Korean War in Color

Starring:Korean War in Color
Studio: Goldhil Home Media
Product Type: DVD
Average customer rating:
- Wow.
- This is a side of the Korean War I've never seen before
- Gratuitious War, Great Movie
- unremarkable and at times slightly absurd
- Tae Guk Gi
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Tae Guk Gi - The Brotherhood of War
Starring: Dong-Kun Jang , Bin Won , Eun-ju Lee (II) , Hyeong-jin Kong , and Yeong-ran Lee
Director: Je-gyu Kang
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
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Similar Items:
- Oldboy
- Shiri
- J.S.A. - Joint Security Area
- Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance
- The Way Home
ASIN: B0006VL1J2
Release Date: 2005-02-15 |
Amazon.com
A big, bruising epic of the Korean War, Tae Guk Gi smashed box-office records when it played in South Korea in 2004, almost as though the country needed to re-live the trauma at a 50-year distance. For the rest of the world, this movie looks like a ground-level reckoning in a melodramatic key, with an authentic feel for battle lines as well as home front. Tae Guk Gi follows two brothers--one uneducated and forceful, the other intellectual and reserved--as they are united and then divided by the conflict. The broadly emotional story has some of the power of tales of the American Civil War, when family members found themselves on opposite sides of a battle. Director Kang Je-gyu , who made the lively female-assassin hit Shiri, takes a blunt approach to the material (including a Saving Private Ryan-style framing device). And at 150 minutes, he has plenty of time for head-splitting, blood-spraying combat. This movie is meant as a punch in the stomach, and it connects. --Robert Horton
Description
In the powerful tradition of Saving Private Ryan and Band of Brothers comes this box-office hit from Korea.From the director of Shiri comes the epic tale of two brothers. Jin-tae, a shoemaker, has worked tirelessly to provide money for the younger Jin-seok to go to college. But each of their hopes and dreams are shattered when both are forced to join the army against their will. Torn away from home and family, Jin-tae vows to protect Jin-seok despite the dangers-and the cost. In the searing crucible of battle, fate intervenes, forcing their bonds of faith, love and trust to be tested time and again in this suspense-filled, action-packed war drama.
Customer Reviews:
Wow........2007-04-28
I have seen this film twice and it certainly moves. I just don't think it was made for American sensibilities, rather for South Korean ones. Some of it was very implausible (partially in that both brothers survived as long as they did; another in the "side switching" done by one and/or both of the brothers). Very emotional, very vivid, very gripping movie. Killer action.
This is a side of the Korean War I've never seen before.......2007-04-11
The film is technically outstanding. Like "Saving Private Ryan," Taegukgi spares no pains to show that war is hell; the battle scenes look like documentary footage, not a "war movie", and have a ferocity I've seen in no other film. Unfortunately, the movie goes on at such length and with--I wish I could find another word that fits--such zeal that it becomes faintly unpleasant. And not unpleasant in the sense that yes, war is not supposed to be nice, but in the sense that there's a difference between depicting and wallowing. You can only show soldiers from the South angrily gunning down soldiers from the North so many times before it becomes a cliché, and a somewhat repugnant one at that. I'm reminded, unfortunately, of François Truffaut's main contention with war movies: all too often they made war look like fun, not like hell on earth.
If the relationship between the two brothers is what makes the film, it is also what unmakes it, no thanks to the movie's muddled and manipulative plotting. At one point the two come across a cadre of wounded North Korean soldiers in a mine, one of whom was a childhood friend of Jin-tae but was forcibly conscripted into the Northern army. "All I see now is a communist," Jin-tae says (too obvious, and too much too soon, really), and prepares to kill him. Jin-seok then leaps to the boy's defense, and watches over him in when he's kept as a POW. This leads to another, deeply unpleasant scene where the Northern prisoners are forced to fight. Jin-tae takes great pride in demonstrating how they need to beat each other; Jin-seok steps in and starts throwing punches himself, and the movie conveniently forgets about his weak heart to make its point.
Both of these scenes, and a fair deal of the rest of the movie, suffer from the same problem: they are willing to ignore the logic of character and circumstance to make points that could be otherwise delivered every bit as effectively. They also show off the film's general and complete lack of subtlety. But the brothers are convincing--even when the script is marching them off a cliff--and their performances are well worth seeing even when they're surrounded by a story that hasn't been constructed with the same care to attention as the war scenery. It is hard for me to say this movie is not worth seeing, though, because it is: It shows a side of a war that has almost never been seen by an English-speaking audience, even if it isn't everything it could have been.
Gratuitious War, Great Movie.......2007-03-31
"Saving Private Ryan", starting out magnificiently, fizzled out halfway through. "We Were Soldiers", with well-designed battle scenes, had too many characters and may have tried to accomplish too much in too little reel. "WindTalkers", so action-packed, came across as overly fantastic at various points. "Platoon" was great, but lacked the epic feel. "Black Hawk Down", whilst show-casing much of modern urban warfare, was somewhat incoherent and disjointed.
"TaeGukGi" (Brotherhood of War) - one of only two movies directed by Je-gyu Kang -, then, is as close to perfect as war-movie perfection gets.
Jin-Tae and Jin-Seok. Two brothers, the older being Jin-Tae, sent off to defend the Pusan perimeter during the North Korea's invasion of the South in 1950. Big brother turns hero to protect the younger brother and hopefully get him sent home. After numerous split heads, blown-up bodies, cold-blooded killing by both sides, they are split up with Jin-Tae being captured by, and eventually fighting for, the North Koreans. A momentous and heart-felt climax ensues in the midst of some of the most gruesome battle scenes on film ever (let alone from Asian cinema).
Director Je-Gyu Kang is a master at taking you deep into the horror, the loss, the community-ripping character of war.
The love between the brothers is poignantly portrayed. The stronger and weaker, one risking everything to protect the other, both growing apart in their view and determination in the war, both estranged, one hating the other, until both are united in the worst of situations again, pledging their love for each other.
Je-gyu Kang is also an expert of the contrast of before and after. He makes is very clear how the war changed families and hearts. From the start, where the two brothers and their family are shown together in blissful harmony and joy, only for war to intervene and for them to recollect the earlier good life as motivation to keep fighting.
You won't see any computer-generated armies in Brotherhood but this is more than compensated by truckloads of extras which also help in retaining an authentic feel. The gore, explosions, blood, maggots, etc. (all made from good 'ol plastic and red paint, I suspect) are also real and graphic enough to make you wince - proof that CGI isn't a must-have for a great movie, even today.
History students are also privileged by the movie, which shows the back-and-forth character of the Korean War and the fluctuating reaction of its South Korean combatants throughout.
This movie also demonstrates the absolutely crucial role of a powerful original score. Almost everyone who's watched it commented on the part the music played in connecting the audience with the narrative. It throws the movie at the doorstep of your soul and leaves you trembling.
Yet, most importantly, it reflects Je-gyu Kang's anguish as a South Korean, living everyday in the reality of divided Korea, hoping (against hope?) that reunification can reoccur without more bloodshed, despairing over the many families and lives torn apart as the peninsular became the pawn of bigger countries and corrupted egos.
This is a theme also explored in his other big movie, "Shiri" (a film with also much 'contrast', depth and violence), and cannot but stick with you all the way to the end.
Part Korean history (and anguish), part Korean culture (and mindset), part character transformation through conflict, Brotherhood is all a war movie should be.
unremarkable and at times slightly absurd.......2007-03-09
This isn't a review of the entire movie - just the first 45 minutes or so. That was my limit for this (almost) comically earnest tale of brotherly love and heroism. For those who suggest that there's no such thing as overacting in Korea, please.
Interested in much better acted (and more intelligent) somewhat recent Korean films? Try Chunhyang (2000), or The Host (2006).
Tae Guk Gi.......2007-01-10
Although english dubbed, reading the subtitles is the most practical form of translation. Other than the necessity to read them, the are no flaws with the movie, and no flaws pertaining to the product. This is a great movie i would rank with Saving Private Ryan.
Average customer rating:
- An excellent documentary about "the forgotton war".
- In fact, not so shocking as it says
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Korean War in Color
Starring: Korean War in Color
Manufacturer: Goldhil Home Media
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
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Similar Items:
- Korean War Stories
- Korea - The Forgotten War (History Channel)
- Historic Time Travel - Korean War DVD
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ASIN: B00005TRZM
Release Date: 2002-02-12 |
Customer Reviews:
An excellent documentary about "the forgotton war"........2003-10-21
I purchased this DVD for my Father who is a Veteran and ex POW of the Korean war. We both agree that this is one of the best documentaries on the subject yet. High quality narration and footage give the viewer a good understanding of how and why the war was fought.
In fact, not so shocking as it says.......2003-10-20
And not so many things to watch.
But, I studied much about my country's desperate history.
This must be a good historical documentary on Korean war.
After having seen this, I strengthened my mind more to fight against the DPRK tyranny regime in North Korea, a component of AXIS OF EVIL.
Finally, I FEEL to thank you Americans for giving us priceless freedom now we Koreans enjoy.
Average customer rating:
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Test of Will - Canada in Korea
Manufacturer: TITLE HOUSE e-DISTRIBUTION
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Product Features:
- Discover Canada's contribution to the Korean War under the command of the United States
ASIN: B000MWWSI8 |
Product Description
Little is known of the story of the Canadian involvement in the Korean War, the first war in which Canadian troops served directly under the command of the United States as part of a United Nations force. In Canada the Korean War is a neglected war, largely because the smaller number of soldiers involved and casualties suffered paled when compared with the much larger national engagement in the two World Wars.
Test of Will: Canada in Korea is a two-hour documentary, focusing on Canadas role in the Korean War.
Archival photographs, film footage, and radio reports are combined with letters, speeches, articles, and reports from the time read by off-camera actors who assume the identity of the author of the written material.
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