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Der Große Japaner - Dainipponjin

Originaltitel: Dai-Nihonjin
  • 2007
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 53 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,2/10
4100
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Hitoshi Matsumoto in Der Große Japaner - Dainipponjin (2007)
An eccentric man aged about 40 lives alone in a decrepit house in Tokyo. He periodically transforms into a giant, about 30 meters tall, and defends Japan by battling similarly sized monsters that turn up and destroy buildings.
trailer wiedergeben1:41
1 Video
9 Fotos
ParodieSatireSuperheldActionKomödieScience-Fiction

Seit vielen Generationen beschützt ein "Big Man Japan" Japan von Monstern. Masaru Daisato ist der derzeitige große Japaner, jedoch hat er nicht den Status seiner Ahnen. Ein Kamerateam beglei... Alles lesenSeit vielen Generationen beschützt ein "Big Man Japan" Japan von Monstern. Masaru Daisato ist der derzeitige große Japaner, jedoch hat er nicht den Status seiner Ahnen. Ein Kamerateam begleitet ihn dabei wie er zunehmend im Elend versinkt.Seit vielen Generationen beschützt ein "Big Man Japan" Japan von Monstern. Masaru Daisato ist der derzeitige große Japaner, jedoch hat er nicht den Status seiner Ahnen. Ein Kamerateam begleitet ihn dabei wie er zunehmend im Elend versinkt.

  • Regie
    • Hitoshi Matsumoto
  • Drehbuch
    • Hitoshi Matsumoto
    • Mitsuyoshi Takasu
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Hitoshi Matsumoto
    • Riki Takeuchi
    • Ua
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,2/10
    4100
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Hitoshi Matsumoto
    • Drehbuch
      • Hitoshi Matsumoto
      • Mitsuyoshi Takasu
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Hitoshi Matsumoto
      • Riki Takeuchi
      • Ua
    • 46Benutzerrezensionen
    • 56Kritische Rezensionen
    • 62Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 5 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Big Man Japan: Trailer
    Trailer 1:41
    Big Man Japan: Trailer

    Fotos8

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    Topbesetzung99

    Ändern
    Hitoshi Matsumoto
    Hitoshi Matsumoto
    • Masaru Daisatô…
    Riki Takeuchi
    Riki Takeuchi
    • Haneru-no-jû
    Ua
    • Manager Kobori
    Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    • Warabe-no-jû
    Haruka Unabara
    • Shimeru-no-jû
    Tomoji Hasegawa
    • Interviewer…
    Itsuji Itao
    Itsuji Itao
    • Female Niou-no-jû
    Hiroyuki Miyasako
    • Stay With Me
    Takayuki Haranishi
    • Male Niou-no-jû
    Daisuke Miyagawa
    Daisuke Miyagawa
    • Super Justice
    Takuya Hashimoto
    • Midon
    Taichi Yazaki
    • Daisatô's Grandfather
    Shion Machida
    • Daisatô's Ex-wife
    Atsuko Nakamura
    • Bar Proprietress Azusa
    Daisuke Nagakura
    • Daisatô's Grandfather - Younger
    Motohiro Toriki
    • Daisatô's Father
    Keidai Yano
    • Young Daisatô
    Junshirô Hayama
    • Shintô Priest
    • Regie
      • Hitoshi Matsumoto
    • Drehbuch
      • Hitoshi Matsumoto
      • Mitsuyoshi Takasu
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen46

    6,24.1K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    9dunnypop

    Refreshing change from your typical monster movie

    I got a chance to see this at the Toronto International Film Festival, and I found this to be a quite refreshing and one of the more original films I've seen in the past little while.

    A brief synopsis, is that a documentary film crew follows a mid-age slacker who basically has nothing going for him in life... but what's odd is he has the power to grow to the size of a building and fight monsters ("baddies").

    The comedy during the interviews and daily life of Dai is very subtle. There is no music track and his facial expression are very mute. The monster scenes are hilarious, and the last 10 minutes made me laugh so hard.

    If you are very open minded with comedy, this is for you, but don't expect a typical giant monster movie.
    8valis1949

    Where Have All The Flowers Gone?

    BIG MAN JAPAN is a very clever spoof on 'The Super Hero Genre'. Depressed and middle-aged Daisato plugs along as a second-rate protector of Japan. The film depicts an altered reality in which cartoon monsters sporadically appear to create mischief and mayhem. The Big Man does what he can, but ends up causing as much confusion and destruction as he prevents. Plagued by waning popularity, the erosion of his powers, and family problems, he stoically soldiers on. As a documentary, the film succeeds admirably. We see this man robbed of his destiny, and watch as he explains his half-hearted efforts to regain some sort of balance between what he was, and what he has become. However, the film's special effects are cheesy, but actually add to the representation of a man stuck firmly in a meager existence. Daisato's life is entirely devoid of any social support network. He visits a grandfather, but this man is suffering from dementia in a nursing home, and is in worse shape than our hero. Daisato is allowed visitation with his wife and daughter twice a year, and his 'friendships' are paid geisha girls with whom he drinks heavily. Although a comedy, BIG MAN JAPAN, is not as funny as it is poignant, and this fact makes it a cut above.
    6drqshadow-reviews

    This Big Man Rewards Patient Audiences with a Cartload of Crazy

    Strangely paced, unflinchingly crazy and brow-furrowingly confusing, this is a tough movie to get a handle on. It's pseudo-documentary in the same style as Christopher Guest, but with a less obvious comedic timing, more humble, unassuming characters and a hefty injection of pure, unabashed Japanese absurdity. The camera's focal point is Masaru, a soft spoken middle-aged loser with a going-nowhere life and zero self confidence, who nonchalantly moonlights as the fifteen-story tall, nearly naked hero "Big Japanese Man." Despite saving the city from a series of rampaging monsters, public interest in his work is waning and he's beginning to find it difficult to make ends meet. Excruciatingly slow at points, it has a few interesting things to say about the longevity of the superheroic profession and the notoriously fickle nature of public favor, but much of that is lost beneath the burden of such a painfully dull lead character. Its dry, bizarre sense of humor hits the mark more often than not, and the CGI fight scenes make for quite the spectacle, but this really didn't need to be half as long as it is. Fans of the eccentricities of Japanese culture will have a ball with it, although they'll have to wade through some arid terrain to get to the good stuff. I'm still trying to figure out what exactly happened in the last scene.
    8MidnightTrash

    The trouble with being big in Japan

    Hitoshi Matsumoto's wonderfully deadpan "Big Man Japan" ("Dai-Nihonjin) is a brilliantly hilarious send up of Japan's giant monster movies of yesteryear. A postmodernist at heart, Matsumoto flips the genre conventions, grounding the beautifully weird world of "Big Man Japan" in reality through a dry mocumentary style that mixes interviews, archival footage and computer animated fight scenes with a razor's wit.

    Masaru Daisato is the latest in a long legacy of men who grow to mammoth proportions when juiced with electricity. Masaru spends most of his time as a normal-sized human being, surviving on a meager government stipend in a grimy suburb of Tokyo. But when strange monsters attack (and believe me they are strange), Masaru is hooked up to a power plant and juiced with enough electricity to grow into a purple underweared giant.

    Not that any of this endears Masaru to the citizens of Japan. The road to the power plant is plastered with signs critical of Masaru's actions and abilities. His house is covered in threatening graffiti and vandalized on a daily basis. Masaru is an outsider in a country of insiders, a colorful anachronism in increasingly bland times.

    Perspective is a central theme in "Big Man Japan"'s giant monster weirdness. Does having the ability to turn into a giant and save the country from destructive building-stomping monsters make you a hero or a freak? It all depends on who you ask.

    There's no doubt that Masaru is a loser. When not attacking giant monsters with a large pipe, Masaru sits in his graffiti-covered home eating dehydrated seaweed ("It only grows big when you need it.") while neighbors throw bricks through his windows. Masaru's wife and daughter have left him, photos are all that remains of his profession's illustrious past and his show routinely earns less ratings than the weather report. No one ever said it was easy being big.

    And perhaps this is the biggest joke in Matsumoto's wonderfully awkward film. Godzilla eventually became a friend of the children, saving Japan from countless invading monsters, but he was always a foreigner. Godzilla called Monster Island home, not the gray slums of Tokyo. Ultraman was from outer space not Osaka. This is an important difference. Forced to live among the very people he fights to protect, Masaru became the biggest oddity in a hegemonic society based on Confucian values.

    The world of "Big Man Japan" is one of dashed hopes and squandered potential, a world where Masaru's senile grandfather, made so by repeated exposure to high levels of electricity, zaps himself giant and wanders through the city. And the monsters, as outrageously weird as they may be, never actually seem threatening in any way.

    Instead, the creatures, with their comb-overs, phallic eyes and sexual perversions seem as oblivious as children that their actions do any harm. Masaru dispatches the beasts by clubbing them once in the head, not through a long drawn out fight, and their souls ascend to heaven in a campy 8-bit video game fashion.

    And by the end, when Matsumoto drops the mocumentary cameras and the computer animation for a ridiculous symbolism-heavy homage to cheesy rubber suits and miniature sets fare like "Ultraman" it hardly makes sense but is hilarious nonetheless. I would've preferred "Big Man Japan" didn't end with an allegory about Japan-China relations and the reliance on the American military for protection filtered through campy 1970s kaiju sensibilities but what the hell, it was one crazy ride.

    Taken from http://www.midnighttrash.net/?p=677 MidnightTrash.net: Your guide to everything under the radar.
    6bravelybravesirrobin

    Big Man Japan tells the tale of Masaru Daisato also known as Big Man Japan, the giant 30 foot tall super hero that defends Japan from invading monsters.

    Big Man Japan is one of the weirder films I've seen from Japan and anyone who's passingly familiar with Japanese cinema knows what a statement that is. Starring, written by, directed by and produced by one man comedy auteur Hitoshi Matusmoto, Big Man Japan tells the tale of Masaru Daisato also known as Big Man Japan, the giant 30 foot tall super hero that defends Japan from invading monsters in a similar vein to Ultraman and other Kaiju films.

    The twist being that everything in Masaru's life, including his monster fighting, absolutely sucks and the people of Japan hate him and think he's terrible at his job.

    That's a brilliant high concept but it's not really the film that Big Man Japan gives us, and partly that's why the film is so odd. It's not the subject matter, although stuff like a giant starfish/vagina monster that stinks is pretty oddball, but rather the tone. Big Man Japan is deadpan to the point that it seems sometimes to be actively taunting the audience with how unfunny it's being. Long sequences of the film are taken up with Masaru eating at a noodle place, driving his scooter, talking about how he likes umbrellas and doing other mundane tasks all filmed in a documentary style with minimal camera movement and subtle acting. It's actively boring at times but it seems to be intentional because the central gag is presenting the absurd and surreal monster battles in as deadpan and ordinary a way as the mundane aspects of Masaru's life. The long boring segments means the eventual pay off of a giant pair of purple pants seems all the funnier. Not that the documentary segments are without humour, particularly the scene with Masaru's daughter in her bunny hat and pixelated face, but it's a subtler humour than the giant electric nipples or enormous cat eared baby spouting poetry. Tolerance for this level of deadpan is likely to be low though so it's certainly not a film with wide appeal.

    People have moaned about the special effects for this feature but frankly on the budget this film had, and especially considering they're using motion capture technology I think they look great and even add to the humour since, again they mix the oddball and the deadpan. Being able to see the actor's facial expressions is much more important than a good looking suit or smooth CGI when you're doing this kind of subtle comedy.

    One final note, the last ten minutes of this film are absolutely hysterical. Having built up the threat of this unknown red monster with Masaru running away from it and finally having to face it again at the end we're all primed for a typical redemption story where Masaru overcomes his own incompetence and beats the big bad. I won't spoil the ending but suffice it to say the film undercuts this expected trope in the most ludicrous and hilarious manner possible. Much as individual scenes have a slow, tedious, excruciating, agonisingly, long build up to a gag so the film as a whole is 90 minutes of deadpan and 10 minutes of utter unrestrained insanity that had me laughing like a loon.

    For more film reviews check out www.wordpress.mummy.com or find out more about at http://about.me/AdamHalls

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    • Wissenswertes
      Hitoshi Matsumoto is a Japanese comedian.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in The Rotten Tomatoes Show: Observe & Report/Gigantic/Hannah Montana: The Movie (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Fureai
      Music by Taku Izumi

      Lyrics by Keisuke Yamakawa

      Performed by Masatoshi Nakamura

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 17. Juli 2008 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Japan
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Official site (United States)
      • Shochiku (Japan)
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Japanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Der große Japaner
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Realproducts
      • Yoshimoto Kogyo Company
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    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 40.796 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 7.133 $
      • 17. Mai 2009
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 9.795.470 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 53 Min.(113 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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