Lost
in Translation (2003)
Rated R
Starring: Bill Murray, Scarlett Johansson,
and Anna Faris
Rating:

out
of

|
One of the great things about moviegoing is that you will occasionally
see an actor or actress in a performance that you know is going to change
their career. Sometimes you see a film that provides that career-making
role for two people. Rarely, though, do you see a film that provides two
career-defining roles as well as being a showcase for the talent of a
young director. Lost in Translation is one of those rare films. Bob Harris (Bill Murray in his finest role to date) is a relative has-been
actor who's in Tokyo to film a commercial for Suntory whiskey. They're
paying him $2 million and he's only doing it for the money. His career
seems to be over. His marriage is on life support. After filming his scenes,
he spends a lot of time in the hotel bar. Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson)
is married to a rock photographer (Giovanni Ribisi). They're in Japan
so he can shoot an up-and-coming band. He goes to work and leaves her
to explore the city alone. She too ends up in the hotel bar.
Charlotte and Bob meet and
strike up a quick friendship. They begin to explore the city and their
feelings about where they are in their lives.
They have the kind of conversations that a couple might have on their
first few dates. They understand each other in a kind of relieving way,
as if they've each finally met someone else that "gets" them.
It's a relationship that borders on romance and melancholy at the same
time.
Murray's performance is subtle and beautifully layered. He's funny, sad,
and tired -- sometimes all at once. A scene involving a photo shoot, where
the photographer asks him to pose in some odd positions while holding
a glass of whiskey, is priceless. Bill Murray has had some strong supporting
roles that allowed him to explore a little of his acting prowess but this
is the role that should catapult him into a serious actor if not win him
an Academy Award.
Scarlett Johansson, who was wonderful in Ghost
World and The Man Who
Wasn't There, is astonishing here. In real life she's only 18 but she
plays a mid-twenties newlywed without ever seeming unbelievable. Her character
is intelligent and funny and Johansson turns in a performance that's full
of longing, sexy wit and humor.
Writer/director Sofia Coppola
has made what I would consider the single best film of 2003. It's subtle,
brilliant and moving. It's light years
ahead of her 1999 The Virgin Suicides, which she also wrote and directed.
Here, she has everything perfectly in place. The Japanese location, which
is almost a character itself, provides humor and beauty which counters
Bob and Charlotte's dislocated feelings. It's to her credit that she does
not allow her characters to just have sex and worry about it later. That
would have been the "Hollywood" way to handle things and this
film is too smart for that.
It would also be criminal not to mention the small role that Anna Faris
plays as Kelly, a Hollywood starlet who is shockingly similar to Cameron
Diaz in terms of ditziness. Faris is delightfully dim in the role, especially
a scene where she describes her father as anorexic. (Trust me, it's funny.)
I have not enjoyed any film this year as much as I enjoyed Lost
in Translation.
I enjoyed the performances of Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson and I
really enjoyed the direction of Sofia Coppola. And that's the only way
I can describe Lost in Translation: purely enjoyable.
Trivia: Sofia
Coppola designed many of the shots for the film by taking a series of
photographs throughout Tokyo and then recreating them with the cast
and crew, using the photos as references. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |