FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

Find (見つける) + Key (鍵・正解)

映画に限らず、人生のヒントを見つける場所です。

FindKeyについてロケ地 (試験中)利用規約プライバシーポリシーお問い合わせ
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ザ・プレイヤー
ザ・プレイヤー

ザ・プレイヤー

19922h 4m★ 7.2謎ドラマスリラーコメディ犯罪

あらすじ

権力者“プレイヤー”を目指す若手プロデューサーを主人公に、ハリウッドの内幕をシニカルに描いた作品。グリフィン・ミルは、大手映画スタジオのエグゼクティブ。高級4WDを乗り回し、多忙な日々を送っている典型的な業界人である。やり手のプロデューサーである彼のオフィスには、朝から売り込みのライターや監督たちでひきもきらない。そんなある日、いつものようにオフィスに出勤した彼は、ある一通のハガキを目にする。そこには彼を殺すといった内容が書かれていた……。

作品考察・見どころ

ロバート・アルトマン監督がハリウッドの内幕を痛烈に皮肉った本作は、虚飾に満ちた映画業界の共犯関係を暴き出す傑作です。伝説的な冒頭の長回しは、観客を一気に業界の狂騒へと引き込み、フィクションと現実の境界を曖昧にする圧倒的な没入感を生んでいます。単なる風刺を超えた、映像表現の極致がここにあります。 ティム・ロビンスが体現する冷徹な野心は、道徳よりも成功が優先される世界の恐ろしさを浮き彫りにします。豪華なスター達が本人役で登場し、皮肉にもハッピーエンドが全ての罪を浄化するという、映画界の構造そのものを自己言及的に描いた、真に冷笑的で華やかな傑作です。

興行成績

製作費: $8,000,000 (12億円)

興行収入: $21,706,101 (33億円)

推定収支: $13,706,101 (21億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

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予告・トレイラー

キャスト

ティム・ロビンス
ティム・ロビンス
Griffin Mill
Greta Scacchi
Greta Scacchi
June Gudmundsdottir
フレッド・ウォード
フレッド・ウォード
Walter Stuckel
ウーピー・ゴールドバーグ
ウーピー・ゴールドバーグ
Detective Avery
ピーター・ギャラガー
ピーター・ギャラガー
Larry Levy
ブライオン・ジェームズ
ブライオン・ジェームズ
Joel Levison
Cynthia Stevenson
Cynthia Stevenson
Bonnie Sherow
ヴィンセント・ドノフリオ
ヴィンセント・ドノフリオ
David Kahane
ディーン・ストックウェル
ディーン・ストックウェル
Andy Civella
リチャード・E・グラント
リチャード・E・グラント
Tom Oakley

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: ロバート・アルトマン

脚本: Michael Tolkin

音楽: トーマス・ニューマン

制作: Cary Brokaw / デイヴィッド・ブラウン / Nick Wechsler

撮影監督: Jean Lépine

制作会社: Avenue Pictures / Spelling Entertainment / Addis-Wechsler Productions / Fine-Line Productions

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Filipe Manuel Neto
Filipe Manuel Neto
★ 10

**A remarkable work.** This is one of those films that I decided to watch without having a clear idea of ​​what I was going to find. I know that there are many people who like to know, read and even watch the trailers to decide what to watch, and I also do this moderately, but one of the sensations I like most in the cinematic experience is surprise, that feeling of pleasure, difficult to describe, that happens when a film pleases us and surprises us. Of course, the opposite could happen, the surprise could be bad, and the film could be magnificent rubbish. It happens! But I think you understand me... Robert Altmann is not a director I know much about. As far as I remember, I've only seen one film of his, “Shortcuts”, and I wasn't particularly impressed. However, I think any director has their ups and downs, and you can't categorize anyone for just one film or two. In this film, Altmann surprises in a positive way, with very careful direction and an attention to detail that I was very pleased with. The cinematography is good, the editing is very well done, and the rhythm is quite pleasant, with no dead moments. The opening scene is a true cinematic masterclass, with almost ten minutes without cuts and lots of camera movement. And throughout the film, the feeling that prevails is that we are led to peek, in secret, into a story that no one wants to be known. The script fits perfectly into this feeling of secrecy, taking us behind the scenes of the film industry through the hands of an arrogant and obnoxious producer who finds himself the target of anonymous death threats. He decides to question the person he suspects of, a screenwriter he ignored for many months, and ends up killing him. From then on, viewers are invited to follow him in his attempts to hide everything, along with the studio he works for, which has little interest in scandals. This is, obviously, a punch in the stomach of the Hollywood industry, where there is no shortage of unscrupulous, arrogant, pedantic, obnoxious people, willing to do anything for ambition, and where the moral conduct of the studios has not always been the most immaculate, preferring to ignore and /or hush up compromising situations whenever possible. With these characteristics, the film had everything to cause hives in many people within the industry. However, it did surprisingly well, garnered a lot of praise, a good box office and was nominated for three Oscars, continuing to be, even today, a film that is regularly shown on TV channels specializing in films. If the technical quality and the intelligent and scathing story are fundamental, the cast also contributed with the union of talents of several renowned actors. Tim Robbins leaves us with one of his most notable works as an actor, with a consistent and impactful acting, and is elegantly accompanied by Greta Scacchi who, in addition to resisting the idiotic idea of ​​appearing naked for no reason, knew how to interpret her character in a deep and controversial. In addition to them, the film also features good performances by Pater Gallagher and Whoopi Goldberg in minor characters, and with a veritable rain of cameos and brief appearances by actors, screenwriters and others, playing themselves, with many of them agreeing to donate the salary for that single day of filming for a social project at the time. The procession of notables is almost endless, making this film perhaps the American film with the most cameos and guest stars in the history of commercial cinema.

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

It’s the job of “Griffin” (Tim Robbins) to secure good storylines for his Hollywood studio and he’s good at filtering out the wheat from the chaff. The thing is, though, he’s getting on a bit and there are rumours abounding that he is on his way out. When “Levy” (Peter Gallagher) arrives from an erstwhile competitor, the writing looks more like it’s on the wall than on the page. He’s also been having some difficulties with a mysterious stalker whom he’s spurned, professionally, at some stage and who is now bombarding him with threatening postcards. Finally, there’s his more off than on relationship of convenience with “Bonnie” (Cynthia Stevenson) to which he is surprisingly indifferent. Under pressure and under siege, his tormentor starts to get under his skin so he determines to get to the bottom of that whilst cleverly manoeuvring his new rival into a cul-de-sac that can only end one way! What now ensues sees a plethora of genuine stars pepper a film that allows Robbins to show us a character that’s shrewd, ruthless and charmingly shallow whilst at the same time not averse to taking drastic measures. It’s those that attract the attentions of tenacious detective “Avery” (Whooping Goldberg) who has a dead body, nobody to pin it on and is curious about the burgeoning relationship between the girlfriend of the deceased (Greta Scacchi) and this outwardly brash and smarmy film executive. This has all the ingredients of a comedy thriller with loads of glamour, a good deal of pithy dialogue and it sends up the Hollywood mentality satirically and plausibly. Robbins is in his element and exudes a sort of selfish obnoxiousness that’s actually quite likeable as he treads on the eggshells of a fickle and unforgiving business. It packs a lot of story into two hours, raises a smile and an heckle in equal measure and is probably Robbins’s best performance to date.

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