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Tokyo!

Tôkyô!

Japan

2008

112 Min
Color
French, Japanese
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Bong Joon-ho, Leos Carax, Michel Gondry

PROD Anne Pernod-Sawada, Masa Sawada, Michiko Yoshitake

SCR Bong Joon-ho, Leos Carax, Michel Gondry

CAST Julie Dreyfus, Ayako Fujitani, Yû Aoi, Denis Lavant

Cannes, London (Film On the Square), São Paulo

Synopsis

Tokyo is a city of transitions in three short films. A young woman who finds her life useless experiences a metamorphosis. A disheveled Caucasian emerges from a manhole to face arrest, trial, and execution; he calls himself “Merde” and speaks a language only his look-alike attorney understands. Is he human? A recluse experiences human contact when a pizza-delivery girl faints at his door during an earthquake. He conquers fear to seek her out. A chair, a corpse, a hermit: sources of urban connection?—IMDb

Director

Joon-ho_bong

Bong Joon-ho

BONG Joon-ho studied Sociology at the Yonsei University and graduated from the Korean Film Academy. By 1995 he made three short films “Memories in My Frame”, “White Man” and “Incoherence”. He wrote and directed his first feature, < Barking Dogs Never Bite >, which won a Fipresci Award at the Hong Kong Film Festival in 2001. His second feature < Memories of Murder > won the Silver Shell award for the best director in San Sebastian Film Festival in 2003. In 2006 his third feature film, < The Host >, was selected for the Directors’ Fortnight at the Cannes Film Festival. —http://london.korean-culture.org/navigator.do?menuCode=200712260008&action=VIEW&seq=15403 

Leos-carax

Leos Carax

An unpredictable French filmmaker whose poetic style earned him a critically sound reputation on the heels of his debut feature, Boy Meets Girl (1984), Leos Carax has since gone on to explore the tortured ramifications of love in the modern world with such features as Lovers on the Bridge (1991) and the controversial Pola X. A native of Suresnes who was born to an American mother and a French father, Alexandre Oscar Dupont (his professional name an anagram of his first and middle names) directed a series of short films and dabbled in cinema criticism before putting his celluloid where his mouth is with his debut feature, Boy Meets Girl. A dramatic exploration of modern love, the film provided undeniable proof of Carax’s already assured, mature visual style and proved the first teaming of the director and his cinematic alter ego, Denis Lavant. In addition, Boy Meets Girl also found Carax forming a long working relationship with renowned cinematographer Jean-Yves Escoffier, a partnership… read more

Michel_gondry

Michel Gondry

Pioneering director Michel Gondry’s remarkable creative energy and ability to innovate have resulted in some of the most visually stunning music videos in the history of the medium, and his wild imagination and organic, childlike imagery raised the bar of what one could achieve in the short format. In particular, his technique of placing numerous cameras around a subject and combining the images to form a visually astonishing sweeping effect has become so popular that it has since gone on to achieve timeless notoriety in such films as the The Matrix. With a family background that consists of a number of inventors and technological innovators, Gondry, not surprisingly, is seen as a bottomless wealth of imaginative innovation.

Michel Gondry is a native of Versailles who was raised in a freethinking family that encouraged and supported his creative endeavors; his parents harbored a deep love of pop music and the works of Duke Ellington, in particular. Gondry’s grandfather Constant… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 9 wall posts.

rajiv ibrahim

17Jan10

4 stars for michel gondry's unique mind and heartwarming story, 3,5 stars for leos caraz's funny satire, and 2.5 stars for joon-ho bong's nonsense..  
Picture of Angel HERNANDEZ

Angel HERNANDEZ

15Jan10

Bong Joon Ho's and Michel Gondry's segments deserve my 5 stars Leos Carax deserves 4,I loved interior design,the whole Kafkaesque of waking up becoming something else...i dont even know what to say,just that i loved it lol  
Picture of Bora Celik

Bora Celik

6Jan10

I discovered this movie on Netflix after liking Bong Joon-Ho's movie Host and doing a search on what other movies he directed. Started watching Tokyo! and I was amazed how three different movies completely connected, giving you the claustrophobic feeling of loneliness of a metropolitan city. Loved all three but I couldn't keep my eyes off of the TV while watching the second movie by French director Leos Carax.  
Picture of Eny

Eny

11Dec09

love this move  

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Fans

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Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.
Spot

What is the 21st Century?: The Modern Director, Pt. 1

By Ignatiy Vishnevetsky on June 15, 2009
What is the 21st Century? is the column where Ignatiy Vishnevetsky tries to find an answer to the titular question. *** Above: Michael Bay on the set of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. "Who is
read article

Lists

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Reviews

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Untitled

By Schaumb​urg on August 3, 2009

Here my thoughts on Tokyo!

It’s a really little weired masterpiece… though not all segments are equally strong…

First Michael Gondry has an awesome sixth sense for humans… His story is…  read review

Forum

Displaying 1 discussion topic.

Tokyo! worth seeing before it DVDs?

8 posts by 8 people 9 months ago