Sathfilms

Sathfilms

who knows anything

You can scroll the shelf using and keys

Lost in Translation

May 14, 2007

Some links about Lost in Translation. It was nice to find so many articles praising the film, but as always, some people hated it too. The interviews with Sofia Coppola are simple but they are inspiring in a sense, because she presents filmmaking in a very personal way – she collected stories and ideas and then put it together in script form. Moreover, many of her ideas are in the script and then in the film in the ways that they are, simply because she liked it and thought it fit. I find that reassuring, because often in the creative filmmaking process, analysis isn’t necessary (but it’s still often useful).

Sofia Coppola on LOST IN TRANSLATION

Sofia Coppola Talks About “Lost In Translation,” Her Love Story That’s Not “Nerdy”

24fps | Lost in Translation

Filmmaker Magazine | Fall 2003: TOKYO STORY

Flak Magazine: 2004 Oscar Dialogue on Lost in Translation, 01.29.04

MovieMartyr.com – Lost in Translation

Neon Gothic: Lost in Translation

NYCFilmCritic.com: Lost in Translation

Lost in Translation Loses little!

What do you think?

Please keep your comments polite and on-topic.

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

comments

Lost in translation is a fantastic film. I just love the tokyo backdrop and simplicity of the storyline. Bill Murray’s genius.

Asia Translate

October 7, 2009

I love love love this film! everyone that i’ve met has said that it’s ‘boring’, but i seriously dont think they understand what it’s about: with ‘proper’ films like lost in translation it doesn’t always have to be about the plot or whatever, it’s a mixture of emotions, identity, colour, music, location, script – I think most judge a film literally on its ability to keep them interested on the first sitting with minimal effort! I think that real film requires patience to look beyond the surface and to seek meaning out of an abstract situation. Thank you for this post! I’m glad someone likes it as much as i do! :)

check out my blog – http://www.urbanoptimist.wordpress.com

xxx

lm2703

January 21, 2010

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.