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The Equation of Love & Death (DVD) (US Version) DVD Region All

Zhou Xun (Actor) | Zhang Han Yu (Actor) | Cao Bao Ping (Director) | Wang Bao Qiang (Actor)
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The Equation of Love & Death (DVD) (US Version)
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Customer Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (1)
All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (2)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Neurotic cab driver Limi (Zhou Xun) has been searching high and low for her fiance who disappeared four years ago, but continues to send her letters. She carries pictures of him everywhere so she can ask her passengers whether they've seen him. Small-time criminal Qiu has come to the big city to make quick cash and find the woman he loves. Recovering druggie Feifei (Wang Baoqiang) is trying to start anew with her boyfriend (Deng Chao). A mysterious death suddenly throws these seemingly separate lives together, revealing their unexpected connections to each other and a drug trafficking case.

Zhou Xun acts up a storm in the heady and unpredictable The Equation of Love & Death, the second film from Mainland director Cao Baoping. Cao's last effort The Trouble Makers was described as being crazier than Crazy Stone, and The Equation of Love & Death follows suit with uncanny storytelling and a manic, moving performance from Zhou Xun. Assembly's Zhang Hanyu and Deng Chao, Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor winners at the 29th Hundred Flower Awards, co-star along with Wang Baoqiang from A World Without Thieves.

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Technical Information

Product Title: The Equation of Love & Death (DVD) (US Version) 李米的猜想 (DVD) (美國版) 李米的猜想 (DVD) (美国版) 李米的猜想 (US版) The Equation of Love & Death (DVD) (US Version)
Also known as: 愛失償 爱失偿
Artist Name(s): Zhou Xun (Actor) | Zhang Han Yu (Actor) | Wang Bao Qiang (Actor) | Deng Chao (Actor) | Wang Yan Hui (Actor) 周迅 (Actor) | 張涵予 (Actor) | 王寶強 (Actor) | 鄧超 (Actor) | 王硯輝 (Actor) 周迅 (Actor) | 张涵予 (Actor) | 王宝强 (Actor) | 邓超 (Actor) | 王砚辉 (Actor) 周迅(ジョウ・シュン)  (Actor) | 張涵予 (チャン・ハンユー) (Actor) | 王宝強 (ワン・バオチャン) (Actor) | 鄧超 (タン・チャオ)   (Actor) | Wang Yan Hui (Actor) Zhou Xun (Actor) | Zhang Han Yu (Actor) | Wang Bao Qiang (Actor) | Deng Chao (Actor) | Wang Yan Hui (Actor)
Director: Cao Bao Ping 曹保平 曹保平 曹保平 (ツアオ・バオピン) Cao Bao Ping
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Release Date: 2009-04-28
Language: Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong, China
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: Widescreen, 1.78 : 1
Widescreen Anamorphic: Yes
Close Caption: Yes
Sound Information: Dolby Digital
Disc Format(s): DVD-5, DVD
Region Code: All Region What is it?
Duration: 96 (mins)
Publisher: Tai Seng Video (US)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1014335120

Product Information

Director: Cao Bao Ping

Zhou Xun (ALL ABOUT WOMEN, PERHAPS LOVE, PAINTED SKIN and THE BANQUET) gives a tour-de-force performance in this suspenseful drama that earned her the Best Actress accolade at the 2009 Asian Film Awards. Xun is Limi, a neurotic and feisty cab driver searching in vain for her missing fiance. When Limi has a run-in with her two most recent passengers, it triggers a series of unexpected ev ents that may hold the key to finding her beloved and uncovering the secrets behind his disappearance. Filled with noir-like visuals, captivating characters, and Zhou's mesmerizing presence. THE EQUATION OF LOVE AND DEATH is an arresting yarn about life's coincidences and unpredictability.
Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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Awards

This film has won 1 award(s). All Award-Winning Asian Films

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "The Equation of Love & Death (DVD) (US Version)"

February 13, 2009

Her movies are not always good, but man, Zhou Xun can act. The petite Mainland dynamo has shined in movies as compelling as Hollywood Hong Kong, as disappointing as The Banquet, and as completely weird as Ming Ming. Zhou adds to her impressive library of performances with The Equation of Love and Death, a slight but still effective little thriller from director Cao Baoping. A tale of obsessive love and criminal schemes gone wrong, the film has great acting and genuine tension, but lacks the narrative or revelations to match. Still, this is an entertaining and even affecting film, in large part due to its excellent leading lady.

Li-Mi (Zhou Xun) is a tough little taxi driver pining over her missing boyfriend Fang Wen (TV star Deng Chao), and keeps a book of photos inside her cab to show to her passengers, just in case they've seen him. However, country hicks Huo-Gui and Shui-Tian (Wang Yanhui and Wang Baoqian) secretly steal her photo book when they get into a minor row with Li-Mi over change for a cab ride. They end up dropping the book when they happen by a car collision - and one of the drivers happens to be Fang Wen, who is riding with a mysterious female passenger. He picks up the dropped photo book, and after seeing that it's filled with pictures of himself, he chases the two men, only to lose them on the streets.

Clearly up to no good, Huo-Gui and Shui-Tian end up back in Li-Mi's cab, but when she discovers that they're carrying a knife, the situation takes a dangerous turn. Li-Mi ends up as their hostage, while Fang Wen ends up haggling with the police over his car accident. Oddly, he's now going by the name Ma Bing, and ostensibly has no knowledge of Li-Mi or her search for him. What's the real connection between Li-Mi and Ma Bing, what the hell are Huo-Gui and Shui-Tian up to, and will Li-Mi find a way out of her hostage situation? And what's with this title, The Equation of Love and Death?

The answer to that last question: not a whole lot, but it's a cool title, isn't it? The film opens with Li-Mi reciting numbers in a seemingly random fashion, and we ultimately learn that they relate to a series of letters sent to her by Fang Wen/Ma Bing. That's the "equation" part. The "love" part comes from Li-Mi's ardent refusal to let Fang Wen go. The "death" part? Well, that would be giving away the movie's plot - though to be honest, the plot doesn't really amount to that much. Some characters do cash in their chips, but their deaths are not really felt or developed as much as they just happen. Director Cao Baoping provides very little overt exposition, and the audience is sometimes forced to follow the characters blindly as they get involved in one mess after the other. The mystery behind the characters and their actions is revealed gradually, though when some of the revelations do come out, they seem perfunctory rather than felt or necessary.

What does work is the film's involving forward momentum and the minor details that humanize each character. Sometimes the details feel like tangents, but they manage to give each character weight and dimension, and the actors flesh things out with their performances. The film's acute emotions and sometimes gritty style complement the proceedings nicely, and the actors fill their roles well, appearing as obtuse, desperate, ridiculous or dumb as the story requires. The Equation of Love and Death conveys a heightened tension, effectively getting the audience into Li-Mi's emotions, and making she and the other characters firmly recognizable. Some characters are ultimately forgotten and others are never fully explained, but nearly all make an impression.

However, the best thing about The Equation of Love and Death is simply Zhou Xun. As Li-Mi, Zhou runs the gamut from tough to frightened to desperate to elated, her performance carrying nearly every scene, and when she finally smiles from her heart, it's a greater payoff than most films ever achieve. Zhou Xun owns both the screen and her co-stars with a compelling emotion that, despite its forceful and occasionally showy flourishes, never feels like overacting. Deng Chao suffers by comparison, though his character is required to be implacable, and Zhang Hanyu (a recent Golden Horse Award Winner for The Assembly) turns in strong, wry support as the police officer assigned to Li-Mi's case. Ultimately, The Equation of Love and Death doesn't really achieve much, as the story it tells never feels that substantial. However, thanks to Zhou Xun, every moment seems to matter.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.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.

Customer Review of "The Equation of Love & Death (DVD) (US Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (1)
Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10 (2)

numinair
See all my reviews


June 10, 2009

This customer review refers to The Equation of Love & Death (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Consists of Connected Random Events Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
With opening credits similar to the Matrix (meandering numbers instead of falling ones) and a coincidental train of events that relate to taxi driver Limi’s (Zhou Xun) lost fiancée Fang Wen (Deng Chao), this is a movie mix of tragic romantic drama, hard nailed thriller, black comedy antics, additional indie style grunge and well crafted and intriguing. What I liked about this, though, is how the train of events seem to happen ‘because’ of Limi's long suffering despondency and emotional loss. That by yearning to find her lost boyfriend a sudden roller coaster of dramatic incidents were the only equal sign for Limi to resolve her ‘slow motion’ depression and broken heart. Its certainly a dramatic film. No sooner as Limi drives and tells two goons about her personal quest to find Fang Wen, do they steal her precious photo filled magazine of Fang Wen. They take it from her taxi in lieu of change she tries to get them for a $20 note and even kidnap her later on. Tsk. Goons, eh?

After the men leave Limi’s taxi they confront a contact sitting on an overpass bridge (the men being two naughty smugglers), for safe conduct plane tickets. But the contact suddenly decides to commit suicide by hurling himself off the bridge, crashing onto a car below. The goons freak out, running to the bridge barrier and lose Limi’s photo magazine, which falls onto a car below. In a leap of coincidental fate the car driver is Limi’s lost fiancee Fang Wen, along with his new heroin scarred girlfriend Feifei. Fang Wen finds the fallen magazine of Limi’s, looks up and chases the two men. As plan A goes very wrong, the goon’s decide on plan B, to kidnap Limi and demand $30,000 for their plane tickets. Limi’s a bit short of $30,000 of course (taxi fees being well below that amount). But as goon stupidity never goes out of vogue, Limi can only drive on and hope to escape.

What enfolds is a partial road movie thriller about Limi’s runaway fiancée. Connected ‘happenings’ that seem to void randomness? It’s fantastically acted, emotional and at times quite funny, especially by the two buffoonery goons, who are like a gritty Laurel and Hardy. Zhou Xun is incredible as streetwise chain smoking cab girl Limi. It’s the sort of film I’d prefer to see Zhou Xun in. Deng Chao and Zhang Han Yu are also of high merit and the two comedic smuggler actors are excellent together. Very well made grunge romance thriller, with contrasting sadness and a bit of cranky humor.
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Best Review
Kevin Kennedy
See all my reviews


May 21, 2009

Zhou Xun shines in an intricate puzzle Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
In "The Equation of Love & Death", taxi driver Li Mi (Zhou Xun) remains frozen in a seemingly dead relationship with Fang Wen, a boyfriend who left her four years ago. Strangely, she continues to receive letters from him -- dozens of letters -- in which he promises to return to her a better man. The letters, however, have no return address, so she has no way to contact him. She is frozen in an emotional limbo, tied to this man she loves but cannot see and unable to move on with her life. Tormented by her situation, she chatters madly and obsessively about the letters to the passengers in her taxi, showing them the boyfriend's photos to try to gain some information about him.

One day two bumpkins enter her taxi and suddenly Li Mi's life is turned upside down. The men were to meet someone who would give them tickets for a flight to Guangzhou, but when they arrived at the meeting point, the man whom they believe to be their contact commited suicide before their eyes (by throwing himself off of a highway overpass and landing on the hood of a car driven by a man who calls himself Ma Bing). They now believe that they must steal enough money from Li Mi to pay for airplane tickets so they can reach their destination. After Li Mi manages a dramatic escape from this situation, she crosses paths with Ma Bing at the police station. She is convinced, despite his protestations to the contrary, that Ma Bing actually is her long-lost boyfriend Wang Fen.

Has Li Mi gone mad or is Ma Bing really her old boyfriend? Why did those bumpkins want to fly to Guangzhou? And what is Ma Bing's mysterious connection to them? Director Cao Bao Ping masterfully untangles these various threads, then knits them together into a very satisfying conclusion, a conclusion that indeed grows more satisfying with reflection. The film belongs to Zhou Xun, who gives an entirely honest and believable performance of this everywoman taxi driver bewildered by the unhappy cards that life has dealt her. The supporting cast is equally good. "The Equation of Love & Death" is a puzzling experience to watch, but when the pieces of that puzzle ultimately fall into place it packs a real emotional wallop. I recommend this film very highly.
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