It's one of those unique, introverted gems, like The Accidental Tourist or The Piano, that either enfolds you with its generosity of spirit or leaves you cold.
Lost in Translation (2003)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:214
Fresh:203
Rotten:11
Average Rating:8.4/10
Consensus: Murray gives one of his best performances in this expertly crafted mood piece.
Theatrical Release:09-01-2004
Synopsis: Sofia Coppola's second feature-length film focuses on two guests at a Tokyo hotel--Bob (Bill Murray), a middle-aged actor in town to film whiskey commercials, and Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson),... Sofia Coppola's second feature-length film focuses on two guests at a Tokyo hotel--Bob (Bill Murray), a middle-aged actor in town to film whiskey commercials, and Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson), the young wife of a trendy photographer (Giovanni Ribisi) who is always out on a shoot. When Bob isn't on the job taking fragmented direction from the Japanese crew, he's receiving faxes on home decorating from his emotionally distant wife. And while her husband is away, Charlotte spends most of her time trying to motivate herself to do more than look out the window at Tokyo's urban sprawl. So when the two meet in the hotel bar, they strike up an unusual friendship, one that provides a welcome escape from their boredom and loneliness. With LOST IN TRANSLATION, Coppola cements her reputation as a thoughtful and inventive filmmaker. Every element of the movie is pitch-perfect, from the dreamy, atmospheric score to the expertly timed editing to the lingering shots of the characters and the city. Most importantly, Coppola's minimalist script allows Murray and Johansson to give astonishingly moving yet subtle performances as people who are lost in the limbo of a foreign country, but find each other for comfort and companionship. Both heartbreakingly sad and hilariously funny, Coppola's LOST IN TRANSLATION is that rare movie in which everything is in its right place. [More]
Starring: Bill Murray, Scarlett Johansson, Giovanni Ribisi, Anna Faris
Starring: Bill Murray, Scarlett Johansson, Giovanni Ribisi, Anna Faris, Fumihiro Hayashi, Yutaka Tadokoro
Director: Sofia Coppola
Director: Sofia Coppola
Screenwriter: Sofia Coppola
Producer: Sofia Coppola, Ross Katz
Studio: Focus Features
Reviews for Lost in Translation
A fidelidade de Sofia Coppola é devotada a seus personagens, e não ao espectador. E esta é, mais uma vez, a decisão correta.
How sorry can you feel for rich, unadventurous Americans in a major funk?
As a character study, the film works very well. As a romance or drama, however, it is nearly inert.
A lovely, evocative film...[but] Coppola insulates her depiction of Bob and Charlotte as earnest, delicate souls by making everyone else look pretty foolish.
a beautiful, lyrical cinematic ode to lost souls finding each in an unlikely place
Director Sofia Coppola’s second feature film is so smart and, yet, simple that it is nearly perfect.
It's that perfect movie that you watch in order to feel that you may not be alone in the world after all. It works like a dream.
[O]ne of the most astonishing films I’ve ever seen... [d]elicate and longing, tender and bittersweet...
Of course, Mr. Murray gets all the laughs with his exquisite timing and wry delivery, but Ms. Johansson makes an eloquent and charismatic listener.
I wasn't quite as impressed as I was apparently supposed to be, and I feel oddly left out because of that.
“Lost in Translation” is a movie about almost nothing at all except a tenuous connection between two lost souls.
Before you know it, Sophia Coppola has wrapped you in a warm, fluffy blanket and you'll find yourself looking out the window wondering about what's going to happen with your life.
Lost in Translation finds something that occasionally happens between people and presents it realistically...one of the best pictures of the year.
At this rate, writer-director Sofia Coppola is poised to become a classic storyteller who is more subtle, if not as grand-scale, as her father.
The film is poetically austere in dialogue but thoughtful. Like a walk on a spring day, Lost in Translation is not momentous but rather pleasantly freeing.
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December 14, 2007:
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