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Schultze Gets the Blues
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Directed by Michael Schorr
Directed and written by Michael Schorr, Schultze Gets the Blues centers around Schultze (Horst Krause), a middle-aged accordionist whose lust for life is renewed after hearing a Cajun zydeco riff on the radio. Despite the fact that using his accordion for anything other than polka would be considered a sacrilege by his family -- Schultze's father was considered legendary in the polka circuit -- a newly invigorated Schultze jumps at the chance to change his musical style and takes it a step further by learning how to cook jambalaya and saving money for a trip to the United States. Despite more than a few unseen barriers, Schultze makes the trip from Germany to America, where he takes on Texas and the Louisiana bayous with an unprecedented zest. Schultze Gets the Blues also features Harald Warmbrunn, Karl Fred Mueller, Ursula Schucht, and Hannelore Schubert. ~ Tracie Cooper, All Movie Guide
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"By Tricia Olszewski Before Schultze got the blues, he had the mean reds. The timid title character in writer-director Michael Schorr’s debut, Schultze Gets the Blues, is a lifelong salt miner and polka player in a bleak industrial German town. Forced into early retirement, Schultze silen " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
In a small German town where time passes by the raising and lowering of the railroad crossing bar, three aging mine workers find things have gotten even slower since their involuntary early retirement. Until one of them, Schultze, decides to pursue his accordion hobby down previously untraveled avenues, and his pace quickens ever so imperceptibly. Michael Schorr's Schultze Gets the Blues is masterful at painting portraits of humdrum pleasures and minor sorrows, cheery even when it's gloomy, and it's blessed with a keen retro-shabby production design. The film truly is comprised of portraits, as Schorr plants that stationary camera and leaves it for a succession of long shots -- both in terms of their depth of field, and their duration. This contemplative pace sometimes acts like a narcotic -- more soothing than numbing, to be sure -- but it also allows the filmmakers to say much with relatively little dialogue, using telltale environmental details to speak volumes. Music is the story's universal form of communication, especially when Schultze travels to the United States, where his already taciturn nature is challenged further by the language barrier. There's nothing glamorous about the Bayou towns portrayed here -- in fact, the similarities to his hometown are driven home humorously -- but the trip itself is an earth-shattering achievement for this creature of habit, who worries, for example, that a change in his musical tastes is a sign of failing mental health. Played by the rotund and wonderfully understated Horst Krause, Schultze doesn't undergo the huge character revelations and other big moments a viewer might expect of a protagonist. But Schultze Gets the Blues should be proud that it has a different definition of what passes for "big moments," and it rewards viewers capable of appreciating its sense of relativity. ~ All Movie Guide
 

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