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Tonî Takitani

  • 2004
  • 0
  • 1 Std. 15 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
5173
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Rie Miyazawa in Tonî Takitani (2004)
Trailer 1
trailer wiedergeben1:49
1 Video
8 Fotos
Drama

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuWhen technical illustrator Tony Takitani asks his wife to resist her all-consuming obsession for designer clothes, the consequences are tragic.When technical illustrator Tony Takitani asks his wife to resist her all-consuming obsession for designer clothes, the consequences are tragic.When technical illustrator Tony Takitani asks his wife to resist her all-consuming obsession for designer clothes, the consequences are tragic.

  • Regie
    • Jun Ichikawa
  • Drehbuch
    • Jun Ichikawa
    • Haruki Murakami
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Issei Ogata
    • Rie Miyazawa
    • Shinohara Takahumi
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    5173
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Jun Ichikawa
    • Drehbuch
      • Jun Ichikawa
      • Haruki Murakami
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Issei Ogata
      • Rie Miyazawa
      • Shinohara Takahumi
    • 37Benutzerrezensionen
    • 71Kritische Rezensionen
    • 80Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 Gewinne & 7 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Tony Takitani
    Trailer 1:49
    Tony Takitani

    Fotos7

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    Topbesetzung9

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    Issei Ogata
    Issei Ogata
    • Tony Takitani, Shozaburo Takitani
    Rie Miyazawa
    Rie Miyazawa
    • Konuma Eiko, Hisako
    Shinohara Takahumi
    • Young Tony Takitani
    Hidetoshi Nishijima
    Hidetoshi Nishijima
    • Narrator
    • (Synchronisation)
    Yumi Endô
    Miho Fujima
    • 4th daughter
    Miki Hayashida
    Shizuka Moriyama
    Hiroshi Yamamoto
    Hiroshi Yamamoto
    • Regie
      • Jun Ichikawa
    • Drehbuch
      • Jun Ichikawa
      • Haruki Murakami
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen37

    7,25.1K
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    8lastliberal

    Loneliness & compulsion are part of our being.

    All of us have felt loneliness at one time or another. Probably not to the extent that Tony (Issei Ogata) felt. His father made sure he would be lonely by giving him an unusual name which prevented acceptance from the beginning.

    After years of loneliness, he takes a beautiful wife (Rie Miyazawa). He is no longer lonely, but becomes fearful that he will experience loneliness again.

    The beautiful piano music that plays throughout and the minimal sets remind us that loneliness is ever present. The film moves slowly, just as loneliness might move.

    Tony is fairly happy after marriage, but another problem crops up. His wife is obsessed with clothes. We are talking Imelda Marcos obsessed. She is addicted to buying and it consumes her to the point that she cannot stop without withdrawal.

    Her obsession causes her death and Tony is alone again. He struggles through the loneliness in strange fashion. We have moved from the action of his married life, back to the minimalism.

    Jun Ichikawa did a magnificent job of using voice-over and music and set to create the perfect mood and a perfect retelling of Haruki Murakami's novel.
    8noralee

    A Meditation on Love for People and Objects and the Loss of Both

    "Tony Takitani" is the first full length adaptation of a Haruki Murakami tale (the IMDb message board provides a link to an English translation of the story) and it beautifully translates his ethereal prose themes to visuals.

    There's his characteristic isolated man, mysterious women who come and go and recur, American jazz and obsessions that all link to Japan's post-war experiences and the prisons we make for ourselves.

    The film begins like a narrated slide show as we see biographical images of "Tony" as a child and his father. Gradually, the stills move for longer periods to learn more about each man and focus on "Tony" as a young man who has gravitated to free-lance mechanistic illustration as a perfect professional emotionless counterpart to his internal condition. The characters occasionally take up the narration in almost the only dialog we hear.

    The second half of the film explores the nature of loneliness and love. The younger woman he falls in love with literally comes with baggage, as each have a fear of emptiness that they assuage through their own means.

    While how she wore her clothes attracted him in the first place, the world is divided between those who are pack rat collectors and those who are not - a division "Tony" thinks he can cross and suppress, only to have those feelings reappear with resonances, with a bit of a spooky reference to Hitchcock's "Vertigo" trying to morph into "Here Comes Mr. Jordan" with almost an O. Henry twist. While most viewers will think the woman's clothes shopping is a fetish (and the montage of her luxuriating in shoe after shoe is humorous), I thought this film was the best since "Ghost World" to make an effort to capture the sensual, addictive feelings of a collector of objects and not as outsiders for an Errol Morris documentary.

    As it visually relates her fear of emptiness to the father's and the son's claustrophobic lives, the film lyrically shows how not only is love not enough and how asking one you love to give up something they love destroys love, but the objects themselves will now carry different and unexpected emotions for whomever comes into contact with them.

    While Ryuichi Sakamoto's gentle score reinforces this meditation on loneliness, I thought we should have heard more of the father's jazz.
    10trngo

    A love letter to loneliness

    *whew* It's been a while since I've been this intoxicated by a film... at least not since February's Nobody Knows.

    Tony Takitani is a beautiful poem to loneliness.

    The eponymous character is a quintessential loner. As the prologue informs us: His father, a WWII vet who pretty much left most of his soul in POW camp, was not much of a father. His mother died a few days after his death. He has been self-sufficient for most of his life.

    We see him mostly by himself, alone near his desk, sketching drawings of motors, engines, amongst other mechanized structures. As the omniscient narrator tell us: Tony doesn't understand the fascination over paintings imbued with passion and ideology. It is certainly fitting for a man bereft of any human connection with another individual to identify with the colder, impersonal realm of mankind.

    His lonely streak finally ends when he meets a woman at work. She is pretty, approachable, and most importantly of all, attracted to Tony. After a semi-rocky courting, they finally marry. Tony relishes in this foreign arrangement, but this exchange of intimacy with another person has Tony terrified. He is terrified because, as the narrator informs us, he might be lonely again, regressing back to his former state of isolation.

    Maybe I'm too hypersensitive for my own good, but I wept a little when I heard these words. I felt that it could've not been a more articulate way to express the vulnerability of humans, especially the ones living in this modern age. Tony is aware of the cruel, unrelenting nature of time: Just as his mother died within days of childbirth and his father barely escaped the "thin boundaries of life and death" in POW camp, he can easily lose all this one day.

    As it is, the inevitable does happen. I shall not reveal the unfortunate fate of Tony's wife and of their relationship, but the biggest rift in their marriage is her shopaholic tendencies. As she, herself, summed it up during their first encounter together: clothes help alleviate the emptiness she feels. After Tony's delicate mention about her habits, she frustratingly tries to restrain herself, only to surrender to the compulsions. In lesser hands, this subplot could've been ripe for (unintentional) camp, but in director Jun Ichikawa's hands, this consuming dysfunction only adds more layers to the film's restrained and somber mood: Tony's wife is not in control of her actions, which in turn, diverts his state of love and companionship to loneliness, once again.

    With his wife gone, Tony becomes downtrodden, and then obsessed. In a Vertigo-esquire twist, he hires a woman who is the spitting image of his wife to take care of the house while wearing his wife's fashion couture wardrobe. The hired housekeeper's reaction to the extensive collection of wardrobe is more or less, abnormal--and of which, unexpectedly serves as a waking call for Tony.

    Tony realizes that the only way to obliterate the obsession of his wife is to obliterate all of her clothes. As The Christian Science Monitor pointed out, one of the underlying themes of the film is "the complex relationship between objects and memories." As the narrator aptly tell us: the clothes are like lurking shadows; ghosts, if you must. What was once worn by a breathing, living body has now been only relegated to the closet. Tony could not bear looking at the clothes without thinking about her.

    His father, the one who has long neglected him, passed away not much longer afterwards. Tony does the same thing to his father's belongings (a trumpet and a collection of records): he obliterated them. For what good are objects if they only remind one of pain? One could argue that although Tony and his wife shared different feelings about objects (she wanted to obtain them, whereas he wanted to obliterate them), they had one thing in common: both internalized objects into their inner selves.

    The relationship humans have with objects is only a secondary theme. The film, for the most part, is simply about loneliness and how an individual such as Tony deals with that state of loneliness.

    As you can tell, I love this film (otherwise, I'd probably not write so damn long). But this film is not for everyone. A couple in the movie theater gave up within twenty minutes into the film. A lady in front of me told her companion (when the movie was over) that she was tempted to sleep throughout the showing.

    But if you are a sucker for atmospheric portraits of loneliness, slow and beautiful pans, and crazy about the empty urban architectural spaces in Edward Hopper's painting, then please, by all means, see Tony Takitani.
    10allstar_beyond

    Simply the most beautiful and poetic film ever made.

    Every frame is like a painting. The film is like an art gallery, we walk through each scene with slow-tracking transitions while Sakamoto Ryuichi's hauntingly beautiful piano score plays. The faint colors of Tokyo has never been so breath-taking.

    After watching, I felt alone, cold and inspired. Strictly for audiences who are open to new things, because this is likely the first movie you'll see of this kind. Don't expect a complicated storyline, this is an observant piece of cinema focusing on the study of characters. It moves slow but is never boring. Be patient and just enjoy what is shown to you on the screen.

    This is how you really tell a great story visually. Mr Ichikawa Jun should be the man to adapt all of Murakami's stories.
    10barbara-sewell

    A film very much worth seeing.

    Visually, this film ranks with those of classic Japanese directors to a degree one rarely encounters today.

    Every shot is a gem that reinforces the tight sterile world the characters inhabit.

    The film narrative is a comment on the materialist obsessions of Japanese life, as well as the exclusion of the Japanese aesthetic--deriving from both Japanese fascism and the influence of Western culture.

    I would certainly like to see more of Jun Ichikawa's films made available on video.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Nearly every shot in the movie moves from left to right, some are static (particularly toward the end) and only a few from right to left.
    • Zitate

      Narrator: In that place, the boundary between life and death...

      Tony Takitani, Shozaburo Takitani: Was as slim as a single strand of hair.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in 2006 Independent Spirit Awards (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Solitude
      Written by Ryuichi Sakamoto

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 9. Juni 2005 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Japan
    • Sprache
      • Japanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Tony Takitani
    • Drehorte
      • Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Breath
      • Wilco Co.
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 129.783 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 1.765 $
      • 26. Juni 2005
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 556.268 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 15 Min.(75 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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