Vitus Movie Review
Vitus Review

"Vitus" Overview

Rating: PG
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Fredi M. MurerProducer : Christian Davi,Christof Neracher,Fredi M. Murer
Screenwiter : Fredi M. Murer,Peter Luisi,Lukas B. Suter
Starring : Fabrizio Borsani,Teo Gheorghiu,Julika Jenkins,Bruno Ganz,Urs Jucker,Tamara Scarpellini
Fredi M. Murer's Vitus may not be a fairy tale, as Murer himself is so quick to
point out, but it certainly has the feel of childhood fantasy. Unlike most
films about childhood told through the fantasy lens, Vitus orchestrates a
fantasy based in realism that echoes child heroes as varied as Bastian Bux (The
Neverending Story) and Oskar Matzerath (The Tin Drum).
As a young boy, Vitus comes naturally to the piano. The works of Liszt,
Schumann and Ravel (amongst others) come easily to him, impressing his parents'
dinner-party guests with one swift flutter of the ivory keys. His father (Urs
Jucker) has a knack for technology and creates advanced hearing aids for a
living. Vitus' mother (a stellar Julika Jenkins) has a job as well but quickly
dismisses it to become her sons muse, manager and guide, much to the young
boy's chagrin. It's when mother dismisses Vitus' babysitter and object of
affection Isabel that he becomes unruly and begins to act out a bit.
Vitus (gifted Teo Gheorghiu) turns 12 and suddenly decides that he wants to try
something else. However, as his grandfather (the great Bruno Ganz) points out,
you sometimes have to be crafty. In accordance with his grandpa, Vitus hatches
a scheme and soon becomes as normal and silly as any other 7th grader. That is,
until he finds out that his family is in trouble and that Isabel (Tamara
Scarpanelli), now 19, works at the local record shop. It is then that Vitus
kicks back into action.
At first, Vitus has the same motivations as Oskar Matzerath. He sees the adults
as people who saw one talent and didn't live the life around them, relegating
themselves to one track. Matzerath threw himself down a flight of stairs to
stop growing; Vitus jumps off his balcony to stop thinking. But where The Tin
Drum had the grandiose visage of perversion and obscenity, Vitus has a subdued
tone of enigma, a sort of goofy espionage sans a villain with a ridiculous
haircut.
At best, Vitus seems a natural cure for the Spy Kids generation, a more
heartfelt flight into a child's imagination and reasoning. As the quote that
prefaces the film implies, the implications of the child's life depends on an
adult's preconceived notions of what life is about. Vitus doesn't neglect or
even dismiss his talent altogether, he just wants to understand the normalcy of
every-day childhood before he is thrown into the hobgob of "genius" culture.
Though ultimately inconsequential and partially overly melodramatic, Vitus
still has an overwhelming charm and a sense of lo-fi dazzle that puts it
heads-and-shoulders above garbage like Evan Almighty. Rather than go the easy
route and say "all you need is your family," Murer rather politely suggests
that maybe we actually need some well-spent time away from our parents.
Now let's see ya dance.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin



