Su un pianeta situato in una galassia sconosciuta, abitato da esseri identici agli umani ma dalla pelle blu, si esibiscono in concerto quattro musicisti. Mentre tutta una metropoli segue il concerto, un'astronave si avvicina al pianeta e ne discende un commando di personaggi mascherati i quali tramite un gas soporifero stordiscono i quattro, nonché l'intero pubblico presente al concerto e le forze di sicurezza. I quattro musicisti, assieme ai loro strumenti, vengono rapiti e portati al cospetto di un misterioso individuo, nel mentre, uno degli addetti alla sicurezza prima di svenire lancia un SOS ad un'astronave dalla forma di chitarra elettrica, il cui occupante è intento a pulirne gli esterni.
P**B
Matsumoto & Daft Punk Perfection
First, to be honest, other than in the generic references of the pop-culture landscape, was I vaguely aware of House sensation "Daft Punk". Unknowingly exposed to their infectious electronic dance beat rhythms from tracks such as "One More Time" or "Harder Better Faster Stronger" by the commercial concepts of shrewd marketing firms using their material to push more things we don't need into the public conscious. Thus was I uninitiated to the scope of Daft Punk's material and the source album for this musical, the 2001 album "Discovery" (I wonder if the name and release year were an intentional homage to Kubrick's "2001 A Space Odyssey" which included the space craft "Discovery" famously hijacked by the HAL-9000 computer?).It is that in being quite a fan of Anime and Japanese Animation and culture, and importantly, a fan of the animated works created or influenced by the inestimable imagination of Leji Matsumoto was my access point to this particular work. Matsumoto is very well known for his unique "retro" style character designs, his penchant for Science Fiction, and stories which capture the human condition with a kind of introspective discovery by the characters he creates.However in this case Daft Punk's House Electronica with an apparently retro style from the source album fuses exceptionally well with Matsumoto's visual design.What is most impressive is that the movie appears to be a derivative work, that is the album was created first and Daft Punk then approached Matsumoto et.al. to create the movie afterward. The music and movie concepts are fused so well that I would have thought that the music was created for the movie. It was almost as if Matsumoto was able to extract what was in the heads of Daft Punk when they created the album and expressed it visually. Indeed the appropriately corporate sounding pop name for the alien band on earth - the "CrescenDolls" I find hard to believe was actually the name of the track on the album as "Crescendolls" without that particular usage in mind! Or the track "Veridis Quo" and the way they were able to meld the ambiance of the Darkwood character in the movie and the corresponding movie sequence to this uniquely yet appropriately sounding track.I am also an Audiophile, and I enjoy a wide variety of music, and am able to enjoy electronic music genres such as House. And as mentioned I am an Anime fan so it is easy to enjoy this movie. However unless you just cannot stand Japanese animation or House electronica, then this "Animated Musical" is just about appropriate for anyone, especially Daft Punk or Matsumoto fans.Also if you are fans of Matsumoto you will easily recognize some of the character designs that recur commonly in Matsumoto's works. Such as Stella, the female alien band member, she is the requisite willowy retro-styled blonde. Shep, the pilot of the "guitar space cruiser" is reminiscent of the Harlock character. I am also quite sure I saw Captain Avatar of the Argo from Star Blazers in a crowd enjoying the Earth Version of the band as the CrescenDolls. And the blue skinned aliens will remind Star Blazers fans of the Gamilons, though these aliens are notably less hostile!The DVD menu and interactive design is an art form itself, and its extras are not designed with the easiest usage in mind, but that can be forgiven. It is analogous to a "fan shrine" web site, rather than a corporate marketing web site in theme and usage.The Audio on the DVD is well done. It is mixed for standard 2-ch stereo as well as 5.1 (dolby?) and DTS 5.1. Inserting the DVD prompts you to choose the English or French version, I used English.I upconverted the DVD to 1080i using my Oppo BDP-83 Blu-Ray player, to my 50" 1080i Plasma, in DTS mode direct 8-ch analog audio output to a Sunfire TGP-5 and a 5.1 speaker system consistent of Klipsch Icon Wood speakers. The sound quality was impressive, and the video, being native 480p had a high average bit rate of around 7.8 - 8.1 kb/s, and looked great even upconverted (with the lack of a Blu-Ray release this must suffice). The vibrant colors and powerful dance beats were a potent and dazzling combination to behold on a large hi-def monitor and on a high-resolution audio rig.You could put this movie on at a party and satisfy gregarious dance types as well as the more introverted who may choose to chill on the couch, and keep the party moving just the same. Or one could just crank it up and zone out on the stunning visuals and throbbing music.Overall an awesome product at an awesome price! If you like Anime or you like Daft Punk you should own this already.
A**R
Image quality's a little rough but not a deal breaker
CONCERNS WITH PLAYER COMPATIBILITYWith this being a European import there are concerns of the disk not working on certain Blu-Ray Players due to region issues, I can't confirm whether this will work on YOUR specific Blu-Ray player but I CAN confirm that it'll work on a PS4 and Xbox One as that is what I own and have tried. With the PS4, it should just pop up on your task bar and you just hit X to start it right up, with the Xbox One, I had to go into my apps folder and manually start the Blu-Ray Player app from there, after that, the movie started right upTHIS IS NOT A BOOTLEGThe man you see and hear talking at the start of the movie is Leiji Matsumoto, the animator of the film, he talks about working in the anime industry and how the movie came to be, if you don't care about that, you can just hit the chapter skip button a few times(?) and One More Time should start right upTHE ACTUAL REVIEWI remember coming across both Daft Punk and Interstella 5555 while watching Toonami way back in the day at like midnight and they were playing the One More Time portion of the film as a music video. At the time, I had no idea what song it was or what show it was from and I eventually found out a few years down the road that it was Daft Punk and Interstella 5555. Over the years, Discovery has become my favorite Daft Punk album and one day I asked myself "why don't I own Interstella 5555?" So I decided to pick it up here on Amazon. Upon viewing it, I do have to agree with a lot of the other reviews, the image quality, even for a Blu-Ray, is a little rough as it's upscaled to 1080i and not 1080p and the image does look pixelated, over time, you barely even start to notice it but when you do, it is a little jarring. Also, a small nitpick I have is that the movie is in its original aspect ration (I think) and the picture doesn't fill the entire screen, not a deal breaker by any means and I'm sure I can figure out a work around but, boy, do you notice it. All in all, the viewing experience isn't terrible, but it could be better
L**S
Good visual story and companion
Great visuals with an awesome soundtrack. Could be region locked to Asia/Aus so beware.
G**M
再生できません。
ブルーレイ版を購入しましたが、SONY PlayStation3、SONY BDP-6500、で動作確認を行いましたが再生できません。操作不能になります。星の数は、内容の評価になります。
Z**H
Didn't work in my Bluray player
As others have written, this disc (which purports to be region-free) did not work in my Bluray player. I played it in a Region 1 (US) Sony Bluray disc player but the disc won't boot. The player recognizes the disc and reads the metadata but cannot start it.
カ**チ
日本では買っちゃダメ
日本の規格では見れない。
T**T
再生できません
ブルーレイプレイヤーおよびプレイステーション3で試しましたが再生できませんでした。リージョンフリーとなっていたので注文したのですが… 非常に残念です。
Trustpilot
3 days ago
5 days ago