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Toto le héros

  • 1991
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
6.6K
YOUR RATING
Toto le héros (1991)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer1:32
1 Video
42 Photos
ComedyDramaFantasy

Thomas believed he was switched at birth with Alfred. Feeling cheated, Thomas spent his life plotting revenge against Alfred, his perceived lifelong adversary who he felt stole the privilege... Read allThomas believed he was switched at birth with Alfred. Feeling cheated, Thomas spent his life plotting revenge against Alfred, his perceived lifelong adversary who he felt stole the privileged life that should have been his.Thomas believed he was switched at birth with Alfred. Feeling cheated, Thomas spent his life plotting revenge against Alfred, his perceived lifelong adversary who he felt stole the privileged life that should have been his.

  • Director
    • Jaco Van Dormael
  • Writers
    • Didier De Neck
    • Pascal Lonhay
    • Jaco Van Dormael
  • Stars
    • Michel Bouquet
    • Mireille Perrier
    • Jo De Backer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    6.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jaco Van Dormael
    • Writers
      • Didier De Neck
      • Pascal Lonhay
      • Jaco Van Dormael
    • Stars
      • Michel Bouquet
      • Mireille Perrier
      • Jo De Backer
    • 34User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 17 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:32
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos42

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    Top cast49

    Edit
    Michel Bouquet
    Michel Bouquet
    • Old Thomas…
    Mireille Perrier
    Mireille Perrier
    • Voice of old Evelyne…
    Jo De Backer
    • Adult Thomas
    Thomas Godet
    • Child Thomas
    Gisela Uhlen
    Gisela Uhlen
    • Old Evelyne
    Sandrine Blancke
    • Alice
    Peter Böhlke
    • Old Alfred
    Michel Robin
    Michel Robin
    • Old Alfred
    • (voice)
    Didier Ferney
    • Adult Alfred
    Hugo Harold-Harrison
    Hugo Harold-Harrison
    • Child Alfred
    Fabienne Loriaux
    • Thomas' Mother
    Klaus Schindler
    • Thomas' Father
    Patrick Waleffe
    • Voice of Thomas' Father…
    Pascal Duquenne
    Pascal Duquenne
    • Adult Cèlestin
    François Toumarkine
    • Adult Cèlestin
    • (voice)
    Karim Moussati
    • Child Cèlestin
    Didier De Neck
    • Mr. Kant
    Christine Smeysters
    • Mrs. Kant
    • Director
      • Jaco Van Dormael
    • Writers
      • Didier De Neck
      • Pascal Lonhay
      • Jaco Van Dormael
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews34

    7.46.5K
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    Featured reviews

    9DennisLittrell

    A kind of naturalistic delight

    Thomas is a bitter old man who feels he has been cheated out of the life that was rightly his because he and another boy were switched at birth during a fire at the hospital. Alfred, the other boy, lives a life of privilege and becomes rich. Thomas is jealous. But in another sense Thomas needs to believe that he was switched because he falls in love with his sister Alice. If he really was switched, they are not related.

    This is just one of the ironic witticisms spun out by Jaco van Dormael, who wrote and directed this striking and totally original bit of life triumphant. Veteran French actor Michel Bouquet plays Thomas as an old man, sneaking cigarettes in the old folks home, reliving his memories, plotting his revenge. Jo De Backer plays Thomas as a slightly nerdish young man, consumed by the loss of his beloved sister in a fire when she was about eleven or twelve. One day by accident he spots a woman who reminds him of his sister. He follows her, they fall in love, and it turns out she is married to Alfred! Thomas Godet plays the little boy Thomas with charm and a touching vulnerability. He is picked on and bullied by Alfred and his friends who taunt him with, "van Chickensoup!" (I wonder if the French Academie approves of this vulgar Anglais.) Sandrine Blancke plays Thomas's cute and impish older sister. Mireille Perrier plays Evelyne, who is the woman who reminds Thomas of his sister.

    In a sense this is a romantic comedy, but be warned that in the French cinema a hint of incest is seldom looked on as shocking, rather as something almost akin to nostalgia. And certainly every woman should have a lover and every man a mistress. In another sense this is an art film that plays with time, using both flashbacks and flash forwards to present a story filled with spooky coincidences, punctuated with fantasy and a kind of naturalistic glorification of life epitomized in the catchy tune, "Boom!" that weaves its way in and out of the story, a tune you might have trouble getting out of your head, so be forewarned. ("Boom! When your heart goes boom! It's love, love, love!" written and performed by Charles Trenet.) There is also as aspect of sentimentality, especially in the resolution, that provides a sweet contrast with the naturalistic pathos. When the words that Alice spoke as a child is reprised by Evelyne (although she could not have known what Alice had said) we are delighted, and Thomas is a little rattled.. ("Do you like my hands?" she asks, holding them up. "Which hand do you prefer?")

    The bitter old man learns that he really had the better of it all along (and so he does somewhat the opposite of what he had intended) and indeed we in the audience realize that how we might feel about life, looking back on it, might really just depend on how we choose to feel about it. Dormael's message seems to be that love makes life worth living. We are left with the sense that there is a time for love, and that time passes, and we have to accept that and celebrate the memory.

    Best scene: Ten-year-old Thomas sees his perhaps 11-year-old sister rising out of the bath tub. (We see only his widening eyes; this is a discreet movie.) He says, "I...didn't know you had breasts." She replies (deadpanning the pride of a pre-adolescence girl), "I thought you'd read about them in the newspapers."

    (Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it at Amazon!)
    8Cinemaquebecois

    Grass is always greener at the neighbor's house

    The first movie from Belgium director Jaco Van Dormael is pure magic. It's what cinema should always be.

    I've just seen the movie, for the third time, on TV past midnight yesterday and I couldn't close my eyes. Why ? Because Van Dormael knows how to tell a story. Also, you become very attached to all the character, bad and good one.

    The cinematography give you the impression that you are dreaming. The camera is so light and the colors are so bright so you know that the imagination of Thomas, the "Toto" from the title, is working very hard to remember exactly what happened in his childhood.

    If you love a good story with a very interesting plot, this is the one.
    dbdumonteil

    a clever brilliant movie

    Thomas, an elderly man lives in an old people's home. He's always been persuaded that he has been inverted with another baby called Alfred, during a fire at the maternity hospital. It means that he should have been Alfred, a wealthy and rough boy, cherished by his parents who fell in love with Thomas' sister, Alice. When he's a grown-up, he'll become a brilliant businessman whereas Thomas, him, will only live a dull and mournful life: his father will die early, he'll become a poor surveyor and when he feels love for a woman called Evelyne who looks like his late sister, Alice, he'll feel betrayed because Evelyne is Alfred's wife! His only way to escape from a destiny that is not the right one is to fancy himself as a secret agent (Toto le héros). So, in the old people's home, Thomas's got a sole idea: killing the "usurpator". Will he succeed in? For his first film, Jaco Van Doarmel showed cleverness, originality and talent. The movie is very close to Etienne Chatiliez's movie: "life is a long quiet river" but in this movie, everybody knew that the two babies had been voluntarily inverted and in Doarmel's film, Thomas remains the only one to be persuaed of being inverted. One of the feats of the film is that it never asserts this hypothesis. We see the fire but we don't know if the intervertion really happened... The movie works like a puzzle as Thomas's thoughts and memories pass by and it links several characters, in different places, at different times. It enables to reconstruct Thomas' bitter life. In parallel, you never lose the thread of the plot (Thomas aims at avenging himself against the one who stole his life). The film abounds in visual brainwaves and is very well served by a watertight screenplay. Moreover, there's an amazing contrast between Thomas's bitter life and Alfred's one (which would be Thomas's real life) that is cherished and successful. But, in the end, Alfred isn't as dreadful as he seems, because I noticed that when he was old, he seemed upset. He's probably marked by Evelyne's departure and don't forget that he's tracked down by terrorists. Always right and agile, the movie, sometimes, succeeds in creating touching moments( when Thomas discovers that Thomas's wife is Evelyne, the woman he loves). At last, Michel Bouquet is excellent in his role of tormented and disillusioned man. Like "eraserhead" by David Lynch, in another register, "Toto le héros" rank among the movies that you must see rather than telling it because it can be seen on several levels.
    David Allison

    The Genius of Small Things

    Jaco van Dormael, I love you. When I first saw this film in a dilapidated arts cinema in Cambridge on a cold winter's night, I wasn't expecting much. The only review I'd read was mildly sniffy. It was French, it was about la condition humaine. I thought it'd be a reasonable way to pass a couple of hours.

    When I emerged from that dark pit of a cinema, I felt, at least for a while, as if my eyesight had been transformed. As we walked back to my friend's flat, I became fixated on one thing after another - the rain upon the cobbles, the light on the church, the darkness of the sky - I felt about five years old all over again. Since then, this film has never been out of my top five. And probably never will.

    That is not say it's perfect. It's message is perhaps a little too bleak for my liking, and it does indulge itself in the precept that life it utterly meaningless. But how the visuals of the film contradict that sentiment! Every shot filled with colour, with life, with imagination.

    In a way, Toto is an old-fashioned film - a thriller in the Third Man/Citizen Kane mold - a complex story unfolding in a semi-linear fashion, in this case throughout one man's whole life. Dour realism this certainly ain't. A wonderfully naive 40s (?) style chanson reappears, as the adult 'Van Chickensoup' watches his dead father sing from the back of a truck in front of him. Flowers sway in time to the song. The child truly believes that his father met his mother by landing in the garden from a parachute. Scene after scene of joyful play follow each other.

    But this is no art-house foppery. This is a tight, mean, well-constructed tale about the feeling that dogs us all - is this all life is? Could I have been happier as someone else? Are they happier than me? Am I lucky or unlucky? And most importantly, this: Why, when life seems so hard at times, can we find so much joy in small things, in a flower, or a kiss, or crazy weather, or new clothes?

    Forget the French subtitles, a fact that seems to put off so many North American and British viewers, forget the 'art-house' tag. I own this film and have shown it to scores of friends, all of whom have walked away astonished at its vision. I assure you that you will love this film.

    It's alright, you don't have to thank me, spreading the word is enough. ;-) Watch it today! And then watch the Eighth Day, Van Dormael's astonishing second feature.
    cinergy

    Don't take your eyes off the screen for even one second...

    Jaco Van Dormael conjures up (he was a magician and a clown) one of those films that because of their formal beauty and intelligent content deserve to be seen more often but are not. The film is full of internal echoes, images that resurface under different contexts, and make you rethink them again and again (dare I say like in Citizen Kane?). As if that were not enough, there are many other resonances to genres and specific films that will make film buffs laugh with excitement: quotations to gangster films, to Hitchcock, to Bunuel, etc. are all there to be discovered and enjoyed. Alan Moore would be smiling at the construction of this beautiful crystal web that is the narrative of this film. See it and rejoice...

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Many of the railway scenes in the movie were shot on a preserved railway line between Dendermonde and Puurs, Belgium.
    • Connections
      Featured in Zomergasten: Episode #10.2 (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Boum
      Music by Charles Trenet

      Lyrics by Charles Trenet

      Performed by Charles Trenet

      Societe EMI France

      (c) Edition Vianelly

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Toto the Hero?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 19, 1991 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Belgium
      • France
      • Germany
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Toto the Hero
    • Filming locations
      • Baasrode, Dendermonde, Flanders, Belgium(railway crossing, with barriers)
    • Production companies
      • Iblis Films
      • Metropolis Filmproduction
      • Philippe Dussart
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,228,153
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,228,153
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 31 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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