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IMDbPro

Tonî Takitani

  • 2004
  • 1h 15min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
5170
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Tonî Takitani (2004)
Trailer 1
Riproduci trailer1:49
1 video
8 foto
Dramma

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaWhen technical illustrator Tony Takitani asks his wife to resist her all-consuming obsession for designer clothes, the consequences are tragic.When technical illustrator Tony Takitani asks his wife to resist her all-consuming obsession for designer clothes, the consequences are tragic.When technical illustrator Tony Takitani asks his wife to resist her all-consuming obsession for designer clothes, the consequences are tragic.

  • Regia
    • Jun Ichikawa
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Jun Ichikawa
    • Haruki Murakami
  • Star
    • Issei Ogata
    • Rie Miyazawa
    • Shinohara Takahumi
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,2/10
    5170
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Jun Ichikawa
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Jun Ichikawa
      • Haruki Murakami
    • Star
      • Issei Ogata
      • Rie Miyazawa
      • Shinohara Takahumi
    • 37Recensioni degli utenti
    • 71Recensioni della critica
    • 80Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 2 vittorie e 7 candidature totali

    Video1

    Tony Takitani
    Trailer 1:49
    Tony Takitani

    Foto7

    Visualizza poster
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    + 2
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    Interpreti principali9

    Modifica
    Issei Ogata
    Issei Ogata
    • Tony Takitani, Shozaburo Takitani
    Rie Miyazawa
    Rie Miyazawa
    • Konuma Eiko, Hisako
    Shinohara Takahumi
    • Young Tony Takitani
    Hidetoshi Nishijima
    Hidetoshi Nishijima
    • Narrator
    • (voce)
    Yumi Endô
    Miho Fujima
    • 4th daughter
    Miki Hayashida
    Shizuka Moriyama
    Hiroshi Yamamoto
    Hiroshi Yamamoto
    • Regia
      • Jun Ichikawa
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Jun Ichikawa
      • Haruki Murakami
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti37

    7,25.1K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    10allstar_beyond

    Simply the most beautiful and poetic film ever made.

    Every frame is like a painting. The film is like an art gallery, we walk through each scene with slow-tracking transitions while Sakamoto Ryuichi's hauntingly beautiful piano score plays. The faint colors of Tokyo has never been so breath-taking.

    After watching, I felt alone, cold and inspired. Strictly for audiences who are open to new things, because this is likely the first movie you'll see of this kind. Don't expect a complicated storyline, this is an observant piece of cinema focusing on the study of characters. It moves slow but is never boring. Be patient and just enjoy what is shown to you on the screen.

    This is how you really tell a great story visually. Mr Ichikawa Jun should be the man to adapt all of Murakami's stories.
    9screaminmimi

    typical? not?

    I'm a big Murakami fan and was fortunate to see Issey Ogata live in Chicago a decade ago. When I read this story, about six weeks before seeing the movie, it struck me as an atypical Murakami story, but then I'm not sure what's typical of his work, anymore. It does revisit his theme of the disappearing wife/girlfriend, but not in quite the same way as "The Wind-up Bird Chronicle" or "Dance, Dance, Dance." There's jazz. There's a WWII P.O.W. thread. There's a vehicular accident. There's a guy who seems to be living on the edge of his own life. All regular Murakami themes, but for some reason, when I read this story, it struck me as operating on a different plane from most of his other stories, maybe because it lacked the high-energy freaky magical realism of "Wind-up Bird Chronicle" or "Wild Sheep Chase." So while all these other flashy stories have been romping around in my imagination as potentially the first movie made from a Murakami work, this quiet and sad little tale snuck right past me.

    Using Ogata in this story also seems atypical, not that I'm fully conversant with his career, but when I saw him, he was doing a one-man show of mostly hilarious material stretched out on the Lily Tomlin-Marcel Marceau continuum. He's also a lot older than Tony Takitani is in the early scenes where he plays him as a college student, and that's something Ogata doesn't do much to disguise. That may be the most typical Ogata thing in this movie. In the stage show I saw, he used minimal makeup and did all his character changes in full view of the audience, including the drag turn, and, dang, if he didn't look like Lily Tomlin's twin sister! It was nice to see Rie Miyazawa in two non-kimono parts. And this is seriously non-kimono. Having both leads play two roles apiece is charming and a great showcase for these talents.

    I loved how faithful it was to the story as a literary object without being stilted. It was reminiscent of Paul Sills' story theatre and had the quality of a fable. It was both literary and cinematic, no easy feat. And, speaking of feet, Rie Miyazawa's are very expressive in this picture.
    10awalter1

    the art of melancholy

    This film, minimalist in the best possible sense, is a lyrical study of isolation and loss. Tony Takitani (Issei Ogata) grows up the loner kid of a jazz-playing, loner father. Like his father, Tony masters an art, drawing, and eventually becomes very successful. Early in his adulthood Tony has a few failed romances but never considers marriage until, in middle age, he meets a woman fifteen years his junior, the sight of whom for the first time adds an unshakable pain to his profound solitude.

    A long sequence of aged Japanese photographs acts as a prelude to the film, telling in a few minutes the story of Tony's father. This section of plot takes up a much greater portion of Haruki Murakami's original short story, and Jun Ichikawa made a wise decision in reducing it, though utmost respect for the source material is in evidence throughout the film.

    And then Tony's story itself begins, and if you are going to fall for this film, you do it then. From start to finish, really, the film is an episodic accumulation of small, deeply-touching scenes tied together by very simple yet evocative piano music and the enchanting voice of a narrator (Hidetoshi Nishijima) whose warm, thoughtful delivery makes one think of some poet of a bygone era.

    Tony's courtship of Eiko and his subsequent troubles draw us closer and closer to this sad, beautiful soul until his loneliness finally becomes absolute. Ichikawa solidifies these intense layers of feeling with wonderfully basic techniques: stirring skylines and skyscapes used as backdrops; lovely, tangible environments; and discrete, minimalist camera angles--key conversations shot from behind the characters, over the shoulder, for instance. As a side note, the one film to which I can compare "Tony Takitani" is Laurent Cantet's "L'emploi du temps" (France, 2001), which has a similarly touching minimalism married to the intense inner lives of characters.

    I was fortunate enough to see "Tony Takitani" at the 2005 Seattle International Film Festival, and of the films I have seen at the festival over the past decade, this ranks among my favorite three--the others being the 1996 Israeli film "Clara Hakedosha" ("Saint Clara") and 1999's "A la medianoche y media" ("At Midnight and a Half") from South America. I cannot imagine a better feature film to first bring the brilliant writing of Haruki Murakami to the big screen.

    Note: Murakami's "Tony Takitani" was first published in English in the April 15, 2002 issue of The New Yorker.
    8arvy

    Simplicity on the subject of loneliness. A shade of "grey"

    This is a slow, deliberate film on the subject of loss (and loneliness) The first few minutes don't exactly imbue you with confidence, and strike very much as a "pseuds" corner speciality.

    The filmmaker and the droll narrator however save you and produce a gentle portrait of a man who lives through loneliness.

    There are woman involved too, but the cast is sparse.

    I have read other users mention melancholy in their reviews. I disagree with this. This is a film simply shot and with a gentle simple piano score attached to it. There are no vibrant colours but it is just as visually enchanting as the "The thin red line" even for it greyness.

    It is the strength of the characters that however keep you engaged.

    Watch this.
    6EUyeshima

    Glacial, Idiosyncratic Journey for a Man Trapped by His Loneliness

    Director Jun Ichikawa demonstrates a uniquely idiosyncratic film-making style somewhat reminiscent of Yasujiro Ozu's work in his constant use of lengthy medium shots shot at waist level, as well as a certain narrative sensibility that focuses on elliptical episodes to unfold a story in a subtly uneventful manner. Unlike Ozu, however, Ichiwara verges somewhat toward contrivance in unspooling his tale, one that feels more like a paean to Alfred Hitchcock's "Vertigo". However, the Freudian subtext and Baroque melodrama of that classic have been submerged in favor of glacial pacing and implied emotionalism.

    The title character with the staccato name is the only son of a renowned jazz trombonist. He grows up to become a lonely technical illustrator who obsesses over his work and remains content in his solitude. He finally meets Eiko, a beautiful, demure woman with an even greater obsession - an uncontrollable desire for designer clothes. Upon his insistence, they marry and live happily for a time, so much so that he realizes he can never live without her. True to Murphy's law, tragedy strikes, and the plot turns on what Tony does next to fill the void in his existence. Based on a short story by popular writer Haruki Murakami (who wrote the intriguingly surreal "Kafka on the Shore" released last year in the US), the 2005 movie effectively captures the author's highly stylized world, in particular, Tony's solitude in a series of lingering silences and mundane activities punctuated by acts of quirky behavior.

    The beautifully muted cinematography is by Taishi Hirokawa, and it reminds me of Gordon Willis's work on Woody Allen's "Interiors". Similar to the Bergmaneque feeling of that film, Hirokawa achieves a consistent aesthetic that matches an art design that sees characters occupying clean white and gray spaces rendered with a soft graininess. Moreover, the camera moves gradually though pointedly from left to right as transitional devices to move the story's action forward as if following a horizontal timeline or looking though a series of slides. The technique is intriguing at first but eventually feels contrived, just like the literary conceit of having the characters finish the narrator's sentences (Hidetoshi Nishijima provides the penetrating voice narration throughout the story). There is also a meditative, Windham Hill-esquire music score by the estimable Ryuichi Sakamoto, which aptly captures the evocative nature of the story structure.

    The acting is unobtrusive to fit the mostly quiet atmosphere. In true Hitchcockian fashion, Ichikawa has his two leads play double roles - Issei Ogata plays Tony and his jazz musician father, and Rie Miyazawa plays Eiko and Hisako, the woman who responds to Tony's ad. Truthfully, neither makes that vivid an impression in either role, and that is part of the problem I have with the film, the lack of indelible characters to inhabit the hermetically sealed world that Ichikawa and Murakami have created. The paper-thin plot yields very little opportunity for emotional payoffs, and there is little that remains resonant after all is said and done. Even at a brief 75-minute running time, it feels like slow going and lingers with a vague sense of hopelessness. By the way, the DVD has no significant extras.

    Trama

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    • Quiz
      Nearly every shot in the movie moves from left to right, some are static (particularly toward the end) and only a few from right to left.
    • Citazioni

      Narrator: In that place, the boundary between life and death...

      Tony Takitani, Shozaburo Takitani: Was as slim as a single strand of hair.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in 2006 Independent Spirit Awards (2006)
    • Colonne sonore
      Solitude
      Written by Ryuichi Sakamoto

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 29 gennaio 2005 (Giappone)
    • Paese di origine
      • Giappone
    • Lingua
      • Giapponese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Tony Takitani
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Yokohama, Kanagawa, Giappone
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Breath
      • Wilco Co.
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 129.783 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 1765 USD
      • 26 giu 2005
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 556.268 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 15min(75 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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