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Mother [Blu-ray]
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Genre | Mystery & Suspense |
Format | Blu-ray |
Contributor | Jin Goo, Kim Gin-goo, Moon Hee-ra, Song Sae-beauk, Chun Woo-hee, Kim Hye-Ja, Moon Yang-Kwon, Park Myeong-shin, Min Kyung-Jin, Won Bin, Kim Byeong-seon, Jung Young-ki, Kim Hong-jip, Yun Je-mun, Park Eun-kyo, Lee Young-suck, Lee Mi-do, Bong Joon-ho, Cho Kyung-sook, Park Tae-joon, Ko Kyu-phill, Yu Mou-young, Jun Mi-sun, Seo Woo-sik, Yoon Jae-moon See more |
Language | Korean |
Runtime | 1 hour and 30 minutes |
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From the manufacturer
MOTHER
Directed by 2020 Academy Award Winning Director Bong Joon-Ho
Mother is a devoted single parent to her simple-minded twenty-seven-year-old son, Do-joon. Often a source of anxiety to his mother, Do-joon behaves in foolish or simply dangerous ways. One night, while walking home drunk, he encounters a schoolgirl who he follows for a while before she disappears into a dark alley. The next morning, she is found dead in an abandoned building and Do-joon is accused of her murder. An inefficient lawyer and an apathetic police force result in a speedy conviction. His mother refuses to believe her beloved son is guilty and immediately undertakes her own investigation to find the girl’s killer. In her obsessive quest to clear her son’s name, Mother steps into a world of unimaginable chaos and shocking revelations.
STARRING
- Kim Hye-Ja
- Won Bin
SPECIAL FEATURES
- Making of MOTHER
- A Look at Actress Kim Hye-ja
- Behind the Scenes
- Production Design Featurette
- Supporting Actors Featurette
- Cinematography Featurette
- Music Score Featurette
Product Description
Mother is a devoted single parent to her simple-minded twenty-seven-year-old son, Do-joon. Often a source of anxiety to his mother, Do-joon behaves in foolish or simply dangerous ways. One night, while walking home drunk, he encounters a school girl who he follows for a while before she disappears into a dark alley. The next morning, she is found dead in an abandoned building, and Do-joon is accused of her murder. An inefficient lawyer and an apathetic police force result in a speedy conviction. His mother refuses to believe her beloved son is guilty and immediately undertakes her own investigation to find the girl's killer. In her obsessive quest to clear her son's name, Mother steps into a world of unimaginable chaos and shocking revelations.
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 2.35:1
- MPAA rating : R (Restricted)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 0.01 ounces
- Item model number : 7479891
- Director : Bong Joon-ho
- Media Format : Blu-ray
- Run time : 1 hour and 30 minutes
- Release date : July 20, 2010
- Actors : Park Eun-kyo, Yoon Jae-moon, Kim Hye-Ja, Won Bin, Jin Goo
- Subtitles: : English
- Producers : Seo Woo-sik, Park Tae-joon, Moon Yang-Kwon
- Studio : Magnolia Home Ent
- ASIN : B003JSSPT8
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #9,590 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #1,122 in Drama Blu-ray Discs
- Customer Reviews:
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It has been said before, but it is worth repeating: He uses the most conventional genre elements in all of his films, freely deploying Hitchcock, the great films of Hollywood's Second Golden Age, especially film noir, the French New Wave, and even Spielberg on the one hand while simultaneously evoking the more independent, open-ended, and adventurous art films of the Japanese masters Kurosawa and Ozu and a great director/mentor like Hou Hsiao-Hsien on the other. In "Mother", the use of extended panoramic long shots that reduce the human figures to dots in the breathtakingly beautiful landscape will remind viewers of Kurosawa while Bong Joon-Ho's equally masterly use of private, constrained, "locked-in" space is pure Ozu.
I am not suggesting that Bong Joon-Ho is a derivative stylist. On the contrary, he is a deeply rewarding artist. I am saying that in his case, the originality is achieved by using the recognizable, even conventional modes of narrative filmmaking in order to create, not just allude to, another world, another universe. On the surface, that universe appears to be rural Korean society. But in the broadest, most relevant sense, it is implicatively every "country" society that is trying to come to grips with a now-dominant "city" ethos. His subject is the severe personal and social dislocation that results from the often unbearable tension between an Old Order that is under immense pressure from the new order, Modernity, cell phones, school-girl prostitution ring and all.
Bong Joon-Ho's protagonists are not just "imperfect" people (we all are). They are crazy (most of us are not). "Mother" is a madwoman, who implodes and is driven completely insane by two ultimately unbearable forces: Internal, namely a mother's abiding and unconditional love for her son that supersedes all other human values for her; and external, namely a society's rapidly changing values that she gradually uncovers for herself but never ever fully comprehends. Alternating between vast landscapes and tiny spaces to convey Internal versus External is almost flawlessly realized by Bong Joon-Ho with exquisite subtlety, measure, and grace. He was, like Bertolucci, born to be a filmmaker, that is, a master conjurer of images in all possible scales.
The typical complaint about not finding a single character in any of Bong Joon-Ho's films that one can "relate to" and "empathize with" is a humanist impulse that Bong Joon-Ho deliberately frustrates. He does not want you to feel sympathetic to any of his characters simply because he does not either. He wants you to see them for who they are, alienated and alienating human beings who represent not just Korean society in transition but all human beings in our Modern Age.
Compared to Bong Joon-Ho, Hitchcock was a humanist despite arguments for his being a ground-breaking anti-humanist (which I believe are misinformed). Hitchcock worked within a humanist sensibility that believed in resolution and made everything satisfyingly "right" in the end. "Mother" offers no closure or happy endings whereas in case one has conveniently forgotten it, EVERY Hitchcock film, however unnerving and including "Psycho", does.
I do not wish to give away the story as a courtesy to those who have not seen the film. Besides, the synopsis available on Amazon and from other perceptive reviewers here is sufficient. All I will say is that "Mother" offers aesthetic pleasure of the highest kind still possible from contemporary cinema, an otherwise debased and degraded art form for the most part. It is lazy writing to call this simply a Korean "Mommie Dearest". It is much, much more than that, a great film, which "Mommie Dearest" is not.
"Mother" is the most disturbing film Bong Joon-Ho has made thus far, and one of the most disturbing films one is likely to see. It is indispensable.
The tone is what I like about Bong's movies. From the moment the titular Mother walks out of a field and does an improptu dance over the credits you should be able to discern this fact. Unlike the previous Bong movies this is a more measured and quiet film compared to the others as well following the mother along her investigations as to whether her mentally dim son actually killed a school girl who herself might have had incriminating photos on a phone that got her killed. Along the way she gets one of her sons thugish friends (who she initially thinks could be the killer) to interrogate two boys, and fights with her son when He remembers that she tried to kill him when He was five. Where the story goes is a revelation of the mothers crumbling psyche and regret she has over past issues.
Apparently Bong wrote the film after knowing Kim Hye-ja for several years and she definitely performs the her part well as a sad little woman who has outbursts that mirror her sons violent reactions. The whole cast is just excellent though mixed with a set of actors returning from Bong's previous films my favorites being Jin Gu as Jin Tae, the sons friend and Yoon Jae-Moon as the weary detective investigating the movie.
In the end everything works because of Bong's direction and writing from the humor to the horror. The pacing of the movie is perfect creating one of the rare thrillers that doesnt feel the need to mistake noise for thrills, and ends not on an action sequence but a sequence of regret played on someones face, kind of like Memories of Murder.
If you haven't seen this movie, do so soon. It as all of Bongs movies are well worth your time.
For fans of the movie the Blu-Ray is thankfully well produced. There have been stirrings online about image issues between the original Korean Blu vs. Magnolia's in the area of contrast boosting but aside from some aliasing I didn't really see any problem with it. Soundwise the disc definitely gets excellent marks from me. Extras are also extensive with numerous featurettes ported from the Korean disc and subtitled like a making of, one of Kim Hye-ja, extras casting, the cinematographer and music composer. For fans of the movie this is the disc to buy, supplemented by an excellent set of features.
She is a very protective mother, constantly hovering over her son, something he appeared to me to be getting tired of. She also gets quite frantic over the course of the film.
The investigation is very well handled: false starts, true starts, unpleasant facts found, and so on. It definitely kept my interest throughout.
Although the ending was a bit much. Still, I certainly understood what happened.
Top reviews from other countries
El envío fue muy rápido y llegó en perfecto estado
Ravenously exploring the concept of how far a mother is willing to go for their own flesh and blood, Joon-ho's script is packed with an alluring sense of unpredictability and poetic thrills that present a darker side to South Korean culture. When the opening cinematic sequence is of the titular parent eerily dancing to a pop song in the middle of a wheat field whilst looking directly at the camera for five minutes, well, you start to develop an idea on what type of film this is. Joon-ho cleverly throws the audience off target on multiple occasions, to showcase a variety of different emotions and themes that our unnamed mother experiences throughout her arduous journey. Pain. Melancholy. Anger.
His consistent juggling of tones, a trademark he has essentially acquired throughout his filmography, allow us to feel these emotive consequences with the protective mother. In just one scene, most notably the prison visitation, Joon-ho injects sorrow from the mother's perspective, unshaken trepidation from her son and hilarity from the actions taken whenever someone says "retard" to him. Occasionally, it does relinquish the intended tone in order to make room for dark humour, but for the most part it provides a refreshing interpretation of the genre. To keep a story engaging, thrilling and suspenseful whilst making it intelligently humorous is quite the achievement. There were multiple scenarios where I certainly did gasp in shock and horror over certain plot details, proof that Joon-ho has crafted yet another captivating mystery.
It must be said though, none of the above would've been as effective if it wasn't for Hye-ja's unprecedented performance. Phenomenal. Absolutely incredible. She commanded every scene through her ornate acting that exhumed fragility, power and sentimentality. Tackling the case head on, despite the detectives rarely caring about the situation, in what must've been a physically and emotionally demanding performance. Bin also gets a mention for his engrossing role as the accused son. From a technical standpoint, it's flawless. Joon-ho's directing techniques, Kyung-pyo's cinematography and Byung-woo's score. Sensational, with each element enhancing the dark world that Joon-ho has lovingly created.
This rollercoaster definitely deserves your attention. You'll laugh at the dark humour, bite your nails during thrilling sequences (although didn't your mother tell you that's a bad habit!), and empty your soul during the third act. Mother, yet again, is another example of pure South Korean cinema at its finest. It still hasn't convinced me to experience acupuncture though...
En resumidas cuentas, muy recomendable para seguidores de Bong Joon-Ho y para amantes del thriller en general. El director coreano, con su característica forma de ver el mundo, con esta película le da al cine de suspense otra vuelta de tuerca, aunque sin llegar a los extremos de su obra maestra "Memories of Murder". No obstante, si te gustó esta última, te gustará sin duda "Mother".
Eher nicht, denn die ältere Frau lebt eher isoliert von ihrer Aussenwelt.
Yun Hye-Ja (Kim Hye-Ja) heisst sie und ist alleinerziehende Mutter, die zusammen mit ihrem etwas debilen Sohn Do-Jun (Won Bi) lebt, Getreide verkauft und zudem die Leute ihrer Ortschaft mit Akupunktur behandelt, ohne dafür eine Lizenz zu haben. Der Sohn ist bereits 29, recht hübsch, aber durch seine leichte Behinderung ein Aussenseiter, der auch wegen seiner leichten Behinderung keine Freundin hat.
Lediglich mit dem geldversessenen Möchtegerngangster und Frauenheld Jin-tae (Jin Ku) hat er Kontakt und dieser zieht mit Do-Jun manchmal um die Häuser, die Kumpelhafte Beziehung wird aber von der fürsorglichen Mama mit Argusaugen betrachtet.
Yun Hye-Ja meint aber, dass der Kumpel vom Sohn ein schlechter Umgang für ihn ist.
Tatsächlich gibts immer mal wieder Ärger. Als Do-Jun von einem zu schnell fahrenden Auto fast erfasst wird, gehen die beiden jungen Männer dem Fahrerflüchtigen nach und erkennen den Wagen auf einem Golfplatz. Dort wird schnell mal der Spiegel des teuren Wagens demoliert und Mama muss Sohnemann bei der Polizei abholen.
Doch es kommt noch dicker. Tage später wird Do-Jun verhaftet. Er soll ein junges Schulmädchen ermordet haben.
Tatsächlich kann sich Do-Jun erinnern, dass er im betrunkenen Zustand diesem Mädchen nachlief, versucht sie in diesem kleinen Gässchen anzumachen, das Mädchen reagiert aber abweisend und Do-Jun rennt davon. Am nächsten Tag ist aber dieses Schulmädchen tot, ein Golfball neben dem Opfer wird gefunden und so wird der behinderte junge Mann zum Hauptverdächtigen. Die Polizei hat auch schnell ein Geständnis durch subtile Drohung des "Dorfdeppen".
Problematisch ist tatsächlich das Erinnerungsvermögen von Do-Jun, der sich nur unter großer Anstrengungen erinnern kann und durch seine Behinderung generell massive Gedächtnislücken hat.
Die Mutter weiss natürlich, dass ihr Sohn keiner Fliege was zuleide tut und gibt sich nicht mit der abgeschlossenen Ermittlung der Polizei zufrieden. Sie macht sich auf in Eigenregie zu ermitteln...
Bong Joon-Ho ist einer der interessantesten Filmemacher Südkoreas. Auf sein Konto geht das verstörende Meisterwerk "Memories of a Murder", wo es um die Jagd nach einem Serienkiller geht und in dem der Regisseur auch die sehr fragwürdigen und gewalttätigen Ermittlung-Methoden der Polizei offenlegt. In "Mother" setzt sich diese Thematik wieder fort.
Nebenbei schafft er es die Charakterstudie einer besorgten Frau zu zeigen, die einerseits sozial isoliert erscheint und andererseits noch zusätzlich am Rande der Selbstzerstörung agiert.
Für Spannung sorgt ein guter Suspenceanteil, der sogar einen Hitchcockfilm zitiert, den ich jetzt nicht nennen will, da ansonsten die Auflösung vielleicht verraten werden könnte.
Auch ansonsten klingt öfters die abgründige Phantasie vom Master of Suspence an.
Der Film ist durchgehend glaubwürdig, unterhaltsam und spannend komponiert. Darüberhinaus hat Bong Joon-Ho einen großartigen Sinn fürs Visuelle, dies ermöglicht natürlich die Entfaltung einer enormen Wirkung. großen Anteil daran hat die Kamera-Arbeit von Hong Kyung-pyo.