Soul Mate (DVD) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Ansen (Zhou Dongyu) is tasked by her boss to track down the author of a serialized online novel that appears to be written by her friend July (Ma Sichun) with whom she is no longer in contact. The novel documents Ansen and July's friendship, starting at age 13 when they meet and become immediate best friends. In high school, the quiet and reserved July begins dating boy-next-door Jiaming (Toby Lee, A Touch of Green), who also seems to share a secret bond with the free-spirited and outspoken Ansen. After high school, Ansen hits the road, drifting from place to place and job to job, while July stays in her hometown with the intentions of marrying Jiaming someday. Through the years of separation and reunion, Ansen and July remain each other's closest friends, but an unspoken tension simmers beneath over their unsettled lives and their respective relationships with Jiaming.
Technical Information
Product Title: | Soul Mate (DVD) (Japan Version) 七月與安生 (DVD)(日本版) 七月与安生 (DVD)(日本版) ソウルメイト/七月と安生 Soul Mate (DVD) (Japan Version) |
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Artist Name(s): | Ma Si Chun (Actor) | Zhou Dong Yu (Actor) | Li Ping (Actor) | Meng Ting Yi (Actor) | Toby Lee (Actor) 馬思純 (Actor) | 周 冬雨 (Actor) | 李萍 (Actor) | 蒙亭宜 (Actor) | 李程彬 (Actor) 马思纯 (Actor) | 周 冬雨 (Actor) | 李萍 (Actor) | 蒙亭宜 (Actor) | 李程彬 (Actor) 馬思純(マー・スーチュン) (Actor) | 周冬雨 (チョウ・ドンユィ) (Actor) | Li Ping (Actor) | Meng Ting Yi (Actor) | トビー・リー[李程彬] (Actor) 마사순 (Actor) | Zhou Dong Yu (Actor) | Li Ping (Actor) | Meng Ting Yi (Actor) | Toby Lee (Actor) |
Director: | Derek Tsang 曾國祥 曾国祥 曾國祥(デレク・ツァン) Derek Tsang |
Producer: | Peter Chan 陳可辛 陈可辛 陳可辛 (ピーター・チャン) Peter Chan |
Release Date: | 2022-02-02 |
Publisher Product Code: | HPBR-1508 |
Language: | Mandarin |
Subtitles: | Japanese |
Place of Origin: | China |
Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
Disc Format(s): | DVD |
Region Code: | 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it? |
Other Information: | DVD |
Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1110148385 |
Product Information
チョウ・ドンユイ[周冬雨] / マー・スーチュン / デレク・ツァン[曾國祥] (監督)
[テクニカル・インフォメーション]
本編110分
製作国 : 香港 (Hong Kong)
公開年 : 2021
[ストーリー]
ある日、安生(アンシェン)の元に映画会社から連絡が届く。彼らは、人気ネット小説『七月(チーユエ)と安生(アンシェン)』を映像化したいのだという。作者は七月(チーユエ)という名の女性だが、所在は不明。物語は幼馴染の女性2人の友情を描いたもので、作者の自伝的な要素が強いという話だった。そこで彼らは、もう一人の主人公のモデルを探し、アンシェンに連絡をしてきたというわけだ。だがアンシェンは「チーユエなんて人は知らない」と彼らに嘘をつく。チーユエ・・・彼女はアンシェンにとって特別な存在だった。何よりも大切な親友、そして誰よりも激しくぶつかりあった戦友、互いに魂の奥深いところでつながっていたはずの2人。それなのに、彼女たちの間に一体何があったのか?恋を知り世界を知り、移ろいゆく時代の中で、彼女たちは何を選び取り、何を捨てたのか?小説に描かれた2人の物語に秘められた驚きの真実が、今明かされようとしていた。
[解説]
大切な人、大事な何かを思い出させてくれる、2人の女性の予期せぬ人生の物語/『少年の君』コンビ、デレク・ツァン監督、チョウ・ドンユイで贈る青春映画
Other Versions of "Soul Mate (DVD) (Japan Version)"
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Hong Kong Version
- Soul Mate (2016) (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3
- US$10.99
- Usually ships within 7 to 14 days
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Korea Version
- Soul Mate (DVD) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3
- US$27.99
- Usually ships within 7 to 14 days
- Soul Mate (Blu-ray) (Korea Version) Blu-ray Region A
- Out of Print
- Soul Mate (Blu-ray) (Korea Version) + Poster in Tube Blu-ray Region A
- Out of Print
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Taiwan Version
- Soul Mate (2016) (DVD) (Taiwan Version) DVD Region 3
- US$11.99
- Usually ships within 21 days
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Professional Review of "Soul Mate (DVD) (Japan Version)"
This professional review refers to Soul Mate (2016) (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
After years of co-directing features (Lover's Discourse, Lacuna) with Jimmy Wan, Derek Tsang goes it alone for his first solo feature Soul Mate. Based on the popular novel "Qiyue and Ansen" and produced by Peter Chan's We Pictures, Soul Mate is a years-spanning story about a close friendship between two very different girls, Ansen and Qiyue, who first meet at the age of thirteen and would grow to have intertwined lives. Ansen (Li Haofang) is the rebel with the always-on-a-business-trip mother, while Qiyue (Yao Xinyan) is the prim good girl with the loving, always-there parents. That contrast informs their post-middle-school lives; Ansen (Under the Hawthorn Tree sweetheart Zhou Dongyu) enters a vocational school and takes on multiple odd jobs, while Qiyue (Ma Sichun) is put on the track to university and a stable job. Regardless, the two love one another like sisters and are seemingly primed to maintain that closeness for life.
But then it happens: men. Qiyue reveals her affection for her classmate Su Jiaming (Toby Lee), a smart and athletic boy who's the prototypical guy every tradition-valuing Chinese girl wants to bring home to her parents. The more outgoing Ansen pushes Qiyue to reveal her feelings, but while Qiyue is successful in drawing Jiaming's attention, so is Ansen. However, before things get too uncomfortable between her and Jiaming, Ansen embarks on a years-long journey around the world. Meanwhile, Qiyue and Jiaming attend the same college and the girls keep in touch. And yet tensions percolate. Qiyue and Jiaming have minor issues, while Ansen's constant sign-off on postcards, "Regards to Jiaming", provide hints at a love triangle. The girls eventually reunite, but by then the tension is so thick that it could probably stop a bullet. Maybe the girls don’t talk about Jiaming but he's always present. By act two, Soul Mate has essentially become Failed Bechdel Test: The Movie. Gender politics aside, Soul Mate soars as a representative member of its genre, outpacing its flaws with its terrific everything else. The relationship between Ansen and Qiyue is well-drawn and exceptionally detailed, and the journeys both take are resonant ones. Soul Mate is the story of two girls who reveal themselves to be more alike than you'd think, and the actresses give strong, deeply-felt performances. Zhou Dongyu, who's long been in danger of stereotyping thanks to her petite frame and innocent demeanor, impresses with a fiery, razor-sharp performance. Ma Sichun gets the less showy and less sympathetic role – because good girls are less appealing than sassy bad girls in the movies – but she's easily Zhou's equal. The script gives the actresses plenty of room to operate, as they're required to convey as much through expression as dialogue. Eventually, the script does provide large swathes of exposition, but matters develop so clearly through incidental detail and performance that when the inevitable info dumps do happen they seem appropriate. The film's story flaws are most apparent in the final act. Qiyue and Ansen's youthful days are related in flashback by an adult Ansen, who's reading an online novel (presumably written by Qiyue) that recounts the pair's developing relationship. Tension is created by the fact that the girls are seemingly estranged in the present, and there's implied hope that reconciliation is possible in the near future. Also, Jiaming is still lingering around somewhere and one wonders if he'll re-enter their lives in a substantial way. However, when the film delivers its big twists, the story is left with gaping holes that make no sense. Derek Tsang's direction is strong enough to distract from the plot holes, but any reasonable look at the story would show that it holds no water. Soul Mate relies on mysteries that shouldn't exist and moments that shouldn't happen to create its most impactful drama. More careful screenwriting could have smoothed these matters over. Still, Soul Mate compensates in so many ways for its story flaws that it gets an easy pass. Not only are the emotions compelling and familiar, but the production values, from the locations and art direction to the cinematography and music (both songs and score), are all well above par. Acting from the two leads is top notch, and even Toby Lee provides decent presence – though his character is little more than the ball in this girl-powered game of football. Perhaps more than anything, Soul Mate offers discovery. Besides showcasing Zhou Dongyu and Ma Sichun, Soul Mate places Derek Tsang firmly onto the short list of outstanding young Hong Kong directors. He may be working with producer Peter Chan, who's been responsible for plenty of acclaimed Chinese films, and obviously played a part in Soul Mate's resulting quality. However, Tsang's previous directorial efforts showed an attention to performance and detail, and offered hope that one day Tsang would do more with his talent. That day has apparently arrived. by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com |
Customer Review of "Soul Mate (DVD) (Japan Version)"
See all my reviews
July 16, 2021
This customer review refers to Soul Mate (2016) (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
A promising start squandered
In 'Soul Mates', Ansen (Zhou Dong Yu) meets and becomes fast friends with July (Ma Si Chun) when they are 13 year old schoolkids. This is a case of opposites attracting. Ansen is wild, willful, and rebellious. July is dutiful, studious, and obedient. As they mature, their relationship grows, even as their radically different personalities lead them on entirely different paths in life.
There was something which rang untrue to me about this story arc. My experience is that, while sometimes schoolkids can befriend people very unlike themselves, those friendships tend to evaporate as the kids grow up and develop much different interests and much different relationships. Unfortunately, that feeling of falseness grew for me as the film progressed. As the story becomes more intense, the characters deliver leaden lines and behave in ways which seemed increasingly unreal. [This paragraph reveals a plot point. Please skip this paragraph if you don't want to be exposed to it.] The sense that this story was detached from real, lived experience reached its peak when, after the two friends have experienced a falling-out, July becomes pregnant, reunites with Ansen, and tells her that her pregnancy has clarified for her what is really most important in her life, i.e., her friendship with Ansen. Seriously? Wouldn't a real-life July tell Ansen that her pregnancy has clarified that what is most important in her life is caring for the baby growing in her womb? With the story having gone so far off the rails, watching the rest of the film became a chore for me, which is a shame given all of the positive things I can say about it. Among those positives, the cinematography, particularly in the film's first half, is strikingly beautiful. The film's initial premise is original. And the performances of the film's three leads, Ma Si Chun (who reminds me so very much of the appealing Japanese actress Arimura Kasumi), Zhou Dong Yu, and Toby Lee, are fresh and authentic. It is terribly unfortunate that the story and the dialogue become so inauthentic. |
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