Have one to sell? Sell yours here
Lost in Translation [Blu-ray] [2003] [US Import]
 
See larger image
 

Lost in Translation [Blu-ray] [2003] [US Import]

Bill Murray , Scarlett Johansson , Sofia Coppola    Blu-ray
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (269 customer reviews)

Available from these sellers.


Amazon.co.uk Currency Converter
Amazon.co.uk allows you to pay for your items in your local currency. Restrictions apply. Learn More.
Learn about LOVEFiLM
Amazon.co.uk’s choice for film and TV series rental has over 70,000 titles, including thousands to watch online - search LOVEFiLM for titles. Enjoy a 30-day free trial and a £15 Amazon.co.uk gift certificate if you become a paying member. Learn more at LOVEFiLM.com

Special Offers and Product Promotions

  • Note: Blu-ray discs are in a high definition format and need to be played on a Blu-ray player. To find out more about Blu-ray, visit our Hi-Def Learn & Shop store.

  • Important Information on Firmware Updates: Having trouble with your Blu-ray disc player? Will certain discs just not play? You may need to update the firmware inside your player. Click here to learn more.


What Other Items Do Customers Buy After Viewing This Item?


Product details

  • Actors: Bill Murray, Scarlett Johansson, Giovanni Ribisi, Anna Faris, Akiko Takeshita
  • Directors: Sofia Coppola
  • Writers: Sofia Coppola
  • Producers: Callum Greene, Francis Ford Coppola, Fred Roos, Kiyoshi Inoue, Mitch Glazer
  • Format: AC-3, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Dubbed, Subtitled, Widescreen
  • Language English
  • Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
  • Region: Region A/1 (Read more about DVD/Blu-ray formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.85:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: R (Restricted) (US MPAA rating. See details.)
  • Studio: Universal Studios
  • DVD Release Date: 4 Jan 2011
  • Run Time: 104 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (269 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B001AQO400
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 77,349 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review

Like a good dream, Sofia Coppola's Lost in Translation envelopes you with an aura of fantastic light, moody sound, head-turning love, and a feeling of déjà vu, even though you've probably never been to this neon-fused version of Tokyo. Certainly Bob Harris has not. The 50-ish actor has signed-on for big money shooting whiskey ads instead of doing something good for his career or his long-distance family. Jetlagged, helplessly lost with his Japanese-speaking director and out of sync with the metropolis, Harris (Bill Murray, never better) befriends the married but lovelorn 25-year-old Charlotte (played with heaps of poise by 18-year-old Scarlett Johansson). Even before her photographer husband all but abandons her, she is adrift like Harris but in a total entrapment of youth. How Charlotte and Bill discover their soul mates will be cherished for years to come.

Written and directed by Coppola (The Virgin Suicides), the film is far more atmospheric than plot-driven: we whiz through Tokyo parties, karaoke bars and odd nightlife, always ending up in the impossibly posh hotel where the two are staying. The wisps of bittersweet loneliness of Bill and Charlotte are handled smartly and romantically, but unlike modern studio films, this isn't a May to December fling film. Surely and steadily, the film ends on a much-talked-about grace note, which may burn some, yet awards film lovers who "always had Paris" with another cinematic destination of the heart. --Doug Thomas

Arena

"Phenomenal … film of the year"

"Hysterically funny"

"A triumph"


Suggested Tags from Similar Products

 (What's this?)
Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product)
 

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
43 of 50 people found the following review helpful
Murray is a Genius 21 Aug 2007
Format:DVD
It seems a lot of people just didn't enjoy the film because it lacked a decent plot. Well, I don't necessarily think that is a bad thing, because the film is plainly focused on the relationship between the two main characters, two people who would never normally have reason to talk to each other.The story is a peek into two people's lives, who are trying to survive the boredom and frustration of being in a place where you have virtually no one to communicate to. It's a shame that a lot of the reviews here have failed to see, or do not rate the great subtleties of this movie.

If you have watched this film and didn't enjoy it then it just wasn't your thing. It doesn't mean it's a bad film. I personally felt very moved, amused and thrilled after seeing it, and I rate it as one of my most favourite films of all time.

and of course, Bill Murray is a genius at this type of roll and deserves some sort of recognition of his great talents.
Was this review helpful to you?
55 of 65 people found the following review helpful
By Priyan Meewella VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD
After proving herself a competent director in her debut film, The Virgin Suicides, Sofia Coppola returns with a much more mature and far more accomplished sophomore effort that suggests she is well on her way to surpassing her father, certainly in his more recent offerings. In stunning film of subtle simplicity she weaves a fragile and poignant friendship over a touchingly funny Tokyo background.

Lost in Translation is the tale of a chance collision between two souls feeling trapped in their lives and lost in a foreign world. Actor Bob Harris [Bill Murray] is endorsing a whiskey purely for the money although he enjoys the break from his wife, while Charlotte [Scarlett Johansson] is accompanying her neglecting husband John [Giovanni Ribisi], a photographer. Set against a delightfully colourful backdrop of Tokyo which provides much of the film's comedy, we watch the friendship between these two strangers slowly blossom into a delicate platonic romance.

While there is a distinctly melancholy tone to the film, it is not nearly as dark as The Virgin Suicides and instead portrays the redemption of its characters rather than their doom. Bob and Charlotte are drawn together by a sense of depression, both somewhat discontent with married life, disconnected from their partners, and feeling extremely lost in both Tokyo and in life. But these shared circumstances lead them to engage in those metaphysical conversations that can only occur between total strangers, since friends always wish to know the personal background. When asked by his wife, "Do I need to worry about you, Bob?" his flat response is, "Only if you want to". While in Charlotte he has found someone who will genuinely listen and also seeks to learn from his experience.

The stage is set for a perfect throwaway Hollywood romance, but the key to this film is that it never caters to what its audience expects and sometimes desires. The result is that some will find it frustrating to watch and without suitable conclusion. In fact, there is not even so much a plot as a series of carefully captured connections between the two leads and their separate journeys of self-discovery, making the affair more of a character-study. Combine this with an intentionally slow pacing, and the result is poetic work of rare beauty that will be difficult to appreciate for those who stick solely to traditional Hollywood fare.

Both leads turn in outstanding performances. Those who suggest this is Murray's definitive role are sometimes criticised on the basis that this is simply the same role he always plays. The key here is his handling in subtly underplaying the dialogue he is offered, most clearly visible in the kareoke scene where it would have been all to easy to go all out, but instead he remains perfectly in Bob Harris' reserved character throughout. Johansson's acting is brilliantly captured by Coppola, who seizes the smallest smile or subtlest inflexion of her voice and turns it into something both moving and beautiful. And it is such detail in its simplicity and lyrical beauty that raises this film far beyond most others, one such example being a scene with no dialogue where the camera pans slowly around Johansson sitting on the windowsill of her hotel room from where we see the sprawling vastness of Tokyo and Charlotte's confusion, displacement and sense of drifting without a word being uttered. Such moments are amalgamated with soft-focus close-ups, simple orchestral scoring and a lingering camera to hold a shiver-inducing ethereal quality.

Much of the film's humour comes from the culture-clash element we are shown as especially Harris stumbles through his job. The unsubtitled photo sessions allow us to share in his alienation, and while the film does sometimes softly poke fun at elements of oriental culture, it equally shows off the grandeur of Tokyo as a bustling and unparalleled urban metropolis. Murray's deadpan, "Am I drinking? As soon as I'm done..." and dour expression in numerous awkward situations are a mixture genuinely laugh-out-loud funny and touchingly tender.

The nature of the relationship between Charlotte and Harris is impossible to define but it is that quality which again raises this film above more standard romantic comedies with their clumsy manipulation of audience emotion in all-too-obvious tearjerking attempts. Here we are offered a rare glimpse in Coppola's very honest and pure depiction of this blossoming friendship which struggles in its fragility but is ultimately a positive experience.

There are some strange quirks to the film, such as the number of shots of Scarlett Johansson in revealing underwear. Of course, being a female director Sofia Coppola is able to get away with such things, but nevertheless it does eventually feel a little unnecessary unless it is intended to demonstrate vulnerability in her youthful beauty. Some of these quirks are wonderful however, such as the closing scene when Bob whispers into Charlotte's ear and we are never allowed to hear what is said. And yet it feels right that we are denied this, for it makes that momentary connection between them infinitely more intimate and we are instead left with an exhilarating curiosity as to just what it is he said that made her smile in that bittersweet instant.

Coppola has risen leaps and bounds with this incredible second film, a film that works through visual poetry where silence can speak volumes, an intensity in its characters and location, and its incredibly honest subtlety in the interaction between its characters. In its closing, just as in life, the leads don't solve all their problems and yet because of all they have shared, they feel a little better anyway, and in that profoundly bittersweet melancholia that runs throughout the film, so should the audience too.

Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Stunning... 17 July 2004
Format:DVD
This is quite simply the best film I have seen for a long time. To me, it is more or less flawless, and it pains me to say it as I've always maintained that she has been riding on her father's reputation, but Sofia Coppola has done an extremely good job.

Lost in Translation follows two Americans, equally 'lost' both emotionally and literally in Tokyo, brought to together accidentally but quite possibly soul mates. The film follows their friendship and mutual alienation with both hilarious and heartbreaking results.

Bill Murray is always a pleasure to watch as he has one of the most expressive faces of any actor working today and he is just excellent in this. I'm not surprised he was miffed at missing out on the Oscar. Similarly I was really impressed by Scarlett Johansson, who is far more deserving of the praise being lavished on Keira Knightley these days. The chemistry between the two leads is at times both electric and tender, translating the ambiguous relationship and common disillusionment between them.

Everything about this film fits together to make an absorbing and atmospheric whole. The soundtrack is brilliantly eclectic, from My Bloody Valentine to Elvis Costello to Air. Music plays such a central role in the film, highlighting the very different aspects of Tokyo and the characters experience there whether it be in the karaoke booth or the clubs or the temple Charlotte visits.

The cinematography is equally stunning and eclectic, ranging from the awesome sight of the Japanese mountains to the technological wonderland that is the city centre. It is parlicularly affecting the way it skips from the domineering (such as the skyscrapers and amazing views from the hotel windows) to the intimate (the sushi bars and the tranquil inner city paradise Charlotte explores).

Without a doubt, 5 stars, this is as good an exploration of human love and loneliness as I've seen.

Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
Most Recent Customer Reviews
I demand my hour and a half of life back
Goodness me ! The movie equivalent of 'The Emperor's new Clothes'. What were the critics who praised this film as 'a triumph' smoking and can I have some please. Read more
Published 10 days ago by mogster99
Self-gratuitous Pish.
In this film, a whole pile of nothing happens, with absolutely no feelings towards the dead, lifeless characters. Read more
Published 23 days ago by izziemack
Fantastic Film!
Lost In Translation is not a film for everyone. A lot of people find it dull and boring. It's a mood piece. Lost in Translation is not basic, cliche ridden romantic comedy. Read more
Published 23 days ago by Janis Livens
Lost in Translation - Lost in life
I looked in on this as I am a bit of a fan of Bill Murray (especially in his recent Wes Anderson collaborations) and the ad line `hysterically funny' on the front of the case... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Victor
This study of alienation alienated me
I see a sneer on your face as you cannot stand someone who finds your taste distasteful. But really, we find two unrelated people who have it all but they find an existential... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Merlin's Owl
Never been better
One of my favorite movies! It has a great atmosphere in Tokyo, fantastic cinematography, great acting and a compelling story. I guess you know all of this already. Read more
Published 1 month ago by tittane
A special film that only few can appreciate
I loved this film when I first saw it, and it has become my favourite. I find myself re watching it every few months and it has the same emotional impact on me every time. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Mrs D
The character development is the storyline here, and by God is it...
If you're expecting a strong plot and lots of action, Lost In Translation is most definitely not a film for you. Read more
Published 4 months ago by MaximumHeat
Annoying movie
This movie calls for the audience to sympathise with the protagonist's artistic integrity, which I feel is obscene. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Mr. M. Brown
what a movie!
What an amazing and fun movie! Bill, Scarlett and Tokio.... the photography and the music are unbeatable, the script too. Read more
Published 5 months ago by M. G. Feliz
Search Customer Reviews
Only search this product's reviews

Customer Discussions

This product's forum
Discussion Replies Latest Post
Closed-captioned - what subtitles? 0 1 Feb 2011
See all discussions...  
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 


Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
   
Related forums


Listmania!


Look for similar items by category


Look for similar items by subject








i.e., each product must be in subject 1 AND subject 2 AND ...

Feedback