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S E A R C H D V D B e a v e r |
"HOU HSIAO-HSIEN ~ 4 DVD DELUXE BOX SET ~ 1983-1986"
The Boys From Fengkuei A Summer At Grandpa's The Time To Live And The Time To Die Dust In The Wind
Everyone seems to have a hobby that somehow allows them to ponder, mentally digress or contemplate - often this is associated with the outdoors and communing with nature - deep-sea diving, skiing, golfing, hiking or even just kite flying in the park. Hou Hsiao-hsien's films are as close as I can find in cinema for duplicating the quality of that same emotional response. His films can be interpretively difficult, and vary stridently from mass appeal and its corresponding box-office take. This is true for most aesthetically rich films though. Hou uses poetic and enduring imagery that filters through your memory banks and evoke a restful response - comparatively for me the warm and relaxing sensation you get from a long soak in the bath, listening to classical music or reading beautiful poetry. Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami evokes similar responses in his films and has commented that he enjoys almost putting his viewers into a sleeping state. The narrative, plot, and dialogue of this cinema all becomes secondary to the images which gracefully dance through to your sub-conscious. Indeed these film conventions seem quite stayed by Hou as if to pull you aggressively toward the strikingly simple and beautiful cinematography. These are films for people who love art and beauty. Each are unique... yet all are similar in their introspective qualities. out of |
DVD Review: Sino Movie (Taiwan) Collector's Set - Region 0 - NTSC
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NOTE: A different cover, but it is the exact same as the sold out first printing Boxset! Thinking of buying from YesAsia? CLICK HERE and use THIS UPDATED BEAVER PAGE to source their very best... |
Distribution | Sino Movie - Region 0 - NTSC |
Audio | Mandarin (Dolby Digital 2.0 Dolby) |
Subtitles | English, Chinese, Japanese, None |
Features |
Release Information: Edition Details: • 56-Page
Color Booklet (text only in Chinese) |
Comments: |
Most transfers looks about the same- non-anamorphic widescreen's in-and-around the 1.78 aspect ratio with inordinately high bitrates. Colors are bright with only bare hints of contrast boosting. There is slight speckles and damage spots on all 4 releases, but they only confirm that there has been very little digital manipulation of these transfers. As far as DVD image quality goes I suspect that most viewers will be quite happy. In the audio, I noticed a few fluctuations, but nothing overly distracting. The subtitle fonts range a little, but mostly they are clean, large, white and removable - with minor spelling and grammar errors. Overall I think we should be quite happy with this. As with many unrecognized films these could easily have been substantially effected by age and improper storage. No Extras on the DVD itself, but it comes in quite a handsome package with a 56 page color booklet with Chinese text. Quoted as 'limited to 3000', which I don't necessarily believe, but regardless I wouldn't procrastinate if you are at all interested. For Hou fans (or all cinema fans) this is quite priceless. out of |
Recommended Reading in Chinese/Hong Kong/Taiwanese Cinema (CLICK COVERS or TITLES for more information)
Memoirs from the Beijing Film Academy
by Zhen Ni, Chris Berry, Ni Zhen |
Zhang Yimou: Interviews (Conversations With
Filmmakers) by Frances Gateward |
Chinese Films in Focus: 25 New Takes by Chris Berry |
Wong Kar-Wai: Auteur of Time (Bfi World Directors) by Stephen Teo |
China into Film: Frames of Reference in Contemporary
Chinese Cinema (Envisioning Asia) by Jerome Silbergeld |
New Chinese Cinemas
by Nick Browne |
Once Upon a Time in China : A Guide to Hong Kong,
Taiwanese, and Mainland Chinese Cinema by Jeff Yang |
Chinese Film Theory by George S. Semsel |
Check out more in "The Library"
(aka "The Boys From Fengkuei" or "Fengkuei-lai-te jen")
Latest Theatrical Shown: 19th April 2002 (Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema) - Argentina
Ah-Ching and his buddies have just finished school on their island fishing village. They now spend much of their free time drinking and fighting. Three of them decide to go to the city of Kaohsiung on the coast to look for gainful employment. They find an apartment with the help of relatives and Ah-Ching becomes attracted to the girlfriend of a neighbor residing there. There they face some of the harsh realities of the big city.
The earliest film in the Hou boxset shows an indistinct style of cinematography and framing, but captures the expressions and deep feelings as well as his later films. The theme of idle youths fighting conformity and uncomfortably seeking a place in society is very prevalent. |
CLICK logo to order from: |
NOTE: A different cover, but it is the exact same as the sold out first printing Boxset! Thinking of buying from YesAsia? CLICK HERE and use THIS UPDATED BEAVER PAGE to source their very best... |
Runtime | 1:38:27 |
Video |
1.80:1
Aspect Ratio Chapters : 17 |
Bitrate:
NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes. |
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(aka "Dongdong de jiaqi")
Recent Theatrical Shown: 20th April 2002 (Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema) - Argentina
When their mother is forced to stay in the hospital for a prolonged period of time,
4 year-old Ting-Ting and her brother, 11 year-old Tung-Tung are taken by their uncle to spend the summer with their grandfather,
who is a doctor in a small, rural town. The warmest of Hou's film - he, like many other directors, have focused a film on children and the intricacies of becoming educated in the working ways of the world... and its inhabitants (us). Ting-Ting and Tung-Tung appear quite traumatized by their mothers absence, but rebound with resolute and the inherent ability to adapt ... a positive examination of the human condition. This is the only film of Hou's that I recall such (relatively) blatant cliché's... there is even a hint of melodrama. For this reason some my dismiss it but I will continue to embrace it as a favorite. |
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NOTE: A different cover, but it is the exact same as the sold out first printing Boxset! |
Runtime | 1:37:42 |
Video |
1.78:1
Aspect Ratio Chapters: 18 |
Bitrate:
NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes. |
DVD Menus
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(aka "The Time To Live And The Time To Die" or "Tong nien wang shi")
Theatrical Release: West Germany February 1986 (Berlin International Film Festival)
A depiction of childhood maturity drawing heavily upon Hou's own
youth. Many who moved from mainland China to Taiwan in the 1940's, like Hou's family,
were unable to ever return. "A Time To Live and a Time To Die" focuses on the widening generation gap in a family shamefully cut off from its cultural
roots. There is an overall reference to a lack of respect for elders and
education - two very strong traditions of Chinese upbringing. Often quoted as ranking with the very best of Bresson and Ozu. Meandering, episodic and deceptively detached in tone, "A Time To Live and a Time To Die" is quite probably Hou Hsiao-Hsien's most daring formal experiment, as well as--surprisingly his most moving film to date. |
(excerpt from Ron Kopp's comments on Imdb found HERE)
CLICK logo to order from: |
NOTE: A different cover, but it is the exact same as the sold out first printing Boxset! Thinking of buying from YesAsia? CLICK HERE and use THIS UPDATED BEAVER PAGE to source their very best... |
Runtime | 2:16:20 |
Video |
1.78:1
Aspect Ratio Chapters: 23 |
Bitrate:
NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes. |
DVD Menus
Subtitle Sample
Screen Captures
(aka "Dust In The Wind" or "Lianlian fengchen")
Theatrical Release: 13 September 1987 (Toronto Film Festival)
Determined Wan and his girlfriend, Huen, leave their employ in the minute mining village
where they reside and move to the bustling city of Taipei to find careers. Wan becomes a delivery boy
while Huen becomes a seamstress assistant. Touching, almost humorous, vignettes abound
with the culture shock of the move. To tell of her families shoe sizes at the store Huen pulls out
pieces of paper with the outlines of her family's feet traced on them.
Heartwarming and still dynamically real evidence of small town innocence
fighting for survival in a large metropolis. |
CLICK logo to order from: |
NOTE: A different cover, but it is the exact same as the sold out first printing Boxset! Thinking of buying from YesAsia? CLICK HERE and use THIS UPDATED BEAVER PAGE to source their very best... |
Runtime | 1:49:36 |
Video |
1.70:1
Aspect Ratio Chapters: 19 |
Bitrate:
NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes. |
DVD Menus
Subtitle Sample
Screen Captures