨン (Actor) | Seo Young Hwa (Actor) | キム・ドンヨン (Actor) | チョン・デフン (Actor) 시오타 사다하루 (Actor) | 모리 유키에 (Actor) | 이소연 (Actor) | 서영화 (Actor) | 김동영 (Actor) | 정대훈 (Actor) |
| Director: | Kim Sung Ho | Kim Jong Kwan | Min Dong Hyun Kim Sung Ho | Kim Jong Kwan | Min Dong Hyun Kim Sung Ho | Kim Jong Kwan | Min Dong Hyun キム・ソンホ | キム・ジョングァン | ミン・ドンヒョン 김성호 | 김종관 | 민동현 |
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| Release Date: | 2009-06-08 |
| Language: | Japanese, Korean |
| Subtitles: | English, Korean |
| Country of Origin: | South Korea |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | All Region What is it? |
| Publisher: | Indie Story |
| Other Information: | 1 Disc |
| Package Weight: | 90 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1020274944 |
Product Information
* Screen Format : 4:3 Letter Box
* Sound Mix : Dolby Digital 2.0
* Extras :
- 보물섬 The Treasure Island
M/V_Moon Patrol
COCORE|2007|5min 30sec|촬영․편집․제작 김성호
Still_에이코가 담은 <보물섬> 여정의 기억들
2min 50sec|촬영 서영화|편집 김성호|음악 Sagitta 2집 보물섬
엄마 찾아 삼만리 Good-Bye
단편영화_기다린다Waiting
김종관|2007|24min|Color
공항남녀 The Beautiful Strangers
M/V_공항남녀
PLASTIC PEOPLE|2006|3min 56sec|편집 민동현
M/V_오후3시
PLASTIC PEOPLE|2006|4min 4sec|연출 민동현 |제작 우하하필름|카바레 사운드
Still_음악 사거리 연가 플라스틱 피플 사진 안도 다이스케
눈부신 하루 One Shinning Day
개봉 축하공연(2006년 2월 25일, 시네코아, 아마추어 증폭기, 플라스틱 피플)
개봉 첫날 무대인사 및 관객과의 대화
* Director : 김성호, 김종관, 민동현
- 참신한 소재의 옴니버스 영화
- 한일 청춘 세대들이 들려주는 세가지 마법같은 이야기!!
제주에서의 하루 - ‘보물섬(The Treasure Island])’, 김성호 감독
“돌아와줘서 고마워” 일본인 미에는 일제 시대 젊은 시절을 한국에서 보낸 할아버지가 제주도 땅에 남겨두었다는 유품을 찾기 위해 친구 에이코와 함께 제주도로 온다. 제주도 한림의 붉은 나무 아래에 묻어 두었다는 할아버지의 보물이 무척이나 궁금한 두 소녀. 그러나 제주도에서 마주치는 다양한 한국인들로 인해 그들의 여행은 시작부터 꼬인다. 그리고 예상치 못한 비밀의 고백! 과연 두 소녀는 할아버지가 남긴 보물을 무사히 찾을 수 있을까?
도쿄에서의 하루 - ‘엄마 찾아 삼만 리(Good-bye])’, 김종관 감독.
“사요나라 서울, 사요나라 아버지…” 노트북 사기 판매로 돈을 모으는 고등학생 종환과 그의 친구 영수. 종환은 돈을 벌기 위해 일본으로 떠난 엄마를 만나러 가기 위해 여비를 모으는 중이다. 시장에서 태극기를 파는 아버지의 피곤함과 아무런 의미도 찾을 수 없는 학교 생활에 지친 종환에게 서울(집)의 의미는 아무것도 없다. 반면 단지 엄마가 있으리라는 기대에 일본이라는 나라는 종환에게 알 수 없는 이상향으로 느껴진다. 일본으로 떠나기 위해 마지막 작당을 꾸미는 종환과 영수. 날것으로 보여지는 소년의 성장통이 가슴 아프게 다가오는 영화.
서울에서의 하루 - ‘공항남녀(The Beautiful])’, 민동현 감독.
“우리 바람 보러 갈래요?” 일본의 한 관광가이드 잡지사에서 일하는 ‘이시다’는 한국 출장을 마치고 일본으로 돌아가기 위해 공항으로 향하던 중, 택시가 고장 나는 바람에 비행기를 놓칠 위기에 처한다. 급하게 공항로비를 달려가던 이시다는 공항 서점에서 일하는 한국 여성 ‘오고니’와 부딪히게 되고, 결국 간발의 차로 비행기를 놓치고 만다. 다음 날 새벽에야 비행기를 타게 된 이시다. 낯선 땅에서의 하룻밤이 불안한 그는 어쩔 수 없이 고니의 뒤만 졸졸 쫓아다니게 된다. 같은 공간에서 다른 시간을 보내는 두 남녀의 작은 로맨스!
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "One Shining Day (DVD) (Korea Version)"
|
With omnibus films currently all the rage, producers are now finding all sorts of reasons – from focusing on a city to even filmmaking pride – to string a few short films together into a two-hour feature. Korean independent film distributor IndieStory chooses to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Korean Independence with One Shining Day, a series of three short films about the relationship between Japan and Korea. Shot on DV, the three films have a low-budget charm and a depth of character that polished co-productions like Virgin Snow just can't achieve. However, each film also has imperfections and problems that commercial films can't even avoid.
The international love-fest starts off with "The Treasure Island" by Kim Sung-Ho (of the horror film Into the Mirror). Taking place entirely on Jeju Island, the short film follows Japanese girls Mie and Eiko as they arrive at the picturesque island to retrieve a "treasure" that Mie's grandfather buried there during the colonial period. However, as most fish out of water stories show, two people visiting a foreign country for the first time without being able to speak the language are bound to run into a few dangerous situations, among them con men and also some mean jocks. Kim Sung-Ho gets some mileage out of his fish out of water story, as the girls get into one troubling situation after another. Kim even serves up an intriguing twist two-thirds of the way through that changes the course of the story. However, anyone who knows what the Japanese language sounds like will have a hard time being convinced by lead actresses Yukie Mori and Seo Yeong-Hwa (known as Kiki Sugino in Japan). Even though both were born in Japan as 3rd generation Korean-Japanese, both possess Korean-accented Japanese that ranges from somewhat weak to very strong (especially in Seo's case). Even with the twist partly explaining the issue, the characters of “The Treasure Island” are unconvincing and may end up alienating a large portion of the intended audience. Even for viewers who don't speak Japanese, the two protagonists are too underdeveloped to make their actions credible. In the beginning, there doesn't seem to be much connection between Japan-Korea relations and One Shining Day's second film “Good-bye”, from writer-director Kim Jong-Kwan. The teen drama follows high school student Jong-Hwan, who goes around town scamming people by selling his laptop for dirt cheap, only to switch the package before his customers notice. The Japan-Korea connection is revealed halfway through when the audience finds out that Jong-Hwan is saving the money from his criminal doings to find his mother in Japan, and the “shining day” in question happens to be the day he flies. Before he leaves, he skips school with best friend Yong-Su and shows him the ropes of his laptop scam. “Good-bye” is the darkest film of the three, and Kim Jong-Hwan gives the film a gritty realism enhanced by the digital video and the true-to-life characters. But Kim also adheres a little too close to reality, presenting two lead characters that may be believable, but aren't particularly likeable or worth following. While central character Jong-hwan – a typical bully with a hard exterior and a soft heart – earns a bit of sympathy by the film's end, it only comes after he's spent most of the story scamming and bullying people. And Yong-Su is given so little background and characterization that he only begins to break through the “best friend” plot device by the time the story ends.
The unlikeable characters of “Good-bye” leave such a bitter taste in the audience's mouths that Min Dong-Hyun's light, somewhat-romantic comedy “The Beautiful Strangers” may induce diabetes. The simple scenario involves Japanese journalist Ishida (Sadaharu Shioda), who's trapped in Incheon Airport overnight to wait for a 4am flight back to Tokyo. Lucky for him, he happens to meet bookstore clerk Go-Ny (Lee So-Yeon) when he hurriedly bumps into her, and the two end up trapped in the airport for the rest of the night after she misses her bus back to town. Of course, neither of them speaks each other's language, and communication hilarity ensues. Min Dong-Hyun doesn't try for anything dramatically powerful in his piece, using ample and mostly-successful humor to present a very simple moment in time between his two characters. Even though the lack of character development is appropriate for the story structure, Ishida's characterization proves to be problematic. Shioda plays his romantic lead character far too broadly, making Ishida appear annoyingly flamboyant at times. Also, like in “The Treasure Island”, the Japanese actor doesn't act convincingly Japanese, causing the story to suffer a little in credibility. If nitpicking was the purpose of this review, I would also point out that there's no 4 am flight out of Incheon International Airport. But since it isn't, I'll settle for calling “The Beautiful Stranger” the best of the bunch simply because it succeeds at the little it reaches for. At one point during One Shining Day, a character asks several Koreans to stop making Koreans look bad. For a film celebrating Korean's independence, it surprisingly does quite a bit of the opposite. The Japanese characters may be poorly represented, but at least they're not generally portrayed as gangster types, con artists, bullies or very strange musicians. At least, one thing One Shining Day has going for is that it's not nationalist fodder. Negative representations of Koreans aside, the film is certainly not a bad representation of what low-budget Korean independent film has to offer. It'll have little chance of crossing into commercial success, but at least it's a step in the right direction. By Kevin Ma |
Customer Review of "One Shining Day (DVD) (Korea Version)"
See all my reviews
June 25, 2009
|
“One Shining Day” from 2005 features 3 individual films from different directors concerning the commemoration of the 60th anniversary of Korean independence, with each film blending Japanese and Korean situations. The initial film “The Treasure Island” concerns a Japanese girl who goes to Jeju Island in search of a crucial family memento, which was buried there near a red oak tree after the liberation. The girl travels with a friendly Japanese female friend but finds the trip such a solemn exercise that she pays little attention to the other girl through out their journey. At Jeju Island the girl’s are conned by a money exchanger and later ditched by a taxi driver to be left stranded in the countryside. But after finding a scooter in a ditch the girls later find the ‘treasure’ area but are accosted by a group of boys who claim the girl’s bike is there's. The second story “Good Bye” is about a lad who wishes to see his mother in Japan but needs money to do so, and so makes dodgy deals and bullies other kids to raise the cash. The third story “The Beautiful Strangers” is the most romantic. About a Korean girl working at an airport bookshop who helps a stranded and lost Japanese lad after he misses his plane home, and keeps him company. Even by difficulty understanding each other’s languages of Korean and Japanese, they both mutually share a special bond ship. The girl helps the lad with a nosebleed, he shows her his reporter’s photo manual and she shows him her personal viewing tower at the airport where both watch the night sky together; those beautiful rare moments souls can share. Its a lovely warm human story that can bring tears to your eyes by how universally sensitive it is. Some nice DVD extras, too. A short 25 minute film called “Waiting” (alas no subs though) and several MV’s. The catchy main song (heard on the menu screen) by Korean group Plastic People is lovely and they perform the song (a folksy type) live outside a film theater with the complete studio version featured on the stills MV of “The Beautiful Strangers” extras. All young Korean and Japanese actors perform beautifully and this film is a great Korean Japanese bond ship movie. Real friends are always around you, life can by much more if you travel and, really, the ‘kids are all right’ when it comes to Korean and Japanese relations. I’m sure if you watch this DVD you will really enjoy the simple and light charm and innocence of it all. Nice song too! |













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