Sunday, March 06, 2005


yuka sweet sweet~ wait til u see her chest then shes transformed to yuka hot hot!!!!



Title: Three Extremes: Dumplings
Film Director(s): Fruit Chan Goh
Film Producer(s): Peter Chan Ho-Sun
Released: 2004 [Hong Kong]
Genre: Dark Comedy
Sub-Genre: Horror

Plot: A fallen starlet seeks help to reclaim her youth as well as her philandering husband. She finds salvation in Aunt Mei, whose secret recipe for restoring woman's youth is dumplings which are made from the remains of aborted fetuses.

Cast: Miriam Yeung Chin-Wah, Tony Leung Ka-Fai, Ling Bai (Bai Ling). . .

IMO:
this is the long version of dumplings... see bai ling in fhm covers so many times but dun find her sexy leh, then see her in this movie so hot sia... always show cleavage cleavage... recommended for all girls who want to stay youthful n pretty forever...

Rating:
4 out of 5 snoopys


Title: New Police Story
Film Director(s): Benny Chan (Muk Sing)
Film Producer(s): Willie Chan (Chi Keung), Solon So Chi-Hung, Benny Chan (Muk Sing), Barbie Tung (Wan Si)
Released: 2004 [Hong Kong]
Genre: Action/Adventure
Sub-Genre: Martial Arts

Overview:
Wing (Jackie Chan) is the Hong Kong police's resident supercop. He's the best of the best, cracking every case he handles in record time.
Fung (Nicholas Tse) is a rebel without a pause, a typically disaffected but street-smart Hong Kong youth who wastes his life in videogame arcades. Talk is cheap, and no one talks cheaper than Fung.

Due to his family's criminal background, it seems that Fung can never become a police officer, and follow in the footsteps of Wing, his all-time idol.

Finally, Fung gets the chance to realise his goal of becoming a detective. He tricks Wing into joining force with him on the trail of a truly vicious band of foes: The Gang Of Five!


Cast:
Jackie Chan, Nicholas Tse (Ting Fung), Charlie Yeung Choi-Nei (Charlie Young), Charlene Choi Cheuk-Yin, Daniel Wu Yin-Cho, Wang Chieh, Andy On Chi-Kit, Terence Yin Chi-Wai, Coco Chiang Yi, Hayama Go, Liu Kai Chi, Yu Rong Guang, Deep Ng, Zac Koo (Hau Zheng). . .

IMO:
typical jackie chan action movie which should be watched becos of what else, his unbelievable stunts...

Rating:
3 1/2 out of 5 snoopys

Saturday, March 05, 2005



Title(s) AKA: Lies; Gojitmal
Film Director(s): Jang Sun Woo
Film Producer(s): Shin Chul
Released: 1999 [Korea]
Genre: Drama
Sub-Genre: Art

Overview:
Jang Sun Woo's highly controversial film chronicles the bizarre sexual relations of a 38 year-old married man, J, and an 18 year-old student, Y, who is intent on losing her virginity before graduation. After the initial encounter, they embark on a sexual odyssey toward the realms of obsession and sadomasochism. No common love affair, theirs tests the limits of both body and mind. Intense desires drive them into a relationship that revolves around pain, pleasure, and unavoidable lies. As J's sexual needs take on addictive dimensions, Y begins to draw back. Insecurities, doubts, and indiscretions begin to weigh on a love that once knew no limits.

Cast:
Lee Sang Hyun, Kim Tae Yeon, Jeon Hye Jin, Choi Hyun Joo, Han Kwon Taek, Kwon Hyuk Poong, Jung Myung Keum, Shin Min Soo, Cho Young Sun. . .

IMO:
shit, watch the show halfway then they show this short clip of actual interview with the young actress how she felt about doing nude scenes then it shows her first out of many nude scenes... fast forward and u get to see another unedited real clip of her friend beating her up for stealing her guy... i thought it was quite cool and hoping for more such clips inbetween but no more le...

watch it if u like to see a guy on his knees begging to be whipped (for the female dominatrix)

Rating:
3 1/2 out of 5 snoopys


Title: Woman is the Future Of Man
Film Director(s): Hong Sang-Su
Released: 2004 [Korea]
Genre: Drama
Sub-Genre: Romance

Overview:
"Woman" takes place in a span of two days, starting with two 30-something college friends _ Hon-jun (Kim Tae-woo), an aspiring filmmaker, and Mun-ho (Yoo Ji-tae) an art professor _ catching up on old times. Drinking and talking at a Chinese restaurant, their conversation turns to Son-hwa (Sung Hyun-ah), whom they both dated some seven years ago, and in an inebriated moment, they decide to search her out.
Those who have watched Hong's earlier films like "Kangwondo-ui Him (The Power of Kangwon Province)" or "Oh! Soojung (The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors)" know not to expect dramatic narrative twists. In fact, not much will seem to be happening in "Woman," even when Mun-ho and Hon-jun do find Son-hwa halfway through the film.

But the thing with Hong's films is that the closer you look, the more you'll see. As in Hong's 2001 film, "Saenhwal-ui Palgyon (Turning Gate)," "Woman" revolves around how two relationships to the same person play off each other. There's a sense of overlapping and symmetry in the way the two friends dealt with their past love, which we see through a series of flashbacks, and through it, how they deal with life in general. For Hon-jun, Sonhwa was a love thoroughly mishandled, one he abandoned when going off to the United States to study and still feels lingering guilt over. For Mun-ho, who met Sonhwa after Hon-jun, his feelings and intentions are more distanced and therefore more difficult to ascertain.

Though the director leaves a lot of room for improvisation, often working without a set script or dialogue, "Woman" is still a carefully rendered film, with all its banal components having a precise place. This order is most obvious in a cleverly filmed Chinese restaurant scene, in which the two unknowingly repeat each other's actions, including using similar lines while flirting with the waitress...


Cast:
Yoo Ji-Tae, Sung Hyun-Ah, Kim Tae-Woo. .

IMO:
hyun ah chio sia! story abit cheem to understand ne

Rating:
3 out of 5 snoopys