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Bullet in the Head
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List Price: $19.98
Our Price: $18.98
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Product Details
- Starring: Jacky Cheung, Chung Lam, Shek Yin Lau, Waise Lee, Tony Leung Chiu Wai
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- Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
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- Binding: VHS Tape
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- EAN: 9786304534335
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- Format: Color, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
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- ISBN: 6304534337
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- Label: Tai Seng
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- Manufacturer: Tai Seng
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- Number of Items: 1
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- Product Group: Video
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- Publisher: Tai Seng
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- Release Date: 1998-01-01
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- Studio: Tai Seng
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- Theatrical Release Date: 1990
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- Title: Bullet in the Head
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- UPC: 601643195438
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Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: In John Woo's most ambitious film, three rumbling teenage thugs decide to flee Hong Kong for the greener pastures of war-ravaged Vietnam, circa 1967. They are entangled almost immediately in the bottomless horrific amorality of the war zone, which harshly tests their quasi-medieval bonds of "brotherhood." Whatever force this notion has comes mostly from the three leading players, who are all terrific: Tony Leung as the idealistic point-of-view character, Waise Lee as the greedy turncoat, and Jacky Cheung as the sap whose massive head wound turns him into a vegetable. Everyone in sight is revoltingly corrupt--only the Americans are portrayed as relatively nonvicious hapless victims--and Woo admits that he simply wasn't much interested in the Caucasian characters; the movie is about Asians fighting each other. The film was cut down to 2-1/2 hours from an initial "director's cut" almost three hours long, and it was mostly motivating dramatic material that was jettisoned. Finally, Bullet may simply be too intense for its own good. From the opening moments, people are screaming and brutalizing each other, and the ferocity rarely ebbs. The final hour is nonstop mayhem, and it numbs you out.. --David Chute
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Customer Reviews
I hope this one is picked up by Dragon Dynasty for release
This movie was amazing. The character development was superb, coupled with excellent acting. The story follows three young friends through their young life as friends through a journey that none will forget. The action is amazing, and in many ways some scenes are almost too intense to take. I loved the movie, seeing what happened to each character, and the way some peoples lives end up far different than expected. See this movie if you love movies, you will not be disapointed.
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Sometimes brilliant, sometimes painfully obvious...
I saw the director's cut of this film a number of years back when John Woo was "hot" in Hollywood terms. It was, for the most part, pretty good, but it's not a perfect film. The relationship between the 3 men is done in a very heavy handed, obvious way (they constantly, and I mean constantly, say "we're buddies, we're supposed to stick together"), Waise Lee's character is very poorly written, and it's hard to believe in the usual "lost innocence" plot line when these guys are having gang fights at 15, and we're supposed to believe that life as smugglers in Vietnam made them hard boiled (so to speak). Aside from that, the film has great setpieces (especially a shootout in a bar), the ending has a great shootout (even though thematically it's pretty obvious where it's heading) and the rapport of Simon Yam (who gives a good performance) and the 3 main characters is surprisingly believable. As one reviewer has already said, Woo is erratic, even in his Hong Kong days. Anyone who has seen Once a Thief or Just Heroes will attest to that. Here, he's intermittenly brilliant and obvious, sometimes in the same scene. It's worth watching if you're a Woo fan. If not, you can probably skip the film.
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Not the best of Woo but still a worth while watch
Jacky Cheung, Tony Leung, and Waise Lee are friends growing up in Hong Kong 1967. When trouble arises they decide to leave for Vietnam to become smugglers. Wlile the story doesn't ever really settle on anything and you don't know exactly where the movie is going to go, John Woo manages to bring us the bloodshed and and tragic friendships that he is best known for. Tony Leung does fine in his role, Jacky Cheung is outstanding, and then Waise Lee is the ony person I questioned. Simon Yam gives his usual average performance with above average moments. The movie of course comes down to the end. Don't expect a great movie like 'Better Tomorrow' or 'The Killer' but one that is different and is worth a watch for any Woo fan.
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Your basic waste of time
This might be the perfect flick for a fourteen year-old who aspires to be a mass murderer. There is little to recommend it apart from the technical perfection of some of the cinematography and the staging of the scenes of mass destruction of people and property. Even these scenes have none of the balletic grace of Tarantino's "Kill Bill" films, his salute to the genre, or "Reservoir Dogs," which has a mystery at its core and some fine acting and dialogue that temper the violence.
"Bullet ..." is little more than two hours of broken glass, fire, blood squirts, amputation, beatings and explosions. This makes Gladiator look like a Sunday school picnic. The characters are totally flat, one-dimensional. There is virtually no plot aside from excuses generated to wreak havoc. The acting is weak, static, despite the fact that I don't understand a word of Cantonese. We are presented with a series of stereotypes (the hooker with a heart of gold, the good friend, the crazy friend and the bad friend).
Unfortunately the American stereotype of the Viet Cong as madmen -- and Saigon as hopelessly corrupt -- is reiterated here to the detriment of any understanding of Viet Nam during the American occupation. The worst thing is that -- because they are so shallow and undeveloped -- you don't care what happens to the characters. So I'll tell you and then you won't have to finish watching the film: they kill each other.
My advice-- skip it.
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John Woo loses the plot
It's a common belief that John Woo lost his way when he moved to Hollywood, but in truth his career was always highly erratic even in his Hong Kong days. For every Better Tomorrow or The Killer on his resume there's at least one disappointment on the level of Bullet in the head.
On paper Bullet in the Head looks like John Woo's most ambitious and under-rated film, but sadly it turns out to be an entirely derivative and largely ineffective shoot-em-up that blows its few good ideas in all the overkill. There's the germ of a good idea in its sprawling tale of three friends who skip the rioting Hong Kong of 1967 to make their fortune in the chaos of Vietnam, but it's quickly lost amid the cartoon carnage - this is the kind of film where Woo will add a bomb disposal man having his arms blown off to the background of a romantic parting, and that's one of the more subtle scenes. Clunking construction and wild leaps of logic abound (it's hard to take Jacky Cheung's cries of "Don't make me commit murder!" seriously after we've just seen him gun down thirty people) and the tragedy of Vietnam is reduced to the level of a video game in several over the top and largely uninvolving action scenes.
There are a few mildly effective moments, such as Simon Yam's memorable introduction, but the lasting impression is of a hack who has seen The Deer Hunter and The Killing Fields several times without ever really understanding them. Horrendously disappointing. No misjudged underappreciated lost masterpiece, just a mess.
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