A great little film that, while lacking visual flair, portrays a faith in and understanding of mankind that is difficult to find anywhere these days.
Raising Victor Vargas (2003)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:104
Fresh:100
Rotten:4
Average Rating:7.9/10
Consensus: A coming-of-age tale marked by its authenticity.
Runtime: 88 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis:
Manhattan's gritty, majestic Lower East Side is the sweltering romantic playground for Victor Vargas (VICTOR RASUK), a self-styled teenaged Casanova who, despite his adolescent hubris, has a lot to...
Manhattan's gritty, majestic Lower East Side is the sweltering romantic playground for Victor Vargas (VICTOR RASUK), a self-styled teenaged Casanova who, despite his adolescent hubris, has a lot to learn about love.
Eager to protect his street-cred after his friends discover he's been sleeping with upstairs neighbour "Fat Donna" (DONNA MALDONADO), Victor sets out to nab a new girl. Much to her annoyance, popular "Juicy Judy" Ramirez (JUDY MARTE) finds herself the object of Victor's relentless attention. After a humiliating series of public rejections, Victor strikes a bargain with Judy's younger brother Carlos (WILFREE VASQUEZ). In exchange for a date with Victor's younger sister, Vicky, Carlos will help Victor win Judy's affections. His plan proves successful and Judy agrees to tolerate him as "her new man," securing Victor's place high atop the neighbourhood's social pecking order.
Unfortunately, his hilariously cantankerous old-school grandmother (ALTAGRACIA GUZMAN), with whom he and his siblings live, is convinced that Victor's teen-age sexual antics make him a bad kid. Caught between regaining his grandmother's trust and helping his kid brother and sister negotiate the oft-baffling ways of the world, Victor discover that there's a difference between acting like a man and becoming one. As he and Judy slowly start to trust and be trusted, Victor learns that a lot of love has been put into RAISING VICTOR VARGAS.
Peter Sollett's feature debut is a stunning piece of filmmaking that carefully explores the stumbling blocks of growing up, capturing adolescence at its most tender, funny and genuine. His script was developed through the Sundance Screenwriters Lab, a prestigious program which offers emerging artists the opportunity to work intensively on their feature film scripts with the support of established screenwriters. Sollett also extensively workshopped the film with the support of La Cinéfondation in Paris. -- © Samuel Goldwyn Films
Starring: Victor Rasuk, Judy Marte, Melonie Diaz, Altagracia Guzman
Starring: Victor Rasuk, Judy Marte, Melonie Diaz, Altagracia Guzman, Silvestre Rasuk, Krystal Rodriguez, Kevin Rivera
Director: Peter Sollett
Director: Peter Sollett
Screenwriter: Peter Sollett
Producer: Alain De La Mata, Robin O'Hara, Peter Sollett, Scott Macaulay
Studio: Samuel Goldwyn Films
Reviews for Raising Victor Vargas
Never once feels false or hits a sour note, and its actors don't seem at all like they're acting.
Raising Victor Vargas is more than a terrific film -- it's a kind one.
Full of humor and heart, it is the best family comedy since Moonstruck.
You keep waiting for it to not be awesome... and it keeps being awesome.
The narrative is thin, but the little-known cast (who helped writer-director Peter Sollett develop the characters) bring an element of realism to roles that defy stereotypes and pigeonholing.
The movie has a fresh, vibrant feel to it that gives its characters room to breathe and be themselves. The best part: Nobody wears out their welcome.
["Raising Victor Vargas"] is such a well crafted, good hearted teen romance I hope it gets deserved life in the after market.
A satisfying motion picture that wins its audience over because the characters are allowed to be themselves.
Raising Victor Vargas displays a sweet intelligence. It has a gritty charm about itself .
Writer-director Sollett has a honed, at-home cast and a deft, funny sense of eros. The many close-ups establish intimacy, though at times this feels like a case study in sex and urban density.
For those sick of the tired conventions of 'rom-coms' (as Hollywood wags call romantic comedies), Vargas is a refreshing cure, frank about healthy teenage curiosity and sexuality in ways that don't make them punchlines to smutty jokes.
There's nothing in the utterly enchanting Raising Victor Vargas you haven't seen before; you'd just be hard-pressed to name another movie that did it as well.
It is rare to find a film that defies one's expectations as sweetly and satisfyingly as this coming-of-age comedy-drama.
In every aspect of filmmaking and intent this picture is peerless, so truly real, funny, poignant and sexy that it almost feels like a watershed cinematic moment.
Raising Victor Vargas has landed exactly the right actors for a script that already gets points for respecting its teenage characters.
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