The Red Violin (1999)
Front Cover Actor
Carlo Cecchi Nicolo Bussotti
Jean-Luc Bideau Georges Poussin
Christoph Koncz Kaspar Weiss
Samuel L. Jackson Charles Morritz
Don McKellar Evan Williams
Irene Grazioli Anna Bussotti
Jason Flemyng Frederick Pope
Greta Scacchi Victoria Byrd
Sylvia Chang Xiang Pei
Liu Zi Feng Chou Yuan
Anita Laurenzi Cesca (Cremona)
Tommaso Puntelli Apprentice (Cremona)
Samuele Amighetti Boy (Cremona)
Aldo Brugnini Assistant (Cremona)
Clotilde Mollet Antoinette Pussin (Vienna)
Florentín Groll Anton von Spielmann (Vienna)
Movie Details
Genre Drama; Music; Mystery; Romance
Director François Girard
Producer Niv Fichman
Writer Don McKellar; François Girard
Studio Lions Gate Entertainment
Language English
Audience Rating R (Restricted)
Running Time 150 mins
Country USA
Color Color
Plot
Mounted in high lavish style, from the opening strains to coda, The Red Violin pays homage to the careful uses of color and composition without bothering to support these qualities with any real substance. Oh, it's a class act on the surface all the way, while failing on nearly every other level to convince. The story tells the story, revealing precious little else. The 17th-century Cremonese instrument-maker Niccolo Bussotti finishes his final violin with a curious red varnish, the secret of which spans the film, yet will come as a surprise only to the very sleepy. The odd voyage of this unique violin through history is then explored from one episode to the next, from child prodigy to gypsies to Victorian virtuoso to a clandestine enclave of art lovers in Shanghai during the Cultural Revolution. This is all framed by the violin's rediscovery in present day by instrument appraiser Charles Morritz (Samuel L. Jackson), for whom the perfect instrument strikes a resonant chord. The main scheme of the film, an object connecting a number of seemingly disparate stories, has been used many times, most notably in Max Ophuls's La Ronde. But while this approach is employed elsewhere to cause one scene to reverberate against another, The Red Violin is content to leave each episode thematically unconnected with any of the others. On the decorative level, the film may satisfy many viewers with its sensuous attention to tone and detail, as well as its eclectic and expertly performed score. But as narrative it is very slight. Just pierce the pretty crust of this puff pastry and gaze in wonder at the pocket of air within. --Jim Gay
Personal Details
Seen It Yes
Index 140
Collection Status In Collection
Links IMDB
Product Details
Format DVD
Region Region 1
UPC 025192067624
Release Date 4/18/2000
Nr of Disks/Tapes 1
Extra Features
Color Closed-captioned DTS Surround Sound Widescreen Dolby