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。

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ザ・コーヴ
ザ・コーヴ

ザ・コーヴ

20091h 32m★ 8.0ドキュメンタリー

あらすじ

60年代の人気TV番組「わんぱくフリッパー」では調教師として活躍したものの、その後はイルカの保護に目覚め、以来30年以上にわたって世界各地でイルカ解放の運動に身を投じているリック・オバリー氏の活動に密着、和歌山県太地町で行われているイルカ漁に対する抗議行動の行方を追っていく。

予告・トレイラー

作品考察・見どころ

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興行成績

興行収入: $1,162,422 (2億円)

※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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キャスト

ヘイデン・パネッティーア
ヘイデン・パネッティーア
Self
No Image
Joe Chisholm
Self
No Image
Mandy-Rae Cruikshank
Self
No Image
Charles Hambleton
Self
No Image
Simon Hutchins
Self
No Image
Kirk Krack
Self
Isabel Lucas
Isabel Lucas
Self
Richard O'Barry
Richard O'Barry
Self
No Image
Roger Payne
Self
No Image
John Potter
Self

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: Louie Psihoyos

脚本: Mark Monroe

音楽: J. Ralph

制作: Jim Clark / Charles Hambleton / Olivia Ahnemann

撮影監督: Brook Aitken

制作会社: Quickfire Films / Diamond Docs / SkyFish Films / Oceanic Preservation Society / Participant

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Kenneth Axel Carlsson
Kenneth Axel Carlsson
★ 8

In Japan, there is a small town called Taiji. In Taiji, there is a place called the Cove. It is a secret place, a place where 23,000 dolphins are killed every year. The dolphins are not just killed, they are in fact slaughtered in the most brutal way imaginable. And all this without anyone really knowing that it goes on. I've heard of dolphins being killed in the nets when they catch tuna, but I've never thought that people actually hunted down dolphins as a source of food. Dolphins, like any whale really, seem a bit too majestic and mysterious to just slaughter like pigs and cows, at least to me. And if this movie is to be believed, they can also be quite dangerous to eat, as they contain a high amount of mercury. This movie is a documentary, focused around a signle event, where we actually see the slaughter of the dolphins. We see how the crew set up the cameras in the middle of the night, as well as how they scout out the area and plan the entire event. But more interesting than all that, we also meet Ric O'berry, one of the original actors and trainers from the tv show Flipper, who has now devoted his life to stopping the killing and abuse of dolphins. Being part of Flipper, and the one who actually caught the dolphins to appear on that show, he feels personal responsible for starting this whole mess. Of course, it would most likely have happened anyways, but we feel his pain. As a documentary, this is really well made. It is constructed much like a movie, but doesn't become too emotional, except at the very end, where we see Ric telling his story to the world, silently and with a screen on his belly. _Last words... I am not a big dolphin lover or anything, but this movie still got to me by the end, because... this seems so pointless. I dont think the dolphins are in any danger of being extinct anytime soon, but still, these creatures are mysterious and might have something to teach us, and for that, they deserve to be treated differently._

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

There is something pretty harrowing about this documentary and it's definitely not for the squeamish. It follows a clandestine investigation by some American conservationists who suspect that a remote cove near the Japanese town of Taiji is being used by local fisherman to kettle and then slaughter hundreds of dolphins. Facing the hostility of the locals and the authorities, the team are determined to capture video evidence of this atrocity and so using state of the art technology and quite a bit of legerdemain, they attempt to infiltrate the highly secure locale to obtain it. In the course of their planning, we are made aware of the role the International Whaling Commission has in policing the fishing of cetaceans around the world, and plausible assertions are made that Japan is using financial and economic muscle to attract new members to it's fold so they can have it's long-term bans reversed or a least modified. We are also advised of the dangers of mercury within the food chain, and of the dangers of consuming dolphin meat as children - frequently when it is ill-defined on the packaging and/or disguised as something else. There's fairly clear complicity from the authorities demonstrated here, usually presented in the name of tradition and to an extent this documentary rather sneers at that. These are centuries-old fishing communities that quite possibly have always fished like this. That's not to excuse their current, brutal, practices - but what this does lack is a little of the historical context in which these fishermen behave and which might possibly explain some of their government's broader strategy in a nation that looks, like many other island nations, to the sea for the bulk of it's food. At times it uses the imagery as a bit of a blunt instrument to make a point that would also benefit from augmentation by debate. It's thought provoking and well worth a watch, but maybe just a little too simplistic in it's broad-brush philosophy.

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