Take Care of My Cat (Special Edition) (2discs/region3)
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Product Information
Also Known As: | Take Good Care of My Cat |
Director: | Jeong Jae-Eun |
Country of Origin: | South Korea |
Genre: | Drama, Juvenile |
Language: | Korean |
Subtitles: | English, Korean |
Sound: | Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround |
Release Date: | Jun 04, 2002 |
Publisher: | Enter One |
Product Made In: | South Korea |
Aspect Ratio: | 1.85:1 |
Case: | Slip Case |
Single Side, Dual Layer
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About Rare Item
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Product Details
Disc 1 - Commentary Track, Interview, Collection of Deleted Cut, Trailer
Disc 2 - Director, Making Featurette, Short Films by Director
Disc 2 - Director, Making Featurette, Short Films by Director
About Take Care of My Cat
Life in Twenty is like Cat.. Their Secret Message
Variety
Five young women find their friendship and dreams tested in the fires of post-high school life in Take Care of My Cat, an engaging, highly-accessible movie. With its wintry setting in the grungy port city of Inchon and its focus on the social divisions between the girls, the film has a more European flavor than most youth-centered Korean movies. Jeong Jae-eun's avoidance of cliches like sex, drugs, and discos keeps the focus tight on the girls' fluctuating friendships. Their ties are held together by that special Korean obsession, the cell phone. Jeong passed up fashionable Seoul for the movie's setting as Inchon better reflected the flux and unease in the girls' lives, as well as their dreams of escape abroad.--Derek Elley
Filmmaker
Jeong Jae-Eun's Take Care of My Cat, deserves special mention, not only for being one of a handful of Korean films directed by women, but also for setting its tale within the working-class town of Incheon rather than the usual slick Seoul backdrops. --Jason Sanders
Variety
Five young women find their friendship and dreams tested in the fires of post-high school life in Take Care of My Cat, an engaging, highly-accessible movie. With its wintry setting in the grungy port city of Inchon and its focus on the social divisions between the girls, the film has a more European flavor than most youth-centered Korean movies. Jeong Jae-eun's avoidance of cliches like sex, drugs, and discos keeps the focus tight on the girls' fluctuating friendships. Their ties are held together by that special Korean obsession, the cell phone. Jeong passed up fashionable Seoul for the movie's setting as Inchon better reflected the flux and unease in the girls' lives, as well as their dreams of escape abroad.--Derek Elley
Filmmaker
Jeong Jae-Eun's Take Care of My Cat, deserves special mention, not only for being one of a handful of Korean films directed by women, but also for setting its tale within the working-class town of Incheon rather than the usual slick Seoul backdrops. --Jason Sanders
Other Versions
recommend by shopmaster.