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Bright Future

Titolo originale: Akarui mirai
  • 2002
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 55min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,7/10
3170
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Bright Future (2002)
Drama

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaTwo young guys work in a plant that manufactures oshibori (those moist hand-towels found in some Japanese restaurants). Their weird bond is based on uncontrollable rage--something neither ca... Leggi tuttoTwo young guys work in a plant that manufactures oshibori (those moist hand-towels found in some Japanese restaurants). Their weird bond is based on uncontrollable rage--something neither can articulate or control--and the strange jellyfish that they keep as a pet.Two young guys work in a plant that manufactures oshibori (those moist hand-towels found in some Japanese restaurants). Their weird bond is based on uncontrollable rage--something neither can articulate or control--and the strange jellyfish that they keep as a pet.

  • Regia
    • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
  • Star
    • Joe Odagiri
    • Tadanobu Asano
    • Tatsuya Fuji
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,7/10
    3170
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
    • Star
      • Joe Odagiri
      • Tadanobu Asano
      • Tatsuya Fuji
    • 24Recensioni degli utenti
    • 45Recensioni della critica
    • 64Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 5 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale

    Foto3

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali19

    Modifica
    Joe Odagiri
    Joe Odagiri
    • Yûji Nimura
    Tadanobu Asano
    Tadanobu Asano
    • Mamoru Arita
    Tatsuya Fuji
    Tatsuya Fuji
    • Shin'ichirô Arita
    Sayuri Oyamada
    • Miho Nimura
    Takashi Sasano
    • Mr. Fujiwara
    Marumi Shiraishi
    • Mrs. Fujiwara
    Hanawa
    • Ken Takagi
    Hideyuki Kasahara
    • Shin
    Ryô Kase
    Ryô Kase
    • Fuyuki Arita
    Miyako Kawahara
    Chiaki Kominami
    • Kaori Fujiwara
    Ken'ichi Matsuyama
    Ken'ichi Matsuyama
    • Jun
    Yutaka Mishima
    Yutaka Mishima
    • A man who buy a box lunch
    Yoshiyuki Morishita
    Yoshiyuki Morishita
    • Mori
    Ryô
    Ryô
    • Lawyer
    Sakichi Sato
    • Manager of Recycle Shop
    Tetsu Sawaki
    • Kei
    Kiichi Sonobe
    • Regia
      • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti24

    6,73.1K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    LGwriter49

    Time past, life wasted

    Bright Future, another recent dark film from the great Japanese director Kiyoshi Kurosawa, focuses on working class folks whose future is anything but bright. The irony of the title is pounded home in scene after scene. Yuji and Mamoru, friends in their 20s who work at the same boring job in the same dull warehouse, are both frustrated with their lives. But there is a big difference.

    While Mamoru looks around carefully and gives Yuji knowing glances, and tells Yuji when to Wait and when to Go Ahead (capital letters used on purpose), Yuji is content to live in his dreams in which, he says in a voice-over, he sees himself as having a bright future. Mamoru has a pet poisonous jellyfish, which he bequeaths to Yuji when something terrible happens and Mamoru lands in prison.

    Their boss, a man of 55, is just as frustrated with his boring existence as his two workers, and Mamoru's father is, as well, a man who labors at a thankless job that keeps him confined to a small space; he fixes broken appliances in a salvage shop.

    When the jellyfish escapes from Yuji, he panics, then relaxes when he realizes that it is, in essence, following him wherever he goes. Kurosawa always fuses fantasy with reality in his films and this one is no exception. Although an obvious symbol for escape from a humdrum existence, the jellyfish turns out to be something more than that as well. This is brought home later in the film when we see a flotilla of the things moving out to sea in the Tokyo canal...

    KK, as I like to call him--to distinguish him from Akira Kurosawa--makes films like no one else today. It's easy and at the same time intriguing to read into his films more than what we see and chances are that the added meanings we find are right. I think we know this because his films resonate long after leaving the theater; the layers of meaning we find in them continue to make themselves apparent without much effort at all.

    Bright Future is a film about significantly more than people who spend their time, their lives in futile activity. It's about whether or not we think about how to live our lives, about whether we value the time that we have, or how we value it, if we do at all. It's about how we try to move beyond what we have and how that usually fails. It's a sad film but one that upon reflection makes us think that maybe there is, after all, a chance for a bright future. Or maybe not.
    DarkAngelAyu

    beautiful but not very understandable

    Yes, this movie is very beautiful because of its image especially when you see the movements of the jellyfish(es), very colourful and calm. There is a lot of philosophy (intelligence, meaning - call it the way you like it) in the whole movie. BUT (yes there's always a "but") I didn't like that. I think the movie tries to force to be unique/special which it isn't. There were a lot of things I haven't understood in that movie. Of course you can think now that I'm stupid or so. Because I don't want to spoil anything I'll describe it like that - there were many things (especially at the beginning and at the end) which aren't explained any deeper and after the movie I thought "hmm...what was it about?". Also the people's personality, relationship, their past, ... etc. - no real hints for them.

    So in the end I think only people who love Kurosawa's (I don't mean Akira Kurosawa) movies should watch it, also people who like this calm and deep philosophy which you have to explain yourself and Asian movie junkies who watch every damn movie just because it's Asian (like me), too.
    8sstocker1

    Interesting premise but the movie ultimately doesn't add up

    Bright Future is about a plot to populate the sewers of Tokyo with a glowing, poisonous jellyfish. So far, so good. There aren't too many movies about plots to populate the sewers of Tokyo with glowing, poisonous jellyfish that I know about. Although the movie has much to commend it, it is ultimately frustrating because characters are constantly doing things not because they make sense but because the filmmaker wants them to in order to advance the plot. Also, the movie has no real ending; it just….ends.

    On the one hand, you might say that the movie doesn't have to make sense because it follows a dream logic and dreams don't always make sense. However, the best movies that follow a dream logic, such as Bunuel's The Exterminating Angel, have an internal consistency. Actions make sense within the context of the movie. Also, The Exterminating Angel has one of the best endings in all of cinema.

    I liked the themes of Bright Future: loneliness, alienation, lack of connection between the generations. I also liked the poisonous jellyfish as a metaphor for disaffected, violent teenagers and 20-somethings. However, I had the feeling that the filmmaker wrote himself into a corner and didn't know how to get out of it. Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami does this with his novels. He starts a novel not knowing where it's going but then eventually has to end it, which he almost always does in an unsatisfying manner.

    Nevertheless, I keep reading Murakami novels and I'm going to seek out other films by Kiyoshi Kurosawa. Maybe some day all the ingredients will fall into place and he'll make a masterpiece.
    sallyfifth

    So much potential out to sea.

    Akarui Mirai has a lot going for it. Somewhere in the mess of metaphor and "art for art's sake" is a good story with a strong message and good images. Unfortunately things get typically nonsensical with the lesser Kurosawa behind the camera. Ok, that's harsh, but why can't this guy find a way to tell his story coherently AND make use of the positive aspects of his style. I like art-house movies, I like esoteric Japanese dramas, I like quirky filmmaking, but I don't like this movie. It's the type of movie I dislike most in fact, it's a badly made film pretending to be a good one. I trusted it, and it basically took me for a ride to nowhere and left me there.

    I admit, the movie has it's moments, the lyrical beauty of the Jellyfish, one of the movie's most powerful images, are wonderful. The performance of the leads is good. There's some humor sprinkled here and there, but for what reason? I couldn't read the tone of the movie... Is this a fariytale? Is it a drama? There's just so much jammed onto that screen, and yet nothing. It's basically a bunch of nice ideas, presented in an incredibly lifeless manner. I can't imagine who would find any of this fulfilling?
    7Buddy-51

    intriguing film, but what on earth is it about?

    I can see the maddeningly inscrutable "Bright Future" serving as the subject for some poor film school student's dissertation in a course entitled "The Use of Enigma and Symbolism in Post-Modernist Cinema" or (if you prefer the vernacular) "What the Heck Was That Film All About Anyway?" For I am absolutely convinced that one could spend a full semester - at the very least - trying to fathom the various levels of meaning in this film and never come up with a thoroughly satisfactory answer at the end of that search. And here I've always thought Ingmar Bergman movies were a challenge!

    Shot through with heavy doses of allegory and Magic Realism, "Bright Future" tells the story of a sullen, moody young man named Yuji, who works at a dull factory job with his close buddy, Mamoru. The latter owns a deadly Red Jellyfish that he keeps in a little tank at home. One day, he gives the jellyfish as a present to Yuji, telling him that he has decided to quit the job and move on to bigger and better things. But instead of doing that, Mamoru murders the boss and the boss' wife, with little or no explanation given as to motive. Mamoru is immediately arrested and charged with first degree murder. Meanwhile, in a fit of despair, Yuji turns over the tank, only to have the jellyfish slide through the cracks of the floor and somehow land in the Tokyo water system, where it miraculously proliferates to the point where the area is literally inundated with freshwater killer jellyfish. While all this is going on, Yuji begins to develop a close but tentative bond with Mamoru's father, who was pretty much estranged from his son before the murder. As Yuji gets more and more obsessed with finding the elusive jellyfish, he seems, paradoxically, to be coming to a greater sense of reality. Well, there's the "plot" in a nutshell; now it's your turn to try to figure it all out.

    If none of this makes any sense to you, don't feel bad because it doesn't make any sense to me either. The best I can make of it is that Yuji is intended to represent the younger generation in modern day Japan - disconnected, rudderless, utterly lacking in motivation, purpose and goals, and prone to act out of ill-defined impulse rather than rationality and logic. And somehow, by committing the murder that Yuji is actually intending to do (though here again, we are given no preparation or motive to explain WHY he would do so), Mamoru sacrifices himself so that Yuji can be saved from his own spiritual ennui and set on the path towards a meaningful life, primarily by caring for this jellyfish, which is itself a symbol of tenacity and beauty.

    Or perhaps not….

    Despite the fact that the film will probably have you pulling your hair out in bewilderment and frustration, "Bright Future," for all its self-conscious pretentiousness, is actually a fairly intriguing film just on the level of its visuals and the relationships it develops among the various characters. It's very well directed and very well acted, and if you can get beyond the symbol-gazing, you may actually find yourself mesmerized by the experience.

    And I will be expecting those dissertations on my desk bright and early tomorrow morning.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      The large group of jellyfish in the Tokyo River was filmed in an aquarium and digitally added to the film.
    • Citazioni

      Yûji Nimura: I've always had lots of dreams when I sleep. The dreams have always been about the future. The future in my dreams was always bright. A future brimming with hope and peace. So I've always loved to sleep. That is, until just recently...

    • Connessioni
      Referenced in Aimai na mirai, Kurosawa Kiyoshi (2002)
    • Colonne sonore
      Mirai
      Written by The Back Horn

      Performed by The Back Horn

      Courtesy of Victor Entertainment, Speedstar Records

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    Domande frequenti16

    • How long is Bright Future?Powered by Alexa

    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 3 dicembre 2003 (Francia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Giappone
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Official site (Japan)
      • Official USA Site
    • Lingua
      • Giapponese
    • Celebre anche come
      • 光明的未來
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Uplink
      • Digital Site Corporation
      • The Klockworx
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 1.200.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 5166 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 2755 USD
      • 14 nov 2004
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 28.463 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 55 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • DTS-Stereo
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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