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Schultze Gets the Blues (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:63
Fresh:45
Rotten:18
Average Rating:6.8/10
Consensus: Schultze Gets the Blues is a sweet and charming dark comedy.
Runtime: 1 hr 54 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
Synopsis: After portly German salt miner Schultze (Horst Krause) and his cronies are forced into retirement, the emptiness of their nowhere, smalltown-Germany existence becomes sadly apparent. The only... After portly German salt miner Schultze (Horst Krause) and his cronies are forced into retirement, the emptiness of their nowhere, smalltown-Germany existence becomes sadly apparent. The only bachelor in his circle, Schultze falls into a dull routine of playing accordion in a polka band, fishing, napping, and tending to his garden gnomes. Then a chance encounter with Cajun zydeco music turns his life around, a little. Soon he is cooking jambalaya for his pals and playing zydeco to the somewhat shocked denizens of his sleepy burg. When his friends arrange for him to be sent to the U.S. for a German folk festival, Schultze seizes the opportunity to visit the Louisiana bayou, and so his one chance at a wild adventure in life begins. Overcoming the language barrier through his hat-doffing, old-world charm, Schultze finds himself strangely at home in this new environment. SCHULTZE is a slow-moving but lovely little tale about facing mortality, and how the power of both music and human kindness can transcend borders and boundaries, no matter what one's age. Director Michael Schorr plays this--his feature film debut--in a wonderfully deadpan, minor key. The film manages to be deeply moving without ever resorting to standard "fish out of water" cliches or manipulative soundtrack cues. Krause is resoundingly authentic in the title role, and the various (actual location) landscapes are rendered with haunting, lyrical realism. [More]
Starring: Horst Krause, Karl-Fred Muller, Rosemarie Deibel, Wilhelmine Horschig
Starring: Horst Krause, Karl-Fred Muller, Rosemarie Deibel, Wilhelmine Horschig, Anne V. Angelle
Director: Michael Schorr
Director: Michael Schorr
Screenwriter: Michael Schorr
Producer: Jens Korner, Thomas Riedel, Oliver Niemeier
Composer: Thomas Wittenbacher
Studio: Paramount Classics
Reviews for Schultze Gets the Blues
Krause, a natural physical comic, lights up with endearingly childish glee as he joyously samples his new life.
He does, but you probably won't, especially from watching this movie.
The film's sparseness has an off-putting effect on the viewer. Schultze, the character, remains more an idea or concept than a fleshed-out human being.
One of those movies where nothing whatsoever seems to happen until you look closely, at which point everything happens.
The writer and director, Michael Schorr, is making his first film, but has the confidence and simplicity of someone who has been making films forever.
Schorr steers clear of emotion and character development, content to just putter down the river to nowhere.
Filmed in a leisurely, understated style, this dark comedy is downright entrancing.
A film with two opposite interpretations to its title -- figuratively sad, literally joyful.
A meandering story of a German everyman who has little to show for his life until he wins a trip to the American Bayou.
Important and thoughtful themes, which in other hands would likely have been weighty and overbearing, remain drolly deadpan in this accomplished debut film.
Schultze Gets the Blues can get a little thin, but it never loses its sense of quiet, playful dignity.
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