Schultze Gets the Blues
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Schultze Gets the Blues | |
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Directed by | Michael Schorr |
Produced by | Jens Körner |
Written by | Michael Schorr |
Starring | Horst Krause, Karl Fred Müller |
Distributed by | Paramount Classics (USA) |
Release date(s) | September 2, 2003 |
Running time | 114 minutes |
Language | German |
IMDb profile |
Schultze Gets the Blues is a 2003 film directed and written by Michael Schorr.
- Tagline: It's never too late to re-tune your soul.
[edit] Plot
Schultze (played by Horst Krause) is a large, recently retired salt-miner living in Teutschenthal (near Halle, Saxony-Anhalt in Germany). Along with his also laid-off friends Jürgen and Manfred he finds himself restless with so much spare time. For years, he has played traditional polka music on his accordion, but a series of upheavals in his life inspire an interest in American Zydeco music. Though being afraid of travelling to the USA at the beginning he accepts his music club's wish to represent it at a German folk music festival in New Braunfels, Texas. But instead of appearing there he chooses to travel around the countryside despite speaking little English, immersing himself in the music and culture of the Bayou. Finally, among his newly found friends he becomes very sick and presumly dies. Back in Teutschenthal a funeral is held for Schultze which turns into a descent and mildly happy celebration of his life: "Herr, lehre uns Bedenken, dass wir alle einmal sterben müssen, auf das wir im Leben klug werden" - "Lord, teach us to understand we all have to die sometime, that we become wiser in our lives" (Psalm 90,12).