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Radio Dayz (DVD) (Director's Cut) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version) DVD Region 3

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YesAsia Editorial Description

The topic of Japanese colonialism blew across Chungmuro in 2007 with the acclaimed horror flick Epitaph followed by Once Upon a Time In Corea. Now comes Radio Dayz, a lighthearted comedy about a ragtag squad kicking off the nation's first radio drama during one of Korea's darkest times in history. Written and directed by Ha Ki Ho (To My Love) as his debut feature, this humorous tale is scented with deep nostalgia for the older generation, while offering fresh new fodder for younger audiences.

Known for his unusual roles, Ryoo Seung Bum (Conduct Zero) returns as an eccentric producer with a flamboyant streak. Kim Sa Rang (Hot for Teacher) epitomizes western-influenced beauty as a razzle-dazzle jazz singer, whilst Hwang Bo Ra (Shim's Family) represents traditional Korean beauty as a pansori (Korean opera) singer. Bathed in satirical humor, the film sees its own fictional drama falling prey to the cliches of modern-day K-dramas like love triangles and terminal illness. An ironic, quintessential comedy, Radio Dayz follows in the footsteps of 2005's blockbuster Welcome To Dongmakgol in drawing humor from idiosyncratic characters and offbeat situations behind the gloomy shadows of historical tragedy.

Under the scrutiny of the Japanese imperialistic regime, a team of misfits come together to make Joseon's first live radio drama, but the ending's up in the air with such an unreliable bunch. First, there's oddball producer Lloyd Park (Ryoo Seung Bum) who spends too much time cooing over his leading ladies. Then there's the writer (Kim Roi Ha, Return) who suffers from writing block. Of course, no drama is complete without the stars: the sexy and self-indulgent jazz singer (Kim Sa Rang), who always finds herself in trouble with her habitual ad-libs, and her quirky yet charming on-air rival (Hwang Bo Ra). Last but not least, there's the freedom fighter (Lee Jong Hyuk) posing as the sound engineer. Let the show begin!

NOTE: Only the theatrical version on Disc 1 comes with English subtitles. The director's cut version on Disc 2 does not have English subtitles.

This edition comes the following special features:
Disc 1:

  • Feature Film
  • Audio Commentaries by Director Ha Ki Ho, Ryoo Seung Bum, Kim Roi Ha, Oh Jeong Se, Hwang Bo Ra
  • Production Sketches
  • Interviews of Cast Members
    Disc 2:
  • Audio Commentaries by Director Ha Ki Ho, Producer Kim Sang Min, Director of Photography Lee Tae Yoon, Musical Director Sung Ki Wan
  • Poster Shooting
  • Production Announcement
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • © 2008 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. 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.

    Technical Information

    Product Title: Radio Dayz (DVD) (Director's Cut) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version) Radio Dayz (DVD) (導演版) (限量版) (韓國版) Radio Dayz (DVD) (导演版) (限量版) (韩国版) ラジオデイズ (ディレクターズカット) (韓国版) 라듸오 데이즈 (감독판) (한정판)
    Artist Name(s): Kim Sa Rang | Ryoo Seung Bum | Lee Jong Hyuk | Hwang Bo Ra Kim Sa Rang | 柳乘泛 | Lee Jong Hyuk | Hwang Bo Ra Kim Sa Rang | 柳乘泛 | Lee Jong Hyuk | Hwang Bo Ra キム・サラン | リュ・スンボム | イ・ジョンヒョク | Hwang Bo Ra 김사랑 | 류 승범 | 이종혁 | 황보라
     Manage My Personalized Product Alerts 
    Release Date: 2008-05-13
    Language: Korean
    Subtitles: Korean, English
    Country of Origin: South Korea
    Disc Format(s): DVD
    Region Code: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
    Publisher: Premier Entertainment
    Other Information: 2 DVDs
    Package Weight: 190 (g)
    Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
    YesAsia Catalog No.: 1010908959

    Product Information

    * Screen Format : Anamorphic Widescreen
    * Sound Mix : Dolby 5.1
    * Extras :
    DISC 1
    - 본편
    - 음성해설 : 하기호 감독, 류승범, 김뢰하, 오정세, 황보라
    - <라듸오 데이즈> 제작과정
    - 배우 인터뷰

    Disc 2
    - 음성해설 : 하기호 감독, 김상민 프로듀서, 이태윤 촬영감독, 김민정 미술감독, 성기완 음악감독
    - 포스터 촬영
    - 제작 발표회
    - 예고편

    * Director : 하기호

    충무로 핫 트렌드 1930년대,
    그 힘찬 포문을 열 <라듸오데이즈>!

    충무로에 ‘경성바람’이 거세게 불고 있다. 스크린이 이처럼 1930년대 경성에 매료되는 것은 시대극이 기성세대에게는 향수를 불러일으키고 젊은층에게는 다양한 소재에 대한 신선함을 주기 때문이다. 2007년 여름 호평을 받았던 공포영화 <기담>을 시작으로 2008년 개봉 예정인 <원스어폰어타임>, <모던보이>, <좋은놈,나쁜놈,이상한놈> 역시 경성을 배경으로 주목받는 작품들이다. 그 중 <라듸오데이즈>는 <원스어폰어타임>과 함께 2008년 가장 먼저 선보일 경성영화로 조선 최초의 라디오 방송국이라는 독특한 소재가 눈길을 끈다. 이 영화는 귀차니즘 한량PD 류승범과 가지각색 캐릭터군단이 라디오 드라마를 완성하기 위한 좌충우돌 무한도전을 그린 코믹드라마로 시종일관 즐거움을 선사할 예정이다. <라듸오데이즈>는 충무로 핫 트렌드인 ‘1930년대 경성’이라는 시대적, 공간적 배경과 소재적 독특함을 가지고 일제감정기라는 암울한 시대와 대비되는 엉뚱 발랄한 캐릭터를 통해 남녀노소 누구에게나 유쾌한 웃음과 진한 감동을 선사할 것이다.

    2005년 <웰컴투동막골> 사람들이 있었다면
    2008년 <라듸오데이즈> 사람들이 있다!

    2005년 800만 관객을 웃기고 울렸던 <웰컴 투 동막골>이 있었다면 2008년 또 한번 대한민국 관객들에게 유쾌한 웃음과 감동을 선사할 <라듸오데이즈>가 있다. 암울한 시대 속에서도 굴하지 않고 유쾌함과 천진함을 잃지 않았던 사람들의 이야기란 점에서 두 영화는 꼭 닮아있다. 1950년 전쟁의 소용돌이 속 전쟁조차 몰랐던 동막골이 있었다면, 1930년 어두운 일제시대 속에서도 사람들에게 꿈을 주는 드라마를 완성시키기에 여념이 없는 경성방송국이 있다. 두 영화 모두 다소 무거울 수 있는 시대의 이야기를 동시대를 살았던 경쾌한 사람들을 통해 아이러니한 웃음을 선사한다. 2005년 동막골 사람들에게 매료 되었던 관객이라면 2008년 경성방송국 사람들의 재기 발랄한 입담과 시종일관 웃음을 선사하는 에피소드에 또 한번 매료될 것이다.

    제1화

    때는 바야흐로 1930년 일제강점기.
    만사태평 천하제일 귀차니즘, 타고난 한량 PD 로이드가 있었으니..
    인생 다 귀찮아 죽겠는 그에게 오직 관심사는 당대 최고의 신여성이자 재즈가수인 ‘마리’뿐.
    아~ 그러나 이 무슨 운명의 장난인가? ‘마리’는 ‘로이드’를 거들떠보지도 않는구나.

    제2화

    할일 없고 낙 없는 우리의 ‘로이드’.
    그의 운명을 바꿔 놓은 일생일대의 사건이 터졌으니..
    우연히 손에 넣은 시나리오가 그것이었던 것이다.
    조선 최초의 라디오 드라마 ‘사랑의 불꽃’을 방송키로 결심한 ‘로이드’.
    아~ 그러나 첫회부터 미스캐스팅! 실수연발! 애드립남발! 완전 방송사고 직전이구나!

    제3화

    돌발 애드립 전문, 방송사고 다발 재즈가수 마리
    연기는 대충 액션은 오바, 푼수 기생 명월
    위기대처 능력 제로, 떠듬떠듬 아나운서 만철
    엔딩을 단 한번도 완성시켜 본적 없는 작가 노봉알
    거사를 꿈꾸는 의문의 소리효과 담당 요원 K
    위기일발 애드립의 귀재 천재사환 순덕

    아~ 드라마를 제대로 만들 수 있을지 참으로 의심스러운 구성이로다!
    엉겁결에 모인 이들이 과연 일제의 감시를 뚫고 조선 최초의 라디오 드라마를 완성시킬 수 있을까~? 그것이 문제로다!
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    YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

    Professional Review of "Radio Dayz (DVD) (Director's Cut) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)"

    June 3, 2008

    Korean cinema produces its first solid film of 2008 with Radio Dayz, a breezy comedy about the first days of Korean radio during the dark period of its Japanese colonial occupation. First-time director Ha Gi Ho, directing from a script by Kim Hyun Jung (Untold Scandal, Public Enemy), delivers a light comedy that possesses plenty of silly humor minus the overwrought melodrama that has plagued the Korean comedy genre for years. Even though some may attack the filmmakers for taking a serious historical subject and turning it into a farce, Radio Dayz is the type of breezy humor Korean cinema needs more of.

    The cast is led by Ryoo Seung Bum, doing his best imitation of Bae Yong Joon as Lloyd, the easygoing director of the new Seoul radio station in the 1930s. Lloyd is a resourceful man who almost never gets nervous about anything and smiles through just about any situation. However, with few paying subscribers, he's struggling to make the station relevant, and is stuck with having to report censored news by the Japanese, working with misfits like an ex-giseang, and having only one announcer for every program. Suggested by his boss to do a radio drama to entertain the paying audience, Lloyd meets with a writer who offers him a melodramatic drama called The Flames of Love. Unlike the usual two-hour radio dramas, The Flames of Love aims to hook the viewers by becoming an action-driven series that runs only 20 minutes a day.

    Once on the air, nothing turns out the way Lloyd and the writer expect, as they have to deal with senseless improvisation from their pretentious star and bad voice acting from the non-professional cast. Through an audition, Lloyd brings in K (Lee Jong Hyuk), who has a talent for making artificial sounds to spice up the drama. Little do they know that K is actually a freedom fighter who plans to use the show to spark a rebellious movement through the airwaves. He's not a very good freedom fighter though; K and his own ragtag group of misfits have done little but raid mail trucks full of love letters instead of important Japanese documents. The drama, with its over-the-top love triangle, begins to pick up popularity throughout the city. However, with popularity also come censorship and forced product placements.

    The best way to approach Radio Dayz is to not see it as a film based on historical fact, but a comedic allegory on today's television dramas. The dramatic twists Lloyd employs in The Flames of Love, such as the reveal that the two lovers are half-slblings, are similar to the ridiculous and far-fetched character relationships seen in television dramas today. With bickering stars looking for more lines and editorial pressure from the executives, Ha and Kim suggest that such today's TV drama practices go as far back as the beginning of serial dramas. While the satire is not biting enough to reach brilliance, Radio Dayz will certainly earn a smile from those who appreciate a bit of media commentary in their comedies.

    That's not to say that the film only works on a satirical level. Despite taking place in a dark period of Korean history, Radio Dayz is perfectly content with evoking nostalgia for some of the better days of colonial occupation. With radio still in its infant stage, some of the improvised techniques the radio station staffers use provide some of the film's most amusing moments. Even the Japanese, usually cast in a dramatically evil fashion, are portrayed as dictators who are just kind of mean. The goal of the filmmakers is obvious not to provide a historically accurate look at the evil Japanese conquerors, but rather how something as trivial as a radio drama can bring people together in celebration. In that context, Radio Dayz works just fine.

    Much of the film's comedic success is also attributed to the cast. Even though Ryoo's constant smile takes a bit of time to get used to, he does eventually reveal a charm that makes him a hard character to hate. The rest of the radio station staff, especially Oh Jung Se and Hwang Bo Ra as the drama's two stars, give immensely likeable comedic performances without going over-the-top. The performances are especially important in a film where the cast spends most of the film inside a room, and Ha uses them splendidly. With the breezy jazz-driven score, an excellent ensemble cast, and a funny script, Radio Dayz is certainly the best feature film debut in Korean cinema so far this year. Even though the filmmakers may not be completely true to history, lighten up - it's only a movie.

    By Kevin Ma

    Editor's Pick of "Radio Dayz (DVD) (Director's Cut) (Limited Edition) (Korea Version)"

    Picked By Sanwei
    See all this editor's picks


    May 23, 2008

    Radio Daze
    Chungmuro has popped out so many half-baked efforts lately I'm beginning to dread watching Korean films, which is why I'm very glad to have found some consolation in director Ha Ki Ho's debut feature Radio Dayz. Coming on the coattails of one too many movie about cheating partners and dying parents/kids, Radio Dayz quietly affects and amuses with a lighthearted story in serious times. Set in the 1930s during the Japanese colonial period, the film follows a ragtag team of characters working at Korea's first radio station as they throw together the country's first radio drama while dealing with pressure from above, internal squabbling, writing blocks, revolutionary activities, and general ineptitude.

    Radio Dayz opens with jazzy flair and a fabulous black and white sequence of a boy whizzing through Seoul on bike to deliver a rooster. As a door is thrown open to greet the boy, color seeps into the picture, followed by a quirky lesson on how to make a rooster crow. I enjoyed the first five minutes of Radio Dayz more than most of the new Korean films I've seen in the last few months combined. The film doesn't manage to maintain this level of charm for its entirety, but the feel-good atmosphere and soft nostalgia remain as the cast bumble and bicker their way through their fabulously cheesy radio drama. While the radio drama within the film packs in the product placements and K-drama cliches, the plot of Radio Dayz itself stays thankfully clear of forced melodrama or romantic subtext, content to just amble along in its own strange way.

    Radio Dayz does have its share of foot-dragging moments, particularly the thread about bumbling freedom fighters which seems to have nothing to do with the other half of the film for most of the story's duration. When the two threads finally come together though, the pay-off is unexpectedly affecting, eschewing climactic dramatics for a gentle yet rousing scene of mass celebration. The conclusion, like the whole of the film, is pleasant while remaining ambiguous and tempered, dancing lightly around a very sensitive period in Korean history. Radio Dayz does not seriously address its historical context, but that never seems to be the film's goal to begin with.

    Keeping the nostalgic design while stripping away the threat, Radio Dayz evokes the period but focuses on the people, telling a simple, comedic, and enjoyable story with a likable ensemble cast. From Lee Jong Hyuk's earnest freedom fighter to Kim Sa Rang's self-absorbed jazz singer to Hwang Bo Ra's theatrical pansori singer, all the characters seem to march to their own drums, lending the film an oddball, offbeat pacing and tone that's smilingly awkward, yet feels appropriate for the period. Ryoo Seung Bum in particular plays the radio station producer with a laidback smugness and spontaneity that is both charismatic and baffling.

    Radio Dayz takes a similar popcorn-friendly romanticized route as other recent colonial period-set works like Capital Scandal and Once Upon a Time in Corea, but it travels at a wholly different speed. While Once Upon a Time in Corea (which opened the same day as Radio Dayz) goes for quick and flashy by emphasizing westernized old-time glamour and throwing in Indiana Jones-aspiring adventure and action, Radio Dayz takes things soft, small, and slow with winking humor. Many terrible things happened during the colonial period, but one can tell from the first frame that nothing too terrible can happen in this film, and that is exactly its cozy, dazy charm.

    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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