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Lost In Translation (Widescreen Edition)

Lost In Translation (Widescreen Edition)

List Price: $14.98
Your Price: $11.24
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent
Review: This movie is not only the best movie of 2003, it is one of the best movies I've ever seen. It's subtle, it's beautiful, it's sad and depressing, but it's also funny. I don't know what else to say, you just have to see the movie.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Before Sunrise better
Review: I couldn't wait to see this movie. Somewhere I'd heard it compared favorably to one of my favorite movies..BEFORE SUNRISE. Although I appreciated Murray and Scarlett Johansson, the filming and soundtrack, it was hard to feel empathetic for 2 rich people lost in their own emptiness.
Where was the passion? (Mental if not physical?) It was more interesting as a travel piece featuring urban Japan rather than a romance.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Being pleasantly surprised is a rarity...
Review: ... and that is how I was after watching Sofia Coppola's homage to finding friends and the oddness that is Japan. After laughing at the "lip" scene and many others... I ended up in tears when I least expected it.

This is a movie I think everyone should see... not only is it funny, it is very poignant.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: lovely visual tone poem
Review: a beautiful, understated film that doesn't try to do too much. Lush cinematography you can almost feel and an amazingly nuanced performance from Bill Murray would be enough reason to see this film, but you get so much more.
American audiences tend to be confused by and hostile toward ambiguity, which is the foundation of this movie. Part of the magic is how well it translates such a nebulous concept into filmic reality.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliant, but especially if you have been to Japan!
Review: I had a strange experience when I saw Lost in Translation. I was the only one laughing in the whole theatre. I was dying of laughter while the rest of the theatre was silent. But there is a reason for this. Having been to Japan 4 times I totally knew how the main characters felt.

This was a brilliant movie, but the watcher needs to be warned that if you have not been to Japan you might not fully see why the film has gotten all the rave reviews that it has.

My favorite scene which has happened to me so many times is when Bill Murray in the in elevator and looks around and notices how different he looks from all the Japanese, how out of place he feels. Anyone who has travelled to Asia has felt this moment.

I really loved this movie....Sofia Coppola has almost made up for single handly ruining Godfather 3!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Okay, but overrated
Review: If you're willing to sacrifice all plot and tension in the name of great atmosphere, then this film may be for you. Otherwise, stay away. Bottom line, this film is nowhere near as deserving of a 'best picture' or 'best director' nomination as, say, 'In America' or last year's 'Punch Drunk Love'. Not even close.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Disappointing, Xenophobic, Tired
Review: Based on the rave reviews of this movie, I was expecting something better than this tired, unimaginative palp. "Lost" replays some of the same tired jokes of the Anglo or American in a foreign place (towering above the natives in an elevator - har har) where the character knows nothing of the language and expects people to speak to him in perfect English. I found Bill Murray's character irritating and offensive; he shows a dismissive smugness towards a people he really never tries to get to know.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Overrated and just plain bad
Review: I dont see why so many people liked this movie maybe because they have bad taste. Let me see there was no plot and extremly boring I fell asleep! I cant believe this won awards it was a lousy movie. An it wasnt even funny maybe one or 2 lines at most. This movie should be up there with the worst movies like Gigli.Its 2 people wondering around Tokyo...wow how exciting. Ive been to Tokyo an I sure didnt spend my time wondering around complainin how lonely I am an I didnt have anyone at the time. I think critics are bein nice to this movie because it has Bill Murray in it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Charming Lost and Found Experience
Review: As I began to compose this brief commentary, I remembered that Sofia Coppola was cast as the infant being baptized during the final sequence of events in the first Godfather film (1972) which her father directed. She later appeared in Godfather Part III, a last minute and miscast substitute, reputedly for Winona Ryder. How different this film is from those films as well as The Conversation (1974) and Apocalypse Now/Redux (1979) which her father also directed.

With regard to Lost in Translation, she wrote the screenplay as well as directed it, evoking brilliant performances from Bill Murray (as Bob Harris) and Scarlett Johansson (as Charlotte). For me, the title suggests multiple dimensions of irony. Some are obviously related to Harris, familiar to those in Tokyo who recognize him but certainly adrift (if not totally lost) in a culture foreign to him in almost every possible way. Other ironies involve communication difficulties unrelated to fluency in language. For example, even after two years of marriage, Charlotte and John (Giovanni Ribisi) are -- to a significant extent -- strangers to each other as are Bob and his wife back in the United States to whom he has been married for quite some time. Moreover, much of the communication between Charlotte and Bob is also lost in translation, more the result (I think) of generational than linguistic differences. All this suggests an important point to me: It is difficult (if not impossible) for others to know who you are if you don't. It is also so important, moreover, to know who you aren't. Presumably Bob has been struggling with these issues, at least since his career began to evaporate. Both Bob and Charlotte are at or near a crossroad in their respective lives when they first meet. After several days together, their relationship arrives at another crossroad. Which way to go? Where is his life headed? And hers? Will they proceed together?

Here are two of several reasons why I admire this film so much. First, thanks to Coppola and her superb cast, it has exceptional charm. There are so many targets of opportunity for a cynical statement. However, to her great credit, she ignores them all. Although there are highly amusing (sometimes zany) moments along the way, to be sure, Coppola develops the characters of Bob and Charlotte with respect and affection but never with condescension. The second reason is that this film has great natural energy which Coppola juxtaposes with moments of intimacy, tenderness, reflection, and even poignancy. To achieve that, Coppola and Lance Acord blend as well as balance exterior shots of Tokyo at night (which resembles Las Vegas) with exterior shots of religious shrines during the day, thereby complementing Charlotte and Bob's diverse moods as they explore at least some of the country in which they feel lost.

Given what she achieves in this film, I am eager to see how Coppola's career develops in years to come. My hunch (only a hunch) is that her talents are more diverse than those of her father (e.g. slapstick comedy) and thus the nature and extent of opportunities which await her are greater than those available to him after the first Godfather film (1972). He must be a very proud father....and should be.

FYI: The special features of the DVD version include a conversation with Coppola and Murray, a behind-the-scenes featurette which includes exclusive footage shot by the filmmakers ("Lost on Location"), several deleted scenes, and an extended version of the Japanese TV show, "Matthew's Best Hit TV."

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: pretty good if you didn't fall sleep due to its slow motions
Review: well, boredom is a very difficult thing to portray and performed. it sometimes won't hold down the viewers too strongly to sit out the whole nine yards. this movie is wonderfully done by bill murray who usually was too over-acting as a comic person. there's nothing you would and could find in tokyo except the day-in and day-out neon signes. a simple script but a very good one, if you don't mind a snail-like paced progress (or, is there any progress?) the slow moving forward scenes were only trying to give you what a boring daily life that some of the westerners might encounter in tokyo, a stranger is a strange land. the young woman could be bill's daughter and he did sometimes showed a fatherly emotion to her, and that's good.


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