Lost in Translation
Lost in Translation (2003)

Lost in Translation

2/5
(41 votos)
7.7IMDb89Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

The first time that Charlotte sits down with Bob at the bar, Bob drinks almost all of his whiskey, but in the next shot it is nearly full again.

During the still photo shoot, the photographer asks Harris to pause so he can change films.

The assistant can be seen sliding the lightproof cover into the film magazine on the back of the camera, and then immediately removing the sliding cover, all without actually changing films or magazines.

Bob walks out of the hotel elevator wearing black shoes.

By the time he gets to the other side of the street, he's wearing multi-colored shoes.

The pink flowers in Charlotte's room disappear when she is listening to the "soul searching" tape, but reappear later in the movie.

In the karaoke room, a shot of Charlotte speaking shows the room number as 601.

In the next shot, Charlotte is sitting outside the room, smoking, and Bill comes out of a door now showing 602 instead of 601.

When Bob lays Charlotte on the bed after carrying her to her room, a few inches of stomach are visible between her sweater and skirt.

When the camera cuts back to her, the sweater is pulled down and no skin is visible.

When Bob first arrives at the hotel he has the first button or two undone on his shirt with no t-shirt visible.

When we see him in the elevator moments later, a white t-shirt is visible under his shirt.

When Charlotte listens to the "find yourself CD" she is looking at the front cover, which makes the back of the cover visible to the audience.

When she turns the box around, the back cover that she's looking at is different than the one we just saw.

When Bob is sitting on the Hotel's bedroom bed, dressed in a green robe and white sleepers looking sad, you can see the cameraman and a woman reflected in the window, above his head.

After the karaoke scene, Charlotte is in the hallway with zebra wallpaper.

The first camera shot looking down the hall, shows Charlotte with her head against the dark painted wall.

In the next shot looking directly at Charlotte and Bob, Charlotte's head is against the zebra part of the wall, however her position in the hallway has not changed.

When Bob lies alone near the beginning of the movie (just before he gets a fax), the clock reads 4:20 in a close-up shot.

At the end of the following long-distance shot, the clock is blurry, but clearly changes (probably to 4:21).

In the following shots, it's back to 4:20.

When Bob is with the masseuse, she pulls him down to the floor.

In the close-up, his head is right next to a small table with a phone.

When he gets up in the next shot, his head is much farther away.

When Charlotte sits in her hotel room just before the "Are you awake?" message slides under her door, the camera, operator, boom mic and sound recordist are all reflected in the window behind her.

After Bob and Charlotte come out of the arcade, their friend Charlie Brown calls them so they can get in a car.

As they are getting in the car we see a man running down the street.

In the next shot, he is gone.

In the sushi restaurant, Charlotte's chopsticks repeatedly disappear and reappear between shots.

When Charlotte is in the amusement arcade, she watches a boy playing an electric guitar game and smoking a cigarette.

When the boy is facing the camera the cigarette is on the right-hand side of this mouth.

It is on the left-hand side when the reverse angle is shown.

In the amusement arcade where Charlotte watches the boy playing the electric guitar game, a man in a red baseball cap walks away from the camera behind the boy.

In the next shot (reverse angle) the man is seen playing an arcade game using an infrared gun.

When Bob and Charlotte first see each other in the hotel elevator, a Japanese woman is seen wearing a kimono with the right flap covering the left.

In Japan, this is only practiced with burial kimonos, indicating that the scene was most likely flipped.

At the beginning of the scene where Bob is in the bath tub in his hotel room a boom mic is visible over the tub, peeking out from behind the wall in the foreground.

In both scenes where John rushes out of the hotel room, a wood-textured door is visible immediately next to his door at a perpendicular angle.

When Bob takes Charlotte back to her room after the first night out, the door he goes in is in the middle of a hallway.

When John is about to go away, getting his jacket and approaching Charlotte who is on the bed, his hair is dishevelled.

In the next shot (from the side) his hair is smooth.

Then again dishevelled when he's at the doorway.

Bob's pillow when he's in his room with Charlotte In the opening scene when Bob Harris is arriving in his taxi, he is looking out the window at the bright lights of Shinjuku where his hotel is located.

The one sign he notices however (the red bannered kanji with the blue circular lights) is a very distinctive sign located at Shibuya Crossing.

In the scene where Charlotte arrives at Shibuya Crossing, the camera shot from her point of view suggests she is crossing away from Shibuya Station, viewing the dinosaur on the jumbo-tron across the street.

In the shots where we actually see her crossing the street, however, she is instead walking towards the station.

After their long night out performing karaoke with Charlie and his friends, Bob and Charlotte's taxi can be seen crossing the Rainbow Bridge heading east towards Odaiba.

Odaiba is a man-made island located in Tokyo Bay.

This is a pretty far detour from their hotel in Shinjuku.

To get back to their hotel, they'd have to turn around and drive back over the Rainbow Bridge in the opposite direction.

When John ('Giovanni Ribisi' (qv)) first runs into Kelly ('Anna Faris' (qv)) in the lobby of the hotel he calls her Anna.

When arriving in Kyoto, there is a scene of what appears to be a 700 Series Shinkansen arriving at the station implying that Charlotte had been riding the 700 Series.

However, when Charlotte is shown walking away from a train, it is a much older 100 Series Shinkansen.

After Charlotte injures her toe there is a shot of her sitting in the window.

You can clearly see both of her feet including the toe that was injured (and later proved to be so bad that she needed to go to the hospital) but all toes look normal.

When Charlotte takes the subway, the orange "you are here" circle on the map indicates that she's at Shibuya station.

When she gets to the platform, a sign says she's at Omotesando station, one stop away on the Ginza line.

In the shower, Bob turns the showerhead counter-clockwise to tighten it.

Like elsewhere in the world, knobs in Japan loosen counter-clockwise and tighten clockwise, suggesting the scene may was flipped.

At the end of the scene where Charlotte first sees Bob in the elevator, she does not actually exit the elevator.

At the far right side of the screen, her purse is visible, revealing that she is just standing there.

When Bob is on the phone to Lydia after he gets back from karaoke, she tells him that the kids are eating breakfast and she needs to get them off to school.

In reality, it would be early afternoon in America when it's 4 a.

in Japan.

The credits of the film incorrectly spell 'Jean-Benoît Dunckel' (qv) as Jean-Benoît Dunckle.

Jean-Benoît Dunckel is one half of the French band, 'Air (I)' (qv).

Early in the movie, during her distress call home, it appears that Charlotte mentions she "even tried ikebana" (the Japanese art of flower arrangement), but in fact only does so later, while wandering about in the hotel.

Most or all of the game audio heard in the arcade is not the original audio from the games shown.

The first time that Charlotte sits down with Bob at the bar, her lighter suddenly moves from on top of the pack of cigarettes to her hand when Bob lights the cigarette for her.

After that, she puts down the lighter over the counter, a click sound can be heard.

However when the camera switches back to the front shot the lighter is on top of the packet again.

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
21 March 2004 USA USD 44,566,004
14 March 2004 USA USD 44,477,523
7 March 2004 USA USD 44,161,419
29 February 2004 USA USD 43,871,278
22 February 2004 USA USD 43,217,012
16 February 2004 USA USD 42,072,415
8 February 2004 USA USD 39,853,665
1 February 2004 USA USD 37,437,901
25 January 2004 USA USD 34,677,058
18 January 2004 USA USD 33,748,834
11 January 2004 USA USD 32,520,705
28 December 2003 USA USD 30,656,612
21 December 2003 USA USD 30,032,449
14 December 2003 USA USD 29,649,058
7 December 2003 USA USD 29,310,562
30 November 2003 USA USD 28,901,949
23 November 2003 USA USD 28,061,165
16 November 2003 USA USD 27,310,686
9 November 2003 USA USD 26,244,243
2 November 2003 USA USD 24,844,796
26 October 2003 USA USD 23,111,364
19 October 2003 USA USD 20,964,443
12 October 2003 USA USD 18,121,154
5 October 2003 USA USD 14,017,704
28 September 2003 USA USD 8,640,267
21 September 2003 USA USD 3,957,342
14 September 2003 USA USD 925,087
USA USD 44,585,453
28 March 2004 UK GBP 9,865,162
21 March 2004 UK GBP 9,736,381
14 March 2004 UK GBP 9,485,719
7 March 2004 UK GBP 9,117,002
29 February 2004 UK GBP 8,531,365
22 February 2004 UK GBP 7,869,545
15 February 2004 UK GBP 6,935,231
8 February 2004 UK GBP 6,230,318
1 February 2004 UK GBP 5,205,457
25 January 2004 UK GBP 3,860,634
18 January 2004 UK GBP 2,361,109
11 January 2004 UK GBP 797,071
worldwide USD 119,723,856
Non-USA USD 75,138,403
1 April 2004 Germany EUR 7,410,337
29 January 2004 Germany USD 2,883,326
22 January 2004 Germany USD 2,023,721
15 January 2004 Germany USD 1,016,190
18 March 2004 Hungary USD 59,000
14 March 2004 Italy EUR 2,915,233
29 February 2004 Italy EUR 2,775,180
22 February 2004 Italy EUR 2,686,578
15 February 2004 Italy EUR 2,604,535
8 February 2004 Italy EUR 2,496,072
1 February 2004 Italy EUR 2,338,430
25 January 2004 Italy EUR 2,148,874
18 January 2004 Italy EUR 2,014,002
11 January 2004 Italy EUR 1,783,144
4 January 2004 Italy EUR 1,433,975
28 December 2003 Italy EUR 1,060,221
21 December 2003 Italy EUR 722,409
15 December 2003 Italy EUR 518,157
7 December 2003 Italy EUR 161,871
6 June 2004 Netherlands EUR 1,268,114
18 April 2004 Netherlands EUR 1,065,564
10 March 2004 Netherlands EUR 584,968
21 March 2004 Poland USD 826,052
14 March 2004 Poland USD 733,128
7 March 2004 Poland USD 599,535
29 February 2004 Poland USD 430,276
22 February 2004 Poland USD 197,776
19 October 2005 Spain EUR 5,545,578
21 March 2004 Spain EUR 4,333,500
14 March 2004 Spain EUR 3,991,500
7 March 2004 Spain EUR 3,612,270
29 February 2004 Spain EUR 2,881,471
22 February 2004 Spain EUR 1,941,193
15 February 2004 Spain EUR 818,254
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
14 September 2003 USA USD 925,087 23
11 January 2004 UK GBP 797,071 96
2 January 2004 Australia USD 367,269 34
9 January 2004 Austria USD 82,014
16 January 2004 Belgium USD 129,666
23 January 2004 Brazil USD 202,456 26
9 January 2004 Europe USD 3,253,422 346
13 February 2004 Finland USD 43,392
9 January 2004 France USD 1,221,838
15 January 2004 Germany USD 1,016,190 88
9 January 2004 Germany USD 597,024
13 February 2004 Hong Kong USD 75,752 5
14 March 2004 Hungary USD 48,000 8
6 February 2004 Iceland USD 23,578
30 January 2004 Italy USD 135,483
7 December 2003 Italy EUR 159,644 31
22 February 2004 Netherlands EUR 113,419 19
6 February 2004 Norway USD 54,887
22 February 2003 Poland USD 167,255 35
23 January 2004 South Africa USD 60,827 10
15 February 2004 Spain EUR 818,254 150
6 February 2004 Sweden USD 92,808
9 January 2004 Switzerland USD 215,497
7 June 2004 Turkey USD 69,500 20
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
21 March 2004 USA USD 42,950 51
14 March 2004 USA USD 120,027 111
7 March 2004 USA USD 243,105 179
29 February 2004 USA USD 432,129 291
22 February 2004 USA USD 831,250 481
16 February 2004 USA USD 1,749,254 600
8 February 2004 USA USD 1,731,915 630
1 February 2004 USA USD 2,156,557 632
25 January 2004 USA USD 725,768 357
18 January 2004 USA USD 927,762 366
11 January 2004 USA USD 747,470 342
28 December 2003 USA USD 370,468 117
21 December 2003 USA USD 263,089 130
14 December 2003 USA USD 217,008 148
7 December 2003 USA USD 283,758 156
30 November 2003 USA USD 544,363 177
23 November 2003 USA USD 531,787 228
16 November 2003 USA USD 706,284 301
9 November 2003 USA USD 942,992 380
2 November 2003 USA USD 1,233,218 522
26 October 2003 USA USD 1,483,166 568
19 October 2003 USA USD 1,903,194 771
12 October 2003 USA USD 2,822,419 882
5 October 2003 USA USD 4,163,333 864
28 September 2003 USA USD 3,688,538 488
21 September 2003 USA USD 2,622,737 183
14 September 2003 USA USD 925,087 23
28 March 2004 UK GBP 55,556 70
21 March 2004 UK GBP 98,555 140
14 March 2004 UK GBP 201,853 209
7 March 2004 UK GBP 345,098 272
29 February 2004 UK GBP 393,842 281
22 February 2004 UK GBP 541,169 278
15 February 2004 UK GBP 421,708 252
8 February 2004 UK GBP 578,251 279
1 February 2004 UK GBP 867,534 280
25 January 2004 UK GBP 927,218 258
18 January 2004 UK GBP 1,051,380 187
11 January 2004 UK GBP 797,071 96
21 March 2004 Germany EUR 128,842
14 March 2004 Germany EUR 230,937
29 January 2004 Germany USD 859,605 126
22 January 2004 Germany USD 1,007,531 116
15 January 2004 Germany USD 1,016,190 88
21 March 2004 Hungary USD 18,000 8
14 March 2004 Hungary USD 48,000 8
29 February 2004 Italy EUR 51,664 21
22 February 2004 Italy EUR 48,701 20
15 February 2004 Italy EUR 62,847 27
8 February 2004 Italy EUR 93,421 37
1 February 2004 Italy EUR 135,483 41
25 January 2004 Italy EUR 80,102 30
18 January 2004 Italy EUR 134,228 52
11 January 2004 Italy EUR 194,588 81
4 January 2004 Italy EUR 209,759 73
28 December 2003 Italy EUR 245,801 59
21 December 2003 Italy EUR 111,284 57
15 December 2003 Italy EUR 233,753 57
6 June 2004 Netherlands EUR 12,504 20
18 April 2004 Netherlands EUR 26,730 22
22 February 2004 Netherlands EUR 113,419 19
21 March 2004 Poland USD 49,766 35
14 March 2004 Poland USD 81,490 35
7 March 2004 Poland USD 102,215 35
29 February 2004 Poland USD 160,057 35
22 February 2004 Poland USD 167,255 35
21 March 2004 Spain EUR 234,910 131
14 March 2004 Spain EUR 252,850 138
7 March 2004 Spain EUR 503,870 148
29 February 2004 Spain EUR 652,537 147
22 February 2004 Spain EUR 767,521 148
15 February 2004 Spain EUR 818,254 150

Comentarios

A woman, Scarlett Johansson, is in a five star hotel, beholding Tokyo's skyline. A man, Bill Murray, looks through a car's window, curious perhaps, but above all estranged.

RELEASED IN 2003 and written & directed by Sofia Coppola, "Lost in Translation" was a big hit in 2003-2004. It's about an aging actor, Bob Harris (Bill Murray), who's in Tokyo doing commercials for a week.

Sofia Coppola,daugther of legendary director Francis Ford Coppola made a very impressive debut with Lost In Translation. Even though this is her first movie you can clearly see he is completely in control.

Lost in Translation is a film whose meaning varies with perception. It could be like a piece of art for some beautiful is its every fabric.

After reading several articles/reviews on the film, scholars seem to agree on one key factor of the film: the aesthetics create a feeling of dislocation and anxiety for the viewer. Well, at least at the start of the film.

I've never written a review before but after watching this 10 years after its release I felt compelled to. Sofia Coppola has crafted an extremely gripping yet distant film that explores the very poignant and deep questions about human life.

I don't know if it was a case of "too much build-up" or what, but this movie was monotonous and lame. After I suffered through it, waiting to see what all the talk was about, I felt cheated out of a couple of hours of my life.

This is a prefect example of a movie that's not about a plot, but about a mood. A simple story about two lonely people.

An American actor and a beautiful woman meet in Tokyo and they are getting familiar with each other. Both of them do not get used to the stay in Tokyo and they are worried about each future.

Comentarios