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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ビバリウム
ビバリウム

ビバリウム

“ようこそ、夢のマイホームへ”

20191h 37m★ 6.0サイエンスフィクション謎ホラー

あらすじ

新居を探すトム(アイゼンバーグ)とジェマ(プーツ)は、ふと足を踏み入れた不動産屋から、全く同じ家が並ぶ住宅地<Yonder(ヨンダー)>を紹介される。内見を終え帰ろうとすると、ついさっきまで案内していた不動産屋が見当たらない。不安に思った二人は、帰路につこうと車を走らせるが、どこまでいっても景色は一向に変わらない。二人はこの住宅地から抜け出せなくなってしまったのだ―  そこへ送られてきた一つの段ボール。中には誰の子かわからない生まれたばかりの赤ん坊。 果たして二人はこの住宅地から出ることができるのか―?

作品考察・見どころ

本作の真の恐怖は、パステルカラーの街並みが象徴する「究極の均一化」にあります。ルネ・マグリットの絵画を思わせる無機質で完璧な風景は、現代社会が理想とするマイホーム主義や消費社会のグロテスクな戯画です。逃げ場のない閉塞感の中で、日常が解体されていく過程を冷徹に描く演出は圧巻の一言に尽きます。 主演二人の鬼気迫る演技は、親としての義務感という生物学的な罠を残酷に浮き彫りにします。不気味な子供の成長を通じて描かれる「育て、死ぬ」という連鎖の虚無感。それは単なるSFの枠を超え、私たちが信じるライフサイクルそのものへの鋭い批評です。美しくも忌々しい、至高のディストピア体験がここにあります。

興行成績

製作費: $4,000,000 (6億円)

興行収入: $488,000 (1億円)

推定収支: $-3,512,000 (-5億円)

※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

イモージェン・プーツ
イモージェン・プーツ
Gemma
ジェシー・アイゼンバーグ
ジェシー・アイゼンバーグ
Tom
Senan Jennings
Senan Jennings
Young Boy
Éanna Hardwicke
Éanna Hardwicke
Older Boy
ジョナサン・アリス
ジョナサン・アリス
Martin
No Image
Côme Thiry
Baby
Molly McCann
Molly McCann
Molly
Danielle Ryan
Danielle Ryan
School Mom
Olga Wehrly
Olga Wehrly
Crying Woman
No Image
Fionn Lockett
Boy at TV

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: Lorcan Finnegan

脚本: Garret Shanley / Lorcan Finnegan

音楽: Kristian Eidnes Andersen

制作: Violaine Barbaroux / Thomas Gammeltoft / Manuel Chiche

撮影監督: MacGregor

制作会社: Fantastic Films / Frakas Productions / XYZ Films / PingPongFilm / VOO / BeTV / Fís Éireann/Screen Ireland / Saban Films / Lionsgate

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

SWITCH.
SWITCH.
★ 8

‘Vivavirum’ slots in neatly next to Jocelyn DeBoer and Dawn Luebbe’s ‘Greener Grass’ and Richard Stanley’s ‘Color Out of Space’ to form a loose trilogy of deeply surrealist releases in 2019 that skewer our perceptions of suburbia and the family unit. Director Lorcan Finnegan has brought to life a disturbing, thoughtful and bleakly funny mutant of a movie. - Jake Watt Read Jake's full article... https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-vivarium-what-makes-a-house-a-horrific-home

actionace
actionace
★ 4

Pretty pointless movie. Signed up to review because I couldn't believe the rating this received. Yes, you get a weird realtor and a creepy kid but other than that you just watch the couple basically repeat each day hating being stuck. You're not going to learn anything more about the weird freaks or why they're doing what they're doing and will end up feeling like you just wasted your time. Yeah, I get it's supposed to be satire but pass.

jackcarlin18
jackcarlin18
★ 6

> **_Review on Horror Focus_** This indie sci-fi thriller Vivarium from Irish filmmaker Lorcan Finnegan is many things, one definitely being quite the head-scratcher. Not because of it being an intellectually challenging story, or one that is laced with twists and turns to create an unpredictable viewing, but a film that delivers a narratives so peculiar that it is like something you've never seen before. Take this with a pinch of salt, as there's certainly aspects which don't make the landing of such an ambitious plot, but let it also be known that Vivarium contains some impressions visual and narrative storytelling, enough to forgive some of the mid-act waffle that cripples the films momentum. Finnegan gets the ball rolling with power, keeping the story taught enough that we are thrown straight into the mystery early doors. This works extremely well as the tension begins to bubble within the first ten minute mark. The performances here from our main cast member already begin to show their brilliance, especially Jonathon Aris who sets a chilling foreshadowing tone with his appropriately eerie character Martin. The small (yet effective) amount of screen time we have with Martin is enough to set the tone, and we, like Tom and Gemma are forced to endure something that is so ominously intense that it leaves a lingering sense of dread. Unfortunately, this soon begins to simmer once Finnegan establishes the plot in its whole, and realisation settles on the simple fact that, after the 30 minute mark, there really isn't much else for the story to go. Yes the labyrinth maze of suburbia is strangely terrifying, and the strenuous repetition is effective, but after 15 minutes of having the child introduced, Vivarium begins to fall flat, and grow increasingly more stale up until after the sixty minutes in. The fantastic Poots and Eisenberg, and the deadpan humour do prevent this film from becoming a little too one-note, but this doesn't exuse more than a few scenes that will be a task to sit through, even in these current homebound world we are living in. There is a glimmer of brilliance in Finnegan's choice of release here, as what our main couple are enduring is poetically reflective of the life we are living in this mad pandemic virus. I found myself identifying with the irritated attitude our characters develop, and sympathised with them when their child (the boy) was well deserving of a slap. Vivarium is intelligently relative right now, and can definitely be perceived as as Finnegan holding a mirror up to the idealistic yet treacherous concept of what makes the perfect home, and the urge to be the perfect family. In fact, there's so much underlying aspects of Vivarium that are so incredibly reflective of the inevitable repetition that comes once a spunky couple are weighed down by family life, securing their "ideal" home and tolerating each others impurities under the same roof constantly. Finnegan exposes the dangers of the nuclear family here, and forces us to endure it too, warts and all. We even get those little moments in which Tom consistently chips away, digging a whole, not to be talked to, helped or interrupted by Gemma, who becomes a slave to ensuring nothing but contentment for their boy. This moment is humourous with a dark sting, and will be reflective of reality to many, but to those inside Vivarium is nothing but a nightmarish loop. This distorted utopia Finnegan creates is what's most effective, orchestrated by a Burton-esque palette that is as gorgeous as it is hauntingly off-kilter. The early 80's, Romero's Day of the Dead-like synth is undeniably effective, and carries the tension through to the final act, which although doesn't hit a payoff point that excuses the slow middle act, does add to the bankers reality Finnegan has crafted, and highlights the eeriness established from the beginning. While Vivarium does lose a tone of momentum when it hits the mid-way point, by the time it reaches its end, I can't shake the distinct feeling of unease I had to endure for over eighty minutes, and I can't deny that a film like this was an experience I have quite been exposed to before. I have been feeling really under the weather these past few days, and let's just say this only made me feel worse. Great job, I guess? VERDICT Vivarium is a simplistically disturbing suburban nightmare with a captivating story and little room for growth. Enduring its drab middle act may prove tricky, but once Finnegan blows the dust of the eerie intensity established from the beginning, you'll find there is much to be desired with this unsettling little indie-sci-fi thriller.

Kamurai
Kamurai
★ 9

Amazing watch, will watch again, and can recommend. Imogen Poots and Jesse Eisenberg (both from "The Art of Self Defense") are amazing in their roles as an abducted couple force to raise a child. This is an amazing premise (see "Solar Opposites" for something similar), and one that is extremely hard to discuss without spoilers. This is a wonderful mix of tropes. There is a prisoner / abductee trope, there is "adoption of a strange child" trope, there is a "troubled couple" trope, there is even a mystery trope. I'm fully of the opinion that the right thing to do in any abduction situation is to not reward the criminals with what they want because there is no reason that while they have all the power that they're going to do anything to benefit the victims. We get see an exploration of what people do in a dire situation and given a task, similar to a couple different "Twilight Zone" episodes. The production value is clearly here, and while they appear to have saved some money on limited locations, it clearly put to good use as the movie delves deeper into its story. I can't recommend this enough, please give it a shot all the way through.

Oswaldo (BlvckBruh)
Oswaldo (BlvckBruh)
★ 7

Sci-fi thriller, just not _"on the edge of sit"_ type. Lorcan Finnegan remakes his short film **Foxes** and adds a life message to it.

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