Lost in Translation (PG) PRESENTED IN 35MM FILM
Lost in Translation (PG) PRESENTED IN 35MM FILM

Lost in Translation (PG) PRESENTED IN 35MM FILM

The Revival House Perth (Como, WA)
Sunday, 16 August 2026 3:40 pm
35 days away
All Ages (minors must be accompanied by Guardian)
Film
Movies / Cinema

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Lost in Translation (PG, 2003) Presented in 35mm Film by The Revival House Perth

Aging movie star Bob Harris (Bill Murray) arrives in Tokyo to shoot a whiskey commercial, disoriented by jet lag, a crumbling marriage, and a creeping sense that his career and life have lost their meaning. At the same hotel, Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson), a recent college graduate accompanying her frequently absent photographer husband, wanders the city alone, uncertain about her marriage and her future. Two strangers separated by decades in age but united by insomnia and isolation, Bob and Charlotte gradually form an unlikely connection amid the neon-lit chaos of Tokyo. Their friendship unfolds through late-night conversations, karaoke sessions, and quiet moments of shared understanding, offering both of them a fleeting but profound sense of connection in a foreign city where nothing quite makes sense—including, perhaps, their own lives.

Director Sofia Coppola crafts a hazy, melancholic portrait of loneliness and connection, using Tokyo's overwhelming sensory landscape as a mirror for her characters' internal disorientation. Bill Murray delivers a career-redefining performance, finding deep pathos beneath his trademark deadpan humor as a man quietly grappling with midlife emptiness, while Scarlett Johansson's understated, naturalistic performance captures the specific ennui of a young woman uncertain about the choices that have shaped her life. Coppola's direction favors mood and atmosphere over conventional plot mechanics, allowing silences and glances to carry as much weight as dialogue. Lance Acord's cinematography renders Tokyo as both alienating and mesmerizing, while the film's ambient soundtrack—featuring Kevin Shields and My Bloody Valentine—reinforces its dreamlike, suspended sense of time. The result is an intimate, deeply felt meditation on human connection that resists easy resolution.

Original format and audio experience of this film faithfully reproduced by The Revival House. Presented in 35mm film unless noted otherwise.

When: Sunday, August 16th at 3:40PM
Where: The Revival House at the Como Theatre
Rating: PG (Sexual references, Low level coarse language)