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IMDbPro

Junk Head

  • 2017
  • 1h 40min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.3/10
1.9 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Junk Head (2017)
It is a real SF feature film used in stop motion technique.
Reproducir trailer0:57
1 video
83 fotos
AcciónAnimaciónAnimación en stop motionAnimeAventuraCiencia FicciónComedia oscuraDramaHorror corporalTerror

En un futuro lejano, la humanidad ha perdido su capacidad de reproducción. Una expedición es enviada a una ciudad subterránea donde los humanoides artificiales aún son fértilesEn un futuro lejano, la humanidad ha perdido su capacidad de reproducción. Una expedición es enviada a una ciudad subterránea donde los humanoides artificiales aún son fértilesEn un futuro lejano, la humanidad ha perdido su capacidad de reproducción. Una expedición es enviada a una ciudad subterránea donde los humanoides artificiales aún son fértiles

  • Dirección
    • Takahide Hori
  • Guionista
    • Takahide Hori
  • Elenco
    • Takahide Hori
    • Atsuko Miyake
    • Yuji Sugiyama
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.3/10
    1.9 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Takahide Hori
    • Guionista
      • Takahide Hori
    • Elenco
      • Takahide Hori
      • Atsuko Miyake
      • Yuji Sugiyama
    • 11Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 36Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 premios ganados y 1 nominación en total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 0:57
    Trailer

    Fotos83

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    Elenco principal3

    Editar
    Takahide Hori
    • Francis
    • (voz)
    • …
    Atsuko Miyake
    • Nico
    • (voz)
    • …
    Yuji Sugiyama
    • Woman Bosses
    • (voz)
    • Dirección
      • Takahide Hori
    • Guionista
      • Takahide Hori
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios11

    7.31.9K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    gavin6942

    An Abolute Blast

    In the distant future, mankind begins research on clones that live underground in search of lost genetic information.

    "Junk Head" began its life as a short film in 2014, with Takahide Hori essentially making the entire movie himself – from writing to directing to sculpting and so on. Not surprisingly, it was a great success just begging for a longer representation of this world and its style. Three years later, Hori is back and again more or less running the show solo, even creating the music. Love it or hate it, you cannot help but respect the daunting amount of time that went into this.

    What we have is a dystopian world, something like an inverted "Wallace and Gromit" where everyone is either dead or at least dead on the inside. Love, friendship and everything that makes life worth living is long gone. For this reviewer, the film seems very much like throwback to the 1990s when there was a steady undercurrent of nihilism and the idea of humans as machines in both film and music.

    The music of "Junk Head" seems very inspired by the nihilistic music of the 1990s, the techno-industrial strain that went mainstream with Nine Inch Nails, but had dozens – even hundreds – of similar bands who were taking the concepts of despair even further. The music and films had a Nietzschean streak, and "Junk Head" picks up where that decade left off. If there is any doubt about this, we have to look no further to the humorous reappropriation of a classic Nietzsche idea, "God is dead… and we killed him." The world is not completely hopeless, however. There are hints that a "tree of life" exists in an area called Kaapvaal. This may be one of the more clever, subtle touches of the film's script. Most likely the name "Kaapvaal" means nothing to 99% of the people who will see the film. But a quick search reveals that it is the name for a section of the search located in southeast Africa. Anyone who is familiar with basic anthropology will know that the evolutionary "tree of life" has humanity beginning in southeast Africa. Rather than say "Kenya" or some other familiar country, Hori cleverly used an obscure name that would make the region timeless to changing national boundaries.

    "Junk Head" is great fun, and a welcome addition to the growing world of adult animation. Unlike the recent "Anomalisa", this is a story for adults that blends fantasy, science fiction and humor. And, despite its dystopian themes, never manages to be depressing. We even get pixilated feces for some reason, which is always good. "Junk Head" screens at the Fantasia International Film Festival on July 3, 2017 and is destined for great things.
    9DankWestern

    Absolutely magical.

    Phil Tippett's Mad God has absolutely nothing on this film.

    I'm not going to bore you with a summary of the story like everyone else. You're here because you're obviously interested, so that's pointless.

    Junk Head is an incredible universe, extremely reminiscent of Tsutomu Nihei's worlds, the maker of BLAME! And Knights of Sidonia in both architecture and character style. If you know, you know.

    Endless sprawling cities full of intrigue and mystery, bizarre locals, and even stranger creatures around ever corner.

    The claymation is beyond spectacular, I don't know exactly how, but it's almost got a motion blur very subtly when things move which really give them a lifelike feel, and the camera angles are insane. Characters will be walking down a hallway, and the camera will rotate from their backs to their face. This sounds mundane, but the way it's done is incredible. It's almost difficult to believe human hands crafted this film, but the 'making of' is out there.

    I will say the ending is easily the weakest part of the film. I won't spoil anything, but it feels like it just ended out of the blue when things were getting good. Like stopping a season of a show on episode 6 out of 8, but even that's part of the mystery and intrigue, so I didn't even knock it for that.

    Ultimately, this was a wild and violent ride, a masterpiece of it's craft, and if anything I've said hits you in your intrigue feels, you should absolutely go out of your way to seek this film out.
    7FroderickFettuccine

    "What Did I Just Watch?"

    I saw this film a couple of months ago when it came out in theaters, and I must admit it was a pleasant surprise! Though I do have some mixed feelings.

    This film is heavily reliant on atmosphere and mood, which the visual do a fantastic job accentuating. However, it's a film that is widely open to interpretation. There is a clear-cut narrative and a solid plot, but there is no conclusive answer to any question the audience might have upon finishing the movie. None of the information revolving around our protagonist can be confirmed, but enough is revealed for us to interpret. That level of uncertainty adds a lot to the atmosphere of the film, along with the mute protagonist, the title, the claustrophobic set - all of it really feels purposeful. The depressing part of that is that you can't confirm if it was purposeful or not, and that only ties with what I believe to be one of the film's themes.

    Tackling philosophical ideas doesn't hold the film back from having grain of humor, which - as unexpected and surprising as it was, made the experience more fun. There were a couple of genuine laughs in the theater! And some clever moments that spurred some internal "aah"s.

    The lack of comprehensible language doesn't hold back any of the characters from actually having character either. Despite none of the characters speaking a language we can comprehend, there is a lot more character to them than any randy in Final Destination 4. There was a certain segment mid-way into the film that was extremely enjoyable for me to watch and kept me engaged enough to stay with the rest of the film. I hoped for more segments such as that one in the film's remaining runtime, but that was just wishful thinking.

    Although my experience was mainly positive, I do have a couple of minor criticisms. The pivotal critique I have with this film is the pacing. There were a couple of moments in the film that failed to keep me invested due to the time they spent on the scene. Looking back, I believe the intension was to build tension, but it was not as effective as I hoped it could be. This enkindled moments where I couldn't tell whether the film was trying to go for "serious" or "comical". Although there were certainly comedic aspects to the film that felt appropriate, some other parts felt a little out of place. There's a constant battle between the shift in mood that left me a little conflicted. If anything, I can praise this film for being bold enough to have its own unique style. Here I am after all, writing a review upon watching this film a couple of months ago because it was just that memorable.

    In spite of commending this film for tackling a subjects that appear philosophical, that was also one of my main issues with this film. You can't tell. It's nice to see movies that don't underestimate their audiences, but it's another thing to see a movie where you can't tell if the movie is trying to be simple or deep. I only dismiss the film as "philosophical" because I thought that's what the movie was going for. Now I can't really tell.

    Going back to the positives, one of the things about this film that stood out to me was the gradual improvement in animation as the film progressed. You can see director Takehide Hori's improvement as a filmmaker as the narrative flows, and it's quite awe-inspiring when you watch the film for the second time and notice how the clunky the first 15 minutes might be.

    Although this movie might not be for everyone, it's a movie that really lets you appreciate the work, effort, and patience this one man put in for 7 years.

    While I can imagine some audiences calling this film pretentious, that shouldn't hold you back from actually seeing the movie to find out for yourself. If you go into the film with an open mind, I'm sure you'll be able to come up with your own interpretation. By the end of the film, I'm sure you'd have a new-found admiration for this director.

    I personally wish for more people to watch it so I can discuss some of my theories on it. Or I'll wait for a blu-ray release. Everyone coming out of my theater had a pretty positive experience so I hope you can have one too.
    7h79423

    All this reminds me of something, but I just don't know what

    Since it took four years to reach Finnish theaters, I'm guessing this is one of those situations where the pandemic just gave new life to a movie which would have otherwise.not received much in the way of distribution.

    The setup is that mankind has been immortal for a long time, but at the expense of our capability to reprocreate. When a pandemic starts to kill people en masse, there is a sudden need to replenish the population, so our hero is sent underground, among the marigan to find the one creature they could identify as having genitalia.

    The marigan have been living apart from humans for a very long time and have built their society, although many of them are "wild". They don't follow the usual patterns of species, but will instead evolve in wildlly different ways.

    This is the world into which our hero is plunged. He loses his body immediately and his head is placed into a robotic body, which brings its own set of difficulties.

    The plot is just bad. Things just happen until the movie just ends. It almost feels like the director just didn't have the time or motivation to make the third act for the film.

    Despite this, I did enjoy it. The weirdness of the world does carry the film pretty far. The monster design does remind me of something, but I'm not sure of what. Maybe some demonic beings from Hellblazer or something.

    The world is claustrophobic and unfamiliar. Dangers seem to lurk everywhere, but at the same time some people have been living there for hundreds of years, so you can apparently get accustomed to it. While the world certainly is artificial, it also seems to grow like some sort of a living being. No-one seems to have any idea about how big it actually is or how things actually work. Certain people just have found themselves working on jobs, even though they might not really know why those jobs are even there.

    So, all in all, if you are one of those people who want a cohesive story, this is not for you, but if you visuals and the art of stop-motion animation are your thing, this is worth checking out.
    7owen-watts

    Oh globbits...

    Junk Head crawled into my eye socket like a 90s European art film that you'd stumble on at 2am on Channel 4 but also somehow like a Jan Svankmajer remix of 1980s British children's series Trap Door. Tonally it's somehow both tons of existing things and something completely new. Both disturbing and very silly, beautiful and very disgusting, hopefully and pessimistic and so on. Fundamentally it just needs watching. Sadly it's also very much one of those "one arty bloke's undiluted vision" projects as well so it's massively self-indulgent, suffers deeply from mission creep and is structurally hugely flawed. It doesn't for example, end, which I think most stories should do. I hope one day it might.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      Took about seven years to complete. The film's director, writer, and voice actor, Takahide Hori, spent four years making a short version for preview in 2013, and then another three years to complete the long version for theatrical release in 2017.
    • Citas

      Nietschzean Moleman: God is Dead! And we have killed him!

    • Conexiones
      Edited from Junk Head 1 (2013)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Jinrui hanjô
      ("Thriving Humanity")

      Performed by the Children of Valve Village (as Barubu-mura no Kodomotachi)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is Junk Head?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 8 de octubre de 2021 (Finlandia)
    • País de origen
      • Japón
    • Sitios oficiales
      • GAGA (Japan)
      • Official Site (United Kingdom)
    • Idioma
      • Ninguno
    • También se conoce como
      • 垃圾頭
    • Productoras
      • Surprise Red
      • Yamiken
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    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 81,755
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 40 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.78 : 1

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