Sumo Bruno
Sumo Bruno
| 18 January 2001 (USA)
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Charming, lonely, 400-pound railway guard Bruno discoves a new life and a new love on the road to the world Sumo wrestling championship.

Reviews
Dynamixor

The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.

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Micah Lloyd

Excellent characters with emotional depth. My wife, daughter and granddaughter all enjoyed it...and me, too! Very good movie! You won't be disappointed.

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Sienna-Rose Mclaughlin

The movie really just wants to entertain people.

Jenni Devyn

Worth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.

FlorianSchirner

This is REALLY the most underrated German movie of the last years. It centers around the first Amateur World championship outside Japan in Riesa, Germany. Riesa is, like many formerly East German areas, a very poor city with high unemployment rate and so on. In these circumstances Bruno Nestroy, unemployed railway worker and "a bit" overweight, is talked by his scoundrel friend (Oliver Korittke) into participating in the upcoming championship. They get a trainer, a German who owns a Japanese restaurant and wants to be Japanese, and marvelously qualify. By the way, Bruno overcomes his self-doubt and shyness and gets a girlfriend (also somewhat of a lovable loser, but with a strong will).The story may sound a bit flat and simple, but the director made it working and, along with the wonderful acting (esp. Korittke and Orbeyi), makes a wonderful movie. But the thing what fascinates me most, is the eye for detail. The people, down to the smallest part, are casted as if they were taken just out of real life, like it is in Riesa and other German cities. The warm and human tax collector, the superficial and insensitive bodybuilding disco owner, the slightly off-worldly bank manager and so on. Even the stand where the two main characters always seem to eat sausages and fries is like any you find here. This grounding in reality makes the film so extraordinary.The Sumo is good, as expected by a movie where the Amateur World champion is the fight trainer and choreographer. He even plays a small part as the other German fighter in the final championship. Also that many other Sumotori were participating gives the movie another level of authenticity.All in all, if you like human and character driven movies, understand a bit German (I don't know how good any translation will be), try to look for this movie. It is worth every second spent watching.

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Vince-6

I just saw this wonderful film tonight at the German Film Festival in London.I knew from the brilliant opening title sequence that this film was going to a treat.This could film could and should be a worldwide hit. I hope it will be. It has everything going for it. It's very well written, full of wonderful performances, has fantastic music throughout and the cinematography is gorgeous.I couldn't have enjoyed it more and I was sad when it ended. It's a definite 10/10 film, and I don't give such a high score lightly. Look out for it and go and see it!

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bgilch

The fun--if lightweight--fable of a 420lb German softie who toughens himself to go after the World Sumo Championship which coincidentally happens to be held in his hometown. Gentle performance by our big hero in a gently perfunctory script. Some good sight gags and an attractive love interest keep the movie bouncing along towards a fairly determined ending. We could have had more of the Japanese coach (where is the necessary philosophical doctrine, the mantra?) and a bit less of the mean ex-boyfriend. Real sumo fans may be disappointed with the fairly limited sumo action. Somewhere between a kid's movie and a fable for fattie adults, the movie is enjoyable on its primary level as a mild comedy. The opening and closing credits are a delightful treat. The Canadian lumberjack sumo was also a howler. Mike G. liked this movie even better than I did. The director also showed up at our screening in Montreal and he was the nicest guy imaginable and terribly funny.

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aj519

Just saw the premiere at the Montreal Film Festival and was greatly entertained. Sumo Bruno is a German film of a 400+ lbs man who finds meaning and self-esteem in a quest to win a sumo-wrestling championship. The story is, in many ways, very conventional with respect to various relationships and plot developments, however the story and characters transcend the Rocky cliches.

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