Slant Magazine
Complacent with road-movie tropes, director Ralf Huettner and screenwriter Florian David Fitz's Vincent Wants to Sea is likeable insofar as it's familiar.
Critic Rating
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Director
Ralf Huettner
Cast
Florian David Fitz,
Karoline Herfurth,
Johannes Allmayer,
Katharina Müller-Elmau,
Heino Ferch,
Karin Thaler
Genre
Drama
Vincent, a young man who suffers from Tourette's syndrome, has just lost his mother. His father, a successful politician, does not want to take care of him and therefore places him into a mental institution. He is put into a room with Alexander, a guy with a compulsive disorder, and is shown around by Marie, an anorectic girl.
Slant Magazine
Complacent with road-movie tropes, director Ralf Huettner and screenwriter Florian David Fitz's Vincent Wants to Sea is likeable insofar as it's familiar.
Boston Globe by Wesley Morris
This is a bright, broad, silly, harmless movie whose sweetness is a means to an end.
The Hollywood Reporter by Sheri Linden
The picture's quiet performances and occasionally surprising moments take it just far enough off the beaten path to make it more than a transparently formulaic feel-good story.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch by Joe Williams
Despite the oddly literate title, Vincent Wants to Sea never deviates from the predictable bonding-through-misadventure script, and it has little to teach us about the nature and treatment of the traveler's respective maladies.
Los Angeles Times by Robert Abele
What's missing is any of the real-life messiness that might have lifted this material from its creatively tic-ridden confines.
Boxoffice Magazine by John P. McCarthy
Trapped inside the German film Vincent Wants to Sea there's an affecting father-son drama, an amusing road movie, a quirky romantic comedy and a non-patronizing take on mental illness. What we actually get - a homogenized movie-of-the-week set against the Alps and punctuated by anodyne English-language pop songs - brought out the cynic in me.
Time Out
If Vincent Wants to Sea proves nothing else, it's that a moronically quirky take on mental illness is no more palatable when it's subtitled.
The New York Times
The principal characters can be reduced to a handful of tics, and the entire story line is immaculately devoid of incidental detail. It's like sitting in a padded cell for about 90 minutes.
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