Winds of September (DVD) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Popular player Yen (Rhydian Vaughan) leads a group of seven troublemaking high school boys who raise havoc in the classroom, smoke on the school rooftop, and heckle at baseball games in their provincial hometown of Hsinchu. When Yen cheats on his girlfriend Yun (Jennifer Chu), the more introverted Tang (Chang Chieh), who holds a torch for Yun, takes the blame and the beating for his buddy. The incident sets off a painful fallout in friendship as misunderstandings build and extend across the group. The harder they struggle to hold on to friendship, the more they lose themselves and each other.
Technical Information
Product Title: | Winds of September (DVD) (Japan Version) Winds of September (DVD) (Japan Version) Winds of September (DVD) (Japan Version) 九月に降る風 Winds of September (DVD) (Japan Version) |
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Artist Name(s): | Eric Tsang | Chris Chiu | Rhydian Vaughan | Lu Yi Ching | Chang Chieh | Wang Bo Chieh | Teresa Daley 曾志偉 | 邱宇辰 | 鳳小岳 | 陸弈靜 | 張捷 | 王柏傑 | 紀培慧 曾志伟 | 邱宇辰 | 凤小岳 | 陆弈静 | 张捷 | 王柏杰 | 纪培慧 曾志偉 (エリック・ツァン) | チウ・イーチェン | 鳳小岳 (リディアン・ヴォーン) | ジェニファー・チュウ | Lu Yi Ching | チャン・チエ | 王柏傑 (ワン・ポーチェ) | テレサ・チー Eric Tsang | Chris Chiu | Rhydian Vaughan | Lu Yi Ching | Chang Chieh | Wang Bo Chieh | Teresa Daley |
Director: | Tom Lin 林 書宇 林 书宇 林書宇 (トム・リン) Tom Lin |
Producer: | Eric Tsang 曾志偉 曾志伟 曾志偉 (エリック・ツァン) Eric Tsang |
Release Date: | 2010-02-24 |
Publisher Product Code: | ASBY-4565 |
Place of Origin: | Taiwan |
Disc Format(s): | DVD |
Region Code: | 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it? |
Publisher: | Amuse soft Entertainment |
Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1021698418 |
Product Information
リディアン・ヴォーン / チャン・チエ / ジェニファー・チュウ / トム・リン (監督、脚本)
[特典情報]
映像特典収録
[テクニカル・インフォメーション]
本編107分
製作国 : 台湾 (Taiwan)
公開年 : 2009
[ストーリー]
1997年夏。竹東高校卒業式の朝、タン(チャン・チエ)は 1年前の夏の出来事を独り静かに振り返っていた。そして、かけがえのない友との思い出を…。 96年9月。新学年の始まりだ。高校3年生のタンの仲間は、同級生のイェン(リディアン・ヴォーン)とチンチャオ(リン・チータイ)、落第生で最年長のヤオシン(ワン・ポーチエ)と彼と同じ2年生のポーチュー(シェン・ウェイニエン)、入学したばかりの1年生チーション(チウ・イーチェン)とチョンハン(リー・ユエチェン)。7人は騒動を起こしては教官室に呼び出されるトラブルメイカーの常連メンバーでもあった。一方、チーションとチョンハンのクラスメイトのペイシン(チー・ペイホイ)は、彼らを上級生の“不良グループ”から脱け出させるため、ブラスバンド部の先輩ユン(ジェニファー・チュウ)に相談し、ブラバン部に入部させようとする。そして、ペイシンの先輩ユンこそが、その“不良グループ”のリーダー、イェンの恋人だった。そんなとき、歓楽街のビリヤード場でイェンと間違えられたタンは、イェンがナンパした女の子、モンルンの恋人からガラス瓶で頭を殴られ、仲間たちを巻き込む大乱闘へと発展する。タンは、その夜以来、仲間たちの軽率な悪ふざけにも心から笑えなくなってしまう。次第にタンは仲間から孤立していき、彼らの溜まり場だった学校の屋上への扉に鍵がかけられていたことが、タンとイェンたちとの溝をいっそう深める結果となる。ところが、そんなある夜、ユンからイェンへの手紙を渡してほしいと頼まれたタンは、久しぶりに仲間と合流する。ふたりは台湾南部の屏東の球場に行く約束をし、友情は復活したかのように見えた。しかし、その直後、イェンの身に思いもかけない悲劇が起きる。 これを機に、残された6人の関係にも微妙な変化が生まれ、ひとり、またひとりと仲間は散り散りになってゆく…
[受賞]
金馬奨 最優秀オリジナル脚本賞 ()
[受賞]
台北映画祭 審査員特別賞 ()
[受賞]
台北映画祭 メディア推薦賞 ()
[受賞]
台北映画祭 最優秀脚本賞 ()
[受賞]
台北映画祭 最優秀新人賞 ()
[受賞]
上海国際映画祭「アジア新人部門賞」最優秀作品賞 ()
[受賞]
中国語映画メディア大賞最優秀脚本賞 ()
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Professional Review of "Winds of September (DVD) (Japan Version)"
This professional review refers to Winds of September (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Taiwan Version)
Produced by Eric Tsang and Hong Kong-based Big Pictures Limited, Winds of September - The Taiwan Chapter is the first of three films from three different Asian countries, each telling the same basic story of youth and friendship, and how good intentions can't stop the inevitable, sometimes tragic end of innocence. Director Tom Lin Shu-Yu (Parachute Kids) is the originator of this concept, as all three films are based off his original script, which follows one year in the school lives of seven boys as they come to grips with change and conflict within their ranks. The Taiwan Chapter takes place specifically in 1997 in suburban Hsinchu, a medium-sized city south of Taipei, at the peak of the Chinese Professional Baseball League's popularity. At the time, the fledgling professional sports league was beset by a game-fixing scandal, mirroring the disillusionment and loss of hope felt by the young boys muddling through their quietly desperate lives. Tang (Chang Chieh) is one of seven friends of varying high school years. Collectively, the group is known as a bunch of troublemakers, though some of the gang are worse than others. The charismatic assumed leader is Yen (Rhydian Vaughan), a handsome playboy whose prim girlfriend Yun (Jennifer Chu) has to put up with incessant stories of his infidelity. The problem reaches a tipping point when Yen sleeps with another girl and her angry boyfriend comes calling. Tang is mistaken for Yen and assaulted in his place, and the incident ultimately drives a minor wedge in the group. The situation is exacerbated by the other boys' individual conflicts and issues, and Yen and Tang nearly have a falling out. The two do seem to patch things up, but the cracks in the group's camaraderie begin to worsen. Some boys are pressured to drop the group, while others continue to misbehave, ignoring the damage it may have on their future. Ultimately, the boys' aimlessness results in a tragedy that further drives them apart, revealing the anger, cowardice, fear, jealousy, and helplessness that lives within them. Winds of September is a second feature for director Tom Lin, whose facility with the Taiwan Cinema house style (picturesque settings, sharp cinematography, slow pacing, generous visual storytelling) gives his film an air of quality most other features would envy. The film's superficial trappings are exceptionally impressive, such that one may feel that the obvious surface quality also exists underneath. Lin does make his characters distinct, giving them personality and charisma, but the situations don't necessarily extend beyond what's obvious. Lin sketches his situations and characters sharply, but despite the drama inherent in his subject matter, Lin never seems to draw the film away from tried-and-true formula. This is a youth film about misbehaving youth, so they're going to have fun, fight, get into trouble, and eventually get in over their heads. Ultimately, what happens to them is expected and even perfunctory because, well, that's what always happens in these films. Not that there's anything wrong with conventional movies, especially ones that feel as quality as this one. Winds of September doesn't do much to make it necessarily stand out, but it possesses a variety of promising, attractive new faces, plus it assembles its elements exceptionally well. Sometimes style (even non-flashy, contemplative style) can make the generic more substantial, and Tom Lin assembles a fine package, getting effective performances from his cast, and making their generic conflicts come to matter. Furthermore, Lin's portrait of Taiwan is undeniably pretty to look at it, and is beautifully captured by art director Lee Tien-Chue and cinematographer Fisher Yu. Hsinchu is more suburban than Taipei, and possesses an idyllic rural charm that perfectly fits the film's coming-of-age themes. Also, the use of the historically-accurate baseball scandal is intriguing, echoing the boys' maturation and changing emotions well. Winds of September is not fully-realized, and lacks the depth or complexity to take it to another level of achievement. But for a second feature, it's a fine effort, and one worthy of support. by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com |
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