- Region 0 NTSC (misprinted as region 3)
- English, Korean and Chinese Subtitles
Bonus Features: Cast Interviews, Music Videos, Trailers, Bloopers, and Behind the Scenes (4 hours, English Subtitles)
Freeze: Freeze stars Lee Seo-Jin (Damo,! Phoenix, Shoot for the Stars) as Joong-Won, a vampire who has spent 350 years trying to forget his lost love. Neither living nor dead, Joong-Won runs a luxurious bar with his friend and fellow vampire E-Hwa (Son Tae-Young). Afraid of getting hurt again, Joong-Won shuts down his heart and lives a sheltered existence. But when he meets a beautiful human named Ji-Woo (Park Han-Byul), all those emotions frozen by time begin to melt away. But where does that leave E-Hwa?
Bonus Features: Interviews & Behind the Scenes (1 hour 18 min)
English subtitles by YA Entertainment.A 5-episode Mini Drama, Freeze stars Lee Seo Jin (Damo, Firebird, Shadowless Sword) as Jung Won, a vampire who has lived for most of his 350 years of age trying to forget the love he lost. He runs a luxurious bar with his friend and fellow vampire Ihwa (Park Han Byul of Ode To The Han River and Wishing Stairs). All she could do was observe and protect her friend from afar (emotionally), as! he closed himself to any new emotion, afraid of suffering the! same tr agedy. But once he meets human Ji Woo (Son Tae Young of Yeon Gaesomun and To Marry a Millionaire) all those emotions frozen by time start to melt away for Jung Won.This is a drama about a violinist,Jung Eun Soo, and a car designer,Park Dong Hyuk.Yoo Tae Joon is a director at a corporation who marries Eun Soo for ambition.Kang Yoon Jung is Dong Hyuk's hoobae and is in love with him.The drama will be about a pair of lovers separating due to parental objections and meeting again when the woman is already married.Legend has it, if you climb the 28 stairs leading to the school dormitory and count each step aloud, a 29th step will appear and a spirit will grant you a wish. If your intentions are honorable, your wish can be a blessing of good fortune. But at this high school, where paranoia and jealousy reign supreme, malicious wishes are about to unleash an unspeakable evil. Be careful what you wish for; some wishes were never meant to be granted.The South Korean "Ghost School" tr! ilogy comes to a close with Wishing Stairs, a typically creepy example of modern Asian horror. First-time director Yoon Jae-Yeon was fresh out of film school when she signed on for this commercial assignment, and her rookie status makes this a lesser entry in the "Asian Extreme" genre, following the trilogy's previous installments, Whispering Corridors and Memento Mori. Still, fine performances and attention to psychological detail make this an effectively eerie study of peer pressure, classroom cruelty, and blind ambition in a girls' art school, where three aspiring ballerinas make fateful wishes upon an enchanted staircase (or is it cursed?) near their school. According to legend, if you climb the 28 steps and count each step aloud, a 29th step will magically appear and a fox-spirit will grant your wish. Fierce competition, paranoia, and malicious intentions make these "wishing stairs" a recipe for disaster, when one girl commits suicide and another w! ishes for her revival. At that point, Wishing Stairs em! ploys st andard-issue horror techniques that will be familiar to anyone who's seen Ju-On or the Japanese version of Dark Water (including the ghostly girl with long black hair). For patient viewers, the film's frightful climax comes not a moment too soon. A comprehensive "making of" documentary is included, including interview clips with primary cast and crew. --Jeff ShannonWith delicately planned actions and many cameras rolling at once, along with carefully calculated editing, the action scenes in films today are becoming more and more extravagant. But follows the characters' emotions and catches the reality of the moment in showing 'emotional actions'. The actors threw and received real punches and got endlessly injured. From highly difficult and grand scaled action to spur of the moment scenes with no set story boards, SONG Seung-hun and KWON Sang-woo did most the scenes themselves without stunt doubles. Their passion and dedication to delivering real, emotio! nal actions can be witnessed in .
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