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Breeze Of July (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3

Sammy Leung (Actor) | Monie Tung (Actor) | Gu Jin Hua (Actor) | Tan Guo Ming (Director)
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YesAsia Editorial Description

Adapted from a short story by Chan Wai, low-key indie drama Breeze of July follows a troubled young woman's journey of recollection and realization when she returns to her late mother's hometown. The directorial debut of film editor and theater vet Stanley Tam, Breeze of July makes up in sincerity what it lacks in budget, gently spinning a tale of two cities and two generations. Underrated young actress Monie Tung (Whispers and Moans) carries the film with quiet grace and maturity, while Sammy Leung departs from his usual comic persona for an understated, dramatic role. Breeze of July also co-stars Japanese actor Tatsuo Dean Fujioka (Summer's Tail) and veteran actress Koo Kam Wah.

In debt with nowhere to go, dour 29-year-old Lan Xin (Monie Tung) reluctantly moves back to her family home after her mother's death. Family friend Auntie Lan (Koo Kam Wah) and childhood buddy Big Head (Sammy Leung) warmly welcome her back to the neighborhood, and everything seems much the same in this quiet neck of the city. In the cavernous traditional-style apartment full of dusty memories, Lan Xin begins to reflect on all that she doesn't know about herself and her mom. After some urging, she agrees to accompany Auntie Lan to Shanghai, her mother's hometown. Greeted by the happy tears of her mother's friends and nostalgic recollections of days past, Lan Xin retraces the steps her mother took as a young woman, and begins a new journey of her own.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Breeze Of July (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) 七月好風 (DVD) (香港版) 七月好风 (DVD) (香港版) 七月好風 (香港版) Breeze Of July (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Sammy Leung (Actor) | Monie Tung (Actor) | Gu Jin Hua (Actor) | Tatsuya Dean Fujioka 森美 (Actor) | 董敏莉 (Actor) | 顧 錦華 (Actor) | 藤岡靛 森美 (Actor) | 董敏莉 (Actor) | 顾 锦华 (Actor) | 藤冈靛 森美 (サミー) (Actor) | 董敏莉(モニー・トン) (Actor) | Gu Jin Hua (Actor) | 藤岡竜雄 (ディーン藤岡) Sammy Leung (Actor) | Monie Tung (Actor) | Gu Jin Hua (Actor) | Tatsuya Dean Fujioka
Director: Tan Guo Ming 譚 國明 谭 国明 Tan Guo Ming Tan Guo Ming
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Release Date: 2008-10-17
Language: Cantonese
Subtitles: Traditional Chinese, English
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 1.78 : 1
Sound Information: Dolby Digital
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
Rating: I
Duration: 92 (mins)
Publisher: Edko Films Ltd. (HK)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1011019809

Product Information

* Special Features:
- Trailer
- Gallery

Director : Stanley Tam

A story about a shanghai-platanaceae is going to be cut off; a mother with secrete beneath without a words in 40 years; waiting for a call from long distance and a breeze of July.
It happened between Shanghai and Hong Kong. A 29-year-old girl, Lan Xin, believed there is no way out in her life by seeing a credit notice from a money collector company brutally stuck on the door. By going though a Shanghai trip, and with Big Head, Lan Xin offers herself a self-refection and acknowledgment, and also understands the meaning of growing up. Something can be re-started when you make up your mind in time.
Then, she finds out her death mother good old days by meeting an uncle in Shanghai. She also make up her mind to her childhood friend, Big Head, again by moving back into the old mansion and also finds a new born of herself.
As Big Head’s word, the breeze of July, there will always be a way out. She believed in.

*Opening Film, Hong Kong Asian Film Festival 2007
*Taipei Film Festival 2008

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Breeze Of July (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"

October 30, 2008

Hong Kong Cinema gets some much-needed indie representation with Breeze of July, an HD Video feature marking the directorial debut of Stanley Tam, recently acclaimed for his work as an editor on Pang Ho-Cheung's Exodus. The film shuttles between Hong Kong and Shanghai to tell the tale of 29 year-old Lan-Xin (Monie Tung), who moves back into her old family home in Tokwawan after the death of her mother. The move gives her an opportunity to reconnect with family friend Auntie Lan (Koo Kam-Wah), as well as rekindle her friendship with childhood pal Big Head (Sammy). The move marks the latest of many for Lan-Xin, who's in debt to some shady figures, but her main reason for moving around may simply be that she has yet to fully mature, opting to leave various episodes in her life unfinished or abandoned.

In returning to her old home, Lan-Xin begins to reflect on her wayward life, noting that she has never traveled overseas with her mother, and perhaps did not know her very well at all. Lan-Xin ultimately retraces her mother's footsteps, traveling back to her mother's original Shanghai neighborhood along with Auntie Lan. The visit is highlighted by Auntie Lan's tearful reunions with old friends, and Lan-Xin makes some small personal discoveries as she quietly immerses herself in her mother's previous environments. Her journey in the film is internal, and given the narrative's lack of urgency or action, the film's success seems to hinge heavily on the performance from Monie Tung. She acquits herself decently considering the inert nature of the film, never overplaying the part even when given opportunities to do so.

However, Tung still has difficulty channeling the proper inner life for her character. The actress is never vacant, but as the film's drama is dependent on her inner emotions, Tung needs to be able to carry the film wordlessly, which she struggles to do. Not helping her is the fact that Lan-Xin is not fully fleshed out. We learn a lot about her through her voiceover, plus her interaction with Big Head, but even more information about her life would have helped. What does she do for a living? Who are her other friends? Stanley Tam's screenplay has proper dramatic themes, but it lacks additional details that would create a more convincing or affecting reality. Without extra knowledge of conflicts or events that helped define her character, Lan-Xin simply seems to be dour and even remote. Monie Tung has turned in some effective supporting performances in My Mother is a Belly Dancer and Whispers and Moans, but as Breeze of July's lead, she seems to be a bit out of her depth.

Sammy Leung is likable and solid as romantic interest Big Head, though his character is underwritten too, and seems to have little function besides conscience/facilitator for Lan-Xin's personal growth. Even more, he simply doesn't look like a guy who would be hanging out on street level Tokwawan, as he still possesses that primped up media star sheen. The film's style is observational and contemplative, giving the audience space to involve themselves in the film's slow, realistic-seeming events. However, the actors are not able to create the reality necessary for the film to truly become exceptional, and resemble screenwriting creations more than real characters. The film is full of details that are meant as emotional devices - burnt-out lightbulbs indicating loss, demolished trees representing the passing of memory - but those details are rather obvious. Despite the film's street-level approximation of living, breathing Hong Kong, much of the film still feels calculated.

Where the film does succeed is in its simple environments and appreciable indie film feel. The HD Video image is well-utilized, possessing decent depth of field, and Tam's technique is frequently effective, with many long takes, slow pans, and obscured POV giving the film a sense of realistic intimacy. At the same time, the way in which characters interact seems too set up, as if they aren't speaking as much as they're channeling screenwriter intent. Breeze of July could use some spontaneity or true surprise; the film's revelations are less felt than they are acknowledged, such that events only plod steadily towards an expected outcome. There's thought and feeling in the film, and Stanley Tam uses his limited resources well. Breeze of July was shot in only 10 days on a shoestring budget, and is a decent achievement considering what Tam had to work with. However, a good portion of that achievement is simply related to scale; Breeze of July is a respectable independent feature that feels sincere, but it's not really a standout work. Perhaps Stanley Tam will one day achieve more when given fewer limits.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.
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