Tobias Moretti Movies
With an approach that recalls such outings as Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1974) and Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993), Til Schweiger's zany farce 1 1/2 Knights - In Search of the Ravishing Princess Herzelinde concerns two knights who set out on a heroic mission, to rescue the kidnapped Princess Herzelinde. Given their propensity for klutziness, however, the expedition soon turns into a gag-filled comedy of errors. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi
- Starring:
- Til Schweiger, Rick Kavanian, (more)
Chaos and quirk reign in this sweetly funny film set in Latvia. An American's arrival in the Baltic country coincides with the Summer Solstice of the year, and he would rather be anywhere else in the world. As he searches for his half-sister, he encounters a cab driver who gives him fondness for this strange country. Midsummer Madness stars Pulp Fiction's Maria de Medeiros and Amelie's Dominique Pinon. ~ Kimber Myers, Rovi
- Starring:
- Maria de Medeiros, Dominique Pinon, (more)
Tobias Moretti directed for the stage this 2006 production of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's 1775 opera La Finta Giardiniera, with Rudolf Schasching as Il Podestà Don Anchise, Eva Mei as Sandrina and Christoph Strehl as Il Contino Belfiore. The La Scintilla Orchestra of the Zurich Opera adds musical accompaniment under the baton of the famed Nikolaus Harnoncourt. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi
- Starring:
- Rudolf Schasching, Eva Mei, (more)
This ambitious, four-hour cable miniseries stars Jeremy Sisto (taking time off from his regular series Six Feet Under) as Roman general-turned-emperor Julius Caesar. Expensively filmed in Malta and Bulgaria, the production vividly traces Caesar's rise to prominence as a brilliant military tactician (with remarkably accurate battle scenes); his complex relationships with his mentor General Pompey (Chris Noth) and his second wife Calpurnia (Valeria Golino); his ideological tiltings with Senator Cato (Christopher Walken), who advocates democracy over Caesar's dictatorial ambitions; and his bloody (but inevitable) murder at the hands of former friends and allies. Taking some dramatic license with the facts, the film is basically sympathetic to its subject, although Caesar is depicted as a flawed man, both physically and morally. Giving Caesar points for being fundamentally honorable, in full possession of his faculties, and possessing the "common touch" with the Roman citizenry, the teleplay does not shrink away from the man's violent epileptic seizures, his megalomania, his casually calculated cruelties, and his bigamous relationship with Egyptian queen Cleopatra (Samuela Sardo). Interestingly enough, however, the miniseries downplays his notorious bisexuality ("Every man's woman and every woman's man"). In his final performance, Richard Harris appears as Caesar's wily bête noire, Roman dictator Sulla. Caesar was first telecast in the U.S. on June 29-30, 2003, by the TNT cable network. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- Starring:
- Jeremy Sisto, Richard Harris, (more)
In this whistle-slick German romantic comedy, an aspiring television personality gets tired of her boy friend's obsession with work and decides to go on holiday by herself. She ends up in Berlin where she gets involved with a moneyed banker and a handsome young buck. Upon her return to Munich she finally begins getting breaks and soon becomes a star. Meanwhile her first boy friend endeavors to win her back, but not before he must make some tough choices. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi






