"Actor: Jung ah Yum"

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  • A Tale Of Two Sisters [2004]A Tale Of Two Sisters | DVD | (22/11/2004) from £9.00   |  Saving you £10.99 (55.00%)   |  RRP £19.99

    'Our sorrow was conceived long before our birth...' When sisters Su-mi (Lim Soo-jeong) and Su-yeon (Mun Geun-yeong) return home from a sanitarium having supposedly recovered their health their stepmother Eun-joo (Yum Jung-ah) welcomes them back. However elder sister Su-mi intentionally avoids her and younger sibling Su-yeon shows a smack of fear for her. Soon strange things begin to happen in the house. Footsteps are heard and Eun-joo's birds are mysteriously poisoned. Assuming S

  • A Tale of Two Sisters [Blu-ray]A Tale of Two Sisters | Blu Ray | (16/08/2021) from £9.35   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £N/A

    Every Family Has It's Dark Secrets... Director Kim Jee-woon (A Bittersweet Life, I Saw The Devil) made his international reputation with this richly conceived, stylishly shot, and genuinely scary chiller, one of the key films of the Korean New Wave. Released from a mental institution, Su-mi returns home with her father and her younger sister, Su-yeon, only to face her cold stepmother's strange behaviour, and the disturbing apparitions that are haunting their house. What dark secret connects them all to the family's past? Haunting and heartbreaking in equal measure, A Tale of Two Sisters' devastating mix of style, scares and emotive storytelling blurred the boundaries between genres as few other horror films had done before and had a profound influence on a new generation of filmmakers. Special Features: High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation Original DTS-HD MA 5.1 and uncompressed stereo audio Optional English subtitles Brand-new Audio commentary by Korean Cinema historian Pierce Conran & critic James Marsh Audio commentary by writer/director Kim Jee-woon, lighting cameraman Oh Seung-chul and cinematographer Lee Mo-gae Audio commentary by writer/director Kim Jee-woon and cast members Im Soo-jung and Moon Geun-young Always on the Move: The Dynamic Camera and Spaces of Master Stylist Kim Jee-woon, a brand-new visual essay by Korean Cinema historian Pierce Conran Spirits of the Peninsula: Folklore in Korean Cinema, a brand-new visual essay by cultural historian Shawn Morrisey Imaginary Beasts: Memory, Trauma & the Uncanny in A Tale of Two Sisters, a brand-new visual essay by genre historian and critic Kat Ellinger Behind the Scenes, an archival featurette shot during filming Outtakes, archival footage from set Production Design, archival featurette about the intricate look of the sets Music Score, archival featurette CGI, an archival featurette Creating the Poster, an archival featurette about the iconic original poster Cast Interviews, archival interviews with Kim Kab-su (Father), Yeom Jung-a (Stepmother), Im Soo-jung (Su-mi), and Moon Geun-young (Su-yeon) Deleted scenes with director's commentary Director's analysis, an archival featurette in which Kim Jee-woon discusses the complexity and ambiguities contained within the film and why they were important to him. Director's thoughts on horror, an archival featurette in which Kim Jee-woon discusses his feelings about the horror genre. Psychiatrist's Perspective, an archival featurette exploring the psychological reality behind the story of the film Theatrical Trailer Stills galleries Reversible sleeve with original and newly commissioned artwork by Sister Hyde FIRST PRESSING ONLY: Illustrated booklet featuring new writing by critics Stacie Ponder and Anya Stanley, plus a new translation of the original Korean folktale that inspired the film.

  • Tell Me Something [1999]Tell Me Something | DVD | (27/03/2006) from £N/A   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £14.99

    Some crimes are better left unsolved... In the summer of 1999 a series of black rubbish bags filled with dismembered body parts (always with one bit missing) begin to show up around Seoul seemingly placed at random. Detective Cho is assigned to the case struggles to identify the victims until the killer starts to drop hints... Cho discovers that all the victims were once lovers of a woman by the name of Su-yeon a curator at the national museum. Cho befriends Su-yeon and

  • The Mimic [DVD]The Mimic | DVD | (19/02/2018) from £6.66   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £N/A

    The Mimic A woman, whose son has been missing for some time, moves to the countryside with her husband, daughter and sick mother-in-law. Out walking one day near Mt. Jang, a mysterious mountain where there appears to have existed a mythical creature which mimics the voices of humans, the woman meets a seemingly lost, and mute, young girl by a cave. The girl reminds her so much of her son that she takes her in, until such time that she can locate her parents or guardian. It s not long before the girl begins to mimic the voice of her own daughter and strange and sinister events start to happen around the house...

  • HH | DVD | (27/06/2005) from £12.89   |  Saving you £5.09 (51.41%)   |  RRP £14.99

    Three gruesome murders have been discovered around town and all three share distinct similarities. All of them involve the killing of pregnant women with the foetus removed from their belly but each killing was executed in a different fashion. What really worries Kim Mi-yun - a cop working on these cases - is that these three murders share the exact pattern of a group of murders committed in the past. The past murderer Shin Hyun has already surrendered to the police and is now in

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