Cuando una máquina que permite a los terapeutas entrar en los sueños de sus pacientes es robada, una gran catástrofe amenaza. Solo una joven terapeuta, Paprika, puede detenerlo.Cuando una máquina que permite a los terapeutas entrar en los sueños de sus pacientes es robada, una gran catástrofe amenaza. Solo una joven terapeuta, Paprika, puede detenerlo.Cuando una máquina que permite a los terapeutas entrar en los sueños de sus pacientes es robada, una gran catástrofe amenaza. Solo una joven terapeuta, Paprika, puede detenerlo.
- Premios
- 6 premios y 5 nominaciones
Hideyuki Tanaka
- Guy
- (voz)
Satoshi Kon
- Jin-nai
- (voz)
Yasutaka Tsutsui
- Kuga
- (voz)
Brian Beacock
- Hajime Himuro
- (English version)
- (voz)
- …
Doug Erholtz
- Dr. Morio Osanai
- (English version)
- (voz)
Michael Forest
- Dr. Seijiro Inui
- (English version)
- (voz)
Shin'ya Fukumatsu
- Magician
- (voz)
- (as Shinya Fukumatsu)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesWhen Paprika interviews Konakawa in his filmmaker guise, his mannerisms and appearance resemble that of Akira Kurosawa.
- ConexionesFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Beautiful Animated Movies (2014)
- Banda sonoraParade
Composed and Performed by Susumu Hirasawa
Reseña destacada
What happens when you see a wonderful film, a truly wonderful one, and you are disappointed because the very last one you saw was from the same filmmaker and was very much better? I should have watched some trash first.
The better film I'm alluding to is "Millennium Actress," a wonderful slippery glide through a shifting of life, movies and personal memory. Several things made that great: the drawings were in some places marvelous; the reason for the slips was never explained; and the "wrapping" story was incredibly thin, just barely enough. It was clearly a movie about movies and how life and film make each other.
This one conflates life, dreams and movies in much the same way, and goes further by merging individual lives and dreams. But it is burdened by two things. The first is that the wrapping story is large, heavy. The second is that we have a tedious explanation about why the slips occur: some invented device. And it adopts the Godzilla/Transformers model where two giants fight, towering over the city. Jees.
Two things are superior, however. One is that the dreamworlds give the artist freedom to depart from the constraints of the real. It isn't surreal: that's a very specific thing. But you do have dancing refrigerators leading a parade to hell. You may not appreciate the visuals here, in fact I suspect most won't think them special. But I did.
But the main thing is the title character, a lovely redheaded virtual soul who lives in the dreamworld. She's the pinnacle of girl fantasy: capable, not real, fairy-like but strong, desirable but forceful, following the rules of the world sometimes and writing the rules at other. She's woven from something deep in the psyche, our usually unfound soulmate who writes our dreams that spill into our lives.
But her appearance and character isn't what amazes here. Its how many different ways the filmmaker has her interact with the dream world. I stopped noting them because they were so varied and clever. She flies of course, she morphs. She shares a body in the real world of a woman scientist. (There's a truly remarkable dream scene when a vagina is "unzipped" to the forehead to reveal the true woman within.) She merges with shadows, reflections, light and shadow. She appears from dolls and billboards, clouds. From cracks and folds. Its as if there was a list of all possibilities that is being exhausted.
I will suggest that you see this before "Millennium Actress." Then both will blow you away.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
The better film I'm alluding to is "Millennium Actress," a wonderful slippery glide through a shifting of life, movies and personal memory. Several things made that great: the drawings were in some places marvelous; the reason for the slips was never explained; and the "wrapping" story was incredibly thin, just barely enough. It was clearly a movie about movies and how life and film make each other.
This one conflates life, dreams and movies in much the same way, and goes further by merging individual lives and dreams. But it is burdened by two things. The first is that the wrapping story is large, heavy. The second is that we have a tedious explanation about why the slips occur: some invented device. And it adopts the Godzilla/Transformers model where two giants fight, towering over the city. Jees.
Two things are superior, however. One is that the dreamworlds give the artist freedom to depart from the constraints of the real. It isn't surreal: that's a very specific thing. But you do have dancing refrigerators leading a parade to hell. You may not appreciate the visuals here, in fact I suspect most won't think them special. But I did.
But the main thing is the title character, a lovely redheaded virtual soul who lives in the dreamworld. She's the pinnacle of girl fantasy: capable, not real, fairy-like but strong, desirable but forceful, following the rules of the world sometimes and writing the rules at other. She's woven from something deep in the psyche, our usually unfound soulmate who writes our dreams that spill into our lives.
But her appearance and character isn't what amazes here. Its how many different ways the filmmaker has her interact with the dream world. I stopped noting them because they were so varied and clever. She flies of course, she morphs. She shares a body in the real world of a woman scientist. (There's a truly remarkable dream scene when a vagina is "unzipped" to the forehead to reveal the true woman within.) She merges with shadows, reflections, light and shadow. She appears from dolls and billboards, clouds. From cracks and folds. Its as if there was a list of all possibilities that is being exhausted.
I will suggest that you see this before "Millennium Actress." Then both will blow you away.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
- tedg
- 23 jun 2007
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 300.000.000 JPY (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 882.267 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 35.593 US$
- 27 may 2007
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 961.196 US$
- Duración1 hora 30 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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Principal laguna de datos
What is the streaming release date of Paprika. Detective de los sueños (2006) in Canada?
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