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Made in Hong Kong (Masters of Cinema) Blu-ray - Classic Asian Films Collection for Movie Enthusiasts & Home Theater Setups
Made in Hong Kong (Masters of Cinema) Blu-ray - Classic Asian Films Collection for Movie Enthusiasts & Home Theater SetupsMade in Hong Kong (Masters of Cinema) Blu-ray - Classic Asian Films Collection for Movie Enthusiasts & Home Theater Setups

Made in Hong Kong (Masters of Cinema) Blu-ray - Classic Asian Films Collection for Movie Enthusiasts & Home Theater Setups

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Released to critical acclaim in 1997, the year of the Hong Kong handover, Fruit Chan s Made in Hong Kong was praised as an anarchic masterpiece, a powerful distillation of urban alienation and youthful despair. Moon (Sam Lee) is a small-time triad, stuck in an endless cycle of pointless violence with no hope of escape. After he and his friends witness the suicide of a young girl, they embark on a journey to deliver two letters she had on her when she died. Produced on a shoestring budget, with non-professional actors and using discarded film reels for stock, the film was rescued from obscurity and fully restored in 4K in time for its 20th anniversary in 2017, thanks to the Far East Film Festival, in collaboration with Andy Lau s Hong Kong production company, Focus Film. BLU-RAY EDITION SPECIAL FEATURES: LIMITED EDITION O-CARD SLIPCASE (2000 Copies Only) 1080p presentation on Blu-ray from a 4K digital restoration Uncompressed LPCM 2.0 audio Optional English subtitles New interview with director Fruit Chan New interview with producer Doris Yang New interview with producer Daniel Yu New interview with Marco Muller, former director of the Locarno Film Festival A collector s booklet featuring new writing by film historian Alexandra Heller-Nicholas; and an archival interview with director Fruit Chan PRESS: "A raw virtuoso work" Los Angeles Times "a striking achievement. " Time Out "One of Hong Kong s Best Indies" New York Post "The film is gorgeous to look at. " Screen Anarchy "a powerful snapshot of (a) city s hopes and fears" South China Post "An intoxicating drama about teenage alienation (...) Fruit Chan's vision of youthful nihilism still carries a heartfelt charge" BBC

Customer Reviews

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This is a great and overlooked film.

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