The Four (Blu-ray) (Japan Version) Blu-ray Region A
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YesAsia Editorial Description
The counterfeit currency case is causing a heated rivalry between the law-enforcing bureau in the imperial capital called the Six Doors, and the Emperor's secret service known as the Divine Constabulary. Headed by Lord Bu (Cheng Taishen), the Six Doors sends constable Cold Blood (Deng Chao) to infiltrate Zhuge Zhengwo's (Anthony Wong) Divine Constabulary, where he meets Zhuge's disciples Merciless (Crystal Liu) and Iron Fist (Collin Chou), and fellow new recruit Lightfoot (Ronald Cheng). Entangled romantically between Merciless and the mysterious beauty Ji Yaohua (Jiang Yiyan), Cold Blood goes undercover at the Divine Constabulary and discovers a shocking conspiracy to overthrow the empire...
Technical Information
Product Title: | The Four (Blu-ray) (Japan Version) The Four (Blu-ray) (Japan Version) The Four (Blu-ray) (Japan Version) ドラゴン・フォー 秘密の特殊捜査官/隠密 スペシャル・エディション The Four (Blu-ray) (Japan Version) |
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Artist Name(s): | Collin Chou | Crystal Liu | Gordon Chan | Deng Chao | Ronald Cheng | Anthony Wong | Jiang Yi Yan 鄒 兆龍 | 劉亦菲 | 陳 嘉上 | 鄧超 | 鄭中基 | 黃 秋生 | 江一燕 邹 兆龙 | 刘亦菲 | 陈 嘉上 | 邓超 | 郑中基 | 黄 秋生 | Jiang Yi Yan 鄒兆龍(コリン・チョウ) | 劉亦菲(リウ・イーフェイ) | 陳嘉上(ゴードン・チャン) | 鄧超 (タン・チャオ) | ヘンリー・ライ[黎允文] | 鄭中基(ロナルド・チェン) | 黄秋生 (アンソニー・ウォン) | 江一燕(ジャン・イーイェン) Collin Chou | Crystal Liu | 진가상 | Deng Chao | Ronald Cheng | Anthony Wong | Jiang Yi Yan |
Director: | Gordon Chan 陳 嘉上 陈 嘉上 陳嘉上(ゴードン・チャン) 진가상 |
Blu-ray Region Code: | A - Americas (North, Central and South except French Guiana), Korea, Japan, South East Asia (including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan) What is it? |
Release Date: | 2016-07-06 |
Publisher Product Code: | PJXF-1020 |
Place of Origin: | China |
Disc Format(s): | Blu-ray |
Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1049824915 |
Product Information
ドン・チャオ / リウ・イーフェイ[劉亦菲] / コリン・チョウ[鄒兆龍] / ゴードン・チャン (監督、製作、脚本) / ヘンリー・ライ[黎允文] (音楽)
[特典情報]
映像特典収録
[テクニカル・インフォメーション]
廉価版/本編118分
製作国 : 中国 (China)
[ストーリー]
世間を震撼させる偽金事件が発生。警察と共に捜査に当たるのは、諸葛正我が率いる4人組──クールな剣士「冷血」、美貌の超能力者「無情」、健脚の酒豪「追命」、豪腕の工作員「鉄手」と呼ばれる者たちだった。
[解説]
アジア×ハリウッドの一流スタッフが放つ超絶アクション・エンターテインメント!/中国で驚異的大ヒットを記録したシリーズ第1弾!/4人の秘密捜査官“四大名捕”の活躍をスリリングに描いた武侠アクション超大作!/『ウルヴァリン』『X−MEN』を彷彿とさせる、超能力&特殊能力を駆使した壮絶なバトルが展開!/『トランスフォーマー/ロストエイジ』『マレフィセント』『パシフィック・リム』のVFXスタッフが放つド迫力映像!
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "The Four (Blu-ray) (Japan Version)"
This professional review refers to The Four (2012) (Blu-ray) (Hong Kong Version)
Gordon Chan continues to cement his position as one of China's top blockbuster directors, following up his hits Painted Skin and Mural with big budget martial arts fantasy The Four. Co-directed by Janet Chun (The Jade and the Pearl) and with action choreography by Ku Huan Chiu (14 Blades), the film is loosely based upon a series of hugely popular wuxia novels written by Wen Ruian in the 1970s. Boasting lavish production values and special effects, the film's impressive cast is a mixture of top Mainland and Hong Kong talent, including Anthony Wong (Motorway), Crystal Liu (A Chinese Ghost Story), Ronald Cheng (Vulgaria), and Chan's Mural stars Deng Chao and Collin Chou.
The film revolves around the Divine Constabulary, a mysterious organisation in service to the Emperor in the imperial capital, who clash heads with law enforcement bureau Department Six over a counterfeit currency case that threatens to cause chaos across the empire. Led by Zhuge Zhengwo (Anthony Wong), the Constabulary is made up of officers with special powers, including wheelchair bound psychic Emotionless (Crystal Liu), the mighty Iron Fist (Collin Chou) and wine loving, fast thinking new recruit Life Stealer (Ronald Cheng), plus Leng Lingqi (Deng Chao), who has been sent in undercover by Department Six head Lord Bu (Cheng Taishen, Under the Hawthorn Tree) to uncover their secrets. Using the currency scheme to further his own ends is the sinister An Shigeng (Wu Xiu Bo), who uses femme fatale Ji Yaohua (Jiang Yiyan, Rest on Your Shoulder), to try and ensure the success of his conspiracy. There's certainly a lot going on in The Four, with a variety of plots, subplots, schemes, hidden identities and strained romances all bustling for attention, Chan and Chun having revisioned Wen Ruian's text as a kind of Chinese period set X-Men. Indeed, the whole counterfeit money case comes across almost as a distraction (not least since the villainous An Shigeng is amusingly laid back about his confusing scheme), most of the focus being on the film's characters and their various relationships. This works well, and though the film does tend to leap around rather randomly and has an uncertain tone, at times seeming to be unsure whether to take itself seriously or head down a more comic route, it's definitely never boring. While their characters are for the most part quite lazily defined by their powers, the cast are all on decent and likeable form, Ronald Cheng getting most of the best lines, Anthony Wong doing well in a stately zen-master type role, and both Crystal Liu and Deng Chao raising a few unintentional laughs with their constant emo-sulking - the film is at its most comfortable and enjoyable during its lighter moments, lacking the emotional weight to hammer home any of its angst. The film is unsurprisingly big on action, and again the two directors do an impressive job of packing in a fair amount of variety, the characters' different powers coming into play and making for some fun set pieces revolving around people turning into monsters, telekinesis and the undead. Though there's nothing too bruising on show, Ku Huan Chiu's action choreography is solid, and the film has some neatly creative and crazily acrobatic scenes along the way, Chan and Chun clearly having enjoyed pushing their budget to its limits. The special effects are suitably spectacular, and though very often used gratuitously, they provide more than enough eye candy to count the film amongst the best looking Chinese blockbusters of late. This was clearly the main aim in making The Four, Gordon Chan and Janet Chun aiming for slick popcorn fun rather than anything meaningful, and on that score it's hard to fault the film. Though it ultimately makes little sense and would have benefitted from a more focused narrative, it's a cheerful, dazzling and occasionally thrilling film which entertains throughout - probably just as well, with sequels already having been announced. by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.com |
Customer Review of "The Four (Blu-ray) (Japan Version)"
See all my reviews
August 27, 2014
This customer review refers to The Four (2012) (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
The first thirty minutes of "The Four" introduce so many different characters and plot points in rapid-fire fashion that my head was spinning. I had to stop the movie and watch those 30 minutes over again in order to get some sense of who was whom and what was happening. The filmmakers Gordon Chan and Janet Chun didn't provide much help. The movie offers no backstories for any of its characters; we learn nothing about how these people acquired their astounding skills or what motivates them. Frankly, we aren't given much reason to care about them. Thank goodness that the cast includes Ronald Cheng; his comic touch allows him to make his character more than one-dimensional. Alas, he is alone in that achievement.
The film's plot concerns an attempt to undermine the nation through counterfeiting its currency and the schemes of evil An Shigeng to seize power amid the currency chaos. Attempting to defend the realm are rival organizations Department Six and the Divine Constabulary, which are engaged in an endless turf war. The plot, oddly, is relatively insignificant to the movie. Strangely, many of the film's most significant events happen off-screen and we simply witness the central characters learning of those events after the fact. Instead, "The Four" focusses on serving up a heaping helping of action, driven by flashy CGI effects. The characters show off eye-popping wuxia skills (all generated by computer graphics) and seem to acquire unexpected new skills whenever circumstances require them. Plenty of action and a paucity of story. What story "The Four" possesses is left unresolved to facilitate endless sequels. Is this the current state of the art for blockbuster film-making? Let's hope not. |
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