Chinese Box
1997 -
Rated
R (MPAA)
Release Date: 09/29/1998
Features:
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Single Side - Single Layer
Letterbox - 1.85
Widescreen - 1.85
Additional Release Material:
Trailers: Original Theatrical Trailer
Interactive Features:
Interactive Menus
Scene Access
Text/Photo Galleries:
Cast Information
Time:
99
mins.
J&R Item # 1080183_2
UPC # 031398685937
Label: Trimark Home Video
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Buying Info
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Chinese Box
1997 -
Unrated
Release Date: 09/09/2003
Features:
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Single Side - Single Layer
Director's Cut
Unrated
Full Frame - 1.33
Widescreen - 1.85
Audio:
Dolby Digital 2.0 - English
Additional Release Material:
Featurette: HOME MOVIES (1997 Wayne Wang Documentary)
LIFE IS CHEAP BUT TOILET PAPER IS EXPENSIVE (Never-Before-Seen Wayne
Wang Feature)
Audio Commentary: Wayne Wang - Director
Time:
99
mins.
J&R Item # 1080183_5
UPC # 031398831723
Label: Lions Gate Home Entertainment
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Buying Info
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| Plot Credits Reviews Related Shipping |
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Hong Kong-born American director Wayne Wang returned to the city in 1990 to make the gritty street-level thriller LIFE IS CHEAP...BUT TOILET PAPER IS EXPENSIVE. In 1997, with the city on the verge of the British handing the colony back to the Chinese, he returned for a different look. In CHINESE BOX, Jeremy Irons plays John, an English journalist moving among the Chinese business elite and British officials at expensive nightclubs. However, the politics of transition are seen through the prism of his personal relationships. He is in love with Vivian (Gong Li), a woman he meets in Beijing who's now working at a club owned by Chang (Michael Hui), the man she wants to marry. But Chang wants to become respectable and won't marry her because of her checkered past. After a personal crisis, John goes out with a camcorder to capture images of the last days of British rule. He becomes fascinated by Jean, a mysterious woman who hides half her face behind a scarf as she darts through the streets aggressively selling strange items. Played with a manic verve by martial arts star Maggie Cheung, Jean comes to represent everything that is strange and enigmatic about Hong Kong. Taken from a story by Paul Theroux and written by Jean-Claude Carri�re, a frequent collaborator with Luis Bu�uel, CHINESE BOX is a thoughtful, realistic blend of individual lives set against a large historical backdrop.
Cast:
"...[A] poetically resonant movie....The film's lyrical sweep and refined performances ensure that its elegiac echoes linger long after the final credits have rolled..."
-- Stephen Holden
, (New York Times)
"...The film pays tremendous -- and redeeming -- attention to nuance and detail....Sophisticated, ironic and highly complex..." -- Kevin Thomas , (Los Angeles Times)
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