Taifû kurabu
- 1985
- 1h 55min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.0/10
1.3 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Tiene lugar en un período de 5 días antes, durante y después de un tifón feroz y aparentemente liberador, que varios estudiantes sufren mientras están abandonados en el gimnasio de su escuel... Leer todoTiene lugar en un período de 5 días antes, durante y después de un tifón feroz y aparentemente liberador, que varios estudiantes sufren mientras están abandonados en el gimnasio de su escuela.Tiene lugar en un período de 5 días antes, durante y después de un tifón feroz y aparentemente liberador, que varios estudiantes sufren mientras están abandonados en el gimnasio de su escuela.
- Premios
- 7 premios ganados y 1 nominación en total
Yûki Kudô
- Rie Takami
- (as Kudou Yuuki)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
10musgrave
I've saw this film on tv back in the eighties so I hardly remember the details but the story is about a young group of teens during their adolescence and their experiences with the opposite sex. While the class is in school a storm raises and they have to stay in school during the typhoon. The story is shown in a very picturesque and (typical Japanese) silent way and won a movie price especially for it's unconventional kind.
I felt like I had passed like these students in the not-so-distance past. But, looking back, it was pretty long time ago. I realized 'the children's range' clearly in the scene when they danced crazily in the gym. The adults cannot touch it.
'Shall we go to McDonald together next time?' I laughed this with childishness, but, after that, I was so awful of the next development! It was like 'The Shining' from Kubrick.
Additionaly, I was also scared the white masked pair who played the ocarinas. I feel it was meanfull, but I have no ideas! I liked it because it reminded me 'Spirited Away.' In even real world, sometims I lose the feeling sof reality suddenly and get scared of me. For instance, when I was alone on my way home, the unknown way and the silent time etc.
'Shall we go to McDonald together next time?' I laughed this with childishness, but, after that, I was so awful of the next development! It was like 'The Shining' from Kubrick.
Additionaly, I was also scared the white masked pair who played the ocarinas. I feel it was meanfull, but I have no ideas! I liked it because it reminded me 'Spirited Away.' In even real world, sometims I lose the feeling sof reality suddenly and get scared of me. For instance, when I was alone on my way home, the unknown way and the silent time etc.
It is easily his most beautiful and artistic work. He is a master of evoking feelings and spaces, almost like Storaro / Bertolucci here.
Watching Somai's films in order, every time I think he reached some formal apex, his next one is even better. What a study for cinephiles.
The images are just unreal. The overall feeing of melancholy, perhaps peaking with the children in the typhoon it is both apocalyptic and freeing. Even nostalgia comes short as a description. At points it feels metaphysically surreal. Think about how the school is being repurposed in front of us, as shelter from the typhoon. No schedules, no classrooms, all those chairs and items unused.
This adjustment does something to the mind, taking you somewhere outside the frame of your existence into a higher plane. It's a rare power for a film to evoke. The review calling it an anti-coming of age film is spot on. One thing I gather to expand on that, with Somai working in the 80s is it is not going to give you classic films on those old fashioned terms.
That reminds me of the American Gen X punk attitude, the aggravation in Somai's work, while yet is so formal, its edge mixes in the broader wisdoms. Rather than the instinct of the young artist, to throw all the past in a basket fire of hate. Thinking they invented everything.
Somai's deepest cutting films respect one thing I see in the arts, is I wonder if artists really know what they sign up for? To be a champion soldier of cinema, one must carry the burden, the weight of the human soul. A good one will go there knowing you can't quite come back from it. The pain of it all reads so deeply here along its beauty, forming an impact of wisdom.
Watching Somai's films in order, every time I think he reached some formal apex, his next one is even better. What a study for cinephiles.
The images are just unreal. The overall feeing of melancholy, perhaps peaking with the children in the typhoon it is both apocalyptic and freeing. Even nostalgia comes short as a description. At points it feels metaphysically surreal. Think about how the school is being repurposed in front of us, as shelter from the typhoon. No schedules, no classrooms, all those chairs and items unused.
This adjustment does something to the mind, taking you somewhere outside the frame of your existence into a higher plane. It's a rare power for a film to evoke. The review calling it an anti-coming of age film is spot on. One thing I gather to expand on that, with Somai working in the 80s is it is not going to give you classic films on those old fashioned terms.
That reminds me of the American Gen X punk attitude, the aggravation in Somai's work, while yet is so formal, its edge mixes in the broader wisdoms. Rather than the instinct of the young artist, to throw all the past in a basket fire of hate. Thinking they invented everything.
Somai's deepest cutting films respect one thing I see in the arts, is I wonder if artists really know what they sign up for? To be a champion soldier of cinema, one must carry the burden, the weight of the human soul. A good one will go there knowing you can't quite come back from it. The pain of it all reads so deeply here along its beauty, forming an impact of wisdom.
In my view, this film cannot be enjoyed. It is a sequence of boring scenes with no meaning whatsoever. It is hard to distinguish the characters as they all wear school uniforms in gloomy environments. Despite all the positive reviews and awards, I don't understand why someone would enjoy watching this. I don't know what to add. Maybe Japanese jurors like to watch schoolgirls in underwear. The end was especially disappointing after dozens of disappointing scenes. Scenes were you don't understand why characters act like this and why. No I am repeating myself and this review becomes as boring as the film.
Somai captures the time and place of his setting in a way that's so much more deliberate than having shot it in Japan during the 80's. At the same time, the small town restlessness, horniness, and longing for something bigger than what is offered in your surroundings make the film timeless.
So much of the production is obviously great. How the camera follows the actors over chairs and desks and sliding doors make the school feel so personal. The cast is perpetually drenched during the second half and I just wanted to give someone a blanket, the tactility of the storm is inescapable. The few scenes in Tokyo are likely orgasmic to anyone who's listened to Plastic Love more than a handful of times.
With all that it's still the incredible cast of young performers that is the most impressive part. At first the carefree idiocy of all of them make the characters blend together, but each one have realistic traits that are discovered. Most are silly, but some are genuinely tragic.
The nostalgic indulgence of youth can be a bit overidealized, but there are parts that are stark and strange reminding the audience that being young isn't all the singing and dancing that the film seemingly wishes it was. Still, the clouds part by the end and what is left is an ultimately wistful impression of youth.
So much of the production is obviously great. How the camera follows the actors over chairs and desks and sliding doors make the school feel so personal. The cast is perpetually drenched during the second half and I just wanted to give someone a blanket, the tactility of the storm is inescapable. The few scenes in Tokyo are likely orgasmic to anyone who's listened to Plastic Love more than a handful of times.
With all that it's still the incredible cast of young performers that is the most impressive part. At first the carefree idiocy of all of them make the characters blend together, but each one have realistic traits that are discovered. Most are silly, but some are genuinely tragic.
The nostalgic indulgence of youth can be a bit overidealized, but there are parts that are stark and strange reminding the audience that being young isn't all the singing and dancing that the film seemingly wishes it was. Still, the clouds part by the end and what is left is an ultimately wistful impression of youth.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaAsked about the scene where six students are completely naked in the middle of a typhoon, Yuka Ohnishi said, "I actually wore skin-colored underwear, but even so, it was really tough to have to perform such a scene in the presence of boys during an impressionable teenage period."
- ConexionesFeatured in Century of Cinema: Nihon eiga no hyaku nen (1995)
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 100,153
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By what name was Taifû kurabu (1985) officially released in India in English?
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