The Most Distant Course (DVD) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version) DVD Region 3
- This product will not be shipped to Hong Kong.
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Seemingly lost in life, young sound recordist Xiao Tang (Mo Zi Yi) embarks on a road trip around Taiwan to capture the "Sounds of Formosa". In need of some therapy himself, intense and unpredictable psychiatrist Cai (Jia Xiao Guo) gets up one day and just keeps driving. The two meet each other in bizarre fashion and become unlikely travel companions on their island circuit. Xiao Tang sends his recordings to his ex-girlfriend, but they end up in the hands of the apartment's new tenant, Wu Ruoyun (Guey Lun Mei), a young woman who's nursing a troubled relationship of her own. Lured by the peaceful recordings of wind, waves, and aboriginal songs, Xiao Tang takes to the road to follow the source of the sounds.
This two-disc edition comes with making of, deleted scenes, still gallery, and cast and crew profiles.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | The Most Distant Course (DVD) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version) 最遙遠的距離 (DVD) (雙碟特別版) (台灣版) 最遥远的距离 (DVD) (双碟特别版) (台湾版) 遠い道のり (最遙遠的距離) (2枚組特別版) (台湾版) The Most Distant Course (DVD) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Guey Lun Mei (Actor) | Mo Zi Yi (Actor) | Jia Xiao Guo (Actor) 桂綸鎂 (Actor) | 莫子儀 (Actor) | 賈孝國 (Actor) 桂纶镁 (Actor) | 莫子仪 (Actor) | 贾孝国 (Actor) 桂綸鎂 (グイ・ルンメイ) (Actor) | Mo Zi Yi (Actor) | Jia Xiao Guo (Actor) Guey Lun Mei (Actor) | Mo Zi Yi (Actor) | Jia Xiao Guo (Actor) |
| Director: | Lin Jing Jie 林靖傑 林靖杰 Lin Jing Jie Lin Jing Jie |
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| Release Date: | 2008-02-29 |
| Language: | Mandarin |
| Subtitles: | English, Traditional Chinese |
| Country of Origin: | Taiwan |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Aspect Ratio: | 1.78 : 1 |
| Sound Information: | Dolby Digital 2.0 |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it? |
| Duration: | 113 (mins) |
| Publisher: | Link. Internation Co, Ltd. |
| Other Information: | 2DVDs |
| Package Weight: | 210 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 2 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1010671125 |
Product Information
* Sound Mix : Dolby Digital 2.0
* Special Features:
Disc 2 特別收錄
1.幕後花絮
2.未曝光畫面
3.演員導演介紹
4.精彩劇照
導演:林靖傑
Director: Lin Jing-jie
★榮獲2007台北電影節評審團特別獎
★入圍威尼斯影展國際影評人週競賽
★釜山國際影展亞洲視窗單元
★2007台北電影節開幕片
★東京影展亞洲之風單元
★香港亞洲電影節
世界上最遙遠的距離不是 生與死
而是 我就站在你面前 你卻不知道我愛你
世界上最遙遠的距離
不是 我就站在你面前 你卻不知道我愛你
而是 明明知道彼此相愛 卻不能在一起
世界上最遙遠的距離
不是 明明知道彼此相愛 卻不能在一起
而是 明明無法抵擋這股想念 卻還得故意裝作絲毫沒有把你放在心裏
世界上最遙遠的距離
不是 明明無法抵擋這股想念 卻還得故意裝作絲毫沒有把你放在心裏
而是 用自己冷漠的心 對愛你的人 掘了一條無法跨越的溝渠
對錄音師小湯(莫子儀飾)而言,世界上最遙遠的距離,不是他和女友雅竺之間的溝渠,而是當他努力想要跨越兩人之間的溝渠時,雅竺卻轉身離開了。
對精神科醫師阿才(賈孝國飾)而言,世界上最遙遠的距離,不是前妻轉身離開了,而是當他也想轉身離開的時候,卻發現自己無能動彈了。
對上班族小雲(桂綸鎂飾)而言,世界上最遙遠的距離,不是自己的無能動彈,而是當她不想動彈的時候,卻發現自己的心依舊懸掛在劈腿男友的身上,愛與不愛,都成兩難。
小湯啟程離開台北,去到了遙遠的台東,錄下了所有吸引他的聲音:海浪撲打著海岸的呼嘯聲、樹林中松鼠嘎嘎嘎的求偶聲、魚市場鮮活而朝氣蓬勃的叫賣聲、小學生單純清朗的嬉鬧聲……。他將這些錄下的聲音和心情,一捲一捲地寄給台北的雅竺,卻不知道她早已搬離……。
剛搬新家的小雲陷落在窒悶無趣的上班族生活,以及一段似乎沒有出路的三角戀情中。看著一封一封遠從台東寄來的信件,她忍不住好奇,拆開了別人的私密,聽到了那些鮮活的生命力和蘊藏其中的豐富情感。抗拒不了隔著耳機傳來的聲聲召喚,她離開了台北,去到台東,循著聲音,一程一程地尋找、接近聲音以及錄音主人的所在……。
在聽著病患訴說外遇傷痛的同時,阿才以犀利的語言毫不留情的指出患者千迴百轉的種種思緒和情感糾纏,因而明瞭,最需要被治療與釋放的,其實是那個被困在不幸婚姻裡的自己。於是,他拋下了在台北的一切,出發到台東尋找多年前失去聯繫的情人。因緣際會,他遇上了小湯。
在寬闊的東海岸地平線,他們試著交換與釋放屬於男人心底無法言說的溫柔與堅強。在各自的生命都不知何以為繼的三個人,因著各自的悠微心情,分別來到海天一色的東海岸,仰望蔚藍的天空,呼吸海洋的味道,為自己的生命尋找轉折的契機。這是最遙遠的旅程,也是最接近自己和愛情的地方。
* Winner, Critic's Week, Venice Film Festival 2007
THE MOST DISTANT COURSE is three desperate souls' journey to find themselves. Ruoyun keeps receiving tapes that are meant for the former occupant of her flat. The tapes are from Xiao Tang, who hopes to win back his ex-girlfriend with the sounds of the coast. There he meets Ah Cai, a psychiatrist burdened by other people's problems, on a journey to restore his own mental health. Inspired by the tapes, Ruoyun too decides to travel. Their paths intersect and they gain a new understanding of themselves.
Other Versions of "The Most Distant Course (DVD) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version)"
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Professional Review of "The Most Distant Course (DVD) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version)"
This professional review refers to The Most Distant Course (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
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Taiwan has never sounded lovelier than in The Most Distant Course, the feature-length debut of director Lin Jing-Jie (Bad Girl Trilogy). The film follows three disparate characters suffering their own forms of alienation and heartbreak. Xiao Tang (Mo Zi-Yi) is a young sound recordist who's apparently a bit of a mess. When we first meet him, he's late for his job, and is about to pay the price; he oversleeps, and shows up late for a film shoot only to discover that he's been replaced. After apologizing to the crew and the director, he ends up weeping along the roadside, sound equipment slung over his shoulder and fuzzy boom mike in hand. Cai (Jia Xiao-Guo) is a psychiatrist who takes his role-playing a bit too far, into counseling sessions containing sexually explicit diatribes, or even into his dealings with prostitutes. One day, while getting ready for another day at the office, Cai switches from his standard shirt-and-tie get-up into a casual outfit, whereupon he abandons his job, and begins a seemingly aimless road trip. He ends up at a roadside shop, where he attempts to seduce the local betelnut beauty, before getting involved in a potential blackmail scam. Thanks to some contrived but entertaining circumstances, he gets bailed out by Xiao Tang, and the two hit the road together. Finally, there's Wu Ruoyun (Guey Lun-Mei), a young office worker whose status as a third party in a relationship leaves her frequently alone, nursing a bottle of liquor. She's alienated by her current life, but finds solace in audio tapes she receives in the mail, labeled "Sounds of Formosa". Each tape contains ambient sound from around Taiwan, including audio collected from windbreak forests, local fish markets, aboriginal tribes, and the simple sound of waves. The tapes are not meant for Ruoyun, but for the former tenant of her apartment. However, Ruoyun begins listening to the tapes anyway, using them to escape from her daily commute and office grind. One day she decides to chase the source of the sounds herself, beginning her own personal journey. The Most Distant Course is an involving, but not very forthcoming motion picture, choosing to introduce its characters in a rather unrevealing fashion. There's no voiceover and little expository dialogue here. Each character is introduced in the midst of their lives, and deducing exactly what they're about takes patience and time. Luckily, writer-director Lin Jing-Jie has a winning narrative device in Xiao Tang, who's compiling the "Sounds of Formosa" for a former girlfriend who jilted him. The tapes are reaching Wu Ruoyun instead, creating a minor tension that the two lovelorn young people will one day meet and perhaps ease each other's heartbreak. However, that outcome is secondary to the journey itself, and thanks to Xiao Tang's pursuit of sound, the film's slow-paced narrative unfolds pleasantly. The characters gradually reveal pieces of themselves, and along the way the audience is introduced to Taiwan's sights and sounds, which seem simultaneously familiar and yet uniquely beautiful. Lin's use of sound helps bring us closer to the characters. The beauty of the sounds and the characters' attraction to them are convincingly conveyed, allowing the audience to empathize with the characters. Ultimately, the destinations they reach are not very special, nor do they necessarily meet standard audience expectation. Each character may not find what they're looking for, but some measure of peace or understanding is discovered, with the outcomes sometimes quietly devastating. Some characters reach an obvious catharsis, while others don't, and their differing fates are subtle and affecting. The themes and emotions in The Most Distant Course don't qualify as new, but the way in which Lin Jing-Jie spins them onto celluloid feels compelling and even accomplished. Mo Zi-Yi is exceptionally sympathetic as the sensitive Xiao Tang, giving his character an innate and compelling likeability. Guey Lun-Mei is remarkable in her emotion-saturated introspective gazes; the young actress has seemingly cornered the industry on emotional depth via only one or two facial expressions. Both actors, however, are outshone by Jia Xiao-Guo. The actor's deep voice and intense, rough charm make him a very imposing and charismatic figure, and his journey is arguably the most affecting one. It's also given to the most extreme conclusion, and the contrivance with which it arrives could alienate some audiences. Then again, alienated audience members would probably be upset with the film in general, because it seldom tells them how to feel, and instead asks for their patience and empathy. The Most Distant Course is a fitting title for this movie; reaching the film's goal takes a while, and getting there requires the audience to give more than they may be used to. However, the reward is there, and it's worth seeking out. by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com |
Customer Review of "The Most Distant Course (DVD) (2-Disc Deluxe Edition) (Taiwan Version)"
See all my reviews
July 5, 2008
| Actually many audience are trained to meet the climax by Hollywood movies which quite often ignores all possible ways of the presentation of movies. For asian movies, especially Taiwan movies, you can see a special and critical point from the eyes of director. And the director wisely uses sound as a way to relate the psychological condition and the story. |
See all my reviews
March 14, 2008
??..what?..
| the movie was soo long and nothing really much happened, it seems like there wasn't even a climax for the turning point of the movie..the best parts of the scene was just GUEY LUN MEI. |




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