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IMDbPro

Todo sobre Lily Chou-Chou

Título original: Riri Shushu no subete
  • 2001
  • Unrated
  • 2h 26min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.5/10
13 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Todo sobre Lily Chou-Chou (2001)
Drama AdolescenteDrama psicológicoLa mayoría de edadTragediaCrimenDramaMúsicaRomanceThriller

La agitada vida de unos estudiantes adolescentes para los que la música de ensueño de la cantante Lily Chou-Chou es la única forma de escapar de una sociedad alienante, violenta e insensible... Leer todoLa agitada vida de unos estudiantes adolescentes para los que la música de ensueño de la cantante Lily Chou-Chou es la única forma de escapar de una sociedad alienante, violenta e insensible.La agitada vida de unos estudiantes adolescentes para los que la música de ensueño de la cantante Lily Chou-Chou es la única forma de escapar de una sociedad alienante, violenta e insensible.

  • Dirección
    • Shunji Iwai
  • Guionista
    • Shunji Iwai
  • Elenco
    • Hayato Ichihara
    • Shûgo Oshinari
    • Ayumi Ito
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.5/10
    13 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Shunji Iwai
    • Guionista
      • Shunji Iwai
    • Elenco
      • Hayato Ichihara
      • Shûgo Oshinari
      • Ayumi Ito
    • 63Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 58Opiniones de los críticos
    • 73Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 4 premios ganados y 1 nominación en total

    Fotos41

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    Elenco principal28

    Editar
    Hayato Ichihara
    Hayato Ichihara
    • Yûichi Hasumi
    Shûgo Oshinari
    • Shusuke Hoshino
    Ayumi Ito
    Ayumi Ito
    • Yôko Kuno
    Takao Osawa
    Takao Osawa
    • Tabito Takao
    Miwako Ichikawa
    • Shimabukuro
    Izumi Inamori
    • Izumi Hoshino
    Yû Aoi
    Yû Aoi
    • Shiori Tsuda
    Kazusa Matsuda
    • Sumika Kanzaki
    Ryô Katsuji
    Ryô Katsuji
    • Hitoshi Terawaki
    Chiyo Abe
    • Shizuko Hasumi
    Takako Baba
    • School girl
    Anri Ban
    • Noriko Izawa
    Kaori Fujii
    • School nurse
    Shinji Higuchi
    Shinji Higuchi
    • Otaku
    Takahito Hosoyamada
    • Kentarô Sasaki
    Hayato Isohata
    • Matsunori Iida
    Yuki Ito
    • Kamino
    Tomohiro Kaku
    • Masashi Tadano
    • Dirección
      • Shunji Iwai
    • Guionista
      • Shunji Iwai
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios63

    7.513K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    chaos-rampant

    Busy Breathing

    I was perhaps lucky to have seen a Hollywood film a few days prior, Alexander Payne's latest and supposedly also about a spiritual journey of sorts and passing for an 'indie'. The comparison is devastating.

    The many times Oscar nominated film: airbrushed beauty mistaken for purity. This little obscurity: lyrical breath and pulse from life.

    In 1968, there was a film made in Japan called Nanami: Inferno of First Love, also Japanese New Wave about confused, apprehensive youth feeling the first pulls to join the fray of existence: love, pain, loss, all the adult stuff they used to know as words. The fulcrum of that film unraveled from this notion: if you peel a cabbage you get its core, but if you peel an onion? (this is really worth puzzling over btw, in a Zen way, and the film worth seeking out.)

    The answer to that very much pertains here. This is the New New Wave: even more visual episodic movements through edges of life, even more radical dislocations from the ordinary world of narrative.

    The story is about teenage high school students: cliques and counter-cliques and much tension and drama inbetween them as they discover love and power. This is woven together with a thread about music, revolving around a band named Lily Chou-Chou that is all the rage among youth. Now and then conversations are enacted in some unspecified blogosphere: this is given to us as disembodied words against a black screen. We presume we'll get to know the people behind the nicknames and identify them as one of several youths whose lives we intimately follow in its petty cockiness and idle pleasure, or even worse that they don't matter at all and this is purely ornamental. It is actually much, much deeper.

    Now we're lucky this is Japanese, and even perhaps unconsciously so. Typical for New Wave, the world is distinctly modern and vibrant. It is all about youthful rejection. But as with Oshima and the rest back in the 60's, what these guys perhaps don't know is that French film that seemed so radical and appealing to the Japanese at the time and was presumed to have re-invented cinematic grammar, it was built on precisely what the Japanese had first revolutionized about representation in the 18th and 19th century. The calligraphic eye.

    So every rejection of tradition that we find in those films, or this one now, only serves to re-discover what was so vital and groundbreaking about Japanese tradition in the first place.

    In other words: if the old Zen Masters were alive now, all of them exceptional poets or landscape painters in their day and with a great sense of humor, they would all be New Wave filmmakers.

    This is as Zen as possible and in the most pure sense of the term. Transparent images. Vital emptiness. Calligraphic flows to and from interior heart. Mournful beauty about what it means 'to read the love letters sent by the moon, wind, and snow', to quote an old Buddhist poem. Plum blossoms at the gates of suffering.

    So this is where it goes deeper than say, a new Malick film. There are no intricate mechanisms to structure life. That is fine but what this film does is even more difficult to accomplish. Just one lush dynamic sweep of a calligrapher's brush that paints people and worlds as they come into being and vanish again. I have never seen for example a film present death so invisibly, so poetically.

    So if you peel a cabbage you get a core, but if you peel an onion?

    We may be inclined to answer nothing. The film may seem like it was about nothing, at best tears from a teenager's overly dramatic diary. The form mirrors the diary after all, after Jonas Mekas. A whole segment about a trip to Okinawa is filmed with a cheap camcorder.

    Let that settle and then consider the following key scene: a choir of students gets together for a school event to sing a capella a complex piano arrangement, Debussy's Arabesque. They had a perfectly capable piano player to do it but wouldn't let her for petty school rivalries. So once more we may be inclined to think that it was too much hassle for something so simple. Adults would never let things reach that stage. A compromise would be made, the piece would be played on the piano, properly.

    Now all through the film we see kids listen to music, everyone seems to have his own portable cd-player for that purpose. Presumably they listen to Lily Chou-Chou, who we're told was heavily inspired by Arabesque. We don't actually listen to her. We never see her or the band, at the big concert we're left outside and marvel at a giant video projection: artificial images in place of the real thing.

    But in this one occasion the kids achieve something uniquely sublime: they articulate the music, actually embody it, by learning to be their own instruments and each one each other's.

    The entire film is the same effort: to embody inner abstract worlds and their 'ether'. The method is rigorous improvisation.

    Something to meditate upon.

    (This is one of two best films from the decade in my estimation. Incidentally both were shot on digital, our new format for spontaneous discovery).
    Davidon80

    sad , long, emotional experience into the teenage years

    Lilly Chou-Chou is quite a perculiar movie experience, there is no over riding message, there is no moment to reflect, everything that this movie expresses appears in an instance and then is lost again in the great 'ether'. Throughout I felt lost, not merely due to the disjointed narrative but the pacing and overall premise did not register to me as 'a movie'. Trying to find meaning in Lilly Chou-Chou is similar to attempting to find meaning in ambient electronic music, as we watch the movie we are detached, the story, so to speak, unfolds gracefully but the audience can not relate to the characters, but can only attempt to make sense of it all.

    Lilly Chou-Chou is in my opinion a great achievement of movie making, interms of acting, editing, sound mixing and visual flair, fans of cinema are treated to something entirely fresh, but there is the overall feeling of dissatisfaction, I wanted more from the story, I wanted to see more of the characters, more of their lives and their interaction with one another. Yet the director withholds much of this from the viewer, choosing to present the characters relationships with one another in small doses, leaving the visuals and sound to complement the rest. And this I feel is one of the dissapointments of this movie, so much is conveyed yet so little is actually on screen, the watching of this movie requires a level of understanding of emotions, and the viewer is called upon to make sense of it all.

    This would be the movies strongest point, and one of its weakneses. I urge anyone with a curiosity for this movie to watch it.
    8d-dog

    Filmmaking at its best

    This is a film that makes you feel more than it makes you think. Combination of poetic images and magnificent music takes you to a new level of emotion. Iwai used emotional space of each characters as well as physical space very well throughout the entire film, it is hard not to make connection with them. This is what the cinema is all about in my humble opinion. Emotions be felt by images and sound.
    10lost-in-limbo

    Wow… truly mesmerising.

    This is a tale about the lows of a group of high school kids that turn to crime and cyberspace obsession of a pop singer named Lily Chou-Chou.

    Writer/director Shunji Iwai film is complex, dark and depressing, with a real intense feel of teenage angst, but truly it's a beautiful film to watch. Shunji Iwai gives us disturbing images of youth's harrowing experiences, in which some characters you feel for, but then after a while you might suddenly despise or the opposite.

    With visually stunning and fresh cinematography, it felt like I was watching an arty music video clip at times. The scenery in the film is lush and exquisite, from the contrast of the alluring islands and the rich grass fields to the harshness of the city and school.

    A distinguished and unique soundtrack surrounds and overwhelms the film; the songs we hear are those from the fictional pop singer Lily Chou-Chou. The music really added to the beauty and mystique of this film.

    Hayato Ichihara as Yûichi Hasumi, a troubled kid that is involve in a crime gang and under an alias, runs the fan club website about Lily Chou-Chou, Shûgo Oshinari as Shusuke Hoshino, once a top student and then suddenly changes and becomes a gang leader and Ayumi Ito as the quiet Yôko Kuno, an outstanding piano player but because of that she is bullied. The performances are brilliantly absorbing and there are no hiccups to say off.

    Since the Lily Chou-Chou Website is an important part of the film, we don't actually see anyone in front of the computer screen, except for Yuichi. Whenever there were conversations on her fan's Website, the user-name and their comment would pop up on the screen throughout different scenes in the film or on a black background, though some of the conversations have no resemblance to what's actually happening on screen. At first some of the people were hard to work out who was who on the net, but still I found it quite intriguing.

    The time line in the story goes from the present to past and back to the present, where we learn in detail about Yuichi and Shusuke. There are a couple of surprises that you don't see coming and the story might have its flaws- but they didn't seem to bother me, as I was simply engrossed with the dense context of the film.

    Like I typed before this is an haunting and intense tale about teenage angst, there is a lot of agonizing imagery and confronting situations like violence, depression, rape, suicide, prostitution and bullying. This gives it such a grim and disturbing undertone, so it might alienate certain viewers.

    For me it was a breath-taking and visually satisfying experience.

    5/5
    10lilyholic

    One of the most breathtaking movies out there...

    The one agreeable thing that can be said about Shunji Iwai is that he makes beautiful images. Lily Chou Chou is his most recent release (and let me state, since someone incorrectly wrote it is pronounced "Choo Choo" it is not, it is spoken "Shoo Shoo"), and one of his most coherent films. For some reason this movie seems to puzzle a lot of people... maybe it is the translation from English to Japanese (I watched the movie in Japanese dialog only, so I don't know if they killed it with subtitles or not), but the movie's plot is really not so complicated. If you know a little bit about Japanese life and culture, the emotions of youth, and devotion to an artist then you can watch this movie and understand it. Even for those who were confused by the plot, another one or two viewing should clear up any misunderstandings. Iwai does have some issues with complicating plot stories, or leaving out plot at all. As a writer he is great, but not perfect. As a director of film and photography he is mind blowing. The images that Iwai creates and displays to the audience are the most beautiful presented. Whether or not the story behind this movie shines to you, the images should be enough to blow your mind. Iwai uses re-occurring themes to present lovely contrasts. He also chose a beautiful selection of music to accompany his film, from Debussy to old Okinawan songs to Lily Chou Chou's own. If you pay attention to the gentle subtleties presented in this film, there is no way you can walk away with your life unchanged. I know this film has changed my life, and has become my main source of inspiration.

    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      At one point a character describes Hoshino's mom as looking like Izumi Inamori. This is the actress that plays Hoshino's mom.
    • Citas

      Yûichi Hasumi: For me, only Lily is real.

    • Créditos curiosos
      The opening takes the form of social media messages from a number of people, depicted as though they were being typed at the moment, using a QWERTY keyboard but with Japanese installed as the language. providing assorted viewpoints of Lily and her impact. This is repeated at the end credits. Also, although the film is in Japanese, the end credits are in both Japanese and English.
    • Versiones alternativas
      There are two versions available. Runtimes are: "2h 26m(146 min)" and "2h 37m(157 min) (original cut)".
    • Conexiones
      Referenced in Kill Bill. La venganza (volumen 1) (2003)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes17

    • How long is All About Lily Chou-Chou?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 6 de octubre de 2001 (Japón)
    • País de origen
      • Japón
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official site
    • Idiomas
      • Japonés
      • Ryukyuan
    • También se conoce como
      • All About Lily Chou-Chou
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Iriomote-jima, Okinawa, Japón(Summer 1999)
    • Productora
      • Rockwell Eyes
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 26,485
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 3,064
      • 14 jul 2002
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 171,781
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 2h 26min(146 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.78 : 1

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