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The Untold Story (Uncut) (import) NTSC

3.5 out of 5 stars 6 customer reviews

Estimated delivery 19 - 28 Apr. to Germany - Mainland when you choose Standard Delivery at checkout. Details
Dispatched from and sold by EliteDigital UK.
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Product details

  • Actors: Anthony Wong
  • Language: Cantonese Chinese
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: All Regions
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.85:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Studio: Tai Seng
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00000IC9C
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 117,632 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Customer Reviews

3.5 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: DVD
The basic story..Body parts are found washed up on a beach and the police investigation leads to the "Eight immortals restaurant" where the previous owner and his family have mysteriously vanished. The shocking truth about what happened to them involving the current owner is eventually revealed..
This Hong Kong horror/thriller is the real deal and high quality in every way. Anthony Wong (Hard boiled) puts in an amazing creepy performance as the killer (a part that won him best actor at the Hong Kong film awards). Danny Lee (The Killer) is also good as the cool guy detective. Herman Yau's direction is impressive and stylish with tremendous energy and there is also a good score. The gore and violence is pretty full on stuff including the infamous family slaughter, a nasty rape and more (I can't see this being released uncut in the UK anytime soon). There has been some criticism about the comedy cop moments as some people think they could lessen the impact of the more serious stuff. These scenes are silly and not really that funny but personally they don't bother me, and I don't believe they effect the darker moments when they come that remain brutal.
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By Trevor Willsmer HALL OF FAMETOP 50 REVIEWER on 15 Dec. 2007
The Untold Story aka Bunman aka Human Pork Rolls is not for everyone, choosing to tell its story of Macao's answer to Sweeney Todd as a broad black comedy, an approach somewhat enhanced for UK viewers by the frightening similarity Anthony Wong's bug-eyed homicidal purveyor of human pork buns has to much-loved British comedian Eric Morecambe on a particularly bad day (it's the glasses). Co-director Danny Lee's cheerful cop doesn't help matters, constantly bringing beautiful hookers with him into the station or to crime scenes and provoking the envy of his cartoonish detectives investigating missing persons while they enjoy free samples from Wong's café. All of which makes a graphic rape scene involving chopsticks all the more unpleasant, and in all the wrong ways. Did I mention it was a true story?
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Format: DVD
Top marks to director Herman Yau for delivery this grim, factual story of events that sadly unfolded in part of China; and, for the outstanding, award winning performance from Anthony Wong as a demented lunatic. This flick is so revolting i actually felt physically sick watching the sheer horror displayed in some scenes, in particular the graphic rape scene where an employee of a restuarant is raped by Wong's character; then, violently has a fistful of chopsticks repeatedly thrust into her orifice of pleasure, the camera angle changes after a couple of strikes to capture the blood gushing out of her fresh corpse from beneath the table. The shocking truth doesn't stop there either as the viewer is forced to witness children under the age of ten being methodically slaughtered with a meat cleaver in the most sadistic fashion. The victims of this vicious attack get skinned, mutilated and cooked by their perpetrator and served-up to customers in the restuarant they onced shared as a happy home. The cool, calm and collected manner in which Wong's character deals with the police investigation is equally disturbing and the families retribution to follow is stark and uncompromising but gives the viewer some hint of relief that poetic justice was served, but not much. Although Herman Yau attempts to integrate some moments of black humour to cushion the devesting images being projected at the viewer, this flick will ultimately leaves most with an unpleasant after taste and a profound sense of shame. Viewing is only recommended for those with a very strong threshold and high levels of tolerance - you've been warned.
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