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IMDbPro

Perdidos en Tokio

Título original: Lost in Translation
  • 2003
  • B15
  • 1h 42min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.7/10
515 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
770
25
Bill Murray in Perdidos en Tokio (2003)
Trailer for Lost in Translation
Reproducir trailer2:15
10 videos
99+ fotos
ComediaDramaLa mayoría de edad

Una estrella de cine decaída y una joven ignorada forman un improbable vínculo después de encontrarse en Tokio.Una estrella de cine decaída y una joven ignorada forman un improbable vínculo después de encontrarse en Tokio.Una estrella de cine decaída y una joven ignorada forman un improbable vínculo después de encontrarse en Tokio.

  • Dirección
    • Sofia Coppola
  • Guionista
    • Sofia Coppola
  • Elenco
    • Bill Murray
    • Scarlett Johansson
    • Giovanni Ribisi
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.7/10
    515 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    770
    25
    • Dirección
      • Sofia Coppola
    • Guionista
      • Sofia Coppola
    • Elenco
      • Bill Murray
      • Scarlett Johansson
      • Giovanni Ribisi
    • 2.1KOpiniones de los usuarios
    • 223Opiniones de los críticos
    • 91Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 1 premio Óscar
      • 97 premios ganados y 133 nominaciones en total

    Videos10

    Lost in Translation
    Trailer 2:15
    Lost in Translation
    Lost In Translation
    Trailer 2:14
    Lost In Translation
    Lost In Translation
    Trailer 2:14
    Lost In Translation
    Lost In Translation
    Trailer 2:08
    Lost In Translation
    A Guide to the Films of Sofia Coppola
    Clip 2:12
    A Guide to the Films of Sofia Coppola
    Lost in Translation
    Clip 1:02
    Lost in Translation
    Lost in Translation
    Clip 1:22
    Lost in Translation

    Fotos305

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    Elenco principal52

    Editar
    Bill Murray
    Bill Murray
    • Bob Harris
    Scarlett Johansson
    Scarlett Johansson
    • Charlotte
    Giovanni Ribisi
    Giovanni Ribisi
    • John
    Anna Faris
    Anna Faris
    • Kelly
    Akiko Takeshita
    • Ms. Kawasaki
    Kazuyoshi Minamimagoe
    • Press Agent
    Kazuko Shibata
    • Press Agent
    Take
    • Press Agent
    Ryuichiro Baba
    • Concierge
    Akira Yamaguchi
    • Bellboy
    Catherine Lambert
    Catherine Lambert
    • Jazz Singer
    François du Bois
    François du Bois
    • Sausalito Piano
    • (as Francois du Bois)
    Tim Leffman
    • Sausalito Guitar
    Gregory Pekar
    Gregory Pekar
    • American Businessman #1
    Richard Allen
    • American Businessman #2
    Diamond Yukai
    • Commercial Director
    • (as Yutaka Tadokoro)
    Jun Maki
    • Suntory Client
    Nao Asuka
    • Premium Fantasy Woman
    • Dirección
      • Sofia Coppola
    • Guionista
      • Sofia Coppola
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios2.1K

    7.7514.5K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    10Derek237

    A great film, but the rating was lost in translation

    It's very interesting to see all of the ratings that Lost In Translation received in different countries. In Canada it is only PG, while in America it's rated R! And really, the only explanation for this is a brief scene at a strip joint that shows some nudity. I really look down on that R rating because Lost In Translation is a good-hearted film that should be enjoyed by all ages. Notice how during the 2003 Oscar season two films played the "only one special effect: the effect on the audience" card; one being this film and the other being Mystic River. Both are great films, both are rated R in the U.S., but only one of them can carry along its story without brutal murders.

    So what can I say about Lost In Translation that hasn't been said a million times already? It's all true. It's subtle, down-to-earth, and allows the audience to observe and relate to the characters, Bob and Charlotte. Both of them have a life crisis to deal with, and I guess if you're thousands and thousands of miles away from your problems it makes it easier to take an objective look at them, even if they do follow you. Bob and Charlotte confide in each other and develop a relationship. That's what it's all about, and every scene is precious. It's a real and true to life kind of film. We never hear the lines: "Oh, Charlotte, I'm so glad I went to Japan. You've changed my life in such a profound way and you'll always be in my heart." That's because that just isn't the way it goes in real life. The feeling is there, the characters know it, the audience knows it, so it has to be left at that.

    So, yeah, I love this movie. It's clearly the highlight of Bill Murray's career and marks the perfect first real stand-out in Scarlett Johanson's. It's so rare to see a movie that only has an interest in its characters (and only two of them, at that!) and makes them so charming, lovable, and familiar. This is a great example of non-Hollywood Hollywood films: the well-known actors and producers going to the roots of independent film-making. In an age where half the movies out there are packed with CGI, this is refreshing to see.

    My rating: 10/10
    8greggman

    Didn't get it at first, then 15 years later I totally got it

    I was living in Japan at the time the movie came out and I didn't get it at the time. My mistake was thinking the movie had anything to do with Tokyo and for me, seeing Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson) be bored in Tokyo seemed so stupid to me.

    But, I watched it again 15 years later and totally got it. Maybe because I'm lost too I finally got it. It's got nothing to do with Tokyo and everything to do with 2 people feeling completely lost in their lives. Tokyo is just a setting that's different from most westerner's every day lives to try to convey that feeling of "lost" to the viewer.

    Neither of them have any idea what to do any more. Their lives seem meaningless to themselves. Charlotte has been married just 2 years but she's already disillusioned in her marriage. She calls her mom very early in the movie crying because she's in Tokyo, seeing new things, knowing it should be exciting but feeling nothing. And further, her husband is seeming like a different person than the person she thought she married. Her mom doesn't listen and doesn't have time for her (same as my mom, haha).

    Bob Harris (Murray) is similarly lost. He wants to find some acting project he's passionate about but instead his manager has him making commercials in Japan. His relationship with his wife is clearly not going well (listen to their conversation on the phone about a hour in) and so he's lost too realising his marriage is basically over and they're just two people who happen to be living together.

    If, like the younger me, you haven't experienced that feeling of being lost, the movie will probably do nothing for you. But, If you ever get in to a point in your life where you're feeling lost, watch it again and you might enjoy it.
    10kevinmanf

    A masterpiece about the mood and states of the characters

    It is not easy to talk about "Lost in Translation". Sofia Coppola's second film as a director is in part about things we never talk about. While its two protagonists try to find mutual solace in each other, their silence is as expressive as their words. This is a film that believes that an individual can have a valuable relationship with someone else without becoming part of that person's life. At 19 years of age, I am not married but I can understand pretty well that it is easier for a stranger with whom you share a moment in the bar or corridor to understand your problems better than your husband or wife. Here is an extract from Roger Ebert's great review of the film: "We all need to talk about metaphysics, but those who know us well want details and specifics; strangers allow us to operate more vaguely on a cosmic scale. When the talk occurs between two people who could plausibly have sex together, it gathers a special charge: you can only say "I feel like I've known you for years" to someone you have not known for years."

    In this marvellous story, the two lonely individuals that merge the illusions of what they have and what they could have are two Americans. The emotional refuge, Tokyo. We have Bob Harris (Bill Murray), and actor in his fifties who was once a star, and is now supplementing his incomes with the recording of a whisky commercial. On the other side of the telephone, a frightening reality: his wife, his sons, and the mission of choosing the right material for heaven knows what part of the house. When we consider Bob's situation, we realise that Lost in Translation is also a meditation on the misery of fame. Certainly fame has great (perhaps greater than disadvantages) advantages but then there are the obligations, the expectations...

    We also have Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson), a woman in her twenties who is accompanying her husband, a photographer addicted to work, on a business trip. But it could said it is as if she is alone anyway. Her world, just like Bob's, is reduced to strange days in the bedroom, the corridors, the hotel's swimming pool, and the bar, the perfect destination for victims of sleeplessness and wounded soul. The bar is the place Bob and Charlotte meet for the first time. They talk, little, but just enough. Once their dislike for parts of their lives are established, they begin sharing times that feel dead to be able to feel alive.

    Bob and Charlotte are souls in transition for whom, surrounded and confused by exotic rituals, and a different language, allows them a moment to lose their identities. Both characters provoke similar feelings form different experiences. There are no kisses or crazy nights between them, but only a shared intimacy in which a night out, a walk in the streets, a session of karaoke becomes a powerful expression of their affection an complicity. The relationship we all await only happens in our minds and the protagonists, whom we are not allowed to know everything they say and desire. Tokyo metaphorically speaking is the third character in the film. The bright colours, the noise of the city...just everything evokes the various spiritual awakenings of the characters.

    It ends on a perfect note leaving the relationship of the characters undecided. A rare gem in modern day cinema.
    8StevePulaski

    The equivalent of cinematic fishing - once you're hooked, the film isn't letting you go

    Lost in Translation details the kind of wayward search for human connection many of us go through in life, sometimes young, sometimes old, or following a traumatic event. It's the time in our lives when we feel the most lost, and truthfully, many of us don't want answers as to how to better our situation, but just want somebody to go along for the ride. We'd like to find someone to empathize with, embrace on a frequent basis, and know that somebody cares about us and our wayward ways and to reciprocate such feelings.

    With this, Sofia Coppola writes and directs a film about that search for human connection and what it can exactly amount to. We are immediately introduced to Bob Harris (Bill Murray), an older American movie star who travels to Tokyo to film an advertisement for Suntory whiskey. Bob has found himself in the mix of a souring marriage and no real close friends, and it is in Tokyo where Bob sinks deeper and deeper into a midlife crisis. Meanwhile, we also meet Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson), a college graduate whose husband John (Giovanni Ribisi) is starting to lose interest in her in favor of all the models he works with.

    Later on, Bob and Charlotte finally meet and immediately recognize each others unfortunate situation. They spend sporadic amounts of time together, often not talking and simply speaking in fragmented sentences and lying next to one another. They aren't very concerned with long conversation; they simply let their lethargy in their current situations carry their relationship along.

    Over time, sexual tension between the two builds, though both of them are still caught in relationships, regardless of how mediocre they are. In addition, neither of them are quite sure how to conjure intimacy with one another. The two are much more in tune with being static beings and platonic. This is one of the few dramas I can recall that allows the presence of the characters to take over rather than their actions. Coppola sits back and watches with a keen eye and a sense of mannered restraint how Bob and Charlotte get close over the course of their visit in Tokyo.

    Coppola's interest lies in Bob and Charlotte's situation moreso than the progression of their relationship, which is a difficult thing to pull off in film without working with more of an impressionistic style. The brushstrokes Coppola paints this story in are more or less minimal, but they craft just enough out of a little so that we can recognize these characters, their feelings, and their current state. They have transcended living life into simply existing within it, rarely getting excited and scarcely finding any kind of mutual contentment.

    Again, in these situations, all you need is another soul who feels the same way you do, and in this case, that's bottled up angst and complete and total uncertainty. The title represents a lot of things and the cultural gap Bob and Charlotte experience is only a small part of it; these two souls are lost within the translation of life. Life has keep going and two formerly active people who could keep up with the bustle have let it all pass by, letting sadness dominate their lives and fogginess encapsulate the remnants of the future. The translation lost is within the characters here, and that's sometimes scarier than not speaking the same language of the community.

    The only issue that arises from this is that we get the impression that Coppola either doesn't understand Japanese culture or simply doesn't want to, what with the abundance of cheap stereotypes and archetypal Japanese characters played for nothing but laughs here. Coppola opens by ostensibly getting most out of her way, thankfully, however, through the use of subtle humor, but sporadically doubles back to throw in another jab or two, which can briefly throw the film out of whack. It reminds me of when a really artsy film wants to try and pander and connect with the audience when it thinks it has lot them, and, as shown here amidst others, the action has the opposite effect.

    However, Murray and Johansson craft wonderful, low-key chemistry here. Murray's subtle sarcasm and overall cynicism are downplayed but in force here, as he employs facial expressions that speak louder than words could. He fully shows how he can be a hilarious comic presence and a fascinating, real dramatic presence and merge the two in one project, proving nothing but great range and ability on his behalf. Johansson, who was only eighteen during the time this was being filmed, bears mannerisms and a self-assured aura that would be more expected from someone ten years older than her. Such lofty material is presented and she handles the task of not being too theatrical or obvious very well, and it's a performance that requires both actors to place a reliance on their body language and facial expressions. This was by no means an easy role for Johansson, yet she breaks out with it and becomes a force all her own.

    Lost in Translation details a difficult time in a person's life and, in the process, doesn't sugarcoat it. The lack of human connection and the feelings of hopelessness, regardless of short-term or long-term, are debilitating to a person, and this film goes on to show to reiterate my idea about life: if we didn't have at least one of these things - a passion, a good relationship with family, or close friends and people to connect with - we would jump out a window.

    Starring: Bill Murray, Scarlett Johansson, Giovanna Ribisi, and Anna Faris. Directed by: Sofia Coppola.
    9SECurtisTX

    Lost Souls

    It's been a long time since a movie has made me hurt the way this one did. Perhaps "hurt" isn't the right word. "Ache" is more like it. I could so completely identify with both characters.

    Bob is a middle-aged actor caught in a life which has lost its zest and purpose, doing what he "ought" to be doing (making money doing whiskey commercials) instead of doing what he WANTS to do (plays). And then a young, beautiful, intelligent woman enters his orbit. On that level alone, with its mute longing and sexual tension, I can identify with him.

    And then there is Charlotte, a student of philosophy seeking herself, her soul lost and adrift. She doesn't know who she is, doesn't know what she wants. Her life is a quest for authenticity of self. And I identify with her because so much of my life I have been seeking the same thing.

    This movie isn't for everyone. They will call it boring, lifeless, limp. There are people, I realize, who have never experienced that kind of longing, who had never sought meaning in their lives, and searched for their own lost souls. They live for the here and now, without giving a thought to the spiritual aspects of life.

    A friend said introverts will love this movie, extraverts will hate it. I think that is a fair surface assessment. This movie is all about the inner lives of two people whose souls connect for a brief time in an alien city. It is a love affair not of bodies, but of minds and spirits.

    Some this movie will make angry. Some this movie will make weep.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      Bill Murray's favorite film of his own.
    • Errores
      When John (Giovanni Ribisi) first runs into Kelly (Anna Faris) in the lobby of the hotel he calls her Anna.
    • Citas

      Bob: It gets a whole lot more complicated when you have kids.

      Charlotte: It's scary.

      Bob: The most terrifying day of your life is the day the first one is born.

      Charlotte: Nobody ever tells you that.

      Bob: Your life, as you know it... is gone. Never to return. But they learn how to walk, and they learn how to talk... and you want to be with them. And they turn out to be the most delightful people you will ever meet in your life.

      Charlotte: That's nice.

    • Créditos curiosos
      At the end of the closing credits, Hiromix (Hiromi Toshikawa), seen throughout most of the party sequence, waves to the camera.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Kevin Shields: City Girl (2003)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Girls
      (2002)

      Written by Tim Holmes and Richard Fearless (as Richard McGuire)

      Performed by Death In Vegas

      Courtesy of BMG UK & Ireland Ltd.

      Under license from BMG Special Products, Inc.

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is Lost in Translation?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 3 de octubre de 2003 (Estados Unidos)
    • Países de origen
      • Estados Unidos
      • Japón
    • Sitio oficial
      • Distributor's web site with synopsis and media
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Japonés
      • Alemán
      • Francés
    • También se conoce como
      • Lost in Translation
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Park Hyatt Tokyo, Tokio, Japón
    • Productoras
      • Focus Features
      • Tohokushinsha Film Corporation (TFC)
      • American Zoetrope
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 4,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 44,585,453
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 925,087
      • 14 sep 2003
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 118,688,756
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 42 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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