Three Times (DVD) (China Version) DVD Region All
- This product can only be played on PAL video players.
- This video product does not have English audio or subtitles.
- This product will not be shipped to Hong Kong.
YesAsia Editorial Description
Get this title absolutely free with our Romance Series Sale : "Buy 3 Get 1 Free".
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Three Times (DVD) (China Version) 最好的時光 (DVD) (中國版) 最好的时光 (DVD) (中国版) Three Times (DVD) (China Version) Three Times (DVD) (China Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Shu Qi (Actor) | Chang Chen (Actor) 舒淇 (Actor) | 張震 (Actor) 舒淇 (Actor) | 张震 (Actor) 舒淇(スー・チー) (Actor) | 張震(チャン・チェン) (Actor) 서기 (Actor) | Chang Chen (Actor) |
| Director: | Hou Hsiao Hsien 侯 孝賢 侯孝贤 侯孝賢 (ホウ・シャオシェン) Hou Hsiao Hsien |
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| Release Date: | 2005-11-05 |
| Language: | Mandarin |
| Subtitles: | Simplified Chinese |
| Country of Origin: | Taiwan |
| Picture Format: | PAL What is it? |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | All Region What is it? |
| Duration: | 110 (mins) |
| Publisher: | Jiu Zhou Yin Xiang Chu Ban Gong Si |
| Package Weight: | 120 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1004089790 |
Product Information
《最好的時光》的英文片名為《Three times》,正好呼應了片中三個時代背景。在這部長達兩個小時的三段式電影中,截取了舒淇與張震在三個不同時代截然不同的風情,訴說著一段三生三世,情緣未了的愛情,如同和弦一三嘆,餘音繞梁。
故事第一段從1966年開始:當兵的張震回鄉度假,在臺球室認識了當記分員的舒淇開始了一段戀曲;而故事第二段又拉回到1910年,講述文人張震和藝人舒淇的際遇……
三世情緣之三個夢
·1966年的“戀愛夢”
當兵的張震回鄉度假在臺球室認識了當記分員的舒淇,展開一段激越的戀曲。片中那個喜歡泡在撞球間追求“球婆仔”(臺球計分小姐)的張震,就是當年的侯孝賢,侯孝賢當年還曾為了追求一位“球婆仔”,趁著當兵放假,從南到北瘋狂地追逐她的身影……
·1911年的“自由夢”
舒淇張震搖身一變成為辛亥革命期間響往自由的男女。這段故事講述舒淇飾演的妓院藝旦與富家弟子張震的一段情。張震本身是個報章記者,經常撰文鼓吹廢止納妾陋習。但舒淇妹妹懷有身孕,她的男友更有意娶妹妹為妾,急需一筆錢贖身,張震出於同情心下借錢給舒淇和妹妹,好讓這對苦命情侶一圓自由的戀愛夢。舒淇自覺受張震之恩,對他感情也更進一步。
·2005年的“青春夢”
故事跨越至2005年的大城市——臺北,此段中,張震飾演的浪子式型男,是一名店長,他和創作歌手舒淇發生了一段縱情縱欲的激情關係。張震本對舒淇癡心一片,奈何舒淇是個雙性戀者,一直以來與一學生情人秘密交往,三人糾葛無法化解。
【獲獎情況】
2005戛納影展競賽片
2005韓國釜山國際影展開幕片
2005紐約國際影展參片
2005多倫多國際影展參展片
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Awards
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Taipei Golden Horse Film Festival 2005
- Best Leading Actress Winner, Shu Qi
- Best Taiwanese Film of the Year Winner
YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Three Times (DVD) (China Version)"
This professional review refers to Three Times (Hong Kong Version)
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More accurately translated as 'The Best of Times', the latest picture from the most highly regarded formalist in World Cinema is a delightfully structured and incredibly focused effort that breathes life into three very different moments in Taiwan's past and present. Three separate chapters bear the names of the broad topics that Hou pursues throughout the film: Love, Freedom and Youth. A lyrical romantic odyssey among smoky pool halls precedes a refined observation of national trauma as it is embodied in the ill-fated relationship of a literati and a courtesan. Each of these dreamier chapters seems to provide a contrasting commentary on the third, which fast-forwards to modern Taipei. A longer and 'slower' (less elliptical) piece, this final segment shows how time in the present is experienced in a fleeting and momentary fashion, completely disconnected from nostalgic memories of the past. In each chapter, differing aspects of a relationship are depicted, always with the same pair of actors. In A Time for Love, May (Shu Qi) is a wandering pool hall hostess who comes across a letter written by Chan (Chang Chen) given to the young woman who formerly held May's job. When Chan comes back to look for the woman, he finds May instead. What follows is one of the best sequences Hou has ever created. Filmed persistently from the same camera position, May and Chan get to know each other, first while waiting for others to finish their game of pool, then over a few games themselves. This sequence features a remarkably shallow depth of field, vigorous rack focusing, and a wonderful interplay of figures in motion as people interchangeably block and reveal pockets of screen territory, and move out of frame only to reappear in unexpected positions. In billiards, Hou seems to have found the perfect associative link to his task as a filmmaker, especially as a master of staging. As Chan and May propel balls across the table, they also happen to orchestrate bodies in motion within a specified boundary. Unlike players of billiards, however, filmmakers can reach beyond their designated frame. It's surprising, then, that so many choose not to do so. Isn't choosing to keep all the action clearly visible and fixedly on screen something like a billiard player refusing to utilize all the available options and bank a shot off the side in order to play around an obstructing ball? By involving space beyond the extremes of the frame in this otherwise simple game of pool, Hou and his crew easily and yet magnificently display the virtuous staging and detailed camera work that they have become so well renowned for. Hou's camera crew has for a long time been helmed by the supremely talented Mark Lee Ping Bing (In The Mood For Love, Vertical Ray Of The Sun), and Hou's principal editors, sound and production designers have all been working together since at least the mid-1990s). The most noticeable feature of the second chapter is the absence of voices. In order to surmount problems relating to the everyday use of language in 1911, Hou opted to shoot A Time for Freedom in a similar fashion to a silent film, i.e. with intertitles and a background score. On two occasions, a traditional instrument is brought into the soundtrack, however, and here the music is noticeably synchronized with the action. Throughout this segment, notions of joyous love take a back seat to gender politics and national turmoil. May and Chan communicate with each other as equals, but May's social position as a courtesan and unspoken ideals raging within Chan conspire to keep them apart in the long-term. Hou compensates for the invisible nature of the passion that bubbles underneath Chan and May's calm exteriors with colorful and lush surface imagery that accentuates the affluence of the milieu. The vibrant costumes and sets wouldn't look out of place in Hollywood's recent Orientalist blockbusters. Also, the spellbinding intricacy of the first chapter is cast away in favor of far more variation in the position of the camera, exciting angular compositions and tighter shots that place more of an emphasis on the faces of the characters. This is Hou's visual style in its flamboyant mode. The old tricks remain though, with reveals occuring unexpectedly in slivers of the frame, and all entrances/exits handled from a rear doorway at the location. Perhaps the only issue with the story presented in Freedom is its specific basis on events surrounding the Wuchang Uprising. If, like me, you need a refresher on Taiwanese history circa the 1910s, the producers of the DVD have kindly supplied a brief summary of this period among the special features. Have a glance at it if you've had enough of the sumptuous visuals and simply must know what's going on with the story. Difficult to comprehend and wide open to interpretation (I guess), A Time for Youth portrays a raw and stark oppressiveness that navigates an extraordinary divergence from the elegant opulence of 1911. Its correlative is Millennium Mambo. Similarly to Hou's previous film about modern-day Taipei, Youth is presented as a set of alternately cold and sticky interiors. The moody blue lighting that encases Chan and May's homes is decidedly unfriendly. Nightclubs and bars are drenched in warmer light, but the gaudy yellows, reds, and purples seem to connote edginess (if not sickness) rather than well being. Even the exteriors fail to provide a release, with dreary, overcast days chased by murky, underlit evenings. If facial clarity was a dominant aspect of the previous chapter, here Hou can't recede the pale features of May and Chan deeply and quickly enough into the shadows. This relentless devotion to an atmosphere of uncaring alienation in Youth makes the still very formalist chapter on Love seem incredibly carefree and technically liberated in comparison. Living in the moment does not necessarily have anything to do with attaining happiness, this segment seems to suggest. Or perhaps not. The absence of an explanative narrator, as Millennium Mambo had, makes the search for direct meanings like this all the more complicated. Unveiling the complex similarities and differences of the three segments that comprise Three Times may require a lot more in the way of reflection and conversation than the average viewer is prepared to undertake. Love is perhaps the most accessible portion of Hou's work since A Summer at Grandpa's, and thus presents a great entry point for those curious to know what the fuss is all about. Freedom is more of a challenge, offering more in terms of intellectual content than it might appear to do so at first glance. Hou's selection of a silent movie format is sure to trigger an interesting debate in the future regarding its necessity. Finally, since Youth lacks a tremendous emotional, sensory or narrative kick in its perhaps somewhat empty depiction of love as a momentary 'fix' for the younger generation, it is certain not to appeal to the majority (as might Love). Yet, it remains a fascinating here-and-now counterpoint to the (faded?) memory-based events of the first two chapters. Hou has as good as promised to produce more films that, like Three Times, deal with his immediate personal feelings about the past. Hou's approach to Taiwanese history has always been fascinating, and given that Three Times is a typically adventurous and wonderful Hou picture, any such promise as this can be met with nothing short of the most eager anticipation. 9 feelings expressed through text out of 10 by James Brown - heroic-cinema.com |
Customer Review of "Three Times (DVD) (China Version)"
Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: (5)
See all my reviews
March 6, 2006
This customer review refers to Three Times (Taiwan Version)
| This newly released edition from Taiwan is worth the money--it's vastly superior to the Hong Kong edition. And, most important, it does have English subtitles! |
See all my reviews
January 18, 2006
This customer review refers to Three Times (Hong Kong Version)
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Just wanna drop my feeling after watching this movie... SIMPLE.... but GREAT! I like Zhang Zhen ! Shu Kei also acts very nice! Absolutly ~ a must to recommend!!! By the way, this DVD not only for CODE 6 player, also can be played in my old CODE 1 player....what a special feature~! Great~ |
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January 5, 2006
This customer review refers to Three Times (Hong Kong Version)
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Director Huo is victorious in this one. I liked the way he constructed the stories that were interwoven with the times and the characters. He did it just about right. I am glad Shu Qi received due recognition after long years of hard work. She is never the best of actresses, but she has the innate vulnerability that is unique and most appealing. Of course, she is always lovely to watch, incredible figure. Given time, she may yet surprise us all in her acting craft. Zhang Zhen was also fine in this movie. |
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December 14, 2005
This customer review refers to Three Times (Hong Kong Version)
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Hou Hsiao Hsien really successfully creates the atmosphere of remember the goodies in the first two episodes, althought hte thrid one (in the contemporary) seems a bit gloomy. But the repeated details really strike me! That concept of repeittion echoes so well with the concept of reincarnation indeed. |
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November 28, 2005
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I would rate the movie as enigmatic. Enigmatic in such a way that it engages you into the film in a very soft and subtle way. And it is very good. From the middle until the end of the film, you are engaged with the story, feelings, and the lives of the characters. The title of my review is "Two Times Enigmatic" instead of "Three Times" because I only found the 2nd (China, 1911) and 3rd (Taipei, Taiwan, 2005) parts effectively enigmatic. Although I think that the first episode (Kaoshiung, Taiwan, 1966) has successfully set the enigmatic mood for the whole film. Overall it is a very good movie and I personally like it. |













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