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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ル・アーヴルの靴みがき
ル・アーヴルの靴みがき

ル・アーヴルの靴みがき

20111h 33m★ 7.0ドラマコメディ
MUBI

あらすじ

北フランスの港町ル・アーブルの駅前で靴磨きをして暮らしているマルセルは、妻アルレッティと愛犬ライカとともにつつましい生活を送っていた。そんなある日、港にアフリカからの不法移民が乗ったコンテナが漂着し、マルセルは警察に追われていた1人の移民の少年イングリッサと出会う。そしてその頃、アルレッティは医師から余命宣告を受けており……。

作品考察・見どころ

アキ・カウリスマキ監督が描く本作は、北仏の港町を舞台にした至高の寓話です。特筆すべきは、絵画のように端正な画面構成と、極限まで削ぎ落とされた台詞が醸し出す独特のユーモア。冷淡な現実に抗うように配置された鮮やかな色彩は、人間の尊厳を照らす希望の光として機能しており、観る者の心を静かに、しかし深く震わせます。 アンドレ・ウィルムらによる無表情な演技が、かえって彼らの内に秘めた慈愛と連帯の精神を際立たせています。冷酷なシステムよりも個人の善意を信じ抜き、ささやかな奇跡を肯定する力強いメッセージ。それは現代社会が忘れかけた「隣人愛」の美しさを鮮烈に描き出し、鑑賞後には温かな余韻とともに、人間という存在への信頼を再確認させてくれるでしょう。

興行成績

製作費: $3,850,000 (6億円)

興行収入: $4,230,854 (6億円)

推定収支: $380,854 (1億円)

※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

André Wilms
André Wilms
Marcel Marx
カティ・オウティネン
カティ・オウティネン
Arletty
Jean-Pierre Darroussin
Jean-Pierre Darroussin
Monet
Blondin Miguel
Blondin Miguel
Idrissa
エリナ・サロ
エリナ・サロ
Claire
Evelyne Didi
Evelyne Didi
Yvette
No Image
Quoc Dung Nguyen
Chang
No Image
François Monnié
Greengrocer
No Image
Roberto Piazza
Little Bob
Pierre Étaix
Pierre Étaix
Dr. Becker

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: アキ・カウリスマキ

脚本: アキ・カウリスマキ

制作: Hanna Hemilä / アキ・カウリスマキ

撮影監督: Timo Salminen

制作会社: Pyramide Productions / Sputnik / Pandora Film / ARTE France Cinéma / ZDF/Arte

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Andres Gomez
Andres Gomez
★ 6

Simple story, well and gently told in Kaurismäki's characteristic style.

CRCulver
CRCulver
★ 5

In the 2011 production LE HAVRE, the Finnish auteur Aki Kaurismäki steps away from his usual Helsinki setting for the first in what will be a trilogy of films in Western European port cities. Always rooting for the underdogs, Kaurismäki this time concentrates not just on the disenfranchised urban lower class, but on a socioeconomic strata arguably lower than them: illegal immigrants. Middle-aged shoeshiner Marcel (André Wilms), who lives in a run-down neighbourhood with loving wife Arletty (Kati Outinen) meets Idrissa (Blondin Miguel), a child who has found his way from Gabon to France inside a shipping container. Marcel decides to shelter the boy and see him on to England, his intended destination, but detective Monet (Jean-Pierre Darroussin) is on their heels. In spite of the French setting, this remains a very Finnish film in its sparse dialogue and deadpan humour. Kaurismäki yet again uses a very drab colour scheme and sets the film ostensibly in the present, but with cars, radios and rock music dating from the 1950s. Like nearly every film he has made, there is a musical performance by an oldies rock 'n' roll band, complete with pompadours and leather jackets. This is getting appallingly repetitive. Basically, if you've seen any two previous Kaurismäki films, then you'll find almost nothing new in the aesthetic and even the plot. That said, this is a more life-affirming film than his last, the absolutely bleak LÄHIKAUPINGIN VALOT of 2006. Kaurismäki is clearly concerned with the plight of those who would escape sub-Saharan Africa by any means necessary, and this leads the viewer to reflection, but his exposé of detention centres and police harrassment becomes heavy-handed at times.

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

When a dockworker hears some strange noises emanating from a box recently arrived from Gabon, he's maybe not so surprised to discover that it's cargo is human - and bound for London. Detained by the immigration officials, the young and nimble "Idrissa" (Blondin Miguel) manages to evade his captors and whilst in flight encounters the slightly down-at-heel "Marcel" (André Wilms). The older man takes pity on this nervous new arrival and takes him into his home whilst they decide what's best to do next. It's a small town community and pretty quickly just about everyone at the local pub knows who and where the youngster is, but instead of turning him in, they decide that maybe they can help him. He's no thief, nor malcontent - just a young man bewildered and personable. As "Marcel" begins to learn a little more of his new charge, he determines to try and help him make it to the UK - but with a grudging fifth-columnist amongst their friends and the determined "Insp. Monet" (Jean-Pierre Darroussin) on his trail, things are not going to be a simple case of jumping onto the Eurostar. "Marcel" has other emotional fish to fry, too, as his ailing wife languishes in an hospital facing a prognosis that we, the audience, appreciate but he does not, as yet, know. Choices have to be made and priorities established for everyone as time and circumstances close in. I found there to be a strong and effective dynamic between Wilms and the young Miguel here, and the sparing script allows the characters to breathe and us to observe their respective, and ultimately conjoined, predicaments as the lad struggles without any real roots. At times it has a slightly documentary-style look to it, which adds a little authenticity to the investigative aspects of the drama - a policeman who does his job efficiently, but does he relish it? It packs quite a bit of food for thought into ninety minutes, and does ask us a few questions about our own attitudes - "There but for the grace of God" sort of things. It doesn't attempt to deliver much by way of the relative merits of illegal immigration nor of heinous people trafficking, per se, but again we are presented with a canvas that's drawn by just about everyone - friend and foe - but not much by the young man himself.

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