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Confessions

Titre original : Kokuhaku
  • 2010
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 46min
NOTE IMDb
7,7/10
44 k
MA NOTE
Takako Matsu in Confessions (2010)
Regarder Official Trailer [OVS]
Lire trailer1:40
1 Video
99+ photos
Thriller psychologiqueDrameThriller

Un thriller psychologique qui raconte une mère dont le chagrin se transforme en plan diabolique pour exercer sa vengeance sur les responsables de la mort de sa fille.Un thriller psychologique qui raconte une mère dont le chagrin se transforme en plan diabolique pour exercer sa vengeance sur les responsables de la mort de sa fille.Un thriller psychologique qui raconte une mère dont le chagrin se transforme en plan diabolique pour exercer sa vengeance sur les responsables de la mort de sa fille.

  • Réalisation
    • Tetsuya Nakashima
  • Scénario
    • Kanae Minato
    • Tetsuya Nakashima
  • Casting principal
    • Takako Matsu
    • Yoshino Kimura
    • Masaki Okada
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,7/10
    44 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Tetsuya Nakashima
    • Scénario
      • Kanae Minato
      • Tetsuya Nakashima
    • Casting principal
      • Takako Matsu
      • Yoshino Kimura
      • Masaki Okada
    • 149avis d'utilisateurs
    • 97avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 9 victoires et 17 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Official Trailer [OVS]
    Trailer 1:40
    Official Trailer [OVS]

    Photos103

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 97
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    Rôles principaux45

    Modifier
    Takako Matsu
    Takako Matsu
    • Yûko Moriguchi
    Yoshino Kimura
    Yoshino Kimura
    • Yûko Shimomura
    Masaki Okada
    Masaki Okada
    • Yoshiteru Terada
    Yukito Nishii
    Yukito Nishii
    • Shûya Watanabe
    Kaoru Fujiwara
    • Naoki Shimomura
    Ai Hashimoto
    Ai Hashimoto
    • Mizuki Kitahara
    Hirofumi Arai
    Hirofumi Arai
    • Shûya's Father
    Makiya Yamaguchi
    • Masayoshi Sakuranomiya
    Ikuyo Kuroda
    • Shûya's Mother
    Mana Ashida
    Mana Ashida
    • Manami Moriguchi
    Soichiro Suzuki
    • Prof. Seguchi
    Kinuo Yamada
    • Miyuko - Shûya's Stepmother
    Hiroko Ninomiya
    • Takenaka
    Tsutomu Takahashi
    • Mr. Tokura
    Yûta Kanai
    Yûta Kanai
    • Prof. Seguchi's Pupil
    Yûko Araki
    Yûko Araki
    Rina Asaishi
    Naoki Ichii
    • Hoshino
    • Réalisation
      • Tetsuya Nakashima
    • Scénario
      • Kanae Minato
      • Tetsuya Nakashima
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs149

    7,744K
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    Avis à la une

    7tombrookes2007

    I must confess I did like some of this arty, moody Japanese drama.

    This Japanese film is very visual and dramatic. It is deep, arty, over- utilising slow motion, making it unusual but darkly poignant. It looks great, with clever lighting and colouring for effect. The film is too slow paced attempting to add to the emotions, but simply the characters are only surface felt and so much of it is left for the viewer and their perceptions. The complicated plot also gets lost at points so making it all too ambitious and confusing. Genius or trying to hard?

    The film is about a teacher, suffering after her daughter has tragically drowned. She is leaving but wants to exact revenge on her class of pupils, as some were involved in her daughters death. There are several flash backs and moments where the lead lady deals with paranoia and dream like sequences. The class also have half of the story, with several pupils losing their control too.

    I did enjoy most of the film, although some of it gets lost in subtitled translations, and it has been hailed for its cleverness, but for many its aims will be lost. World Cinema does not appeal to the mass and this arty music video like drama , although excellent in story and theory, leaves much to taste and individual mood. It is rather long, challenging and grim, but it is none the less commendable, individual world cinematography.
    9ken1848

    Move Thee Reviews: Every Cloud Has a Silver Lining

    Confessions, directed by one of my favorite Japanese directors, Tetsuya Nakashima, is one of the most disturbing and depressing movies I have watched this year. It is a psychological thriller of a grieving teacher turned cold-blooded avenger with a twisty master plan to pay back the students who were responsible for her daughter's death.

    In the story, the major characters make confessions one by one. The more perspectives from which the murder is looked at, the more we know about the characters and their motives, which may remind the audience of A Stranger of Mine. As the story is unfolded, there are several surprising twists. While making confessions and sometimes touching on the subjects they are ashamed of, some characters refuse to accept the truth, tell lies and point the finger of blame at others to salve their conscience.

    The director tries to explore the reasons why innocent children become evil teenagers with no conscience. Some seek attention because they are abandoned or physically abused by their parents. Some become vulnerable owing to their overprotective parents. Some feel lonely because they are nerds neglected and bullied by their peers. Some commit suicide or other crimes because they follow suit. Some tragedies are also attributed to the internet which allows people to gossip anonymously, the mass media which places too much emphasis on violence, and the law which exempts teenage murderers from being punished. Thanks to the convincing cast, the characters become lifelike.

    The black-grey-and-white setting, which is very different form the flamboyance of Memories of Matsuko, is stifling and depressing. After watching the film, the images of crimson blood, white milk, snow-white sakura, the bleak classroom, the lifeless homes and the dimly lit school hall will linger in one's mind. Apart from these, the gloomy skies in the movie were reminiscent of the ones in Elephant by Gus Van Sant. Despite the ominous dark clouds gathering overheard, every cloud has a silver lining, which symbolizes that the director still believes in the goodness of human nature, despite its dark side. This belief is also reflected in the scene when the female teacher stares at the strawberry given by a kid and another scene in which she says "your new life has begun".

    The mesmerizing classical music, spiced with a hypnotizing female voice, not only creates a shocking contrast to the disturbing scenes shot in slow motion, but also adds eeriness to the story. The sound effects are also memorable. When the female teacher puts down the last stroke of the word LIFE on the blackboard, the ear-piercing sound chilled me the bone. When the bubble pops, we feel hopeless.

    The film would have been more gripping if the first confession had been shorter and less talky. Besides, the CG images at the end are mediocre. Also, it is a difficult movie for the faint-hearted to sit through.

    On the whole, Confessions is a darkly disturbing, visually stunning and thought provoking movie ruthlessly exposing the root of various teenage problems and the dark side of human nature. After watching the movie, I left the cinema with a heavy heart. It conjured up images of several parricides committed by Hong Kong teenagers recently and I pondered on what had happened to our post 90's generation.
    10DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: Confessions

    It's the kind of feeling all over again that makes it a delight to relive moments of a film that's just so steeped with brilliance. It's dark and it's disturbing, a psychological thriller to rival some of the best out there, tackling themes of poetic justice and revenge that's coolly served in perfect tones of subversion, grabbing you by the scruff of your neck with its extended hook from the start and lasting some thirty minutes, before things kick into full gear for a chilling, violent ride that's unflinching in its violence, laced with strong characters filled with perverted motivations all round.

    Written and directed by Tetsuya Nakashima and based upon the novel by Kanae Minato, the story's extremely hypnotic and sprawls points of views from multiple characters, each weaved intrinsically with one another and all being uncannily hypnotic in its stylish execution. The hook wraps up everything you'd come to expect from a great thriller, and that riveting introductory classroom scene alone is worth the price of an admission ticket many times over, orchestrating its sound contrast design to perfection where it seems a teacher is unable to control her class, and is nonchalantly attempting to do so until a bombshell is dropped to elicit an automatic silence, and fear.

    Takako Matsue (of The Hidden Blade and Villon's Wife fame) plays a schoolteacher whose young daughter was murdered by students identified in her class. Rather than challenging the judge's verdict and knowing jolly well that a juvenile is protected by the law against capital punishment, the plan she devices is so devious that it turns the class upside down turning classmates against the guilty, and yet still hitting them where it hurts most, slowly observing and scheming any exploited weaknesses. Probably the best strategy anyone can adopt when dealing with unspeakable evil, and it is this execution of her plan that forms the remainder of the film told from different perspectives in confessional style (hence the title), where a deeper character study gets presented, while smartly fusing social observations about the restlessness of today's misguided teenagers in wanting recognition and being one up against their peers.

    Mothers seem to come into play, and the film provokes thought into this aspect of human nature that's so universal. A mother loses her child, another maintains her protective blindness fending provocative charges against her son, while yet another proudly obsesses with wanting the best from her kid that it becomes detrimental to his development. One knows about the power of Mother's Love and the extent they will go to protect their brood, and here the school teacher's severe loss becomes the catalyst for revenge best served cold, while also becoming pawns in a plan best unraveled when you watch the film.

    Nakashima's assured direction keeps you glued to every gorgeous frame thanks to its beautiful cinematography and shots that make it picture perfect, supported by an excellent soundtrack to bolster the dark mood created visually, and I just fell in love with the plenty of slow motion used which brings a sense of calming rhythm that betrays the dark undertones that were constantly brewing in the narrative. There doesn't seem to be a wasted frame or scene in the film, each moving the narrative forward in an engaging manner, keeping you guessing what's the next curve ball to be thrown, and silently rooting for justice in whatever form to be meted out, and on the other hand cannot help but to check yourself since they're kids to begin with, albeit guilty ones whom the teacher chooses a punishment that will resonate deeply throughout their lives, which is obviously a very long road ahead.

    The predominant cast of teenagers also performed their roles admirably since one can imagine the kind of thought process they have to go through to play characters who are basically mentally unsound for doing what they did, and frankly these aren't things that are far fetched given notable crimes committed by juveniles here too. The violence can be unsettling here for those with weak stomachs, not so much whether there's plenty of gore put on screen, but psychologically when you're made to crawl under the perpetrators' skins seeing things from their viewpoints.

    Confessions lives up to every critical acclaim garnered thus far, and I too love this film enough to put it firmly in my shortlist as the best film of the year, where all the technical elements that make up filmmaking gelled perfectly together with excellent performances all round. A movie gorgeously filmed that justifies why I go to the movies. A definite recommendation!
    8Heislegend

    Superb

    Sometimes I feel like I have to watch a lot of Asian thrillers just to find one that really works. For every 50 or so I watch, there will be only one 20th Century Boys or Confessions. The film works on pretty much every level, though it might be a bit hard to follow for some.

    The story starts with a pretty simple event. What you're completely unprepared for is that such a simple act will spiral completely out of control into an incredibly twisted series of events. You see...this is one of those movie that will tell (relatively) the same story from different angles and perspectives. That bit may throw some people off, but I promise it all makes sense if you're paying attention. And you should be paying attention, because watching the whole thing unravel is a hell of a lot of fun.

    Every movie has at least a couple drawbacks, however minor. One minor thing that kind of irritated me was the frequent use of slow motion shots. I understand using it to emphasize the importance of a shot, but this is just a little out of hand. Also, I wish some of the alternative tellings of events happened more linearly at some points. In some cases results are shown before the audience has a chance to even follow the story line to what leads to said action. But those are both minor nitpicks, really. On the whole, the movie is just plain excellent.
    8joebloggscity

    Stormer of a film.. a light hearted direction but a very dark heart...

    This little stormer of a movie really takes Asian extreme movies in another direction. A revenge movie that will keep you intrigued and interested till the end. The Far East market has been the home of great originality in the terror & horror film markets, and this is one great highlight in that vein.

    The film begins in a school classroom where the teacher tells her pupils that she is leaving, and then begins to tell a long tale revolving round her life and the tragic death that haunts her (her "Confession"). This leads to serious repercussions for some of the pupils. Twists and turns in the story then unfold for the viewer as we are retold further confessions to piece it all together.

    A very cerebral movie, the direction masks the revenge story at its heart with a very art-house look and indie soundtrack. A very original film, the acting is exceptional especially from the young school kids. Our lead lady who plays the class teacher is mesmerising as she leads the opening long confession scene. It was a very well delivered scene by her and sets the tone beautifully.

    The film begins quite psychological but it then does slide into more graphic detail. Takes you by the hand and leads you down the dark heart at its centre. You don't ever seem to know what to expect.

    It's great to have such a fresh original movie. Acting, story and direction are superb. A film I'd highly recommend to all who enjoy dark hearted movies.

    Centres d’intérêt connexes

    Rosamund Pike in Gone Girl (2014)
    Thriller psychologique
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drame
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Shortlisted as Japan's entry for the Best Foreign Language Film Academy Award.
    • Gaffes
      At the 1:24:49 mark, when Yuko is crying on her knees in the street, a distance shot shows her getting up. Almost immediately, just 2 seconds later, we are shown a close-up of her suddenly back down on the ground. Then 6 seconds later, we see a distant view with the same shot of her getting up again.
    • Citations

      [last lines]

      Yuko Moriguchi: Just kidding.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Tienes que ver esta peli: Confessions (2022)
    • Bandes originales
      Last Flowers
      Performed by Radiohead

      Written by Thom Yorke, Jonny Greenwood, Ed O'Brien,

      Colin Greenwood, Phil Selway

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Confessions?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 5 juin 2010 (Japon)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japon
    • Site officiel
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Langue
      • Japonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Kokuhaku
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Tokyo, Japon
    • Sociétés de production
      • DesperaDo
      • Hakuhodo DY Media Partners
      • Licri
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 45 203 103 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 46min(106 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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