

アリスのままで
"もうすぐ私はすべてを忘れる。けれども愛した日々は、消えはしない。"
Trailer
Overview
50歳のアリスは、まさに人生の充実期を迎えていた。高名な言語学者として敬われ、教鞭をとるニューヨークのコロンビア大学でも、学生たちから絶大な人気を集めていた。夫のジョンは変わらぬ愛情にあふれ、法科大学を卒業した長女のアナと医学院生の長男のトムにも何の不安もなかった。唯一の心配は、ロスで女優を目指す次女のリディアだけだった。ところが、そんなアリスにまさかの運命が降りかかる。物忘れが頻繁に起こるようになって診察を受けた結果、若年性アルツハイマー病だと宣告されたのだ。しかも、子供たちに50%の確率で遺伝をしてしまう家族性なのだ。アリスの家族に突き付けられた苦難…。アリスは気丈に闘うが、今の医学では記憶を失うことは止められない。ある日、アリスはパソコンに自分が残した映像を発見する。かつての自分から自分への“アリスのままで”いるためのメッセージとは──?
製作費: $5,000,000 (8億円)
興行収入: $44,779,195 (67億円)
純利益: $39,779,195 (60億円)
配信サービス
Cast
Reviews / 口コミ
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TMDB ユーザーの口コミ
'Still Alice' is a film that boasts a remarkable central performance from Julianne Moore. It tells the story of a University linguistics professor (Moore) as she is diagnosed a rare form of Auzheimer's disease. Richard Glatzer's direction of the movie can be viewed as a parallel to his own life and personal struggle as he lived with ALS disease. 'Still Alice' is full of emotive shots as the characters show care and support to Moore as she tries to continue juggling her career and family life with the disease. Aspects such as the music and cinematography is given a very straight-forward approach to allow the actors' performances to tell the story and to add a true to life direction. Based on the novel of the same name written by Lisa Genova, the screenplay is very faithfully adapted. The film really focuses on the story and the dialogue between the characters and some scenes and interactions are extremely moving thanks to how well it is written. Julianne Moore is perfect as the main character. She portrays her struggle with the disease with so much inner strength and dignity. Moore is supported by a solid cast such as Alec Baldwin and Kristen Stewart but are outshone by her brilliant performance. Overall, 'Still Alice' is a very good film. It is very touching and moving tale about coping with such a life changing and destructive disease. However, it seems to only be memorable due to Julianne Moore's incredible acting. ★★★½
At the ripe old age of fifty, renowned American linguist “Alice” (Julianne Moore) is at the top of her game and looking forward to a married life with three grown up children and a grand-child. Then she starts noticing that she is becoming a little forgetful. Those climbing the stairs then forgetting why you went up in the first place moments start to become more regular. She can’t recall the words for her lectures and presentations, indeed she can’t always even recall the topic she is supposed to be speaking about. These aren’t complete memory blackouts, but they concern her enough to go to doctor who confirms that she has early-onset Alzheimer’s. Her husband (Alec Baldwin) and her children rally around her, they do what they can, but in the end it is the distressing dismantling of a life that Moore presents quite poignantly here as her character’s illness worsens and it’s effects on her family resonate quite profoundly. The children themselves prove quite useful in portraying the differing responses to the illness, with independently-minded daughter “Lydia” (Kristen Stewart) who is already having a tempestuous relationship with her mother being one of the powerful litmus tests offered by auteur Richard Glatzer as they come to terms with the situation. There’s an especially effective scene where she essentially creates a trap-door, or exit strategy, for herself and that illustrates just how difficult it is for someone who’s life has always relied on her cerebral abilities, being gradually eroded to the point where reason becomes something blurred and complicated. It does flirt a little with sentimentality, but for the most part it is a thought-provoking, slightly observational, drama that raised quite a few question about our own mortality.



























