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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パシフィック・リム
パシフィック・リム

パシフィック・リム

“人類最後の望みは、この巨兵。”

20132h 12m★ 6.9アクションサイエンスフィクションアドベンチャー

あらすじ

2013年、突然未知の巨大生命体が太平洋の深海から現われる。それは世界各国の都市を次々と破壊して回り、瞬く間に人類は破滅寸前へと追い込まれてしまう。人類は一致団結して科学や軍事のテクノロジーを結集し、生命体に対抗可能な人型巨大兵器イェーガーの開発に成功する。パイロットとして選ばれた精鋭たちはイェーガーに乗り込んで生命体に立ち向かっていくが、その底知れぬパワーに苦戦を強いられていく。

作品考察・見どころ

ギレルモ・デル・トロ監督が怪獣とロボットへの偏愛を注ぎ、圧倒的な質量感で結実させた傑作です。見どころは二人一組で脳を同調させる「ドリフト」という設定。孤独を分かち合い欠落を補い合う人間ドラマが、鉄錆と雨に濡れた巨大兵器の激闘に血の通った熱量を与えています。 映像における物理的な重みの描写は圧巻で、巨大な拳が空気を切り裂く雄姿は実在するような説得力に満ちています。絶望を前に種族を超えて手を取り合う人類の意志こそが本作の輝かしいメッセージであり、大人たちが忘れかけた童心と魂を激しく震わせる至高のエンターテインメントです。

原作・関連書籍

映画化された原作や関連書籍を読んで、映像との違いや独自の世界観を楽しみましょう。

興行成績

製作費: $180,000,000 (270億円)

興行収入: $411,000,000 (617億円)

推定収支: $231,000,000 (347億円)

※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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HBO Max on U-Next

レンタル・購入

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キャスト

チャーリー・ハナム
チャーリー・ハナム
Raleigh Becket
菊地凛子
菊地凛子
Mako Mori
イドリス・エルバ
イドリス・エルバ
Stacker Pentecost
Max Martini
Max Martini
Herc Hansen
クリフトン・コリンズ・Jr.
クリフトン・コリンズ・Jr.
Tendo Choi
ロン・パールマン
ロン・パールマン
Hannibal Chau
チャーリー・デイ
チャーリー・デイ
Dr. Newton Geiszler
Burn Gorman
Burn Gorman
Dr. Hermann Gottlieb
Robert Kazinsky
Robert Kazinsky
Chuck Hansen
Robert Maillet
Robert Maillet
Lt. Aleksis Kaidanovsky

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: ギレルモ・デル・トロ

脚本: Travis Beacham / ギレルモ・デル・トロ

音楽: Ramin Djawadi

制作: Mary Parent / ギレルモ・デル・トロ / Thomas Tull

撮影監督: Guillermo Navarro

制作会社: Double Dare You / Legendary Pictures

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

GeekMasher
GeekMasher
★ 8.5

First I want to say I liked this movie. I was surprised, I've been hearing bad reviews but I can't see big problem. The only issues was with the story. Apart from that the graphics where very good. The actors where okay (no major actors) and the baddies (no spoilers) where well thought out and graphically impressive (same for the robots). All in all a good movie.

Matt Golden
Matt Golden
★ 9.5

When monstrous, building-sized creatures (dubbed "kaiju") hell-bent on destruction begin pouring out of an extra-dimensional fissure at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, humanity bands together to build titanic mechas called jaegers, each controlled simultaneously by two pilots whose minds are linked through a neural bond called "The Drift." As the kaiju get stronger and the signs point to an all-out flood of the beasts, the fate of humanity looks bleak, and the surviving jaegers are brought together for one last-ditch attempt at saving the world. After an agonizingly long five-year wait, filled with some heartbreaking starts and stops (like the almost-weres of The Hobbit and At the Mountains of Madness), Guillermo del Toro has finally returned with his biggest budget and story yet. The Mexican master of fantasy returns to the toybox of his youth, drawing from the kaiju films of old (Godzilla, Gamera, Mothra, and the like) and anime to create the modern-day monster movie we didn't even know we wanted. I am a genre man through and through, and del Toro's films are filled with both the intelligence of the best of science fiction, fantasy, and horror and a flawlessly-rendered vision unique to him. His innate knowledge of what makes those outlandish stories truly matter to us is the backbone of his work as a writer and director, and his visual style is one that invokes true wonder. It's that wonder, that childlike glee that makes Pacific Rim work so well, and well it does work. This is a brawny, massive film made by a true artist and auteur at the top of his game, but while the technicals of this film could have been mounted by any number of working directors, the magic of Guillermo del Toro is that he infuses every film with himself. His love of the material, whatever it may be, shines brightly through every frame. It is this complete sincerity that makes his films such a joy to experience, and even when there are 250-foot behemoths slugging it out on the screen, there's not a trace of the disastrous irony or cynicism so readily supplied by other blockbusters anywhere to be found. The cast gamely comes to play, with Idris Elba (TV’s Luther) as Stacker Pentecost (one of my favorite character names of all time) as the stoic leader of the jaeger program, Charlie Hunnam (TV’s Sons of Anarchy) as former pilot Raleigh Becket, who suffered a tragic loss and has to be convinced to return to jaeger service, and Oscar-nominated Rinko Kinkuchi (Babel) as Mako Mori, another life touched by the kaiju and ready to serve up some righteous fury. If these sound like tried-and-true archetypes, it’s because they are. This is a grand, epic war film on a bigger scale than anything ever attempted before in that genre, and one of the strokes of genius from del Toro and original writer Travis Beacham is that we instantly establish and identify with the characters onscreen. There are so many ideas flying around (monsters, mechas, neural bonding, kaiju culture, and many, many more) that the broadly-drawn characters serve as a perfect anchor for the audience, immediately relatable in their inherent humanity. It seems that the mission statment of this movie was, in a word, “texture.” Del Toro delivered a visual feast unlike any other big spectacle films, with his insistence on it not looking like a “glossy car commercial.” Instead, every frame is filled with rain, snow, scuffs, smoke, debris, and other visual elements that reflect the weight and dimension of these cyclopean combatants. Unlike the ultra-glossy (and emotionally irrelevant) Transformers films, or virtually any other modern big-budget actioner, this universe feels dirty, grungy, and lived-in, like the original Star Wars trilogy. In fact, dubbing a film “this generation’s Star Wars” has been overused to the point of robbing the phrase of all meaning. But Pacific Rim feels just like that. It invokes those most elusive of emotions in the modern studio film: wonder, awe, and sheer enjoyment. Do you remember the awe you felt upon seeing a Star Destroyer creep onto the screen? Discovering a brachiosaurus on Isla Nublar? Laying eyes on the verdant fields of Middle Earth? This film has that. No one builds worlds like del Toro, and here he is, the master, inviting you to play in his sandbox with him. Grab your favorite action figure and hop in.

VolcanoAl
VolcanoAl

My favorite movie for years!!!I absolutely love this movie!No big story.A lot of action.The only bad thing is all the fights are at night & in the rain.A bright daylight fight would have really made it great!!!

Andres Gomez
Andres Gomez
★ 7

This movie has almost everything that is expected from it so just relax lay back with the pop corn and your soft drink and enjoy. Just to make noticeable the remarkable few amount of females featuring in the movie and how bad is that Travis Beacham and Guillermo del Toro just copy Evangelion's idea without giving anything back.

Per Gunnar Jonsson
Per Gunnar Jonsson
★ 7

I have to say that I enjoyed this pure special effects movie quite a lot even though the plot is totally ridiculous. Clumsy giant robots beating at alien beasts with their fists should be better than modern tanks and airplanes with modern explosive and armor penetrating weapons? As I said, a ridiculous story. Well it does not really matter does it because the story gives an excuse for some real cool special effects loaded action. Giant robots and alien Godzillas in the same movie. Cool, simply cool. Once you have gotten past the silliness of the story it is a very entertaining rollercoaster ride of action. The scenes where the robots and aliens go head to head is visually very enjoyable. Sometimes they make you laugh as well. For instance the scene where Gipsy Danger (one of the robots) drags a cargo ship after it to use as a club. Unfortunately a somewhat somber mood is set right from the start by the fact that the Jaeger program is discontinued. Not because they are really defenseless as the movie blurb states but because dumbass politicians wants to save money as usual. Instead they build giant walls that are subsequently breached in hours. As I said, dumbass politicians. I guess they wanted to put some realism into the movie! As much as the robot and alien action is tremendously enjoyable I think some of my favorite scenes are the ones with Ron Perlman as Hannibal Chau. I have always liked Ron Perlman and he is simply outrageously (as in funny) wacky as Hannibal Chau. The one thing I did not like with the movie is the ludicrous nonsense statements about the dinosaurs being the first attempt at an invasion. Whoever wrote that must be an idiot. Worse, the fact that it made it into the movie means that someone believes that the audience are idiots. When it then was followed by some green-religious crap that the atmosphere was not right for them then but that we have now “terraformed” earth for them by our pollution it was at least a star off just for that. I hate it when they put crap like that in the movies. It is an insult to the audience. Anyway, despite the dinosaur nonsense I found it a very enjoyable movie. Without that it would have received a near top rating but as I said, it is at least a star off due to that crap.

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