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Lost In Translation Details

2003 DVD Certificate 15.gif
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 86,317 members

An American film star out to make a commercial in Tokyo meets up with a photographer's wife in a hotel bar. These two people are lonely and having to contend with a foreign language and a new culture. A friendship begins. Read more

Starring Bill Murray, Scarlett Johansson, Giovanni Ribisi
Director Sofia Coppola
Genres Comedy, Drama, Romance

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Lost In Translation

An American film star out to make a commercial in Tokyo meets up with a photographer's wife in a hotel bar. These two people are lonely and having to contend with a foreign language and a new culture. A friendship begins.

Starring Bill Murray, Scarlett Johansson, Giovanni Ribisi
Director Sofia Coppola
Studio MOMENTUM PICTURES
Run time DVD: 1 hr 37 mins
Certificate DVD Certificate 15.gif
Collections 100 Rom-Coms
Genres Comedy, Drama, Romance
Language English
Hearing-impaired English
Released DVD: 25 Jun 2004
Production year: 2003
Format DVD
  • Critics' reviews (6) of Lost In Translation

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  • 5 stars out of 5

    Is this really the same Bill Murray who spent decades making broad comedies such as Ghostbusters and Stripes for the world's adolescents? You'd never guess from his delicately restrained and masterful performance in Sofia Coppola's marvellous follow-up to debut movie The Virgin Suicides. He stars as world-weary film actor Bob Harris who's reluctantly staying in Japan to make a whisky commercial. There he meets, and begins to fall in love with, an unhappily married younger woman, played by Scarlett Johansson. She is equally as good as the woman trapped in a loveless marriage, and Coppola — rapidly revealing herself to be as talented as her father, Francis — wisely underlies the bittersweet soul-searching with a healthy dose of humour, that includes a standout scene featuring an overly energetic prostitute. By expertly using the neon-drenched backdrop of night-time Tokyo as an alien landscape against which the couple delicately explore each other's ambiguous feelings, this talented young director has produced a sad, funny, magical and almost irresistibly moving experience that could be the surprise package at Oscar time.

    • Radio Times
  • 2 stars out of 4

    On the plus side, Murray's portrait of a tired actor going through the motions is perfect (though it's impossible to ever imagine him as the action star he's meant to be), and the brief almost-romantic encounter is treated with delicacy; on the minus side

    • Halliwell's Film Guide
  • Most helpful member's review of Lost In Translation

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  • 142 out of 195 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars

    Lost On Some, But Not Me

    Lost In Translation could be a film easily lost on many. With its slow pace, lack of any clear storyline and no particular 'action' per se, it may not appeal to everybody.

    However, if you are a fan of film in any way, shape or form, I implore you to see this movie. The acting here is sublime, with Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson just outstanding in their respective roles.

    Lost In Translation is not only one of my favourite movies of the year, but also one of my favourites of all time. Its touching, funny, and just the right side of pretentious to be called a 'thinking man's classic'

      • David Levy from Totteridge, London
  • Most recent members' review of Lost In Translation

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  • 58 out of 93 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars

    Greatness achieved on a small budget

    In the 'Conversation with..' extra on the DVD Bill Murray acknowledges this as the best film he's ever been in. An ideal showcase for both his comic and dramatic abilities (his is an everyman persona that begs for your compassion whatever situation he's in) Sofia Coppola got the man she wanted for the job when Murray agreed to take the role of Bob Harris (a name familiar in the UK to those who remember The Old Grey Whistle Test!).

    Harris' film career is ostensibly behind him and to keep the wolf from the door he agrees to travel to Tokyo to record commercials for a Japanese whiskey (a well-trodden route for today's A-listers - the commercials not the whisky). At the same hotel a fellow American Charlotte (Johannson) has recently graduated and has travelled to accompany her photographer husband John (Giovanni Ribisi), except John's perpetually on a photo shoot and they spend precious little time together.

    Bob and Charlotte, both suffering from insomnia and going through individual life crises find themselves drawn towards one another. Coppola got a Best Original Screenplay Oscar for the sparky script and much has been made of who the roles were based on; Bob Harris = Murray himself; Charlotte = Sofia; John = Spike Jonze; Kelly = Cameron Diaz. Greatness achieved on a small budget and filmed under demanding circumstances, this is a near-perfect film experience. Murray and Johansson were awarded the BAFTAs they deserved.

    • Alfod
      • Alfod from Walsall
  • News and features

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    Lost In Translation

    Johansson frustrated Redford in Whisperer

    • 01 Aug 2009

    Robert Redford struggled to work with Scarlett Johansson on the set of The Horse Whisperer - because she frustrated him so much. The actress was 13 when director Redford cast her to star in the 1998 film, and although he acknowledges her acting talent he found it difficult working with her. In upcoming book Robert Redford: The Biography, a crew member from the movie claims the Lost In Translation star would constantly interpret her scenes against Redford's own vision. The book also alleges... Read more

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Rating breakdown

86,317 Member ratings
  • 100
9,881
  • 90
7,814
  • 80
12,957
  • 70
11,292
  • 60
12,112
  • 50
8,384
  • 40
7,453
  • 30
6,133
  • 20
6,809
  • 10
3,482

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    • An American film star out to make a commercial in Tokyo meets up with a photographer's wife in a hotel bar. These two people are lonely and having to contend with a foreign language and a new culture....