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Big Man Japan

Titre original : Dai-Nihonjin
  • 2007
  • PG-13
  • 1h 53min
NOTE IMDb
6,2/10
4,1 k
MA NOTE
Big Man Japan (2007)
An eccentric man aged about 40 lives alone in a decrepit house in Tokyo. He periodically transforms into a giant, about 30 meters tall, and defends Japan by battling similarly sized monsters that turn up and destroy buildings.
Lire trailer1:41
1 Video
8 photos
ActionComédieScience-fictionParodieSatireSuper héros

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn eccentric man living alone in a decrepit house in Tokyo periodically transforms into a 100-foot tall giant in order to defend Japan against similarly sized monsters.An eccentric man living alone in a decrepit house in Tokyo periodically transforms into a 100-foot tall giant in order to defend Japan against similarly sized monsters.An eccentric man living alone in a decrepit house in Tokyo periodically transforms into a 100-foot tall giant in order to defend Japan against similarly sized monsters.

  • Réalisation
    • Hitoshi Matsumoto
  • Scénario
    • Hitoshi Matsumoto
    • Mitsuyoshi Takasu
  • Casting principal
    • Hitoshi Matsumoto
    • Riki Takeuchi
    • Ua
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,2/10
    4,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Hitoshi Matsumoto
    • Scénario
      • Hitoshi Matsumoto
      • Mitsuyoshi Takasu
    • Casting principal
      • Hitoshi Matsumoto
      • Riki Takeuchi
      • Ua
    • 46avis d'utilisateurs
    • 56avis des critiques
    • 62Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 5 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Big Man Japan: Trailer
    Trailer 1:41
    Big Man Japan: Trailer

    Photos7

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 2
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    Rôles principaux99

    Modifier
    Hitoshi Matsumoto
    Hitoshi Matsumoto
    • Masaru Daisatô…
    Riki Takeuchi
    Riki Takeuchi
    • Haneru-no-jû
    Ua
    • Manager Kobori
    Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    • Warabe-no-jû
    Haruka Unabara
    • Shimeru-no-jû
    Tomoji Hasegawa
    • Interviewer…
    Itsuji Itao
    Itsuji Itao
    • Female Niou-no-jû
    Hiroyuki Miyasako
    • Stay With Me
    Takayuki Haranishi
    • Male Niou-no-jû
    Daisuke Miyagawa
    Daisuke Miyagawa
    • Super Justice
    Takuya Hashimoto
    • Midon
    Taichi Yazaki
    • Daisatô's Grandfather
    Shion Machida
    • Daisatô's Ex-wife
    Atsuko Nakamura
    • Bar Proprietress Azusa
    Daisuke Nagakura
    • Daisatô's Grandfather - Younger
    Motohiro Toriki
    • Daisatô's Father
    Keidai Yano
    • Young Daisatô
    Junshirô Hayama
    • Shintô Priest
    • Réalisation
      • Hitoshi Matsumoto
    • Scénario
      • Hitoshi Matsumoto
      • Mitsuyoshi Takasu
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs46

    6,24K
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    Avis à la une

    ANCHINN

    expecting his next work

    Matsumoto is a member of comedy duo Down Town, he's a No.1 comedian in Japan present. His vision is very surreal and it makes him so special. I'm a huge fan myself, however I'm not so happy about Dai Nippon Jin. I recommend his early works like Visualbum series, To-Zu or Hitori-Gottsu series instead. Those are more fun and lyrical, overall it's unique.

    I'd say he should work with his friends together again like in his early days. Though, I know they are all big now, there's some problem working together. But it's my dream that Matsumoto working with Mr. Itao full time making a picture together. It should be a great surreal comedy flick.

    Actually, Itao appearing few minutes as smelly monster in this film. I always laugh my head off seeing that, but it's not enough, cos considering their talent, they can do more than that.

    Maybe Matsumoto's weak point is working with strangers and that huge budget. Probably, big budget gave him big pressure mentally, and couldn't concentrate. his talent will definitely explode when solving those problems. Working with his close friends, making it with low budget. I'm expecting his next work.
    8MidnightTrash

    The trouble with being big in Japan

    Hitoshi Matsumoto's wonderfully deadpan "Big Man Japan" ("Dai-Nihonjin) is a brilliantly hilarious send up of Japan's giant monster movies of yesteryear. A postmodernist at heart, Matsumoto flips the genre conventions, grounding the beautifully weird world of "Big Man Japan" in reality through a dry mocumentary style that mixes interviews, archival footage and computer animated fight scenes with a razor's wit.

    Masaru Daisato is the latest in a long legacy of men who grow to mammoth proportions when juiced with electricity. Masaru spends most of his time as a normal-sized human being, surviving on a meager government stipend in a grimy suburb of Tokyo. But when strange monsters attack (and believe me they are strange), Masaru is hooked up to a power plant and juiced with enough electricity to grow into a purple underweared giant.

    Not that any of this endears Masaru to the citizens of Japan. The road to the power plant is plastered with signs critical of Masaru's actions and abilities. His house is covered in threatening graffiti and vandalized on a daily basis. Masaru is an outsider in a country of insiders, a colorful anachronism in increasingly bland times.

    Perspective is a central theme in "Big Man Japan"'s giant monster weirdness. Does having the ability to turn into a giant and save the country from destructive building-stomping monsters make you a hero or a freak? It all depends on who you ask.

    There's no doubt that Masaru is a loser. When not attacking giant monsters with a large pipe, Masaru sits in his graffiti-covered home eating dehydrated seaweed ("It only grows big when you need it.") while neighbors throw bricks through his windows. Masaru's wife and daughter have left him, photos are all that remains of his profession's illustrious past and his show routinely earns less ratings than the weather report. No one ever said it was easy being big.

    And perhaps this is the biggest joke in Matsumoto's wonderfully awkward film. Godzilla eventually became a friend of the children, saving Japan from countless invading monsters, but he was always a foreigner. Godzilla called Monster Island home, not the gray slums of Tokyo. Ultraman was from outer space not Osaka. This is an important difference. Forced to live among the very people he fights to protect, Masaru became the biggest oddity in a hegemonic society based on Confucian values.

    The world of "Big Man Japan" is one of dashed hopes and squandered potential, a world where Masaru's senile grandfather, made so by repeated exposure to high levels of electricity, zaps himself giant and wanders through the city. And the monsters, as outrageously weird as they may be, never actually seem threatening in any way.

    Instead, the creatures, with their comb-overs, phallic eyes and sexual perversions seem as oblivious as children that their actions do any harm. Masaru dispatches the beasts by clubbing them once in the head, not through a long drawn out fight, and their souls ascend to heaven in a campy 8-bit video game fashion.

    And by the end, when Matsumoto drops the mocumentary cameras and the computer animation for a ridiculous symbolism-heavy homage to cheesy rubber suits and miniature sets fare like "Ultraman" it hardly makes sense but is hilarious nonetheless. I would've preferred "Big Man Japan" didn't end with an allegory about Japan-China relations and the reliance on the American military for protection filtered through campy 1970s kaiju sensibilities but what the hell, it was one crazy ride.

    Taken from http://www.midnighttrash.net/?p=677 MidnightTrash.net: Your guide to everything under the radar.
    7KaZenPhi

    Just wonderful

    I'm embarrased to admit I avoided this film for years, despite its appearance in several curated movie collections, because it looked rather bad. Fortunately I finally caved after watching other Matsumoto films that were creative, hilarious, sad and unique, with deeper layers beyond their insanity as to never succumb to being weird for weirdness sake alone.

    Dai-Nihonjin shares all these strengths with the dryness levels on the humour-knob turned up to severe skin-chafing levels. This will put off many viewers not familiar with this style of japanese comedy best exemplified by the cult director SABU's filmography.

    As a deconstruction of tropes this is a rather genius work of art. The faux-documentary style enhances the absurdity of the situations and at the same time gives real weight to the plight of the hero, the eponymous Dainihonjin. Turns out having to be a hero sucks, it destroys your life, nobody likes you and maybe you're only making things worse for everyone.

    A lot of what makes this movie so charming is the intentionally bad CGI for the creatures that are somehow both hilarious and oddly terrifying. It reminded me of the bizarre existentialist Dreamcast game Seaman which is always appreciated. There are so many clever elements here that are always glossed over in other movies or comics like this. Just how do you solve the whole underwear problem when you grow from human to giant size and back?

    Beneath the comedy there is some genuinely smart commentary on the media, society and strangely enough international relations of Japan to its neighbors. While this is presented in a rather understated and subtle manner, being played straight thoughout, it all eventually erupts like a comedy volcano in the final ten minutes and just totally bludgeons you over the head. I can't remember the last time I've laughed this hard. I was in actual pain.

    This is a hard film to recommend to more mainstream audiences but it's so genuine, creative and hilarious that it deserves more viewers.
    9dunnypop

    Refreshing change from your typical monster movie

    I got a chance to see this at the Toronto International Film Festival, and I found this to be a quite refreshing and one of the more original films I've seen in the past little while.

    A brief synopsis, is that a documentary film crew follows a mid-age slacker who basically has nothing going for him in life... but what's odd is he has the power to grow to the size of a building and fight monsters ("baddies").

    The comedy during the interviews and daily life of Dai is very subtle. There is no music track and his facial expression are very mute. The monster scenes are hilarious, and the last 10 minutes made me laugh so hard.

    If you are very open minded with comedy, this is for you, but don't expect a typical giant monster movie.
    9LunarPoise

    Matsumoto evolves

    Hitoshi Matsumoto is one of a rare breed of comedians with a special gift. Tommy Cooper had it, Billy Connelly has it sometimes - the ability to make you laugh the moment they appear on stage. I've followed Matsumoto and Downtown since 1989, when I first encountered them on the sketch comedy show Yume de Aetara. A lot of his experimental comedy on the small screen since then has been outrageous, cerebral and/or scatological. It is almost always riotous, and for that reason I was expecting more of the same here. Part of Matsumoto's genius is in how he reigns in his basic instincts, creating a tension for domestic audiences, while also fashioning a clever narrative with universal appeal. That tension makes for a glorious release when classic Matsumoto moments do appear, such as standing in front of giant purple underpants, or the edit to his pixel-ated daughter in a bunny hat declaiming her indifference to her father, in contrast to the sentimental speech on her he has just given.

    Many Japanese geinojin seem fettered by the jimusho system that controls their creative output, and you feel sympathy for the truly talented ones who seem capable of so much more than the usual prime-time foolishness (Takuya Kimura, take note). I always had a sneaking suspicion Downtown's Hamada-san could rise to a serious dramatic role if given the chance, so it is a pleasant surprise to be blind-sided by Matsumoto here. Understated, even moving in places, with a wonderfully comic climactic scene where the 'traditional' Matsumoto surfaces, Big Man Japan is a refreshing addition to Matsumoto's array of comic talent. Small mention to Ua as the mercenary manager, a cold-blooded portrayal. Was Matsumoto having a sly dig at his Jimusho's creative accounting? Matsumoto bites the hand that feeds here, but then feeds them in turn with the grosses this film has earned. The man is practically re-inventing the term irony, in art and in his life. Genius.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Hitoshi Matsumoto is a Japanese comedian.
    • Connexions
      Featured in The Rotten Tomatoes Show: Observe & Report/Gigantic/Hannah Montana: The Movie (2009)
    • Bandes originales
      Fureai
      Music by Taku Izumi

      Lyrics by Keisuke Yamakawa

      Performed by Masatoshi Nakamura

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Big Man Japan?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 2 juin 2007 (Japon)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japon
    • Sites officiels
      • Official site (United States)
      • Shochiku (Japan)
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Japonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • 大日本人
    • Sociétés de production
      • Realproducts
      • Yoshimoto Kogyo Company
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 40 796 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 7 133 $US
      • 17 mai 2009
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 9 795 470 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 53min(113 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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