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I Wish: Nos voeux secrets

Titre original : Kiseki
  • 2011
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 8min
NOTE IMDb
7,3/10
8,3 k
MA NOTE
I Wish: Nos voeux secrets (2011)
12-year-old Koichi, who has been separated from his brother Ryunosuke due to his parents' divorce, begins to believe that the new bullet train service will create a miracle when the first trains pass each other at top speed.
Lire trailer1:37
4 Videos
31 photos
Drame

Koichi, 12 ans, qui est séparé de son frère, Ryunosuke, à la suite du divorce de ses parents entend une rumeur selon laquelle les nouveaux trains grande vitesse accordent un voeu miraculeux ... Tout lireKoichi, 12 ans, qui est séparé de son frère, Ryunosuke, à la suite du divorce de ses parents entend une rumeur selon laquelle les nouveaux trains grande vitesse accordent un voeu miraculeux lorsqu'ils se croisent à toute allure.Koichi, 12 ans, qui est séparé de son frère, Ryunosuke, à la suite du divorce de ses parents entend une rumeur selon laquelle les nouveaux trains grande vitesse accordent un voeu miraculeux lorsqu'ils se croisent à toute allure.

  • Réalisation
    • Hirokazu Koreeda
  • Scénario
    • Hirokazu Koreeda
  • Casting principal
    • Kôki Maeda
    • Ôshirô Maeda
    • Ryôga Hayashi
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,3/10
    8,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • Scénario
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • Casting principal
      • Kôki Maeda
      • Ôshirô Maeda
      • Ryôga Hayashi
    • 25avis d'utilisateurs
    • 124avis des critiques
    • 80Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 5 victoires et 9 nominations au total

    Vidéos4

    U.S. Version
    Trailer 1:37
    U.S. Version
    I Wish: Clip 2
    Clip 1:03
    I Wish: Clip 2
    I Wish: Clip 2
    Clip 1:03
    I Wish: Clip 2
    I Wish: Clip 1
    Clip 1:20
    I Wish: Clip 1
    I Wish: Clip 3
    Clip 1:56
    I Wish: Clip 3

    Photos31

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    + 24
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    Rôles principaux23

    Modifier
    Kôki Maeda
    • Koichi
    • (as Koki Maeda)
    Ôshirô Maeda
    • Ryunosuke
    • (as Oshiro Maeda)
    Ryôga Hayashi
    • Tasuku
    Seinosuke Nagayoshi
    • Makoto
    Kyara Uchida
    • Megumi
    Kanna Hashimoto
    Kanna Hashimoto
    • Kanna
    Rento Isobe
    • Rento
    Nene Ôtsuka
    • Nozomi (Mother)
    • (as Nene Ohtsuka)
    Joe Odagiri
    Joe Odagiri
    • Kenji (Father)
    Yui Natsukawa
    Yui Natsukawa
    • Kyoko (Megumi's Mother)
    Masami Nagasawa
    Masami Nagasawa
    • Ms. Mimura (Teacher)
    Hiroshi Abe
    Hiroshi Abe
    • Mr. Sakagami (Teacher)
    Yoshio Harada
    Yoshio Harada
    • Wataru (Grandfather's Friend)
    Kirin Kiki
    Kirin Kiki
    • Hideko (Grandmother)
    Isao Hashizume
    Isao Hashizume
    • Shukichi (Grandfather)
    Shunsuke Godai
    • Wataru's Friend
    Masahito Irie
    • Kenji's Friend
    Lily
    • Higashi's Wife
    • Réalisation
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • Scénario
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs25

    7,38.3K
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    Avis à la une

    8howard.schumann

    A charming and lighthearted film

    As a result of their parent's separation, 12-year-old Koichi (Koki Maeda) lives in Kagoshima with his mother (Nene Ohtsuka) and grandparents (Kirin Kiki and Isao Hashizume) while his younger brother Ryunosuke (Oshiro Maeda) lives with his intermittently employed musician father (Jo Adigiri) in Fukuoka. Both talk to each other daily on their cell phone but have not seen each other in six months. Acclaimed Japanese director Hirokazu Koreeda's I Wish is a comedy/drama about the consequences of a split family and of the children's longing to reunite them. In contrast to Nobody Knows, an earlier Koreeda film about children, I Wish will not break your heart.

    The brothers (brothers in real life as well) are very different in personality but both seem happy and well adjusted in spite of the difficult circumstances of their life. Ryu is fun loving and his toothless smile will warm your heart. Koichi is more serious and thoughtful but very engaging. He becomes elated when he hears that a bullet train is coming that will connect his city to his brother's. Even more exciting are the rumors that are floating around that when two trains pass each other in opposite directions, your wishes will come true out of the energy the trains create. Koichi's wish is for the nearby volcano to explode so that his family will have to move, and he will be reunited with his brother.

    The plan is to meet his brother half-way and do some serious wishing. The fun starts when they have to find creative ways to raise the money. There's also the pesky part about Koichi and his two friends leaving school in the middle of the day. For this he recruits his grandfather to provide an excuse to the school authorities and includes the school librarian who once had a similar experience of wanting to escape from school to attend a concert.

    The group of friends of both brothers adds a lot to the film as well. Tasuku (Ryoga Hayashi) wants to marry his teacher, a bit of magic realism there. Makoto (Seinosuke Nagayoshi) wants his dog to come back to life. Megumi (Kyara Uchida), much to her mother's indifference, wants very much to go to Tokyo and become an actress. Kanna (Kanna Hashimoto) wants to be a better painter, and Rento (Rento Isobe) wants to be a faster runner. While the focus of the film are the wishes of the group of children and their trip to the trains' midpoint, the film also provides a rounded portrait of all of its characters without syrup or other sweeteners, though it certainly views children through a somewhat rose-colored lens.

    I Wish is a charming and lighthearted film, though its over two hour's length can makes the goings-on a bit tedious. Although the children arrive at the point of realizing that accepting what is can produce happiness, the growth in reaching that point is what the film is about. Ultimately, however, though hoping, wishing, and yearning are all part of childhood, some adults come to realize that, a step beyond wishing and hoping and praying for something to happen, is our ability to create, to make things happen. Unfortunately, most people have not gotten past the hoping stage.
    jamesdamnbrown

    more magic from Koreeda

    If, as many have pointed out, Koreeda is Ozu's cinematic heir, then I Wish is Koreeda's take on Ozu's Good Morning. Both films focus on adorable young kids and Japanese family life, and I have no qualms about saying between the two films, Koreeda easily outdoes Ozu. Not only is Koreeda's depiction of children subtler and more intuitive (no fart jokes here), but he coaxes wonderfully naturalistic performances from his child actors. Is there a director alive who does better work with kids than Koreeda? The movie really takes flight once the kids hit the road on their quest, and I loved the Ozu-ish part where they meet an elderly couple that takes in all the children for a night. Just a wonderful movie with tons of heart. Puts the human in humanistic filmmaking.
    8ebiros2

    Common movie that's uncommon

    Kouichi (Kouki Maeda) and Ryunosuke (Oushiro Maeda) who's parents are separated and now lives apart in Fukuoka, and Kagoshima hears about a rumor that if you see the meeting of the first bullet trains from Fukuoka and Kagoshima, a miracle will happen. Wishing that the miracle will be the reunion of their parents, they set out to see the meeting of the two trains, while involving their friends, teachers, and adults around them.

    Child prodigy stand up comic team Maeda-Maeda performs the role of Kouichi, and Ryunosuke. Director Hirokazu Koreeda originally had a different plot for the story, where a girl living in Fukuoka, goes to see the two trains crossing each other on the track, meets a boy from Hakata and love story ensues. But upon seeing Maeda-Maeda at the audition, he changed the story to that which involves the two brothers. The project was a promotional campaign for the opening of the Kagoshima route of Japan Railways bullet train line. They brought the project to director Koreeda, and he accepted.

    Very common story that involves nothing but the life of few children, but is made extraordinary by the direction of Koreeda, and the performance of Maeda brothers. Observation of people in common life, and attention to detail is extraordinary, and can only come from the eyes of a genius. I can see why Koreeda is regarded so highly as a director. I'd say only few directors can take a theme like this, and create a truly intriguing movie like this one.

    In reality it is virtually impossible to pinpoint where the two trains will meet on the track, so the story is purely fictional.

    It may be difficult to see all the inner workings of this movie at a first glance, but it is worth the time to sit in and really enjoy the performance.
    7LunarPoise

    Kore-eda in cruise control

    Pre-teen brothers Ryunosuke and Koichi (played by real-life brothers Ohshirô and Koki Maeda) are forced to live apart when their separated parents end up residing in opposite ends of Kyushu. Ryunosuke broods on this, while Koichi seems more at ease with the arrangements. Together, the brothers hatch a plan to meet at the point where the new shinkansen trains pass each other, after hearing an urban legend that the vortex created by the speed of the trains has the power to grant wishes. Meanwhile, granddad tries out a new sponge cake recipe, a friend of Koichi's has acting ambitions, and Dad is writing a new song.

    The usual Kore-eda themes of fractured families and kids finding magic in a flawed universe are present, but by the director's own standards this is a much lighter, almost sugar-coated engagement with those themes. There is the signature naturalistic, engrossing performances from the child actors, with Ohshirô as Ryunosuke especially impressive in his conflicted, caring attempts to be re-united with his brother. Koki is more of a one-note outing, required to be relentlessly upbeat, which he does superbly. The scene where he moves his mother to tears on the phone plays on this astutely. Forcing two young brothers to live apart for their own selfish ends could be represented in darker tones, even as abuse, but Kore-eda keeps it all light and humorous, through the simple trope of having the children be sensible and down-to-earth, and the adults, especially the bickering parents, petty and immature. The sub-plots, involving sponge cake and acting ambitions, are so removed from the main story strand that they give the film an episodic, slightly meandering feel when they pop up. Ultimately they are distracting, making the story busier than it needs to be. They also stretch the running time to over two hours. While some will delight in spending time with such engaging children, the film felt flabby to me after the 90-minute mark. The ending, while admirably avoiding sentimentality, takes too long to come around.

    Such is Kore-eda's stature that a host of A-listers pack the minor roles giving them more gravitas than normal. Jô Odagiri as the musician father, Kirin Kiki as the grandmother, and Hiroshi Abe as a disciplinarian teacher ply their day-shifts admirably.

    There is a lot to enjoy in I Wish, but lacking the damning social critique of Nobody Knows, and the acerbic scalpel on family life of Still Walking, this is Kore-eda choosing to crowd please rather than stretch himself.
    rooprect

    You'll WISH you rented "Kikujiro" instead.

    I've been impressed with Koreeda's work in the past. "Maborosi" and "After Life" are two excellent, deeply philosophical and moving films. Maybe based on those I had unrealistically high expectations (further inflated by the DVD box boasting a dozen rave reviews & awards), but "I Wish" failed to deliver.

    One hour into this 2-hour movie I had to shut it off. Since I didn't watch the whole thing I can't fairly rate it, but I wanted to share my (unpleasant) experience because I wish someone had warned me the same way. This was the first time in my life I've ever shut off a movie from sheer boredom. No, boredom isn't the word. It was more a feeling of total disconnection. The scenes, perhaps attempting to recreate the disconnected, ADD-type thought process of little kids, were so unrelated and random that I became irritated.

    Like my title suggests, if you want to see a truly magical film about youth, innocence and the not-so-innocent, hunt down a film called "Kikujiro" (1999). More about that later. First let's talk about "I Wish".

    Here is a breakdown of the first hour. Each scene lasts 2-5 minutes. At any time if you become bored, skip to the last paragraph of my review.

    Scene 1) a boy grabs a washcloth and cleans his desk. Scene 2) The boy's mother is talking about meaningless things while the grandmother makes random gestures in the air, saying "I'm the wind. I'm a ghost. Etc..." Scene 3) The boys walk to school and complain about the hill. Scene 4) Kids are scolded by a teacher for not doing their homework properly. Scene 5) Kids are in the hall complaining about the teacher. Scene 6) Back to the mother and grandparents talking about vegetable gardens. Scene 7) Jump to some other kids at a swimming pool. Scene 8) The boy stares blankly at his homework assignment. Scene 9) A bunch of old men talk about baking a cake for the festival. Scene 10) The boys are back in school ogling the librarian's legs. Scene 11) The boy's father wakes up, strums a guitar and goes back to sleep. Scene 12) The kids gather and talk about acting.

    While I hesitate to call the movie "bad" because I didn't watch it all the way through, I can definitely conclude that the first hour didn't provide enough substance to convince me to keep watching. And trust me, I like slow movies (2001, Werckmeister Harmonies, Hitchcock's Rope). Instead of watching "I Wish", I HIGHLY recommend a Japanese film called "Kikujiro" which this movie seemed to be imitating. However, even though it is slow paced, "Kikujiro" wastes no scenes. They all relate to each other, build upon each other and eventually lead you to a powerful message by the time the film ends. The music in "Kikujiro" (composed by the Japanese master Joe Hisaishi) is also leagues above the mediocre soundtrack of "I Wish", another turnoff. Maybe one day I'll go back & finish the last hour of this film and revise this review if I feel differently. But all the same, I'd rather spend my time watching something else.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Shinkansen wanted to make a movie to promote their bullettrains. They approached Koreeda, an avid trainlover. He came up with this movie.
    • Connexions
      Featured in A Story of Children and Film (2013)
    • Bandes originales
      KAGOSHIMA OHARA BUSHI
      Written by Quruli

      Performed by Quruli

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ17

    • How long is I Wish?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 11 avril 2012 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japon
    • Sites officiels
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Langue
      • Japonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • I Wish
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Sakurajima Volcano, Kagoshima, Japon
    • Sociétés de production
      • Bandai Visual Company
      • Chugoku Broadcasting (RCC)
      • East Japan Marketing & Communications Inc.
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 145 808 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 10 919 $US
      • 13 mai 2012
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 2 371 548 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 8min(128 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS-Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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