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
© 2026 Bennu Inc.TMDB Logo

本サービスはTMDB APIを利用していますが、TMDBによる推奨・認定を受けたものではありません。

怪物
怪物

怪物

“怪物だーれだ”

20232h 5m★ 7.9謎スリラードラマ

あらすじ

大きな湖のある郊外の町。息子を愛するシングルマザー、生徒思いの学校教師、そして無邪気な子供たち。それは、よくある子供同士のケンカに見えた。しかし、彼らの食い違う主張は次第に社会やメディアを巻き込み、大事になっていく。そしてある嵐の朝、子供たちは忽然と姿を消した――。

作品考察・見どころ

本作が突きつけるのは、視点の数だけ真実が歪む人間の業です。是枝監督の冷徹かつ慈愛に満ちた演出は日常の違和感を増幅させ、観客の倫理観を激しく揺さぶります。安藤サクラの凄絶な演技と少年たちの瑞々しさが衝突し、銀幕には言葉を超えた感情の奔流が溢れ出します。 坂元裕二の脚本を原作とし、映像は行間の湿度を鮮烈に補完しました。文字では不可視な表情の機微や坂本龍一の旋律が重なり、物語は魂の救済へと昇華されています。映像でしか到達できない、主観の壁を壊した先の純粋な祈りを、その眼で焼き付けてください。

口コミ

あなたの評価を記録する

Netflix
Amazon Prime Video
Hulu

予告・トレイラー

配信サービス

サブスクリプション

Netflix
Amazon Prime Video
Hulu
U-NEXT
Netflix Standard with Ads
Amazon Prime Video with Ads

レンタル・購入

Amazon Video
Apple TV Store
Google Play Movies
FOD

特集レポート

FindKeyのエディトリアルチームがこの作品の深層や歴史を解説しています。

静寂と映像美に溺れる独りきりの夜。魂を浄化し、真実を射抜くミステリー・セレクション

FindKey Editorial2026/1/14

キャスト

安藤サクラ
安藤サクラ
Saori Mugino
黒川想矢
黒川想矢
Minato Mugino
柊木陽太
柊木陽太
Yori Hoshikawa
永山瑛太
永山瑛太
Michitoshi Hori
田中裕子
田中裕子
Makiko Fushimi
高畑充希
高畑充希
Hirona Suzumura
角田晃広
角田晃広
Shoda Fumiaki
中村獅童
中村獅童
Kiyotaka Hoshikawa
森岡龍
森岡龍
Kanzaki
黒田大輔
黒田大輔
Shinagawa

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: 是枝裕和

脚本: 坂元裕二

音楽: 坂本龍一

制作: 川村元気 / 山田兼司 / 市川南

撮影監督: 近藤龍人

制作会社: TOHO / Fuji Television Network / AOI Pro. / BUN-BUKU / GAGA Corporation

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Lachlan Thiele
Lachlan Thiele
★ 7

INT. COOKIE MONSTER – NIGHT Monster is the latest entry in the Kore-eda filmography (a filmography I still need to dive deeper into). Still, just like his previous films, It's a deeply personal look into a character, their motives but most importantly, how that motive affects those around them. Monster is a multi-layered beast; it retells one story from multiple perspectives giving us the whole cookie instead of just the crumbs. Usually, I'm a crumb kinda guy; I like to figure things out myself, putting them all together to get my cookie. Still, Kore-eda gives me the cookie; at points, he just hands the cookie over when instead I would have preferred the traditional 'show, don't tell' filmmaker mentality. Yet, without that one little critique Monster would have shot right up to a 4-star thanks to its standout performances from Sakura Ando as the mother and excellent direction (especially when it comes to blocking actors within a scene, yeah, I know a weird thing to point out but something I wrote down while watching) Anyway, please head out and see this one. It's worth the spoon-feeding. FADE OUT.

Lachlan Thiele
Lachlan Thiele
★ 7

INT. COOKIE MONSTER – NIGHT Monster is the latest entry in the Kore-eda filmography (a filmography I still need to dive deeper into). Still, just like his previous films, It's a deeply personal look into a character, their motives but most importantly, how that motive affects those around them. Monster is a multi-layered beast; it retells one story from multiple perspectives giving us the whole cookie instead of just the crumbs. Usually, I'm a crumb kinda guy; I like to figure things out myself, putting them all together to get my cookie. Still, Kore-eda gives me the cookie; at points, he just hands the cookie over when instead I would have preferred the traditional 'show, don't tell' filmmaker mentality. Yet, without that one little critique Monster would have shot right up to a 4-star thanks to its standout performances from Sakura Ando as the mother and excellent direction (especially when it comes to blocking actors within a scene, yeah, I know a weird thing to point out but something I wrote down while watching) Anyway, please head out and see this one. It's worth the spoon-feeding. FADE OUT.

Brent Marchant
Brent Marchant
★ 8

The perspective from which we view a situation infallibly provides us with a clear, irrefutable picture of its truthfulness, right? But what happens if we encounter someone who witnesses the same incident and comes away from it with a totally different interpretation? Both views can’t be “right,” can they? Or is it possible that none of us can see the totality of a scenario and claim to know everything about it? That’s the core takeaway from director Kore-eda Hirokazu’s latest feature, an ambitious, skillfully crafted tale told from multiple vantage points, all of them “correct” in their own right, despite the myriad differences that distinguish them from one another, a storytelling technique first developed by Japanese master filmmaker Akira Kurosawa in the screen classic “Rashomon” (1950). Kore-eda’s cinematic homage to the famed auteur, told in three separate but interconnected segments, focuses on the exploits of a rebellious pre-teen (Soya Kurokawa) seemingly prone to acting out as a bully. The youth’s unpredictable behavior, however, doesn’t tell the whole story. His actions appear to be cryptically interwoven with those of his overly protective widowed mother (Sakura Ando), his young middle school teacher (Eita Nagayama), his aging, softspoken principal (Yuko Tanaka), and his effervescent best friend (Hinata Hiiragi), many of whom aren’t always what they seem to be. There are forces at work here that are a cause for concern, prompting the often-asked question, “Who is the monster?”, a query that provides the inspiration for this film’s title. It’s intriguing to watch how the picture’s various story threads come together, reminding us of the old adage of not judging a book by its cover, poignantly illustrating that, no matter how much we may think we know about a particular situation, there’s a good chance we’ll never get a complete picture of it. Kore-eda serves up an eye-opening tale, one that gives us pause to think about our impressions and preconceptions in an age when many of us are all too quick to superficially judge what we see – and in a frequently flawed framework at that. The picture could stand to be a little more swiftly paced at times (especially in the final act), but this is arguably the director’s best and most sensitive work to date, one that, we can only hope, will have the kind of profound impact we need in an age where open-mindedness and tolerance are traits we could all stand to develop to a much greater degree – particularly when pieces of the puzzle are missing.

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

I'm not usually a fan of children leading films, but hats have to come off here for a really delightful performance from the young Hinata Hiiragi as the shy and shunned "Hoshikawa". We will get to him in a minute, but first the film is delivered in three parts as a fire slowly devours a city centre tower block. The first episode introduces us to "Minato" (Soya Kurukawa). He's a bright and friendly boy who lives with his widowed mother (Sakura Ando). She starts to notice that his behaviour is a becoming a bit erratic and after some investigation begins to suspect that he is being bullied at school. A visit to the recently bereaved Principal (Yûko Tanaka) reveals that his teacher "Hori" (Eita Nagayama) might be the culprit and apologies are made. The next segment takes up the same story, only this time we look from the perspective of the teacher, a caring and enthusiastic professional. Though there are similarities between the two scenarios, the conclusion from the first doesn't quite tie up with the information from the second. Then to the final instalment where the two boys take and hold really well the centre stage of this drama and we get to grips with the puzzles set already and discover more about their complex characters. It's this third phase that is quite captivating to watch. The older boy must tread a thin line between a peer pressure that thinks his friend is odd, even that he has "a pig's brain" whilst he, himself, realises that "Hoshikawa" is a friendly, curious and loyal lad who has quite a few domestic demons of his own to face, on pretty much a daily basis. Amongst the adults, there's plenty going on too. The head teacher is clearly sitting on a fairly hefty secret of her own and "Mr. Hori" faces a series of predicaments that reminded me a little of the recent "Teacher's Lounge". A typhoon, some tunnels and an old railway carriage provide a perfect focus for the concussion that isn't so much that, it's an invitation to see what might happen next. The director excels here at putting us into the minds of the children and of the adults whilst also allowing our own observations to watch a story of two young children at a sensitive stage of their lives - and it really does make you think and reminisce about your own childhood in equal measure.

badelf
badelf
★ 10

This film is the highest compliment to Kurasawa's Rashoman I've ever seen. Others have tried the (perhaps bonsai rule-of-three inspired) triple-POV, but I've always just witnessed a "yeah, so what." But this film - Kore-Eda's vision? Kurasawa himself would stand up and bow. It takes the master's style to a completely new level. Yuji Sakamoto and Kore-Eda have created the perfect film here. It's tight, it's paced incredibly well, and it's complex and layered like a fine wine. Kore-Eda threw away the book of film directing, and created two hours of in-your-face, up front and personal story-telling. And surprisingly, it worked quite well here. And Ryuichi Sakamoto's score? Is this where we talk about life after death? It's a masterful fit for Kore-Eda's vision.

おすすめの作品