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IMDbPro

O Garoto Toshio

Título original: Shônen
  • 1969
  • 18
  • 1 h 45 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,4/10
2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Bin Amatsu, Tsuyoshi Kinoshita, Akiko Koyama, and Fumio Watanabe in O Garoto Toshio (1969)
Drama

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA young boy reluctantly aids his swindling father in a threatening scam.A young boy reluctantly aids his swindling father in a threatening scam.A young boy reluctantly aids his swindling father in a threatening scam.

  • Direção
    • Nagisa Ôshima
  • Roteirista
    • Tsutomu Tamura
  • Artistas
    • Fumio Watanabe
    • Akiko Koyama
    • Tetsuo Abe
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,4/10
    2 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Nagisa Ôshima
    • Roteirista
      • Tsutomu Tamura
    • Artistas
      • Fumio Watanabe
      • Akiko Koyama
      • Tetsuo Abe
    • 9Avaliações de usuários
    • 19Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 4 vitórias no total

    Fotos49

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    + 45
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    Elenco principal6

    Editar
    Fumio Watanabe
    Fumio Watanabe
    • Takeo Omura
    Akiko Koyama
    Akiko Koyama
    • Takeko Taniguchi
    Tetsuo Abe
    • Toshio Omura
    Tsuyoshi Kinoshita
    • Peewee
    LoLo Cannon
      Do-yun Yu
      • Victim driver
      • (não creditado)
      • Direção
        • Nagisa Ôshima
      • Roteirista
        • Tsutomu Tamura
      • Elenco e equipe completos
      • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

      Avaliações de usuários9

      7,42K
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      Avaliações em destaque

      6boblipton

      Another Well Made Oshima Movie For Me To Hate

      Tetsuo Abe travels Japan with his mother and father and little brother. They're con artists, pretending to be hit by cars and then mulcting the drivers for cash. The youngster makes up his own reality in which an alien comes from the stars to bring righteousness to the world. But sometimes it seems he believes it, sometimes he he tells this fiction to amuse his younger brother, and sometimes he seems to use it to comfort it somehow. He loves his mother and fears his father.

      I have concluded that, brilliant film maker that he is, director Nagisa Oshima rarely makes movies that I find particularly telling. He seems to hate all his characters, and blames them for the ills of Japan. He doesn't have any solutions; like many of the Japanese New Wave, he seems more intent on apportioning blame than is solving any problems. Sometimes that is an appropriate thing to do, but in this slow-moving movie of misery, falsehoods, and insanity, there seems nothing to do but throw up my hands at the rampant nihilism.
      5edtherevelator

      don't waste your time

      although not a terrible film, there's really nothing out of the ordinary to see in this. You feel no emotion for any of the characters, which is unfortunate because you want to like at least one of them. The fact that the subtitles were white really hurt the film. On the plus side, the soundtrack, while very scarce, fit the film quite well.
      noonward

      a sample of oshima's greatness

      'Boy' is, below the surface, a scathing commentary on post-war Japan. The country has been consumed by greed and has taken Western ideals to its hilt. The parents exploiting their son for money strikes into the heart a family that is so far away from the respect and courtesy of old Japanese values.

      As a contradiction, Oshima rejects the classical repertoire of Ozu or Mizoguchi and creates a radical language much more to his own invention. The soundtrack unsettles, the camera movement is slow and anxious ridden and the characters push against any sort of likability. The fact that a small boy is the most morally conscious out of a cast of adult characters is especially telling. Also used are still images and colour filters, almost a surefire way to portray the inner thoughts of a young boy who can't adequately express himself. The widescreen filming allows for much detail in the scenes, a rush of intricacies flood each shot. Exquisite to look at but also plenty to think about.

      Oshima is usually volatile in his ideas and this leads him to be a not very consistent filmmaker but when his ideas align themselves like this, there are very few who could direct better.
      7Jeremy_Urquhart

      Strange but good

      Can I call this film dreamy? I don't know if it's wrong to call this film dreamy. Maybe I watched it late at night, at a time when I should've been dreaming. But I don't know... the atmosphere struck me as strange, the use of colour was unpredictable, the whole movie seemed to glide right past me, and there was something unsettling about how it felt.

      The story is also a little intense. Maybe more so nightmarish or fever dreamish than normal dreamy. It's about a family who fake motor accidents - as pedestrians - to extort money from drivers. They have their kids involved, and then that leads to extra drama. Things don't play out as expected. Some things never happen, and some happen very quickly. Its arthouse in the "unpredictable structure" sense, but not in the "we're going to be boring and/or pretentious sense," because this film moved well overall.

      Nagisa Oshima was a strange but always interesting director. I don't know if I've disliked anything he's done, and films like Death by Hanging and Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence both his me pretty hard. Boy's another solid entry into his filmography, so it seems.
      10timmy_501

      Oshima explores identity formation

      The premise of Boy is quite simple: a middle aged couple travels around Japan and fakes accidents because they know hapless automobile drivers would rather pay a little bit of money to make their troubles go away then confront them. Most of the time they get the oldest child, who is never given a name beyond Boy, to quickly jump into a car from the side. The drivers must be very guilty people because they all assume they have in fact hit the Boy in spite of the impossible logistics they are presented with.

      The Boy is the main character of the film and he's as disturbed as you would expect a ten year old boy who works dangerous con jobs to be. Since his family moves around all the time he doesn't have any sort of perspective of place, he hears the names of cities they are in and ones they are going to but they are never more than names to him. The Boy also lacks the usual naivety and faith in others that are usually found in children that age; he sees the worst side of the strange adults he deals with and his parents are trashy criminals: in addition to being the mastermind of their scam, the Father is also abusive and manipulative. The Mother is actually not the Boy's real mother but he still prefers her to his father; she may treat him poorly and give in all too easily to his father but she at least occasionally feels bad and tries to make him feel better. The Boy is in the unusual position of being the most intelligent and mature person in most of the encounters he has with others.

      Although the Boy is disenchanted with humanity he is not disenchanted with all lifeforms: he repeatedly tells his baby brother and the Mother about the aliens from outer space. These aliens actually care about one another and help each other out instead of greedily deceiving each other. Basically, the aliens represent to him what family represents to most children his age. Unsurprisingly, he sees himself as a part of this mysterious but ubiquitous race, presumably one that has been placed in Japan by mistake.

      In addition to the fascinating characterization of the protagonist Boy is also interesting for its experimental style. Oshima experiments with still images and distortions (as in the scene in which the Boy wears someone else's glasses and everything is slanted) and especially with color: filters give scenes tone they wouldn't have otherwise, often suggesting the emotions of the Boy quite effectively.

      Oshima shows Japan as a country striving to find a sense of itself much as the boy does, particularly in the scene where Japan's traditional colors of red and white are displayed prominently in the background: not on the familiar flag but on a giant Coca Cola billboard. It's also no coincidence that the family exploits automobile traffic and not something more traditionally Japanese.

      With Boy Oshima managed to make a film that was simultaneously universal in its treatment of human nature, culturally relevant in its treatment of postwar Japan's national identity, and modernistically rich in its treatment of cinematic techniques.

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      Enredo

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      Você sabia?

      Editar
      • Curiosidades
        The role of the boy was cast by searching in Tokyo children's homes, eventually finding the young orphan Tetsuo Abe. Abe's own life resembled the fractured childhood of the character he was to play, and he was allowed to join the production with the children's home's permission. After the film's release, Abe was put up for adoption but refused it and chose to stay at the children's home's. He would never act again.
      • Erros de gravação
        While the boy is wandering through a village it is night time, at the ocean inlet it's dawn, but the following scenes are at night time again.
      • Conexões
        Featured in The Man Who Left His Soul on Film (1984)
      • Trilhas sonoras
        Roei no uta
        (aka: Song of bivouac) (uncredited)

        Composed by Yûji Koseki

        [Sung at the geishas]

      Principais escolhas

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      Perguntas frequentes14

      • How long is Boy?Fornecido pela Alexa

      Detalhes

      Editar
      • Data de lançamento
        • 26 de julho de 1969 (Japão)
      • País de origem
        • Japão
      • Idioma
        • Japonês
      • Também conhecido como
        • Boy
      • Locações de filme
        • Akita, Japão
      • Empresas de produção
        • Art Theatre Guild (ATG)
        • Sozosha
      • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

      Especificações técnicas

      Editar
      • Tempo de duração
        1 hora 45 minutos
      • Mixagem de som
        • Mono
      • Proporção
        • 2.35 : 1

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      Bin Amatsu, Tsuyoshi Kinoshita, Akiko Koyama, and Fumio Watanabe in O Garoto Toshio (1969)
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