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)

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ザ・ファイブ・ブラッズ
ザ・ファイブ・ブラッズ

ザ・ファイブ・ブラッズ

20202h 35m★ 6.4戦争ドラマ

あらすじ

ベトナム戦争からほぼ半世紀。ともに戦った4人の黒人退役軍人が、隊長の亡骸と埋められた金塊を探し出すために戦場へと舞い戻る。スパイク・リー監督作品。

作品考察・見どころ

スパイク・リー監督が放つ、血と誇りが渦巻く衝撃作です。単なる戦争映画の枠を超え、歴史の片隅に追いやられた黒人兵士たちの失われた尊厳を奪還する闘争を描いています。時代ごとに変化する画面比率や大胆な演出は、過去と現在が地続きであるという残酷な真実を突きつけ、観る者の魂を激しく揺さぶります。 とりわけ、デルロイ・リンドーが見せる狂気と哀愁に満ちた熱演は圧巻の一言です。PTSDの深淵を覗き込むような彼のモノローグは、戦争が肉体のみならず精神までをも永遠に支配し続ける恐怖を体現しています。赦しと呪縛、そして友情の絆。重層的なテーマが緻密に織りなされる本作は、現代社会に潜む歪みを鋭く告発する、映画史に残るべき傑作です。

興行成績

製作費: $45,000,000 (68億円)

※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

デルロイ・リンドー
デルロイ・リンドー
Paul
Jonathan Majors
Jonathan Majors
David
Clarke Peters
Clarke Peters
Otis
Norm Lewis
Norm Lewis
Eddie
イザイア・ウィットロック・Jr
イザイア・ウィットロック・Jr
Melvin
Mélanie Thierry
Mélanie Thierry
Hedy Bouvier
ポール・ウォルター・ハウザー
ポール・ウォルター・ハウザー
Simon
Jasper Pääkkönen
Jasper Pääkkönen
Seppo Havelin
ジョニー・チー・グエン
ジョニー・チー・グエン
Vinh Tran
No Image
Lê Y Lan
Tiên Luu

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: スパイク・リー

脚本: Danny Bilson / Paul De Meo / Kevin Willmott

音楽: Terence Blanchard

制作: Beatriz Levin / Mike Bundlie / スパイク・リー

撮影監督: Newton Thomas Sigel

制作会社: 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks / Rahway Road Productions

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

SierraKiloBravo
SierraKiloBravo
★ 4

Click here for a video version of this review: https://youtu.be/Ahb78xE_xyc Hooked by the trailer, I keenly awaited the arrival of _Da 5 Bloods_ on Netflix. This is a new Spike Lee movie that follows four African-American veterans from the Vietnam War as they return to Vietnam decades later. Their reason for going back is twofold - they are in search of the remains of their fallen squad leader but also to recover a pile of gold they buried while in-country. I’ll start off with the things I enjoyed about this. I thought it was great to see Delroy Lindo front and centre of this movie. He’s a great actor and he is by far the stand out in this. In fact the best part of the whole movie belongs to him in a fantastic monologue delivered directly to the camera. It sears and makes you feel uncomfortable to watch. His performance in those three or four minutes was so good that it elicits a reaction from you. It reminded a lot of the devastating monologue Jean Claude van Damme gives in his criminally underrated movie _JCVD_. It’s fantastic stuff. The other thing I liked was that Lindo and crew were the same age through the whole film, be it in Vietnam during the war, or in the present day. There seems to be some confusion online about this, my take on it was that this was an artistic choice to show how memories of the war stayed with the guys. When they reminisced from the present day, the things that happened to them back during the war were still affecting them. It was an effective way to get this across. Also from an artistic point of view I thought the way the aspect ratio of the screen changed depending on whether it was present day or during war was great. It gave you a visual reminder of the change of tone and storyline. So those were some good things that really stood out to me. On the other side there were a number of things that I found quite distracting about this, things that took me out of the film. Like how within the first 10mins there is a dig at Donald Trump. One of the characters refers to him as “President Fake Bone Spurs” which was a funny joke in passing, but then we switch to some actual footage of Trump at a rally and the on screen graphic identifies him as President Fake Bone Spurs. There’s digs like this all the way through and it felt odd and shoehorned in for a movie about Vietnam. To the point where towards the end of the movie, the biggest a-hole in the movie literally puts on a Make America Great Again hat. Like, we get it bro, you don't like Trump, can we please get back to the treasure hunt now? At times the movie does a subtle job of speaking its message, but at other times it feels too heavy handed. Lee treats his audience like idiots by having a character go on to explain a point that he had subtly made just in case you didn't get it, and then at other times like with the MAGA hat, he just slaps you in the face like as if nuance is beyond you. I think this means that for some viewers, rather than getting them thinking and the dialogue being thought provoking, it will just entrench them deeper in their beliefs by getting defensive. I also felt that the movie was too long. It clocks in at just over two and a half hours and it drags in places. At one point I thought “man this has been going for ages and we’re not even in the jungle yet” and looked at the timer to see I was only around 45mins in and there was still nearly two hours to go. I kinda feel like it could have benefited from a couple more sessions in the editing suite. There was one thing I couldn’t work out - one of the 5 Bloods has a scene where he reconnects with a lady he had a relationship with during the war. But the thing is she is nowhere near old enough to have been in her 20s in the 1960s, and the daughter they had is also nowhere near old enough to have been born in the late 1960s. Was it an odd casting choice or was their underlying explanation for it? If anyone knows, let me know! So yeah, overall it was a bit of a odd experience. It has moments of good stuff, but for me, the down times were too many and too long. This would have been a much better movie if it had a shorter runtime, and less over-explaining of its political messaging.

r96sk
r96sk
★ 8

I enjoyed watching this. <em>'Da 5 Bloods'</em> is very good, it kept me watching with interest from beginning to end. The cinematography is tremendous, there are many great looking scenes in this; the whole look of the film is top notch. The run time could've perhaps been shorter, but most war films tend to go on for a while to be honest. I will say that I didn't enjoy the start and end as much I did the middle, but there's still enough in there. I would also agree that some of the real life imagery used is unnecessary. The cast are excellent. Delroy Lindo is, for me, the star of the 156 minutes. He gives an outstanding performance as Paul, one I won't be forgetting any time soon. It's always a pleasure to see Chadwick Boseman (Norman), while Clarke Peters (Otis), Norm Lewis (Eddie) and Isiah Whitlock Jr. (Melvin) are all likeable in their respective roles. I unquestionably, with zero doubt, like those four in the lead roles, but man the original cast list would've been absolutely incredible. Could you imagine Samuel L. Jackson, Denzel Washington, Giancarlo Esposito and John David Washington in this?! Gutted it didn't happen, can't lie. Not a perfect film, but one I certainly felt entertained by.

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 5

Ok, so a team of old African American soldiers decide to return to Vietnam to find the body of their colleague who was killed in action - and to retrieve some $17m worth of gold bars. En route they have to face some personal demons; an old girlfriend and the locals who have their own plans... It's not dreadful, but it certainly could not be described as Spike Lee anywhere near his best. The gang do emanate some sense of comradeship and loyalty, but in such a gung-ho fashion as to render the whole thing little better than a run-of-the mill Nicolas Cage style shoot 'em up effort with a really rather episodic and inevitable structure and a storyline remarkably indifferent to the indigenous population. Two and half hours is far too long, to. Looks great, though but sorry, more miss than hit for me.

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