Vitus

2006
7.6| 2h0m| PG| en| More Info
Released: 22 December 2006 Released
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Synopsis

Vitus tells the story of a highly-gifted boy (played by real-life piano prodigy Teo Gheorghiu) whose parents have demanding and ambitious plans for him.

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Reviews

Jeanskynebu the audience applauded
Nonureva Really Surprised!
Freaktana A Major Disappointment
Casey Duggan It’s sentimental, ridiculously long and only occasionally funny
Sean Payne A musical Extravaganza of Epic proportion on a biblical scale. this is the story of a young genius virtuoso of the ivory keys, Vitus is misunderstood until he takes maters in to his own hands, This is PG 13 due to complicated social issues, I enjoyed this film so much I bought a copy, HIs grandfather dies he was Vitus's moral grounding, and best friend but it mostly about the Music this is worth the watch God bless and enjoy
kikoshaus Perhaps you heard about geniuses before and imagined the typical stereotype of a "genius", like probably Einstein, Newton or some smart dude of our times. But whatever you might have had in mind, Vitus will make you think how cool is to be in charge of your intelligence and skills. No matter what your age is, no matter how super smart you are, you still can be cool without losing your touch. I love Vitus and Bruno Ganz makes also a terrific role and a couple of key scenes with him are just amazing. I specially like the fact about this movie that once you realize you are different and you try to hide it, still your own scent will come up sudden, unexpectedly. That makes you unique and should encourage you to direct what you want to achieve in life taking advantage of your own resources. Vitus shows you it's fine to have no clue about what to do. The question is, do you really don't know what to do? Not sure how many Vitus are in the world anyways but definitely this movie is one of my favorites to be re-watched.
Virginia Chang The theme is too common, if not somewhat a clichés. It is a movie about a gifted boy, and his love for freedom. Yes, but what else then? I have seen so many movies about gifted people, but none of them is so boring like this one.First of all, his love for music is wired. It is music that made him find his "princess", and it is music that forced him to get rid of the disguise. But what does this love for music actually mean for the movie as a whole? To me, it is something beautiful but totally redundant. I understood the impact his grandfather has had on him, so I understood the flying thing, the craftsmanship, and the final take-off scene. But why is music so important? Without music, we still knew he was talented because he was talented in many aspects. Without music, we still knew he was interesting, because he created the whole drama to deceive the tough mother...Only his love for Isabel explains music, but guess what, his love for Isabel is also redundant...What I could see is a deliberate tact to make him look funny, a man's mind in a boy's brain...But does he look funnier? Certainly not so noticeably...Only the grandfather did a good job. And this is the only compliment that I can give...
hasosch It is an open secret that Swiss German movies are almost unknown outside of Europe and that they seldom or never win Oscars. Well understood, I speak here about movies in Swiss German language. Swiss German is by most Americans not even recognized as German; for Americans who have traveled to Europe, it sounds like Austrian, which is does not at all, in reality. Therefore, it does not astonish either, that most Americans do not know that there was a time when Swiss German movies were en vogue, this was in the 50ies and in the early 60ies. Even before, in the 30ies and 40ies, there was a time when it looked like Swiss German movies would reach international standards in the near future.But unfortunately, except some highlights like "Bäckerei Zürrer", "Hinter den sieben Gleisen" or "Dällebach Kari" by Kurt Früh, "Ueli der Knecht" and "Ueli der Pächter" by Franz Schnyder (which are available in Japan, but not in the US), "Die plötzliche Einsamkeit des Konrad Steiner" by Kurt Gloor (all available in region-bound, non-subtitled dvds for horribly high prices in Switzerland), Swiss movies are not reaching the standards of other European states. And now comes Vitus which has been nominated for Oscar, from a film director who has made not much more than a handful of feature-length movies. How does this movie fit into the Swiss film tradition? For everybody who knows the movies that I have mentioned above, the structure of "Vitus" is not unknown: it is a movie that belongs to the fairytale-genre introduced by Kurt Früh fifty and more years ago. Vitus, the "wunderkind" who plays most difficult sonatas before he is 10 years old, is ready to graduate from high school with 12 and earns with his own company millions and millions of Swiss Franks by stock-exchange - this is not so different from the miraculous fate of the poor and miserably living family Caduff to whom the wizard comes in the person of the realty-owner Mr. Frehner who gives them for free a luxury-apartment on the Nob Hill of Zurich and turns them from gypsies to winners of the post-war-time in "Es Dach überem Chopf". However, there is a huge difference between "Vitus" and the old Kurt Früh-movies: the ladder are social-critique, the Vitus is not, but stays on the surface. Instead, we learn about the desolate status of today's Swiss German which is mixed up with American lumps. Above all, "Vitus" simply lacks its anchoring in today's Swiss society - as Kurt Früh's movies were strongly anchored in the Zurich society of the 50ies and 60ies. Although we see Vitus' father and, shortly, his mother, at work, the family stays isolated from the rest of Zurich's society. For example, we do not even see any neighbors in or around the house in Wipkingen, where the family von Holzen lives. All the encounters of Vitus and his family stand under the appearances of wonders that will happen, not under actual social interplay. The movie, therefore, is a nice and entertaining story about a fictive little boy, but not more and settles, compared to Kurt Früh's movies, on a much deeper level than it had been reached in Swiss film culture already at the end of the fifties.