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Open City (DVD) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2

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Open City (DVD) (Japan Version)
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All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 6 - 6 out of 10 (3)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Son Ye Jin (A Moment To Remember, April Snow) masters the art of seduction in Open City, an erotic crime thriller penned and directed by Lee Sang Ki in his first feature film. The chameleon actress is enchantingly breathtaking as the sexy, manipulative femme fatale who leads an organized pickpocket ring. The first Korean film to reveal the intricate inner workings of what is considered Korea's equivalent of the FBI, Open City also offers a riveting first-hand look at the various methods of pickpocketing that will have the audience think twice before leaving the house. Completely smitten by Son's beauty is Kim Myung Min (Return) who breathes much charisma into his complex role as a criminal investigator. As he finds himself caught in the deadly predicament of falling for his investigation's prime target, the onscreen chemistry between the two leads explodes to a new high. Also joining the cast is veteran actress Kim Hae Sook who won the Best Supporting Actress prize at the 45th Dae Jong Sang Awards for making a dramatic career turn playing an ex-convict. Tightly coiled with sexual tension throughout the film, Open City shows all the right moves in all the right places.

The leader of an international pickpocket organization, sexy siren Baek Jang Mi (Son Ye Jin) returns to Korea after blowing her cover in Japan. Keeping a low profile by running a small tattoo parlor, she soon organizes a new ring which quickly gains power across the country. Top-notch criminal investigator Jo Dae Young (Kim Myung Min) is called in to handle the massive pickpocket crime that is spreading like wildfire. Besieged by a dark family secret, Dae Young reluctantly takes on the case. A fatal attraction ignites when the detective saves Jang Mi from the hands of her rival ring members. Ensnared by her brazenly sexual advances, Dae Young is shocked when he later learns that she is his investigation's prime target. With so much riding on the outcome, he trails her right into her tattoo parlor. But once again, he finds himself gambling away his basic instincts in the name of passion.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Open City (DVD) (Japan Version) Open City (DVD) (Japan Version) Open City (DVD) (Japan Version) ファム・ファタール Open City (DVD) (Japan Version)
Artist Name(s): Son Ye Jin | Kim Myung Min | Kim Hae Suk 孫 藝珍 | 金明民 | 金海淑 孙 艺珍 | 金明民 | 金海淑 ソン・イェジン | キム・ミョンミン | キム・ヘスク 손 예진 | 김 명민 | 김해숙
Director: イ・サンギ
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Release Date: 2009-05-02
Publisher Product Code: THD-18191
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it?
Publisher: TAKI Corporation
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1014435629

Product Information

タイトル:ファム・ファタール
出演:ソン・イェジン/キム・ミョンミン/キム・ヘスク/ジム・ジホ
監督:イ・サンギ

刑事チェ・デヨンは、あるスリ事件を担当するように命じられる。捜査の過程で、ペク・チャンミという国際的なスリ組織のリーダーと出会う。彼女は美しく、そしてスリとして高い技術の持ち主だった。追うものと追われるものという立場で接していくうちに、互いに惹かれあっていく二人。しかしチャンミは、己の宿命として、裏社会へと身を投じていく…。
一匹狼の刑事と美貌の天才女スリとの許されぬ愛を描く。主演は「私の頭の中の消しゴム」のソン・イェジン。共演にキム・ミョンミン、キム・ヘスク、ジム・ジホなど。清純派のイメージが強かったソン・イェジンが、韓国裏社会に生きる魔性の女に扮する、ラブ・サスペンスである。

PG-12(12歳以下の方の鑑賞は保護者の了解が必要)
■映像特典:メイキング映像/オリジナル・トレーラー

テクニカル・インフォメーション
:カラー
画面:16:9/4:3(LB)
言語/音声:韓国語:DD(ステレオ)

その他の情報
製作年:2008
日本小売価格:¥4800

Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Open City (DVD) (Japan Version)"

May 30, 2008

This professional review refers to Open City (DVD) (DTS) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
Korean Cinema's fixation with parental relationships continues with Open City. On the surface, this aspiring erotic thriller comes with a fresh concept about a showdown between an international pickpocket ring and determined Seoul police. However, Open City is the already the third Korean film released in January 2008 that has parental relationships as a central theme. The parental relationship here involves police officer Dae Yung (Kim Myung Min), a tough guy who's good with his baton. However, he refuses to take on pickpocket cases - an avoidance that can be attributed to his mother Man Ok (Kim Hae Sook), a veteran pickpocket who abandoned her children after being sent away to jail.

Getting in between them is Jang Mi (Son Ye Jin, A Moment to Remember), the head of an international pickpocket ring who is first seen pulling off a daring heist in a crowded Japanese train station. She's so ruthless when it comes to her job that her men will slash anyone who tries to stop them. After that job, she returns to Seoul to build a new team. She tries to recruit Man Ok, her old prison buddy, to join the new team. However, she refuses, hoping to redeem herself in the eyes of her children. Meanwhile, Dae Yung is assigned to track down Jang Mi's group of pickpockets, and he gets dangerously close to Jang Mi, not knowing that she's the head of the very group of criminals that he's after.

Jang Mi owns a high-class tattoo parlor - which covers up her real day job, and gives Son the perfect chance to "show off" her tattoos. That's where the so-called “erotic” part of this "erotic thriller" comes in. Open City is touted as Son's big acting leap, playing a femme fatale who draws Dae Yung deeper into the criminal world through seduction. While Son is a beautiful actress who has proven her acting talent in more innocent roles, writer/director Lee Sang Gi gives her character too many shades of gray. Jang Mi is supposed to be a sympathetic woman - a big-time criminal with a conscience - but she fails to be neither convincing nor intriguing as a femme fatale. In fact, unlike most femme fatales, Jang Mi seems to be only seducing Dae Yung for seduction's sake, as her success or failure has little effect on the plot.

Again, part of the blame goes to the script's obsession with parental relationships. While the themes of redemption and past traumas are an effective device for building layered characters, Open City's script is eventually weighed down by its themes. As the fractured relationship between Dae Yung and Man Ok continues to develop, the central pickpocket plot gradually gets pushed to the background. In the end, the original concept gives way to family melodrama - an easy way out for the filmmakers to create an emotional connection.

The pickpocket scenes sometimes stretch credibility (slashing someone on the wrist shouldn't have the same effect as firing a gun in the air), but Lee does earn points for showing the dangers of both pickpocketing and being pickpocketed. The writer/director shows not only the potential violence of this rarely explored criminal underworld, but also the consequences on the victims. Lee takes care to show audiences the interesting techniques that pickpockets use, such as using a tiny blade to slice open pockets while someone creates a distraction. Also, Lee shows the ability to direct hard-boiled action, which can be seen in Dae Yung's introduction, an arrest scene that turns into a group brawl. Even Son Ye Jin should get some credit for stepping out of her comfort zone as a potentially menacing villain - and for changing costumes more often than an award show host. However, the film's later action gets nowhere close to matching the intensity of the opening scene, and once again, the family melodrama drags the whole film down. Ultimately, audiences are likely to leave Open City talking more about what the movie could've been rather than what the movie was. Lee brings in the right elements, but he needs to go back and study up on his film noir.

By Kevin Ma

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.

Customer Review of "Open City (DVD) (Japan Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 6 - 6 out of 10 (3)

Rhoda
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June 18, 2008

This customer review refers to Open City (DVD) (DTS) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
Good Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
Son Ye Jin is a pretty actress actually although for me she that very good in her acting. Never theless this film is a nice movie. The betrayal of trust to avenge the loss of a mother. Its a good movie over-all so think its worth watching.
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numinair
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April 21, 2008

This customer review refers to Open City (DVD) (DTS) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
4 people found the following helpful

SYJ picks a pocket or three! Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7 out of 10
Not too long ago I watched an English subbed interview video of Ye Jin mentioning her part in this film, and considering her femme fetal character of Jang Mi Baek being somewhat akin to Sharon Stone's "Basic Instinct" character, Ye Jin confessed that she didn't feel she was as pretty as Sharon and Nicole Kidman. ????. Well, I put my hand over my forehead to check that she was 'okay' in saying that, as it was certainly unfounded words. I mean, Ye Jin is one of the most loveliest women in cinema and equally as beautiful (inside and out) as Sharon and Nicole, so all I can say is " Ye Jin, sip that Soju and relax gal, you're nothing to worry about there". Likewise, Ye Jin mentioned a lot of fans could be freaked out by her more colder and sinister role here (which it certainly is!). But again - "chill out, YJ, fans will be there no matter what part is performed! - and especially if you preform more versatile and enriching parts". Some roles must be tough, surely, but the upside of acting (I'm speculating of course), is the unique way an actor can understand the many facets of real people through the colours and grey shades of life, that can be portrayed in this profession; adding to that performer's life and skill. So, in a way, its the theatrical version of the University of Life! And Ye Jin here can only benefit from this role in the long term.

Still, although its easy for me to say 'par for the course', "Open City" is quite an icy film and could be a difficult watch for some. Its certainly a nasty and brutal film, not necessarily in the ultra hard edgeness of a Park Chan Wook, but more in its empty and quite feeling less execution. Ye Jin's character Jang Mi is the proverbial ice maiden, and the overall coldness of this film, I think, is how this one will get judged. But as with most Korean movies, high quality film making, acting and editing are all evident in this crime thriller gangster movie, and having a slick if somewhat commercially orientated style - is furnished with enough thrills and spills to make this a fairly decent action movie. But the overall plot is quite basic. You get a gang of nasty pickpockets who cause trouble for Korean middle class wallets and purses, along with a rough FBI type police man getting involved with Jang Mi and having his own mother problems - due to the fact that she was also a pick pocket herself. From there on, its pretty much the same scenario. But as mentioned, I think the cold and empty feeling of the emotion in all of this, will likewise leave you a bit cold yourself. The characters leave very little for your heart to sympathies with, and you certainly don't get any cuddly characters here. Action films, although violent, do have at least some 'humanness' and reasoning about them, but the absence thorough malice in this, is too lacking in any reasoning or emotion. The gangsters themselves, albeit looking a bit goofy, are mostly violent. I mean, I realize that these are pick pocket thieves and not a bunch of afternoon tea drinking flower arrangers, but even so! Where's a little mirth? Most gangster flicks have some human element where there is at least some credence to the reason's of their circumstances, or they are a comedy type (like in "My Wife is a Gangster), that give you some light relief amongst the biff bash bong! But this band of pick pockets don't have either, and it feels contrived. No camaraderie to offer the viewer, or befitting backgrounds to who they are.

Mainly it all starts with police man, Dae Young Jo, who disliking pick pocket thieves, due to his own mother being one and jailed when he was a child, finds himself having to trail and catch a new pick pocket gang (the thorn in his side), by the pressure of his superior. Dae Young is a bitter and brittle man, due to his loathing of his mother's criminal past, and even when she is released, he remains constantly in denial and rejection of her. As far as Dae Young is concerned, his mother 'died' when she went into jail, and in his heart fools himself that he has no mother. So, ironically, with his loathing of pick pockets, ends up trailing this new gang led by Jang Mi, which brings sensitive issues and increasing bitterness to his heart.

The plot them moves on to femme fatal gangster boss Jang Mi, who hid after being sprung in a pick pocketing theft in Japan, and reforms with a new gang back in Korea. She oversees this small band of pickpocket experts in their field, and orchestrates their missions. As a boss of street thieves, Ye Jin is probably the best looking Fagin you'll ever get, and by her cold demeanor and cigarette wielding struts, sexy legs in high heels and a fashion wardrobe bigger than Seoul itself, Jang Mi strikes a icy role that is far removed from any of Ye Jin's previous outings. Here with her gang, (and not being bovverd one bit) she masquerades as a tattoo artist as a cover, but mostly targets middle class people in shopping precincts, malls, markets and steals (by proxy of her 'lovely boys') their money and valuables. Her 'lovely boy's' come in various modes : a 'distractor' that gabs the attention of a victim, an 'antenna' who gives cover and watches the back of the thief, and the 'machine' who cuts into the bags and takes the valuables or money without the victim realizing it. (These 'names' make them sound like they stepped out of a sci-fi MMORPG game..."Star Craft" or something") Trouble is, any people who do cotton on to the thefts (like a woman at the beginning who nearly loses her hand), the 'machine', due to his cold and hard killer nature, cuts and injures the victims if ever they should retaliate. So, as you can guess, these aren't your comedy and bubbly gangster types at all. On top of that, numerous other pickpocket gangs also get hot under the collar when Jang Mi appears on their turf (and its nothing to do with her legs in high heels either!), and some nasty violent street ally way stand offs occur, even with Jang Mi getting some rough stuff in the proceedings. Dae Young of course comes across and rescues her (not on a white horse, but he has a big stick to hit her rivals with) from a turf war fight and gets to know her. The rest is, well, lots more pickpocketing, Dae Young having melodramatic encounters with his mother, and a number of sexy dresses to watch Jang Mi wearing.

As mentioned, this is quite a cold film and when its gets nasty, it certainly does. But you cannot always see 'why' or 'where' this film wants to go. Ye Jin's character, too, doesn't have enough substance to give you much sympathy towards her. She shrugs and struts, pouts and smokes, puts her high heeled feet up on the table and says that 'all men are annoying', with a couldn't care less for anyone nature. Jang Mi even says "Every breath I take is a lie". (So maybe she does care?) There's only a bit of credit regarding her past, by a quick mention about Jang Mi's mother being the original gang boss, giving a somewhat credence to her criminal vocation. But there's no real depth to 'why' she becomes calculative and nasty. Only an off the peg reason. Normally, an aloof ice maiden like Jang Mi, can reveal beneath the layered hardness, a more revealing and emotional person. She shows feelings at one point when a theft of a woman's bank withdrawal goes wrong, as the money is for the woman's sick son, and Jang Mi chastises the 'machine' for cutting into her bag and taking it. Not that he probably knew what she was going to do with the money. There is a bolted-on-the-end melodramatic bit, but this is more a 'typical' cause and effect situation. Jang Mi mirrors Dae Young in a way, as they both have mother trouble, and maybe this is what this film is angeling at.

There is some good acting credit here, though. Actress Hae Sook Kim who plays the ajumma of Dae Young as quite a varied and intense emotional role with her sickness and hand wringing, as she tries to win back the heart of her son. Myung Min Kim as the troubled cop is also decently performed in his exasperated and cold fusioned heart towards his mother. Ye Jin is lovely (although not quite in this I suppose), and is a creditable actress like many other amongst her Korean contemporaries, and although she played her role here to the requirement, probably won't win you over this time. Jang Mi can paint body tattoos, looks sweet and demure in glamorous dresses and shades, but is one really cold lady! But still, as a gang boss, this is a good and different part for Ye Jin to be in, and is interesting and valid. All roles must be necessary to move on and enhance for richer parts, that Ye Jin will get in the future, and Jang Mi bases the foundations for her. I really hope she performs in more varied and even gritty parts. But a little more human in future. Ji Hi Shim who plays the 'machine' guy Seong So in this is quite the anime looking gent, who I have to admit looked pretty good next to Ye Jin at times. But his character is such a nasty piece of cute, that he doesn't soften the hues though. If this movie had featured some ironic humor, like the 'machinist' making a cut that goes dire, and by cutting someone's trouser belt instead of the intended target, and that someone losing their trousers - a balance would have been met. I mean, that little bit of possible daftness could have 'humanized' the film more. But there isn't any humor here. No...Ha Ha! Or of there is, its all very cynical.

The DVD set is good and the bonus disk features quite a decent amount of extras especially with 16 deleted scenes that appear to be more fleshed out in the editing sense and worthy content. They aren't subtitled, but should be reasonably easy to access after watching the main film. This may be an average movie that won't be on the same level as maybe "Seven Days" or "The Chaser", but its worth looking at if you like action movies. Just don't expect the plot of dreams or much warmth though. If you want to see another film similar to this, try "Tazza : The High Rollers", which is very good.
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Yasir
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April 13, 2008

This customer review refers to Open City (DVD) (DTS) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)
1 people found the following helpful

Steer Clear Customer Review Rated Bad 3 - 3 out of 10
The only thing going for this film is Ms. Son's bony body. If you're into stick figures who look all pretty but couldn't act their way out of a sock, then this film is definitely for you. On the other hand, if you'd like your movies to keep you involved, have good characterizations and a logical plot, then please stay away from this mess.
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