Ein französischer Polizist bekommt 2 Monate Urlaub, weil er zu heftige Ergebnisse erzielt. Seine japanische Freundin, die vor 19 Jahren verschwunden ist, ist gestorben und er fliegt von Pari... Alles lesenEin französischer Polizist bekommt 2 Monate Urlaub, weil er zu heftige Ergebnisse erzielt. Seine japanische Freundin, die vor 19 Jahren verschwunden ist, ist gestorben und er fliegt von Paris nach Tokio zu ihrer Beerdigung und wird voller Überraschungen sein. Der Yakuza trifft au... Alles lesenEin französischer Polizist bekommt 2 Monate Urlaub, weil er zu heftige Ergebnisse erzielt. Seine japanische Freundin, die vor 19 Jahren verschwunden ist, ist gestorben und er fliegt von Paris nach Tokio zu ihrer Beerdigung und wird voller Überraschungen sein. Der Yakuza trifft auf seine brutalen Wege.
- Olivier
- (as Jean Marc Montalto)
- Van Eyck
- (as Mikhel Scourneau)
- Jean Baptiste 2
- (as Yann Epstein)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
The plot is the least of the matter in this film. As directed by Gerard Krawczyk, `Wasabi' is really all about style. Besson's screenplay is fitfully amusing, doling out cleverness and cutesyness in roughly equal measure. Cinematographer Gerard Sterin brings out the colorful richness of the urban Japanese landscape and editor Yanne Herve doesn't linger longer on the jokes and sight gags than is absolutely necessary. These elements help to compensate for the somewhat desperate air that afflicts the screenplay from time to time.
The prime asset of `Wasabi' is Jean Reno's performance. Reno perfectly mines the comic potential inherent in the material through the tone of weary cynicism and superiority to all around him that he conveys throughout. As an actor who has played this type of rogue-cop character many times in his career, Reno obviously relishes this opportunity for a little good-natured self-ribbing. And he does a splendid job.
`Wasabi' is little more than a piffle when all is said and done, but Reno makes it worth seeing.
1. The interplay between Fiorentino (Jean Reno) and his sidekick Momo (Michel Muller) was consistently humorous throughout, with Muller delivering the punchline, and nearly upstaging Reno throughout. My favorite scene is when Fiorentino is eating generous gobs of Wasabi (hence the name of the film), and Momo, not wanting to be outdone by his mentor, nearly gags to death on the stuff. I was laughing out loud -- maybe because it reminds me too vividly of the first time I ever ate sushi, and nearly died doing the same thing as Momo!!
2. Ryoko Hirosue, who plays Yumi, the previously unknown daughter to Fiorentini, is one of the current hot young faces in Japan, and has appeared in many TV dramas and movies. She certainly provides all the eye candy I could ever wish for in this film. But I must admit a certain new found-respect for her acting abilities, as she pulled off her lines in French flawlessly, while maintaining her trademark cuteness and capturing the carefree attitude of today's Japanese youth. She provided a foil of a different sort for Reno, her bright colors (pink hair, pink everything) offering a striking contrast to Reno's darker, demure look.
The Yakuza were portrayed as mindless goons in this film, and there are certainly better films out there if you want to know more about Yakuza, but it appeared that they played their role, which was to showcase Reno's machismo, in a humorous way, something along the lines of Jackie Chan films -- they are more like props in the film than anything else.
All in all, I was entertained by this film, which is all I was looking for during my 11 hours crossing the Pacific.
Title (Brazil): "Wasabi"
Any film with Jean Reno in the lead and Luc Besson behind the script is going to entertain and this does just that. Thankfully the film is kept short enough for none of the flaws to start to irritate and the kick ass French cop goes to Japan theme is done well enough to warrant a viewing.
My DVD had the option for French with English subtitles or English dubbed. Even though Jean Reno does his own over dubbing in the English version, I found the overall effect was a little stale. I restarted the film in French with subtitles and the energy and humour of the performances just shone through a lot better.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesRyoko Hirosue didn't know a word of French; she learned all of her lines phonetically.
- PatzerAfter arriving in Tokyo, Hubert asks Momo to drive him to Shinjuku district to meet the lawyer. However, the following scene shows Hubert getting out of the car at Akihabara (the famous electronics shopping district) which is on the other side of Tokyo. This is evident by the iconic Akihabara pedestrian crossing under the green train bridge where he gets off. Later on, Hubert again leaves "Shinjuku" from what is clearly Akihabara and its electronics shops in the background.
- Zitate
Maurice 'Momo': How wonderful, Hubert. Let me look at you. You look good man, just arrived and already in deep shit.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Rental Reviews: Underrated Action Movies (2019)
- SoundtracksKorega Watashino Ikirumichi
Written by Tamio Okuda
Performed by Puffy AmiYumi
Remixed by Yasuharu Konishi
©Sony Music Artists Inc.
administré par Sony Music Publishing France
©1999 Sony Music Entertainment (Japan) Inc.
avec l'aimable autorisation
de Sony Music Entertainment (France) S.A.
Top-Auswahl
- How long is Wasabi?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Wasabi
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 15.300.000 € (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 97.220 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 17.560 $
- 29. Sept. 2002
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 10.366.360 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 34 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1