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。

FindKeyについてロケ地 (試験中)利用規約プライバシーポリシーお問い合わせ
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Origin
Origin

Origin

20232h 21m★ 6.4ドラマ

あらすじ

No synopsis available.

作品考察・見どころ

エイヴァ・デュヴァネイ監督は、知的な探求と魂を揺さぶるドラマを高い次元で融合させました。世界各地の悲劇を「カースト」という根底的なシステムで繋ぐ視座は、観客の価値観を根本から覆すほどの衝撃を秘めています。圧倒的な映像美と緻密な構成が、一見すると抽象的な社会理論を、血の通った一人の人間の物語へと見事に昇華させているのです。 主演のアーンジャニュー・エリス=テイラーの静謐かつ力強い演技は、探求者の孤独と情熱を完璧に体現しています。個人的な喪失の痛みが、人類全体の構造的な不条理を暴き出すプロセスへと変わる瞬間、映画という媒体が持つ真の力を目撃するはずです。今を生きるすべての人に、この真理への旅路を追体験してほしいと切に願います。

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: $38,000,000 (57億円)

興行収入: $4,474,931 (7億円)

推定収支: $-33,525,069 (-50億円)

※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

アーンジャニュー・エリス=テイラー
アーンジャニュー・エリス=テイラー
Isabel Wilkerson
ニーシー・ナッシュ=ベッツ
ニーシー・ナッシュ=ベッツ
Marion Wilkerson
ジョン・バーンサル
ジョン・バーンサル
Brett Hamilton
Emily Yancy
Emily Yancy
Ruby Wilkerson
フィン・ウィットロック
フィン・ウィットロック
August Landmesser
ビクトリア・ペドレッティ
ビクトリア・ペドレッティ
Irma Eckler
Jasmine Cephas Jones
Jasmine Cephas Jones
Elizabeth Davis
Isha Blaaker
Isha Blaaker
Allison Davis
ヴェラ・ファーミガ
ヴェラ・ファーミガ
Kate Medina
Audra McDonald
Audra McDonald
Miss Hale

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: エイヴァ・デュヴァーネイ

脚本: エイヴァ・デュヴァーネイ / Isabel Wilkerson

音楽: クリス・バワーズ

制作: Laurene Powell Jobs / Melinda Gates / Anne Wojcicki

撮影監督: Matthew J. Lloyd

制作会社: ARRAY Filmworks

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Manuel São Bento
Manuel São Bento
★ 7

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://fandomwire.com/origin-venice-film-festival-review-a-must-see-educational-story/ "Origin brilliantly transposes the pillars of caste from Isabel Wilkerson's book to the big screen through an incredibly revealing, genuinely fascinating narrative, despite becoming clear that the source material is better suited to a documentary. The exceptionally human performances of the entire cast, especially Aunjanue Ellis, compensate for some lack of balance between emotionally personal dialogues and weighty lectures. Impactful imagery and an extremely stirring score make the audiovisual experience even more captivating. It's not without issues, but it's one of the most important stories to watch/read this century." Rating: B

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

The acting is all really quite adequate here, but it's not really that important to the fascinating underlying premiss that underpins the theory that race, in itself, might not be the reasons for the hierarchical nature of a society that always manages to create sub-classes. Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor offers her own engaging perspective on author Isabel Wilkerson who is invited by a publisher to offer a more considered and less reactionary appraisal of race relations following the murder of a young black man who just happened to be in the wrong place (a white neighbourhood) at the wrong time. The audience know full well from the outset what has happened here, so that's not especially important to the plot either - it's her search for a rationale. That search attempts to draw parallels between the plight of the African American citizenry with the victims of Holocaust and of the system of caste that prevails in India. By spending a section of the film in Germany and then in India, we are exposed to a more internationalist view of just why society is made up of the have lots, the haves and the have nots - and at just how little much of that has changed for centuries. The comparison she develops works surprisingly convincingly, if not without it's flaws, and Ellis-Taylor acts well as a sort of sponge for the philosophies that emerge. The one element that it rather studiously avoids is religion. That isolation does rather compromise the authenticity of any conclusion as it doesn't acknowledge that so often the behaviour and structures of cultures are dictated by those atop them in some form of priesthood - whether they be Brahmin or Cardinal. There are a few familial sub-plots to add a bit of drama to the story, but I found them a little unnecessary as the theory elaborates more. It does come from a very specific American perspective - I'd be interested to see how it might turn out if it were to be remade from a Jewish or Indian point of view, but as it is - it's a thoughtful exercise in what makes human strata function and endure.

Brent Marchant
Brent Marchant
★ 8

Those who believe that institutionalized systemic racism is fundamentally an American problem should probably give a serious look to this latest offering from writer-director Ava DuVernay, best known for the superb historical drama, “Selma” (2014). Based on the book Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents by best-selling author Isabel Wilkerson, the film examines how organic prejudices are actually a worldwide phenomenon that may or may not have anything specifically to do with race but are more readily attributable to matters of caste. While the picture indeed examines this practice from an American perspective, it also addresses it from the standpoint of the dictates employed in Nazi Germany and in the longstanding Indian caste system, where race was/is not an inherent issue. Rather, the institutionalized discriminatory practices in these locales (as well as in others) were (and in some cases still are) driven by the implementation of artificial distinctions that have been established and perpetuated based on other characteristics but that have had the same kinds of negative impact as those driven by race-based policies. The filmmaker explores how author Wilkerson (Aunjanue Ellis Taylor) went about researching and writing the book on this subject, a project undertaken at a time when she was dealing with the fallout from a series of personal tragedies involving her mother (Emily Yancy), husband (Jon Bernthal) and cousin (Niecy Nash-Betts), giving her a reason to pick herself up and carry on with her life. Admittedly, the multiple story threads involved in the narrative and the way in which they’re organized could have used some tweaking for greater clarity and smoother connectedness, and the author’s theories could have stood to be presented a little less overly intellectually at times. However, in the end, the movie’s themes successfully come together to create a captivating and eye-opening hypothesis that we’d all be wise to consider seriously. What’s more, the depiction of Wilkerson’s personal story is filled with a series of strongly emotive moments that are sure to tug heartily at the heart strings, so keep the hankies handy. The film also features an array of fine, small-role supporting performances from the likes of Nick Offerman, Blair Underwood, Audra McDonald, Finn Whitrock, Vera Farmiga, Myles Frost and Lennox Simms. In the end, the revelations exposed here could well make you sad for the needlessly sorry state of humanity. But the picture also provides a deeper, more insightful understanding of what’s fundamentally wrong with humanity, providing us with a key that just might help us find our way out of the current social morass with a solution that could potentially help us finally fix things for good.

swiewior
swiewior
★ 4

A missed opportunity. While I agree with the most but not everything that was stated in the movie, I can't understand why it failed to find obvious similarities to segregation based on religion. Am I the only one who sees forbidding marriage between religions the same as forbidding interracial marriagies? I think it was convenient to find funds for this movie in times of woke movement. The intentions of the author can be clearly seen by referring to tragic and catchy events such as the death of a convicted felon and local thug George Floyd as racially based and several other events while they had nothing to do with racial discrimination. The movie had a perfect chance of becoming challenging and discussing other aspects of racial segregation such as a very high number of crimes, unemployment and gangs in areas occupied by black people, dispropotionate to their population. It could also challenge a religion as an obvoius tool for segregating people but it didn't because it's just another mainstream woke production.

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