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。

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“魂の歌声は、誰にも止められない。”

20002h 20m★ 7.8ドラマ犯罪

あらすじ

1960年代のアメリカの片田舎。チェコから移民してきた女性セルマは幼い息子ジーンを育てながら工場で働く。遺伝性の病気で視力を失いつつある彼女は、ジーンにだけは同じ運命をたどってほしくないと、手術費用を必死でためている。ところがある日、彼女はその大事な貯金を隣人の警官ビルに盗まれてしまう。しかも奪われた現金を取り戻そうとした彼女は思いがけずビルを殺した容疑で捕まり、刑務所に入れられてしまう。

作品考察・見どころ

AIが作品の魅力を深く読み解いています

興行成績

製作費: $12,500,000 (19億円)

興行収入: $40,061,153 (60億円)

推定収支: $27,561,153 (41億円)

※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)。

口コミ

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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。

深淵を覗く、魂の処方箋 ―― 絶望と暗黒を凝視する5つの叙事詩

FindKey Editorial2026/2/3

キャスト

ビョーク
ビョーク
Selma Jezkova
カトリーヌ・ドヌーヴ
カトリーヌ・ドヌーヴ
Kathy
デヴィッド・モース
デヴィッド・モース
Bill Houston
ピーター・ストーメア
ピーター・ストーメア
Jeff
Joel Grey
Joel Grey
Oldrich Novy
Cara Seymour
Cara Seymour
Linda Houston
No Image
Vladica Kostic
Gene Jezkova
Jean-Marc Barr
Jean-Marc Barr
Norman
Vincent Paterson
Vincent Paterson
Samuel
シオバン・ファロン・ホーガン
シオバン・ファロン・ホーガン
Brenda

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: ラース・フォン・トリアー

脚本: Sjón / ラース・フォン・トリアー

音楽: ビョーク

制作: Vibeke Windeløv / Peter Aalbæk Jensen / Leo Pescarolo

撮影監督: ロビー・ミューラー

制作会社: Zentropa Entertainments / DR / SVT Drama / ARTE / France 3 Cinéma / Blind Spot Pictures / Liberator Productions / Íslenska kvikmyndasamsteypan / Pain Unlimited Filmproduktion / Trust Film Svenska / Cinematograph / What Else? / ARTE France Cinéma / Film i Väst / WDR

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

FrontrunnerParis
FrontrunnerParis
★ 10

Dazzling Björk in this indictment against the death sentence, in tight close-ups. This film is a UFO, musical without being.

badelf
badelf
★ 6

I have tremendous respect for Lars von Trier's work, and I deeply admire his courage in attempting to fuse drama with musical theater. "Dancer in the Dark" is nothing if not audacious. Unfortunately, ambition alone doesn't make a successful film, and this one fails both as a drama and as a musical. As drama, the film stumbles on two fundamental levels. First, the handheld, shaky camera movement is completely unnecessary. Von Trier broke other Dogme 95 rules throughout this film, so why cling to this one annoying restriction? The constant jittering ruins suspension of disbelief, pulling us out of the story when we should be immersed in Selma's tragedy. Second, and more damning, there's no redeeming value to the bleak outcome. What have we learned? This is Greek tragedy without the moral lesson—the protagonist dies, and we're left with nothing but emptiness. Catharsis requires meaning, and "Dancer in the Dark" offers none. As a musical, it fares no better. Musicals, even dark ones, require some happiness, continuity, or saving grace. The genre demands transcendence, a moment where song lifts us beyond suffering. Here, there is none. That said, Björk does a tremendous job with what she's given, and casting Joel Grey in the final courtroom musical number was absolutely brilliant, a meta-theatrical stroke that acknowledges the genre's history while subverting it. But brilliance in moments doesn't rescue a fundamentally flawed film. "Dancer in the Dark" is an admirable failure.

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

You get a clue as to the slightly surreal nature of the drama right from a start that sees Björk and Catherine Deneuve doing their own amateur dramatics rehearsals of “The Sound of Music”! It turns out that the former, “Selma”, is a Czech immigrant to the USA who is suffering from a progressive blindness that she has passed on to her young son. She knows that he still has time to have corrective surgery, but she has to earn the cash to pay for that so works at a tool assembly plant and saves every cent she can. She has a small group of friends, mainly just “Kathy” (Deneuve) and “Jeff” (Peter Stormare) who would like to develop their relationship despite her obvious, though always polite, reluctance. It might be that she could have achieved her goal but for a violent altercation with “Bill” (David Morse) that sees her facing a criminal trial. Now we know what happened, and I suspect we would all be shouting the best course of action from the auditorium, but will “Selma” listen to anyone? Why? Well she has a rather unique psychological recourse when the going gets tough. She imagines that the scenario is to feature in a piece of musical theatre - and, of course, we know that the joyous lyrics and perfectly choreographed dancing will always provide for an happy ending. What chance here, though? Aside from her singing prowess, Björk also presents us with a character that is simultaneously confident and vulnerable at the same time. “Selma” is shy yet outgoing, she has a determination to see her son gets his treatment at all costs, but still has time to dream of being “Maria” (as in Julie Andrews). Now I didn't love the jarring, hand-held, photography; there is a curious frostiness to the look of the film - despite the glowing efforts from the underused Deveuve and I can’t pretend that I fully grasped quite why the dispute with “Bill” followed the path it did, but I still found I cared for this young woman and about what happened to her as her declining sight seemed to become symbolic of something more, something quite sad. It does take it’s time, but there is some humour wrapped up in this frequently quite dark analysis of not just human spirit and resilience but of 1960s small town America. Perhaps singing “My Favourite Things” does work?

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