Pikunikku
- 1996
- 1h 8min
Tres pacientes psiquiátricos - Coco, Tsumuji y Satoru - se escapan de su clínica para buscar un lugar de pícnic donde puedan ver el fin del mundo, que creen inminente.Tres pacientes psiquiátricos - Coco, Tsumuji y Satoru - se escapan de su clínica para buscar un lugar de pícnic donde puedan ver el fin del mundo, que creen inminente.Tres pacientes psiquiátricos - Coco, Tsumuji y Satoru - se escapan de su clínica para buscar un lugar de pícnic donde puedan ver el fin del mundo, que creen inminente.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
- Premios
- 3 premios ganados en total
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
How do one feels the rules, the World, the Bible, and love when s-he's mentally disturbed? Reaaly cool! Chara and Asano Tadanobu are awesome and it has incredible cinematography as i think it can be expected from Shunji Iwai. The cinematography enhances the whole stuff, with a crescendo till the very end of the movie. It tells a lot while keeping it low on the words, as it let one feels from the inside point of view thanks to the humor and the great sensibility that are put into it. Overall a charming movie, on a barely easy field :)
This is the second Shunji Iwai movie for me. His films aren't officially available in France, which is a real pain in the *ss.
This is the second Shunji Iwai movie for me. His films aren't officially available in France, which is a real pain in the *ss.
I've seen Love Letter, Swallowtail Butterfl, April Story from Iwai Shunji before this shortfilm.And I finally got to see it several days ago.
It's really great,another gem from Iwai.It's the best shortfilm I've ever seen,I think.
It feels like an allegory ,about our society and something we lost while struggling in it.I can't say out the signification clearly,but it DOES make me ponder about many things.
And the cinematography,is very beautiful.I got deeply absorbed in the dreamlike picture,especially the slowly_fluttering black feathers in the last scene.I felt overwhelmingly sad at the time.
All the performances are perfect,embodying the significance Iwai intended for.
According to the four films I've seen, Iwai Shunji is the hope of Japan film industry.Expect more stunning from him.
It's really great,another gem from Iwai.It's the best shortfilm I've ever seen,I think.
It feels like an allegory ,about our society and something we lost while struggling in it.I can't say out the signification clearly,but it DOES make me ponder about many things.
And the cinematography,is very beautiful.I got deeply absorbed in the dreamlike picture,especially the slowly_fluttering black feathers in the last scene.I felt overwhelmingly sad at the time.
All the performances are perfect,embodying the significance Iwai intended for.
According to the four films I've seen, Iwai Shunji is the hope of Japan film industry.Expect more stunning from him.
Since the composition is so delicate, the harsh texture of the editing should be made deliberately.
The gloomy and horrific interior space and imaginative outdoor wanderings seem to tear the movie into two parts, but when the fences, rainstorms, feathers and other details are fully expressed, the metaphorical irony is gradually replaced by a purely romantic atmosphere.
Although some part of the film it's going too far, the integral effect is quite remarkable.
To watch this film about three patients from a fairly grim looking mental institution you have to suspend one belief: The belief is that all three can just leave without being detected. Once you get beyond that, and you should, you are left with a film that is oddly both ugly and beautiful. The three patients are Coco (the wonderful Chara), Tsumuji (the equally great Tadanobu Asano) and Satoru (Koichi Hashizume). They are sent to the institution for reasons you find out about eventually, and once they leave the film really expands into a somewhat atmospheric but beautifully shot film, with you watching these three supposedly crazy people interact with themselves and, in my favorite scene, a priest. The film is not long, only 65 minutes or so, but I was deeply affected about what these three young people are all about. So, get beyond my little caveat and watch the world with them. I think its a richly rewarding film about the frailty of life.
Iwai's Swallowtail and Love Letter are two of my favourite films. Asano and Chara are high calibre actors, and there are the stunning visual set pieces we've come to expect from Iwai, including the most arresting, startling suicide death ever committed to celluloid, a thing of sheer beauty. Unfortunately, the story is just too flimsy. The characters are not developed beyond their prognosis; Asano's demon makes disturbing hallucinatory appearances, but apart from that back story the rest is just three mentally disturbed people walking (and walking, and walking...) on a wall. There seems to be a short version and an extended version kicking about - I had the extended version, and it felt long. This seems to work better as a short film. The pseudo-Christian references are lame, a bum note in an otherwise passable effort. Thankfully, Iwai paid more attention to script in his later outings. This early one is strictly for fans looking to chart the director's development.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaChara and Tadanobu Asano met while filming this film and married the same year. The two had an amicable divorce in 2009 after fourteen years of marriage.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 8min(68 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.66 : 1
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