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The Bird People in China
Director: Takashi Miike
Number of Items: 1
Format: Color, Widescreen
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Running Time: 118 minutes
Studio: Wea Corp
Product Group: DVD
Release Date: 2004-11-16

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From Description
Wada, a Japanese Salaryman is sent on a job to survey a Chinese village for a strain of Jade for his company. On the way though he meets up with a Yakuza collector named Ujjie who wants the money from the jade for his organization. The two set out with their trusty guide Shen for the mysterious village. They travel through forests, on rafts and many other hardships to come to this wonderful land, but once they're there will they want to leave?

Directed by Takashi Miike (AUDITION; GOZU; ICHI THE KILLER)

SPECIAL FEATURES:
Interview With Director, Takashi Miike
Full Length Commentary By Tom Mes
Original Movie Trailer
Biographies & Filmographies
Scene Selection





"ichi the killer you make ?????"
takashi miike is a great director and this movie is like saying
sometimes we don't need a sadomasokist to make a movie, is like hes softh side and if you live in a big city like japan you will love this movie, miike is great the movie is really good ...




"Superb drama and absolutely one of Miike's best"
Unlike anything else directed by Takashi Miike, The Bird People in China is a film that stays with the viewer long after ending. Though the ever-present yakuza does make an appearance here--in the form of a lone bill collector who follows the protagonist, Wada, to a remote village--that element (yakuza violence) is not at all the primary focus of the film.

Wada, a Japanese salaryman, is sent by his company (to whom the yakuza made a loan, and now they want their money back), a gem brokerage firm, to a totally isolated part of China in which jade is said to be the finest available. At the onset, Ujiie, the yakuza bill collector, shows Wada just how tough he can be. Through the arduous journey up to the remote village, Wada struggles to keep up and Ujiie curses, shouts, threatens, and mutters in his sleep.

Though Wada does find his jade, he (and Ujiie) find much more as well. The simplicity of the mountain people they encounter is, even to Ujiie--or more aptly, especially to Ujiie--something completely irresistible. So much so that when it's time to leave, the yakuza freaks out and...well, no spoilers here.

If you know beforehand that a few of the bits and pieces that make up the mystery of this village are an old Scottish song, an uprighted plane, and six huge ocean-going turtles, that still won't prepare you for the amazing emotional experience this is. The very last scene is truly breathtaking, and before that, one scene in particular, in which a young village girl sings in the middle of the night, is sublimely beautiful.

It's great that Miike is much more than a purveyor of grotesque, bizarre violence (e.g., Gozu, Izo, Ichi the Killer, Audition). The Bird People in China should be counted as one of the top ten Japanese films of the last ten years, hands down.

Highly recommended.




"Another Masterpiece from the Indefatigable Miike"
Takashi Miike is the living definition of the word "indefatigable". In a career that began in the early 1990s, he has directed a staggering number of films in a mind-boggling array of different genres, from horror to family films, even a musical (!); but Miike is probably best known for his Yakuza (Japanese gangster) films. The likes of FUDOH, ICHI, and DEAD OR ALIVE, with their over-the-top violence and surreal (often disgusting) setpieces, are Miike's chief claim to fame. In one respect that's a pity, because every once in a while, Miike will produce a wild card, and BIRD PEOPLE IN CHINA is a film that fits into that latter category. The man character is a young Japanese executive named Mr. Wada (Masahiro Motoki), who is sent by his boss to a remote region in the wilds of China to survey a supposedly rich jade mine. He is joined on his trip by a Yakuza named Ujiie (Renji Ishibashi), who plans on taking the jade as payment for some outstanding debts on the part of Wada's boss. After they are taken as far as the train will go, Wada and Ujiie are met by their guide, the absent-minded Mr. Shen (scene-stealer Mako), who takes them through the rugged, unsettled terrain of rural China, first on foot, and then on a raft pulled by several huge sea turtles. When the three men finally reach their destination, a village left untouched by the ravages of industrialization, Wada and Ujiie have a few epiphanies that will prove to make leaving rather difficult. It sounds like a simple story, and it is, but there's something about this film that makes it great, but that I find hard to articulate. No doubt the startlingly beautiful cinematography by Hideo Yamamoto has alot to do with the film's hypnotic quality. And then there's the genuinely touching story of two men who discover a whole other side to themselves that they were never previously aware existed. And finally, the film's deft blend of genres is seamless: it shifts gears from a screwball/buddy comedy to a jungle-bound adventure to an existential rumination on identity and civilization, finally ending on a dream-like note of perfect serenity. There is one scene of Yakuza violence that seems inserted to remind us that we're watching a Miike film, but it's fleeting and, compared to some of what can be found elsewhere in his films, it's utterly tame and inoffensive. There's also an ecological message packed into the mix. So, final verdict: for fans of Miike who wonder what else the man is capable of, I highly recommend BIRD PEOPLE IN CHINA, surely the gentlest and most poignant of all the man's movies (at least that I've seen). For the truly open-minded afficionado, there is much to be enjoyed here.



"Very nice"
This film is a very beautiful, nice piece which will put you under its spell. One thing that I didn't realise before I got the film was how funny it was. Whilst it is generally a touching story, there are moments of hilarity which really lift the film. These mainly come from Renji Ishibashi, one of Miike's most frequently used actors.

Difficult to reccomend to Miike fans. There is no violence in this movie (well, there is a tiny bit, but not for a miike fan). I would reccomend it to someone who likes "art films" quicker than I would your average Miike fan. But to all those who like "nice" films once in a while, this one is very, very nice.




"Miike at his finest"
I love takeshi miike films. This film goes well away from his trademark gore. This is a simple fable of a mystic pristine far away land and the people that inhabit it. The 2 vistors, one business man one bill collector flail helplessly, complements of the beauty and folklore. The ending is overwhelming and still haunts me. Extremely worthy, this one will stay with you.






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