"Lost in Translation," the highly auspicious second film from writer-director
Sofia Coppola (following 2000's best motion picture, "The Virgin Suicides"),
begins jarringly and without a firmly grasped rhythm. Bob Harris (Bill
Murray) is a middle-aged Hollywood actor coaxed into leaving his family
and coming to Tokyo to film a whiskey commercial in exchange for a
$2-million paycheck. Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson) is a recent Yale
grad without any discernible future plans who has accompanied her
photographer husband, John (Giovanni Ribisi), to the same overseas
city. Being constantly left alone while John chases his next assignment,
Charlotte feels empty and lost. For a while, so does the viewer, as
we are offered varied, disconnected glimpses of both Bob and Charlotte
as they go about their days in a landscape as foreign as the lives
they come to realize they have been living. And then Bob and Charlottestaying
in the same hotelshare an elevator ride that ends with a reciprocal
smile of acknowledgment, and everything shaky about the preceding
twenty minutes suddenly falls into place. It is clear that director
Sofia Coppola knew exactly what she was doing all along.
Lyrical and deeply touching, "Lost in Translation" is, first and foremost,
the tale of two human beings lost both in their own lives and in their
surroundings who unexpectedly discover a kindred connection. From
the very beginning, all Bob and Charlotte can muster asking themselves
is how they have ended up where they are. Struggling through a wildly
different culture than their own and dealing with a serious language
barrier, they are stuck in a lonely rut. However, when on their second
run-in Bob and Charlotte lock eyes across their smoky hotel bar, the
moment they share is not simply one of desperation between two Americans
in a foreign setting, but something more. Although Bob is about 25
years Charlotte's senior, their ages are a refreshing non-issue, and
when Charlotte approaches Bob and strikes up a conversation, they
find themselves understanding each other with more clarity than their
significant others' ever have. Writer-director Coppola's assured screenplay
never feels the need to enter into a conventional romance between
her two central lost souls, but allows the relationship to play out
through a more natural set of developments. The result is as intimate,
humane, and heartfelt as any love story this year.
Second, "Lost in Translation" is an utterly gorgeous travelogue of
Tokyo and its bordering region s. Director Coppola wisely offers no
information about the characters' vital backdrop other than what they
themselves know, thoughtfully putting the viewer in a place without
any advantage over their protagonists. As unusual as the culture and
language is to Bob and Charlotte, it is just as bewildering to us.
Nonetheless, through its scenic camerawork by cinematographer Lance
Acord (2002's "Adaptation"), Tokyo is presented as a rapturous visual
delight, unlike any other place on Earth.
Relatedly, Charlotte makes her way late in the film to the city's
bordering countryside and ancient temples, and all that needs to be
said about the Japanese culture's poignant fight between the past's
customs and the present's modern waysand Charlotte's self-recognition
of this very factis achieved through a series of completely wordless
shots. Not stopping there, Acord and Coppola choose to shoot much
of thei r film as if there is a struggle going on over what framing
subject should be in focus and what shouldn't. Sometimes, it takes
a few moments for the characters to clear up in a particular scene,
as if even through their aesthetic presentation they are constantly
on the verge of getting lost in their surroundings. In terms of their
innovation and their narrative importance, each shot is simply exquisite.
In essence a two-character motion picture, the picture's ultimate
success or failure falls upon the heads of Bill Murray (1998's "Rushmore")
and Scarlett Johansson (2001's "Ghost World"), and there will likely
not be a more accomplished screen duo for the rest of the year. As
Bob Harris, Murray injects his own brand of quirkily winning humor
to some scenes, such as a hilariously nightmarish experience on a
piece of exercise equipment, and a large helping of unblinking humanity
to his every moment. Murray's Bob is a man almost indifferent to his
emotionally dead marriage as he continues to go through the motions
of his family life and flagging career, and the actor plays these
often unspoken subtleties with pitch-perfect grace.
The 18-year-old Scarlett Johansson, playing someone about four years
older than she, matches Murray with a wise-beyond-her-years turn that
is not surprising from a young actress who has proven her talent in
the past, but most definitely is unanticipated. There is true depth,
not to mention an emotional tug-of-war, within Charlotte's interior
that speaks far louder than words, and it is a testament to Johansson's
startlingly mature craft that she nails each and every layer of her complex character.
Giovanni Ribisi (2000's "The Gift") and Anna Faris (2003's "May")
turn up in vital supporting roles that are purposefully archetypal
rather than three-dimensional, all in the name of further giving Bob
and Charlotte very real wake-up calls. Ribisi plays Charlotte's husband,
John, as a man who loves his wife without really taking the time to
prove it or listen to her. Meanwhile, Faris has some fun as a flaky
Hollywood actress in Tokyo promoting her latest action film who is
shallow without ever becoming intentionally vain. More could have
been done with Faris' small role as Kelly, but all that really needs
to be said about her is summed up in her final scene, as she gleefully
and cluelessly embarrasses herself singing karaoke to Carly Simon's
"Nobody Does It Better."
The music, with especially notable song selections from The Jesus
and Mary Chain, Phoenix, Happy End, Kevin Shields, and My Bloody Valentine,
is pitch-perfect, lovingly accentuating every scene they are accompanying
rather than merely an excuse to sell soundtrack albums. This is no
more true than in the film's two most alive momentsa karaoke free-for-all
in which Bill Murray does a charming rendition of "Peace, Love, and
Understanding" and Scarlett Johansson performs "Brass in Pocket;"
and the heartbreaking closing sequence, which manages to be both hopeful
and tragic at the same time without stepping into easy sentimentality.
Every last element of "Lost in Translation"save for the beautiful
love story at its centersymbolizes with brilliant clarity the disorienting
feeling of being out of place and lost in an alien setting, and it
is done without any signs of a heavy hand.
In her sophomore effort, writer-director Sofia Coppola has proven
she has the very same filmmaking talent as her father, Francis Ford
Coppola, if not more so. She has a way of getting to the heart of
her characters and really, truly trying to understand them and their
place in the world. "Lost in Translation" is a fascinating and highly
original piece of work, while at the same time a compassionate love
story that never rings false. When its closing moments arrive, simple
and pure, it may just blindside you with its sheer cumulative power.
Copyright © 2003 Dustin Putman