La ballade de Titus is a 1997 French comedy film, directed by Vincent De Brus.
La ballade de Titus | |
---|---|
Directed by | Vincent De Brus |
Written by | Vincent De Brus Stéphane Giusti |
Produced by | Christian Larouche Jean-Pierre Ramsay-Levi |
Starring | Michel Courtemanche Jean-Claude Dreyfus Catherine Jacob |
Cinematography | Michel Abramowicz |
Edited by | Marie-Blanche Colonna |
Music by | Hadi Kalafate |
Production companies | Cinépix FIT Productions |
Distributed by | Les Films de l'Atalante |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 min |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Burlesque fable addressing a serious subject : the right to difference through the adventures of Titus from a young age was locked in the basement by his adoptive parents with only companions a television, a VCR and five hundred cartoons cassettes. We find him twenty years later in the clinic of the terrible Dr. Schrink. But there, thwarting the plans of the wicked, he meets the love and glory soon.
The movie was first released in Germany, 17 July 1997, and then in France, 15 July 1998.[1]
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