|
|
|
Bob
(Bill Murray) and Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson) look bored
with proceedings ... something viewers of Lost in Translation
can relate to
|
Losing
the plot
Lost in Translation
Stars Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson and Giovanni Ribisi.
Rated MA
Reviewer
:: Lt Simone Heyer
Some
movies don't quite live up to the standard their publicity sets.
Maybe it was arriving at the cinema five minutes late, maybe it
was the five-year-old sitting behind us asking her Mum all the poignant
questions, then double, while gnawing noisily on popcorn. Maybe
the movie was just a dud.
The
concept was fine. A middle-aged movie star, Bob (Murray), whose
best days are behind him, is in Tokyo for a week doing an advertising
shoot. He feels alone and somewhat reflective of his life.
During
a late-night drinking binge he meets Charlotte (Johansson), also
in Tokyo for a week. She's visiting with her photographer husband
who is gallivanting around Japan, leaving her to make her own fun.
I immediately
had to grapple with two problems: do you really get that jet-lagged
after a flight from the US to Japan, and how lonely and lost do
you really feel if you are spending one week in a city? A week is
just long enough to explore on your own.
So
Bob and Charlotte get around town and identify with each other's
home lives, despite the 30-year age difference.
As
they while away the hours together, she is attracted to his neediness
of her, and he is attracted to her quiet confidence and willingness
to hang around with him.
I found
myself hoping they wouldn't get it on, although a wild sex scene
in the middle would have given the film a bit of direction.
The
film reflects the way you feel in a new place with the effects of
different time zones and strangers. That semi-haze laziness overtakes
you slowly and drags you through the 90 minutes, but also dulls
the film. It's no Groundhog Day.
Simone rates
this movie
|