ReviewReviewReviewReviewReviewLes Triplettes de Belleville (2003)Dec 7, '04 2:01 PM
for everyone
Category:Movies
Genre: Animation
probably the best thing i've watched this year, great music and the best part - no dialog to ruin anything.



my fav review.
Visual ingenuity, wry humour, and French self-parody

A club-footed grandmother named Souza, a batty trio of vaudeville
chanteuses known as 'Les triplettes de Belleville', and a train-hating
dog called Bruno are the unlikely heroes of 'Belleville Rendez-vous',
Sylvain Chomet's surreal feature-length cartoon. In their bid to rescue
Souza's grandson Champion from the clutches of a cyclist-abducting
racket, they must stand up not only to ruthless gangsters, but also to
the modern world itself.

[zip zippety snip.. more]

It's Got: Josephine Baker dancing to
the accompaniment of Django Reinhardt (until a gang of mischievous
monkeys steals her banana skirt); a dog having nightmares about train
travel; an old woman using a grenade to catch frogs; a cabaret piece
using a fridge, newspaper, vacuum cleaner and bicycle wheel as
nstruments; a gravity-defying chase; and one last comic pay-off after
the final credit has rolled.

It Needs: To be seen by parents as much as by their children.

Alternatives: 'Jour de Fête', 'Monsieur Hulot's Holiday', 'Mon Oncle', 'Playtime'

Summary:

Visual ingenuity, wry humour, and French self-parody add up to a
strange and touching experience. Like no other cartoon you will have
ever seen. 8/10

Review by Anton Bitel

url: http://www.movie-gazette.com/cinereviews/416

[imdb]

Also known as "Belleville Rendezvous, The Triplets of Belleville, Les Triplettes de Belleville"



also, apprently not so available lyrics of: Belleville Rendezvous

I won’t finish my life in Timbuktu
Cheeks so tight my lips are turning blue
I like to be wrinkly
Utterly wrinkly
Wrinkly like a triplet from Belleville.

I dreamt to end my days in Acapulco
Playing guitar and dancing tango tango
I love to be twisted
Utterly twisted
Twisted like a triplet from Belleville.

[Come on, girls!]
Swingin’ Belleville Rendezvous
Marathon Dancing doop-de-doo
Voodoo cancan balais taboo
Au swingin’ Belleville Rendezvous.

I won’t be an old man in Singapore
Playing Scrabble and eating petit-fours
I want to be wicked
Utterly wicked
Wicked like the triplets from Belleville.

I want to end my life in Honolulu
Singing like a bird in Honolulu
I want to be as rough
Every bit as rough
Rough, rough as a triplet from Belleville.

Swingin’ Belleville Rendezvous…

I won’t finish my days in Miami Beach
Sand in my eyes, talking like an old bitch
I’d like to be flying
Utterly flying
Flying like a triplet from Belleville.

Don’t mind ending my life in Katmandu
Swinging with the sitar and a guru
But I prefer to be
Much prefer to be
Swinging with the triplets from Belleville.

Swingin’ Belleville Rendezvous…

jsting2001 wrote on Dec 7, '04
I heard it was great...i'll have to rent it tonight.

Anyone seen 'Spirited Away' yet? Another animated film that is supposed to be amazing.
vilius wrote on Dec 7, '04
btw, this IS not japanimation. the 3d/2d mix does remind me Gorillaz "I aint happy" video.

spirited away?
not seeing the best reviews on it.

Neil Doyle (Doylenf@msn.com)
Elmhurst, NY

Date: 2 July 2003
Summary: Weird Japanese nightmare of epic proportions...not a charmer...


I watched the English language version of this nightmarish film and I can't
understand the lavish praise bestowed on this Japanese animated fantasy. Its
colors have a muted, washed-out look as it tells at great length the murky
story of a little girl (with a screechingly high-pitched voice that gets on
the nerves) who gets separated from her parents and enters the dark world of
an abandoned amusement park. None of it makes any sense--at least not to
American minds--so there must be something either lost in the translation or
lost in the vast differences between American and Japanese culture. If this
is a picture kids can relate to, I can only suppose that more kids than I
thought are living in a nightmarish world ruled by adults.

The story goes on for two hours without presenting anything except turning
the girl's world into a nightmare of dead spirits and mean-spirited elders
against which she is supposed to eventually be reunited with parents who
have been turned into pigs.

It's all so weirdly incomprehensible to adults and let me say firmly that
there is no enchantment here. Perhaps you have to have the imagination of a
ten-year old to see what's fun about this strange and fearsome world.
Instead of entertaining us in the manner Lewis Carroll did with ALICE IN
WONDERLAND and his cast of weird characters, it is much too dark and intense
to be called anything but a Japanese nightmare
of epic proportions with elements of other famous fairy-tales working their
way through the tale.

The dubbing for the English version should have used a different voice than
the grating one used for the little girl. Definitely not a
charmer.
jsting2001 wrote on Dec 7, '04, edited on Dec 7, '04
First of all ..you got that review from a user comment at IMDB.com.....but if you look at the star rating it got 8.6 out of 10 by user reviews...which is hard to get on that site.

Roger Ebert's review of Spirited Away ( I tend to have the same taste as him...so I usually use his reviews a lot...)



Spirited Away


BY ROGER EBERT / September 20, 2002

Cast & CreditsWith The Voices Of:
Chihiro: Daveigh Chase
Yubaba, Zeniba: Suzanne Pleshette
Haku: Jason Marsden
Kamaji: David Ogden Stiers
Chirhiro's Mother: Lauren Holly
Assistant Manager: John Ratzenberger

Walt Disney Studios Presents A Film Written And Directed By Hayao Miyazaki. U.S. Production Directed By Kirk Wise. Running Time: 124 Minutes. Rated PG.(For Some Scary Moments).

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"Miyazaki's Spirited Away" has been compared to "Alice in Wonderland," and indeed it tells of a 10-year-old girl who wanders into a world of strange creatures and illogical rules. But it's enchanting and delightful in its own way, and has a good heart. It is the best animated film of recent years, the latest work by Hayao Miyazaki, the Japanese master who is a god to the Disney animators.

Because many adults have an irrational reluctance to see an animated film from Japan (or anywhere else), I begin with reassurances: It has been flawlessly dubbed into English by John Lasseter ("Toy Story"), it was co-winner of this year's Berlin Film Festival against "regular" movies, it passed "Titanic" to become the top-grossing film in Japanese history, and it is the first film ever to make more than $200 million before opening in America.

I feel like I'm giving a pitch on an infomercial, but I make these points because I come bearing news: This is a wonderful film. Don't avoid it because of what you think you know about animation from Japan. And if you only go to Disney animation--well, this is being released by Disney.

Miyazaki's works ("My Neighbor Totoro," "Kiki's Delivery Service," "Princess Mononoke") have a depth and complexity often missing in American animation. Not fond of computers, he draws thousand of frames himself, and there is a painterly richness in his work. He's famous for throwaway details at the edges of the screen (animation is so painstaking that few animators draw more than is necessary). And he permits himself silences and contemplation, providing punctuation for the exuberant action and the lovable or sometimes grotesque characters.

"Spirited Away" is told through the eyes of Chihiro (voice by Daveigh Chase), a 10-year-old girl, and is more personal, less epic, than "Princess Mononoke." As the story opens, she's on a trip with her parents, and her father unwisely takes the family to explore a mysterious tunnel in the woods. On the other side is what he speculates is an old theme park; but the food stalls still seem to be functioning, and as Chihiro's parents settle down for a free meal, she wanders away and comes upon the film's version of wonderland, which is a towering bathhouse.

A boy named Haku appears as her guide, and warns her that the sorceress who runs the bathhouse, named Yubaba, will try to steal her name and thus her identity. Yubaba (Suzanne Pleshette) is an old crone with a huge face; she looks a little like a Toby mug, and dotes on a grotesquely huge baby named Boh. Ominously, she renames Chihiro, who wanders through the structure, which is populated, like "Totoro," with little balls of dust that scurry and scamper underfoot.

In the innards of the structure, Chihiro comes upon the boiler room, operated by a man named Kamaji (David Ogden Stiers), who is dressed in a formal coat and has eight limbs, which he employs in a bewildering variety of ways. At first he seems as fearsome as the world he occupies, but he has a good side, is no friend of Yubaba, and perceives Chihiro's goodness.

If Yubaba is the scariest of the characters and Kamaji the most intriguing, Okutaresama is the one with the most urgent message. He is the spirit of the river, and his body has absorbed the junk, waste and sludge that has been thrown into it over the years. At one point, he actually yields up a discarded bicycle. I was reminded of a throwaway detail in "My Neighbor Totoro," where a child looks into a bubbling brook, and there is a discarded bottle at the bottom. No point is made; none needs to be made.

Japanese myths often use shape-shifting, in which bodies reveal themselves as facades concealing a deeper reality. It's as if animation was invented for shape-shifting, and Miyazaki does wondrous things with the characters here. Most alarming for Chihiro, she finds that her parents have turned into pigs after gobbling up the free lunch. Okutaresama reveals its true nature after being freed of decades of sludge and discarded household items. Haku is much more than he seems. Indeed the entire bathhouse seems to be under spells affected the appearance and nature of its inhabitants.

Miyazaki's drawing style, which descends from the classical Japanese graphic artists, is a pleasure to regard, with its subtle use of colors, clear lines, rich detail and its realistic depiction of fantastical elements. He suggests not just the appearances of his characters, but their natures. Apart from the stories and dialogue, "Spirited Away" is a pleasure to regard just for itself. This is one of the year's best films.

adri1924 wrote on Dec 7, '04
saw Triplettes - thought it was wonderful - i havent seen Spirtited Away - i have to rent that over x-mas break- i have seen Miyazakie's earlier work which is so beautiful , there is something about this flick - Nausicaa Of The Valley Of The Wind - and his theme of Man verse Nature-
The simplicity and truth of the message is so sad that it made me cry -
honestly its great -check it out ...





vilius wrote on Dec 7, '04
mkay, still sounds very opposite from the mood of belleville and i'll have to keep the "screechingly high-pitched voice" part in mind.
electricmayhem wrote on May 29, '05, edited on May 29, '05
ReviewReviewReviewReviewReview
I did see both movies. I loved Triplettes. That song is glued to my mind. Spirited Away was AMAZING! I own all of Hayao Miyazaki's films and this (Spirited) is my favorite. Princess Mononoke was also amazing. Watch and enjoy!
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