Silk (DVD) (US Version) DVD Region 1
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Dedicated cop Tung (Chang Chen) helps weird scientist Hashimoto (Yosuke Eguichi) uncover the secret of how human beings become ghosts after death. Hashimoto and his two assistants (Barbie Hsu and Wilson Chen) have done much research on the anti-gravity Menger Sponge with which they trap a ghost child. Called in for his exceptional vision, Tung sees in the ghost child the "silk" which mysteriously connects human beings and ghosts. Little does he know, participating in this experiment will place him and even his girlfriend (Karena Lam) at odds with great dangers from the unknown world...
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Silk (DVD) (US Version) 詭絲 (DVD) (美國版) 诡丝 (DVD) (美国版) Silk (US Version) Silk (US Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Chen Chang (Actor) | Matsuura Toru (Actor) | Bo-Lin Chen (Actor) | Chun-Ning Chang (Actor) 沈暢 (Actor) | 松浦徹 (Actor) | Bo-Lin Chen (Actor) | Chun-Ning Chang (Actor) 沈畅 (Actor) | 松浦彻 (Actor) | Bo-Lin Chen (Actor) | Chun-Ning Chang (Actor) Chen Chang (Actor) | 松浦徹 (Actor) | Bo-Lin Chen (Actor) | Chun-Ning Chang (Actor) Chen Chang (Actor) | Toru Matsuura (Actor) | Bo-Lin Chen (Actor) | Chun-Ning Chang (Actor) |
| Director: | Chao-Bin Su Chao-Bin Su Chao-Bin Su Chao-Bin Su Chao-Bin Su |
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| Release Date: | 2007-06-12 |
| UPC Code: | 842498030554 |
| Language: | English, Japanese, Mandarin |
| Subtitles: | English, Spanish |
| Country of Origin: | United States |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Color Information: | Color |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 1 - USA, Canada, U.S. Territories What is it? |
| Rating: | Not Rated |
| Publisher: | Tartan Video |
| Package Weight: | 110 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1004775547 |
Product Information
Region 1
NTSC
Snap Case
Anamorphic Widescreen
Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1 - Mandarin
Dubbed - English, Japanese - Optional
Subtitles - English, Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Materials:
Behind The Scenes - Making Of
Deleted Scenes
Trailers - Theatrical Trailer
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Hong Kong Version
- Silk (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3
- US$16.99
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- Silk (Hong Kong Version) VCD
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Silk (DVD) (US Version)"
This professional review refers to Silk (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
|
If seeing ghosts is getting passe, how about being a ghost? The Taiwanese ghost thriller Silk takes the usual Asian horror iconography and spins a pseudoscientific thriller that's part theory, part hogwash, and mostly entertaining. Usual art-house favorite Chang Chen stars as Tung, a Taiwanese sniper who's called in for a special assignment. The Japanese government would like Tung to work for Hashimoto (Yosuke Eguichi), a crippled scientist who has made massive advances with the Menger Sponge, a mathematically subdivided cube that acts as an energy black hole. Hashimoto's large-scale Menger Sponge can defy gravity, and may even allow a person to walk on walls. However, the application that Hashimoto is most interested in is utilizing the energy-warping ways of the Menger Sponge to see other types of energy, namely spectral energy, e.g. ghosts. Hashimoto and his crew (including Wilson Chen and F4 accessory Barbie Hsu) have managed to trap a ghost child (Kuan Po-Chen) in a Menger Sponge-lined room, but they need help investigating the child's activities. They want to know where he's going, what he's doing, and indeed, what he wants. Thanks to an application of Menger Sponge-enhanced spray on their eyes, Hashimoto's crew can see the ghost, but they can't hear what he's saying. But Tung can, because he's a lip reader, ace sniper, and all-around badass. Actor Chang Chen usually appears in art house fare, and is probably best known to international audiences as Zhang Ziyi's roguish lover in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. Never before has Chang tried a leading role in such an obviously commercial film as Silk, and he attacks the unusual role with a fierce, underplayed intensity that's riveting. Tung is a dedicated cop, but he's also a bit of a sourpuss, not only to Hashimoto and his colleagues, but also to his girlfriend Wei (an underused, but still very effective Karena Lam), who sticks by him even though he's chronically unhappy. After initially saying "no" to helping out Hashimoto, Tung eventually agrees, and proceeds to shadow the ghost child on his daily routine. During the process, Tung and Hashimoto discover the child's origins, plus get mixed up in some unforeseen circumstances, including betrayal (one of the team attempts to steal the ghost), crappy politics (the Japanese government has had it with Hashimoto's quack scientist ways), and also "the silk", a mysterious spectral thread that connects ghosts to humans. Tung discovers that following the thread may prove the key to the investigation, but Hashimoto wants to know more than where the ghost is from. What he's really after is how ghosts come into existence in the first place - and even how to replicate the process. Writer-director Su Chao-Bin also wrote the 2002 film Double Vision, which was notable for its intriguing if not fully-developed screenplay. Silk echoes Double Vision in that it tries to provide explanations for its supernatural happenings, and goes a long way in providing intelligent-seeming, though totally bogus science to back up its supernatural shenanigans. A lot of the pseudoscience works, but many of the leaps of logic involving how to become a ghost seem to be deduced by random guesswork rather than actual discovery. Some of the scientific details are also a bit funny. It's silly enough that liquefied Menger Sponge spray can help you see ghosts, but spraying some on your bullets can actually turn your gun into a handy ghost-busting tool! Tung gets to do this on more than one occasion, though the ultimate fact is that not even Menger Sponge bullets can stop a pissed off ghost. It just makes them angry, and pretty much guarantees that they'll come after you next. The ghosts in Silk may be treated scientifically, but they're still prone to attacking people and squeezing the life out of them. The ghosts also move in nonsensically creepy ways and look just like ghosts you'd see in The Eye. These details earmark Silk as just another Asian horror entry, but the film has different aims. Silk is more X-Files than Ju-On, and attempts to hook with a supernatural narrative and haunted lead characters. The combo works, as the narrative does prove involving, but it's also a bit underdeveloped. Some characters, including Barbie Hsu's dour scientist, and even the charismatic, but kind of wonky Hashimoto aren't fully fleshed out. At a certain point in the film, things stop getting explained -- and in a movie where explanations are everything, lack of disclosure can be downright alienating. A lot of theorizing goes on as to how ghosts are created, and eventually, the answer is assumed to be discovered. But is it? Or are the characters wrong? And does it really matter when Tung is engaged in a hair-raising car chase with a pissed off ghost trying to squeeze the life out of his heart? Probably not. If anything, the appearance of car chases pretty much tells you that Silk is one overstuffed film. It tries to be a ghost film, a supernatural thriller, a character drama, and even a pulse-pounding action flick, complete with a familar-sounding score from Peter Kam (Purple Storm, Tokyo Raiders). There's also some unexpected humor, and even some effective heartbreak involving Tung's relationship with his comatose mother. It's all a bit much, but Silk manages to string things together thanks to an involving storyline, well-developed tension, ace production values, and Chang Chen's charismatic central performance. Chang has always been an actor to watch, and Silk is worth seeing if only to see this veteran of Wong Kar-Wai and Hou Hsiao-Hsien films stalk all over Taiwan shooting ghosts with Menger Sponge-enhanced bullets. Yeah, it all sounds a bit silly, but this is clearly a commercial film intended for international appeal, and it achieves its aims in an efficient and entertaining manner. It's not scary, nor is it really that conclusive, but hey, it's also not bad. by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com |
Customer Review of "Silk (DVD) (US Version)"
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May 23, 2008
This customer review refers to Silk (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
|
This film is about a lost soul that was captured by a group of people trying to study how he was doing a routinary think. But in a tread of silk if you look in his eye you die. The ending is quite unexpected, thats something to watch. |
See all my reviews
July 10, 2007
This customer review refers to Silk (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Ghosts in Alien Wave Forms
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When I first saw the intro DVD menu to this film and immediately spotted Village of the Damned / Grudge type spooky child amongst its juxtaposed intro, I felt that this was going to be another Hideo Nakata / Takashi Shimizu clone. Thankfully, though, and although "Grudge" related this is one thought provoking and interesting movie, albeit with improbable science. The premise of the story is that ghosts can be seen by using a structured and concentrated human protein energy called "Menger Sponge" (which you wouldn't want to do the washing up with) and alters the magnetic structure of surrounding gravity fields to enable a person to see other invisible wave forms. In this case, the wave form of a disembodied ghost in the form of a melancholic spooky boy trapped in a derelict house. What you get then is a story of intrigue, paranormal investigation, elements of sci-fi and action in a Hollywood type X Files mode and also in a category to movies like "The Matrix" and "The Fifth Element". But aside to that, its all written well and there is also a fair amount of the human element, too, where its not all cold investigation (although most of its characters are within the ice), but of archetypal characters trying to discover their own truer natures of human communication, needs and love inevitably, all parallel to the ghost plot. Still, this film is a very technical idea of what could be behind the "Grudge" concept, but instead of mere psychological fear and ghostly displacements alone, its also scientific thought by putting spooky ghosts into analytical 'test tubes' and attempting to understand their condition. By doing so the scientists are also trying to understand themselves. And in this film with 'fatal consequences'. The 'silk' is the ghost strand that links the boy's apparition with the humans and projects the malevolence to anyone who interfers with him (apparently this 'silk' must be juxtaposed enough to effect both wave forms of ghost and human) that is revealed in the outcome. The Menger Sponge is interesting, but to me a similar concept to the Kirlian photography that can show invisible forms of magnetic energy surrounding all living things, but with less paradox. The story is interesting with its mixture of paranormal, sci-fi and action sequences, but its suggestion of things well beyond the idea of the plot are interesting and it doesn't over indulge by expressing overly on death, fear and the beyond alone, but also about human bond ships and love. There is the 'human heart' reasoning behind the ghoulishness of the plot here. Acting wise it is all well performed and the two male leads of Chang Chen and Yosuke Eguchi take center stage in the main. The actress performs well as the moody and sultry female scientist who also as a romantic appeal to Hashimoto (revealed more in the extras scenes) and the other supporting actors including Wilson Chen as the remaining scientists are well performed also. The only thing that I found unfortunate about "Silk" was Karena Lam's under used character in this film as Ye's love interest Wei, as her character becomes almost no more than an over glorified cameo role. This is Karena Lam and such a waste of great talent by only allowing her a tepid part that should have been more. I was looking forward to seeing her in this, too. So, please, give Karena a really great role next time, she was excellent in "Koma" and "Inner Senses" and this lady is one brilliant actress. Otherwise, its all very good and an interesting film that seems to have slipped into oblivion out of the chart which it doesn't deserve. The DVD again is another gem. Its got 5.1 sound plus DTS, its fully loaded with a second disk of extras that all have English subtitles and that includes the additional commentaries on the movie disk. Its region free. Its kissable in fact, the more you think about it, and deserves all the credit here. The only down sides are the slightly iffy science, the blockbuster feel about it and that poor Karena Lam is left with a short straw role here, but otherwise its all worth seeing. |
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April 20, 2007
This customer review refers to Silk (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
| This film actually surprised me. Some other Asian countries are trying their hand at contemporary horror films in the ghost story sub-genre. Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea and Thailand are already on the map. "The Maid" put Singapore on the map; as well as "Sigaw" for the Philippines and "Naina" for India. Well, this film "Silk" has put Taiwan more on the map. There are quite a few effective scares in this film. It is always nice to watch the gorgeous Karena Lam (Koma, Inner Senses, Home Sweet Home). Grant it, this film is not "Shutter", "The Eye", "Ju-on", "Apartment", "Phone", "Dark Water", "One Missed Call", "Re-cycle", "Bunshinsaba", "Arang" or "Ringu". But this film is definitely worth checking out. |





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