Audition (Takashi Miike)
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From: Blu-ray.com
Audition (Takashi Miike)

Takashi Miike's AUDITION: Disc company Shout! Factory released the first peek at the cover art for a new two-DVD release of Takashi Miike’s AUDITION, as well as content info. Featuring a new high-definition transfer from the internegative (with a fresh digital stereo soundtrack) of Miike’s notorious chiller, about a widower (Ryo Ishibashi) who holds “auditions” for a new girlfriend and winds up hooking up with a beautiful psychopath (Eihi Shiina), the set will street in October, along with a double-Blu-ray edition.
Both versions will include an impressive array of original special features; the lineup includes:
New audio commentary by director Miike and screenwriter Daisuke Tengan
New video introduction by Miike
Over 90 minutes of new interviews with the cast, including Ishibashi, Shiina, Renji Ishibashi and Ren Osugi
Trailers
Liner notes by Tom Mes, author of Agitator The Cinema of Takashi Miike
Retail price is $24.98 each for both the DVDs and the Blu-rays.
Both versions will include an impressive array of original special features; the lineup includes:
New audio commentary by director Miike and screenwriter Daisuke Tengan
New video introduction by Miike
Over 90 minutes of new interviews with the cast, including Ishibashi, Shiina, Renji Ishibashi and Ren Osugi
Trailers
Liner notes by Tom Mes, author of Agitator The Cinema of Takashi Miike
Retail price is $24.98 each for both the DVDs and the Blu-rays.
#4
DVD Talk Hero
Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
Hope it turns out well, I love this flick.
#8
Moderator
Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
I watched the first 20-30 minutes of this the other night. Boring romantic comedy. Was expecting crazy shit based on Miike's other flicks. Oh well. Ejected, and on to the next flick!
#9
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#11
Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
Your joking, right? This movie is supposedly INSANE if you watch the entire flick. You made a mistake in taking it off when you did if this is true for you.
#12
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Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
Definitely looking forward to this.
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From: Austin, TX
Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
Sweeet.
Definitely a day-one purchase. Now I hope they get around to Ichi the Killer (my favorite Miike film) and Happiness of the Katakuris.
I'd say Visitor Q as well, but I do not think it would benefit much from BD treatment.
Definitely a day-one purchase. Now I hope they get around to Ichi the Killer (my favorite Miike film) and Happiness of the Katakuris.
I'd say Visitor Q as well, but I do not think it would benefit much from BD treatment.
#15
DVD Talk Gold Edition
Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
I guess I should rent this and give it another shot. I've seen it once and hated it. Groucho's joke aside, I actually was bored to death watching it.
#16
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Banned by request
Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
What I would really like on Blu-ray is The Bird People In China, Gozu, and Dead or Alive 1 and 2, along of course with Ichi The Killer and Happiness of the Katakuris.
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From: Austin, TX
Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
Yay! Yeah, guess I missed that. 
Hahah... watch the rest and you'll see how many ways you are wrong. You'll watch the last 20 minutes with your jaw on the floor. Once you see the ending, watching the rest of the film again will make a whole lot more sense.

i watched the first 20-30 minutes of this the other night. Boring romantic comedy. Was expecting crazy shit based on miike's other flicks. Oh well. Ejected, and on to the next flick!
Last edited by RobLutter; 06-17-09 at 10:00 PM.
#20
DVD Talk Legend
Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
Nope 
http://forum.dvdtalk.com/hd-talk/546...ch-31st-2.html
I think after the delay, many of us put it on the mental back burner for now.

http://forum.dvdtalk.com/hd-talk/546...ch-31st-2.html
I think after the delay, many of us put it on the mental back burner for now.
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From: Blu-ray.com
Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
There is more Miike coming to BD, including to the US. Here's another bit:

French distributors Wild Side are set to release Takashi Miike's Kurôzu zero a.k.a Crows Zero in Gallic territories on August 4th.
Variety:
Pro-B

French distributors Wild Side are set to release Takashi Miike's Kurôzu zero a.k.a Crows Zero in Gallic territories on August 4th.
Variety:
A punk's gotta do what a punk's gotta do in "Crows: Episode 0," the third picture by prolific Japanese maverick Takashi Miike to hit the fest circuit in as many months, following "Like a Dragon" and "Sukiyaki Western Django." Recalling any number of brawling student pics from Asia -- and playing sometimes like a serious version of the South Korean "Conduct Zero" (2002) -- this prequel to a planned adaptation of the manga by Hiroshi Takahashi, which sold more than 32 million copies in Japan, opens locally Oct. 27. In the West, "Crows" should raise a ruckus as a culty DVD title.
Pic finds Miike still on his current creative roll, if not at the same inspired level as yakuza fightfest "Dragon." There's the same mixture of irony and deadly seriousness in the face-offs and mano a mano fighting, as well as a central hero who simply gets off on the physical pain of combat. But the grungy high-school setting places the pic in a much more restricted universe than "Dragon," and the virtually all-male story has little of "Dragon's" melancholy romanticism.
Suzuran Boys' High, aka School for Crows, has a rep as the toughest educational institution in town (not that we ever see the students getting any education). Thither goes beanpole punk Genji Takaya (Shun Oguri, "Sukiyaki," "Azumi") to prove to his dad, yakuza boss Hideo (Goro Kishitani), that he has the smarts to eventually take over papa's operation.
Arriving at the rundown school, Genji is mistaken for its numero uno fighter, Tamao Serizawa (Takayuki Yamada), by smalltime gangleader Ken Katagiri (Kyosuke Yabe). After Genji whips Ken & co.'s asses without breaking a sweat, Tamao realizes the school has a new pretender to his throne.
As per any Asian actioner, pic is basically a gradual progression to a final face-off between the two leads. But first, Genji has to prove himself against lower-ranked punks.
Chief among these is Izaki, who develops a mutual respect for Genji after the latter is beaten to a pulp by his men. When Izaki is thrashed by another gang, Genji almost loses sight of his main objective in his desire to avenge Izaki's beating.
Though obsessed by modern "warrior" codes and personal masochism, Miike has always tempered his portraits of yakuza with plenty of sly humor. In "Crows," it's made clear that, beneath all the alpha-male strutting and snorting, these guys are softies at heart, following rules they feel they have to abide by rather than anything else. Slyest perf comes from Kishitani (the never-say-die psycho in "Dragon") as Genji's dad, whose offhanded treatment of his son's braggadocio is one of pic's major delights.
A tentative romance springs up between Genji and young band singer Ruka (lissome Japanese-American model Meisa Kuroki, "Under the Same Moon") and, when she's kidnapped on the orders of one of Tamao's henchmen, pic starts moving towards its climactic battle.
Cross-cutting in the final reel, which has Tamao's and Genji's men going at it in the pouring rain, while Tamao's sidekick is undergoing surgery and Ken is paying a heavy price for an act of selflessness, is worth the wait.
Though film's physical universe is limited, there are enough disparate characters to fend off a sense of repetition. Individual alliances and enmities between the punks are well-drawn, their wild hairdos and rocker duds (closely modeled on Takahashi's manga) defining them clearly onscreen. Most of them don't look especially tough, but that's not the point: The exaggerated sound effects and relatively small amount of blood-letting make it clear this is hardly real life.
Production values are fine, from the dingy gray-brown color palette of d.p. Takumi Furuya ("Azumi," "Godzilla: The Final War") to Yuji Hayashida's trash-scattered, graffiti-plastered art direction. Techno-rock score, with its anthem of "Eternal Rock 'n' Roll!," underlines the boys-must-be-boys tone of the hijinks.
Camera (color), Takumi Furuya; editor, Shuichi Kakesu; music, Naoki Otsubo; art director, Yuji Hayashida; sound (Dolby Digital), Hiroshi Ishigai. Reviewed at Pusan Intl. Film Festival (A Window on Asian Cinema), Oct. 7, 2007. Running time: 129 MIN.
Pic finds Miike still on his current creative roll, if not at the same inspired level as yakuza fightfest "Dragon." There's the same mixture of irony and deadly seriousness in the face-offs and mano a mano fighting, as well as a central hero who simply gets off on the physical pain of combat. But the grungy high-school setting places the pic in a much more restricted universe than "Dragon," and the virtually all-male story has little of "Dragon's" melancholy romanticism.
Suzuran Boys' High, aka School for Crows, has a rep as the toughest educational institution in town (not that we ever see the students getting any education). Thither goes beanpole punk Genji Takaya (Shun Oguri, "Sukiyaki," "Azumi") to prove to his dad, yakuza boss Hideo (Goro Kishitani), that he has the smarts to eventually take over papa's operation.
Arriving at the rundown school, Genji is mistaken for its numero uno fighter, Tamao Serizawa (Takayuki Yamada), by smalltime gangleader Ken Katagiri (Kyosuke Yabe). After Genji whips Ken & co.'s asses without breaking a sweat, Tamao realizes the school has a new pretender to his throne.
As per any Asian actioner, pic is basically a gradual progression to a final face-off between the two leads. But first, Genji has to prove himself against lower-ranked punks.
Chief among these is Izaki, who develops a mutual respect for Genji after the latter is beaten to a pulp by his men. When Izaki is thrashed by another gang, Genji almost loses sight of his main objective in his desire to avenge Izaki's beating.
Though obsessed by modern "warrior" codes and personal masochism, Miike has always tempered his portraits of yakuza with plenty of sly humor. In "Crows," it's made clear that, beneath all the alpha-male strutting and snorting, these guys are softies at heart, following rules they feel they have to abide by rather than anything else. Slyest perf comes from Kishitani (the never-say-die psycho in "Dragon") as Genji's dad, whose offhanded treatment of his son's braggadocio is one of pic's major delights.
A tentative romance springs up between Genji and young band singer Ruka (lissome Japanese-American model Meisa Kuroki, "Under the Same Moon") and, when she's kidnapped on the orders of one of Tamao's henchmen, pic starts moving towards its climactic battle.
Cross-cutting in the final reel, which has Tamao's and Genji's men going at it in the pouring rain, while Tamao's sidekick is undergoing surgery and Ken is paying a heavy price for an act of selflessness, is worth the wait.
Though film's physical universe is limited, there are enough disparate characters to fend off a sense of repetition. Individual alliances and enmities between the punks are well-drawn, their wild hairdos and rocker duds (closely modeled on Takahashi's manga) defining them clearly onscreen. Most of them don't look especially tough, but that's not the point: The exaggerated sound effects and relatively small amount of blood-letting make it clear this is hardly real life.
Production values are fine, from the dingy gray-brown color palette of d.p. Takumi Furuya ("Azumi," "Godzilla: The Final War") to Yuji Hayashida's trash-scattered, graffiti-plastered art direction. Techno-rock score, with its anthem of "Eternal Rock 'n' Roll!," underlines the boys-must-be-boys tone of the hijinks.
Camera (color), Takumi Furuya; editor, Shuichi Kakesu; music, Naoki Otsubo; art director, Yuji Hayashida; sound (Dolby Digital), Hiroshi Ishigai. Reviewed at Pusan Intl. Film Festival (A Window on Asian Cinema), Oct. 7, 2007. Running time: 129 MIN.
#24
DVD Talk Ultimate Edition
Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
Crows Zero is available in the US through Tokyo Shock, of course it was announced hours after I sprung for the HK edition. Awesome movie. Now if we could just get Like a Dragon in an English friendly edition somewhere in the world.
#25
DVD Talk Special Edition
Re: Audition (Takashi Miike)
I watched Imprint before I saw this, so it wasn't all that crazy to me. I thought this movie was pretty boring as well, save for the last 10 mins or so.




