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Unagi

  • 1997
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 57m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,3/10
6,9 k
MA NOTE
Unagi (1997)
JaponaisFarceComédieDrame

8 ans après avoir tué sa femme, Takuro se réinsère comme coiffeur, en banlieue. Un ressort est cassé, il ne communique plus qu'avec une anguille qu'il a apprivoisée en captivité. Mais voilà ... Tout lire8 ans après avoir tué sa femme, Takuro se réinsère comme coiffeur, en banlieue. Un ressort est cassé, il ne communique plus qu'avec une anguille qu'il a apprivoisée en captivité. Mais voilà qu'il sauve une jeune fille qui veut se suicider... Rédemption ? [255]8 ans après avoir tué sa femme, Takuro se réinsère comme coiffeur, en banlieue. Un ressort est cassé, il ne communique plus qu'avec une anguille qu'il a apprivoisée en captivité. Mais voilà qu'il sauve une jeune fille qui veut se suicider... Rédemption ? [255]

  • Réalisation
    • Shôhei Imamura
  • Scénaristes
    • Shôhei Imamura
    • Daisuke Tengan
    • Motofumi Tomikawa
  • Vedettes
    • Kôji Yakusho
    • Misa Shimizu
    • Mitsuko Baishô
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,3/10
    6,9 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Shôhei Imamura
    • Scénaristes
      • Shôhei Imamura
      • Daisuke Tengan
      • Motofumi Tomikawa
    • Vedettes
      • Kôji Yakusho
      • Misa Shimizu
      • Mitsuko Baishô
    • 32Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 33Commentaires de critiques
    • 81Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 16 victoires et 14 nominations au total

    Photos64

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    Distribution principale47

    Modifier
    Kôji Yakusho
    Kôji Yakusho
    • Takuro Yamashita
    Misa Shimizu
    Misa Shimizu
    • Keiko Hattori
    Mitsuko Baishô
    Mitsuko Baishô
    • Misako Nakajima
    Akira Emoto
    • Tamotsu Takasaki
    Fujio Tokita
    Fujio Tokita
    • Jiro Nakajima
    Shô Aikawa
    Shô Aikawa
    • Yuji Nozawa
    Ken Kobayashi
    • Masaki Saito
    Sabu Kawahara
    • Seitaro Misato
    Etsuko Ichihara
    • Fumie Hattori
    Tomorô Taguchi
    Tomorô Taguchi
    • Eiji Dojima
    Chiho Terada
    • Emiko Yamashita
    Shinshô Nakamaru
    Sei Hiraizumi
    Sei Hiraizumi
    Seiji Kurasaki
    Toshirô Ishidô
    Sanshô Shinsui
    • Doctor
    Kôichi Ueda
    • Keiji - A detective
    Ken Mitsuishi
    • Detective
    • Réalisation
      • Shôhei Imamura
    • Scénaristes
      • Shôhei Imamura
      • Daisuke Tengan
      • Motofumi Tomikawa
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs32

    7,36.8K
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    Avis en vedette

    gilli

    Flawed but interesting

    This film deals with the theme of faith, its loss, its recovery. It has strong images, as usual in Imamura's films. It has also a well thought out plot development. But... it hints at directions that are never fully explored. There is a suggestion that the main character is insane. There are hallucinations. Keiko's behavior is also a little obscure at times. But as the core of the movie is melodrama, surreal aspects are only hinted at. That leaves a slight sensation of unachievement.
    7DukeEman

    A little gem

    THE EEL borders on dark humour when a man, who after eight years in prison for the murder of his wife, is released from jail. He sets himself up in a barber shop by the river and trouble comes knocking on his door and he can not seem to get away from it. Simple, yet effective, a very mature piece of work and pleasing overall.
    9jzappa

    Truly Unpredictable, Bold, Inventive Film-making

    The Eel does something so imaginative and effective in the way it tells its story. It really makes the audience interact. Explaining this would ruin its effect, a sort of thing rarely experienced anymore in filmgoing. It's difficult to find movies that actually redirect your thinking and stimulate you and make you suffer in that great, fulfilling way. So, I will leave you to take my word for it. What is amazing about what The Eel does is how it really enlightens the audience when it comes to the judgment and expectations of characters. The Eel probes meticulously and sneakily the strange progression of a person.

    Shohei Imamura, the film's cunning, subtle, and seemingly offbeat director, fashions the opening murder with what is in the first nanosecond of reaction aggravating and promptly recognized as a brilliant little effect. As the movie's main character stabs his cheating wife to death after slashing her frightened adulterous lover, blood sprays all over the camera, the scene becoming skewed and blurred through the bloodied lens, forcing us naturally to want to peer around it to see as clearly as we can the violence the character continues to commit. And at that point we realize, as is Imamura's intention, that we are the audience and that there is the movie, and that we are voyeurs who so badly anticipate such things as the passionately vindicating slaughter of a coldly adulterous lover. And from there, Imamura exploits the weakness he knows we have, but in what way cannot be predicted.

    Later in the film, Imamura stages a ballistic, ungraceful fight that includes many characters, but with a relentlessly stationary camera. No matter how intricate certain actions get, he refuses to let it be anything more than observed. His intentions are all to make us conscious of what we are thinking as we watch these scenes. It's a creative intelligence applied more and more rarely all the time.

    The cast is very carefully balanced. Certain characters are animated, some eccentric, some very stoic, and some are combinations of all three, yet they never become even remote resemblances of clichés. They are all meant to oppose or serve as comparison to each other in nature and chemistry.

    Another plus is the film's purposely awkward, infectiously gawky musical score that, like most music in Japanese films, is recurrent and sustained, a repeated series of only a handful of melodies that are very memorable.
    8Veskanderrai

    How a Japanese man copes with guilt

    The Eel tells a story about a Japanese man who copes with his guilt after committing a crime. (I won't go into details on the crime, that's for you to find out) The way he does this is what makes this movie a great one in my book. Not only does he turn himself in after the crime (with a great way of response by the police) he even makes a friend out of an eel in prison. Hence the name of the movie. Once outside the prison he tries to build up a barber shop and get his life back on track.

    The film is carried by its character interactions. Apart from these there is nothing else in this film, so for those who don't like dialogue don't bother with this film because you'll be bored.

    For the others, who like a story carried by characters, this surely is a must. The only flaw for me was the presence of a quirky UFO nut, but that's minor.

    And please watch the original version with subs and not some gruesome dubbed version. I never understood the appeal of a dub.
    7Quinoa1984

    Slippery when Imamura

    The Eel is a good kind of surprise as a film primarily if you are familiar with other films by this director; works like Vengeance is Mine, The Insect Woman, even his other Cannes winning The Ballad of Narayama contain a harsh view of humanity, unsparing and pitiless really, especially when it comes to how far human beings will take themselves into dark recesses. This film looks like it will go that way, but that is just in the opening minutes as we see Yamashita commit a brutal act (the always tremendous Yakusho, because he always is doing so much with so little in a natural, observant but commanding manner), and then it cuts ahead years later, out of prison, and he has to just move on with his life.

    There is the theme or metaphor or what have you with the eel, and a character or two even try to figure out and explain to Yamashita what an eel represents (fittingly, he does not know fully himself, which is the right character move on Imamura's part), though that is less interesting to me than what hoe Yamashita gradually becomes involved with this small community by this barbershop he works at, not least of which the young woman Keiko (Shimizu, very good here as well, if sometimes asked to go big and melodramatic when that is not her strong suit), who Yamashita saves from ending her own life.

    If anything it reminded me not what I sort of thought it might be ala Sling Blade (albeit very very different protagonists) than it is like one of those low-key comedy/dramas that were coming out in the mid to late 90s and into the 2000s in America. Of all things The Station Agent in particular popped in my head as far as this sort of outsider who is befriended by a few people despite the fact that the protagonist is reminded all too much that he may not be fully accepted (if he even wants to be), and a tone that is most interesting precisely because it sort of bobs and weaves (or, if I must go to the eel metaphor, a slippery creature you can never get a handle on) between a lighter comedic tone and something that is melancholic and contemplative about how one forgives onself.

    All of this makes the film sound more captivating than it is on the whole since Imamura takes his time with the storytelling, maybe too much (and I know I watched the newly released director's cut but hey that is how he wanted the world to see it), as there is some meandering with a side character obsessed with UFO sightings (again, 1996 for you) and Keiko's mother who pops up for some scenes and feels superfluous. Other developments happen that will eventually snowball by the climax, ie a pregnancy and another parolee who is definitely not doing life after jail the right way (two words: prayer beads), and the film picks up some dramatic steam in the last twenty five minutes or so.

    The Eel is a character study more than something that relies on shock value like Imamura's other work, but in a way that may make this his most accessible film, which is ironic given how it begins in a graphically violent set piece (not the amount of blood so much as the frankness of it and what Yamashita does right after the killings). It is almost like we have to decompress and find some sort of... is peace the word? This may take too much time to get to where it is going, but there is also a pleasure in experiencing what Yamashita is going through and what connection he is forming - if not romantic than just having a real friend in Keiko - and Yakusho keeps it grounded to that reality, despite some (odd) dips into surrealism for Imamura. 7.5/10.

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    Intérêts connexes

    Hidetoshi Nishijima and Tôko Miura in Conduis mon char (2021)
    Japonais
    Leslie Nielsen, Robert Hays, Julie Hagerty, and Lorna Patterson in Y a-t-il un pilote dans l'avion? (1980)
    Farce
    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comédie
    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight - L'histoire d'une vie (2016)
    Drame

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Winner of the 1997 Palme D'Or at the Cannes Film Festival tied with another title, Abbas Kiarostami's Le goût de la cerise (1997) from Iran.
    • Citations

      Takuro Yamashita: An eel's all a man needs.

    • Autres versions
      The theatrical cut is 117 mins., but there's also a "director's cut" (134 mins.).
    • Connexions
      Featured in Especial Cannes: 50 Anos de Festival (1997)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is The Eel?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 24 mai 1997 (Japan)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japan
    • Langue
      • Japanese
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Eel
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Sawara, Chiba, Japon(Police Station)
    • sociétés de production
      • Eisei Gekijo
      • Groove Corporation
      • Imamura Productions
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 418 480 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 29 879 $ US
      • 23 août 1998
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 424 683 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 57m(117 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono

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