What
does it mean to be lost in translation? It is not just being lost in country
unlike your own and surrounded by a language you do not understand. It is about
being lost in the world and trying to find your own place within it, a place
where you belong. The place doesn’t have to be one of a particular location; it
can be a connection one has with another person in the same situation. Lost in Translation is not a film just
about being lost in language and miscommunication between cultures, but also
between people in one’s own surroundings; one does not have to go to another
country to be lost in what is being said and done around them, it is easy to
get lost in what others are doing and while trying to find a place that they
fit into.
First
thing one will notice about the film Lost
in Translation by Sophia Coppola is the miscommunication that is found
between Bob Harris, Charlotte, and the people they are surrounded by. The fact
that Sophia Coppola has filmed the movie in Tokyo, surrounded in a language
that the main characters do not understand is an idea that was perfectly
executed. Bob and Charlotte are lost in the culture and language around them
while all they are trying to do is find themselves. Had the film taken place in
America, the idea of being lost would not have been as strong of a message as
it was, the idea of one not knowing what is being said and done around them is
confusing and at times frightening. This can be seen when Bob Harris is filming
his commercial for whiskey, he doesn’t really know what the director is asking
of him and when the director does speak, and the translation of what he said
just doesn’t seem to give enough context based on how long he was speaking for.
Thus Bob Harris has to work on instinct and his own interpretation of the
director’s reactions to him. Not only is Bob Harris lost in Tokyo, he is lost
in his own family and the life he has at home, it is becoming one that he is
estranged from and he is becoming unfamiliar to his own family. When he does
talk to his wife, although he understands what his wife is saying, he does not
understand why his life is unravelling the way it is. It is best stated by
Randy Martin in Where Did the Future Go?
What is happening “The home would revert to its originary Greek status as
oikos–the root of economy–now the scene where money not flesh would be
constantly fondled as all manner of futures (pensions, kids educations, debt
disbursements, home mortgages) would be worked over into the wee hours”. Bob
kids are getting used to him not being home, it also seems that his wife is
beginning to feel this way as well; she has become concerned with nothing that
is going on in Bob’s life other than the fact that she is trying to remodel his
office and cannot obtain the right carpet. Bob is unconcerned with his office,
he could care-less what it looks like, he wants to know what his family is
doing, one can tell that if he had his choice, he would not be in Tokyo, he
would be at home. But in order to maintain their life and his status of being
famous, he must take these odd jobs in other countries in which lead him to
being lost in the world around him. Bob has become a stranger to his family, he
is a stranger in Tokyo, he is confused by all around him and finds solace in
Charlotte; a women who is experiencing some of the same problems as he is.
When
we meet Charlotte, we see her as a shy lonely woman who is trying to spend
quality time her husband even though he has to work. Although she is with her
husband in this strange world, she is lost because he spends most of his time
working and leaves her to entertain herself. Charlotte, like Bob, is trying to
find her way in this strange world, and not just the one in Tokyo but the
marriage world itself. Charlotte went to Tokyo with her husband because she had
nothing else to do and wanted to spend more time with him, but it has turned
out that she is spending more time alone.
The time that she spends thinking and trying to hang out with friends,
but she is coming to realize that her time there is one of finding herself and
trying to figure out if the life that she has chosen for herself is the one
that she really wants. The bond she creates with Bob is one of commonality, on
the surface they both know that they are lost in this strange country, they are
unsure of what is going on around them, they do not know the language, but they
find that they able to make the best out of it by finding the world around them
is only as good as they make it. In Cultural
Space and Urban Place The New World Disorder it states that “Space is a
construction and material manifestation of social relations which reveals cultural
assumptions and practices” meaning that the world around Charlotte is one that
she has created. She has the ability to change the loneliness she feels, and
the feeling of being lost by changing her social relations; this is done
through the relationship she builds with Bob. What makes this relationship
different from the ones that she has with her friends and even that which she
has with her husband is that this one is built upon common experiences in the
current world they are in. She has found that she is not the only one that
feels the way she does about being in this strange place, both of them are
dealing with social relations and with their personal relationships with their
spouses. Bob is nearing the end of his marriage, whereas Charlotte is just
beginning hers, both offering a new perspective on what could be in the future.
Though
many people can understand as to why both Bob and Charlotte felt lost during
their time in Tokyo, it is also important to see that they weren’t just lost in
Tokyo; they were lost in their everyday lives. Both of them have family and
friends around them and still they found that the connection they made with a
total stranger was stronger than what they could have formed with their own
families. The important part is to realize that the relationship they formed
was one based purely on their commonalities and it was nothing sexual. They
were only in search of someone that they could share their experiences with,
and someone that could relate to what they were going through. The end of the
movie is brought together perfectly with Bob whispering something to Charlotte which
helps to ratify that not only have the viewer’s been lost in this world with
Bob and Charlotte, they are lost outside of them as well.
In
the end being Lost in Translation can
happen to anyone, anywhere, and at any time, it is up to the person to find
someone they can relate to during this time and find the points in life that
are worth celebrating. Nobody has to travel these roads alone, some may choose
to, while others take someone along for company, either way it is always best
to figure out where one belongs in this strange world.
Works Cited
Harvey. Cultural Space and Urban Place The New
Disorder. 12 December 2013. PowerPoint.
Lost In Translation. Dir. Sophia Coppola. 2003. DVD.
Martin, Randy. Where Did the Future Go? 12
December 2013. PDF.
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