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Japón (2002)
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Übersicht
Premierendatum:
2. Oktober 2002 (Belgium) mehrPlot:
A painter from the big city goes to a remote canyon to commit suicide. To reach some calmness he stays at the farmstead of Ascen, an old religious woman. Although but a few words are spoken love grows. | add synopsisFilmpreise:
16 wins & 8 nominations mehrNutzerkommentare:
A good reason for cinema to persist mehrBesetzung
(Auswahl der im Abspann genannten Besetzung)| Alejandro Ferretis | ... | The man | |
| Magdalena Flores | ... | Ascen | |
| Yolanda Villa | ... | Sabina | |
| Martín Serrano | ... | Juan Luis | |
| Rolando Hernández | ... | The judge | |
| Bernabe Pérez | ... | The singer | |
| Fernando Benítez | ... | Fernando | |
| übrige Besetzung in alphabetischer Reihenfolge: | |||
| Carlo Reygadas Barquín | ... | The hunter | |
Weitere Details
MPAA:
Rated R for some strong sexuality, nudity and language.Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsLänge:
130 Min | Argentina:132 Min | Canada:122 Min (Toronto International Film Festival) | Netherlands:143 Min | USA:122 Min | UK:133 Min | USA:128 Min (unrated version)Sprache:
SpanischFarbe:
FarbeSeitenverhältnis:
2.66 : 1 mehrTonverfahren:
DolbyMOVIEmeter: 
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Dies und das:
Director Carlos Reygadas financed the initial shoot of $50,000 himself. mehrHäufig gestellte Fragen (FAQ)
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Japón is not a film about Japan. It is a Mexican film, but not a film about Mexico either. For me, it is something really grand: a film about cinema and why it still exists. The story is rather simple and not at all world-shattering: a man, determined to kill himself, walks into a canyon in order to commit suicide in peace and tranquility. He moves to an old woman's house and, impressed by her attitude to life and somehow inspired by what is going on in the beautiful Nature around him, falls in love with or, or at least unfolds the desire to sleep with her. Telling the rest wouldn't take long but still spoil a lot.
The important thing is not the story (including logical character development) but the way it is told. The movie has the air of grandezza sometimes, it is the opposite of naturalism, but thus it is much more like reality` than a couple of Dogma-style films. When you are alone in nature, well, what else will you do but admire the wonderful landscape and small events happening therein for a couple of minutes, trying to absorb it as intensely as possible? As a result, there are quite lengthy moments in the film, which might repel some people but that's a pity because it means that they are unable to enjoy the immediate experience of beauty.
In a review I read the author charged Reygardas with being pretentious and cheap, and I guess he referred to the very last shot (which, by the way, could be the most astonishing technical achievement a cinematographer has ever performed!). I understand what he means, and in a way he is right but I find that what we see makes up for this oh so terrible lack of modesty. Seldom have I heard so little noise in a theatre after the last image of a film - it was completely silent (except for one person in the audience who couldn't help applauding). And this experience has confirmed me in two opinions: First, movies are not made for intellectual critics in the first place. And second, cinema will always have a reason to persist. Nothing like a television or DVD set can give you the same feeling as a movie like Japón on the big screen. Of course, there are a lot of films that need the big screen to be worth their money but, as opposed to them, Japón is something really, really great, touching our hearts AND senses AND also (it is not a silly movie!) brains.