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Wolfgang (Extraordinari)

Play trailer Wolfgang (Extraordinari) 2025 1h 40m Drama Comedy Play Trailer Watchlist
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Critics Reviews

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Grant Watson Fiction Machine Wolfgang is pretty good, all things considered, and while it is unlikely to win any plaudits for originality it does treat its subject matter with surprising sensitivity and intelligence. Rated: 7/10 Jun 22, 2025 Full Review Randy Meeks Espinof Does it work? Yes. Do you forget it as soon as you see it? Absolutely. [Full review in Spanish] Rated: 3/5 Mar 17, 2025 Full Review Javier Ocaña El Pais (Spain) ...Wolfgang is a highly accomplished work, elegant in its form, that addresses such complex themes as Asperger's, depression, the difficulties of motherhood and fatherhood,...and even personal vulnerability... [Full review in Spanish] Mar 14, 2025 Full Review Pablo Vázquez Fotogramas ...it's striking that a film so comfortable in its comfort zone soars when it plunges into its tangential darkness. [Full review in Spanish] Rated: 3/5 Mar 14, 2025 Full Review Andrea G. Bermejo Cinemanía (Spain) Ruiz Caldera takes us on a journey of emotion, from a tender comedy with nods to the world of cinema to that bittersweet ending that showcases the immense talent of its two protagonists. [Full review in Spanish] Rated: 3/5 Mar 12, 2025 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Marco L (CASTELLANO) Hay películas que parecen pensadas más para vender postales que para contar una historia de verdad, y Wolfgang es un ejemplo claro. Todo está rodado con una limpieza artificial: Barcelona, París, las casas perfectas, los interiores impolutos… y, sin embargo, no hay emoción real detrás. Lo que vemos es un escaparate disfrazado de drama. La película insiste en buscar la lágrima fácil desde el primer momento. Todo está calculado para que el espectador empatice, pero nunca llega a sentirse auténtico. Los personajes son estereotipos que hemos visto mil veces: el padre torpe, el niño prodigio con problemas, la abuela insufrible… hasta los secundarios parecen sacados de un molde. Da igual la escena: sabes exactamente qué va a pasar antes de que ocurra. El niño protagonista, lejos de generar ternura, resulta agotador. Su construcción como “genio especial” está tan manida que termina siendo más un recurso de guion que un personaje con matices. El padre no se queda atrás: exagerado hasta la caricatura, parece escrito con brocha gorda. Todo refuerza la sensación de que no estamos viendo un retrato honesto, sino una manipulación emocional mal disimulada. La única que consigue salvar algo es Anna Castillo, en el papel de psicóloga y profesora de piano. Su personaje tiene cierta frescura y naturalidad que brilla entre tanta impostura. Cada vez que aparece en pantalla, la película respira un poco. Pero no es suficiente para equilibrar un conjunto que naufraga en exceso de clichés. Al final, Wolfgang es un producto más que una película. Busca emocionar a base de fórmulas y lugares comunes, pero lo que consigue es todo lo contrario: alejar al espectador con un dramatismo impostado y una puesta en escena de postal. Hay telefilmes de sobremesa que, sin grandes pretensiones, logran sorprender mucho más. Aquí todo está demasiado calculado, demasiado perfecto, demasiado vacío. (ENGLISH) Some films seem designed more to sell postcards than to tell a real story, and Wolfgang is a clear example. Everything looks spotless: Barcelona, Paris, the pristine homes, the polished interiors… but there’s no real emotion behind it. What we see is a showcase disguised as a drama. The movie keeps pushing for easy tears from the very beginning. Everything is calculated to make the audience empathize, but it never feels genuine. The characters are stereotypes we’ve seen countless times: the clumsy father, the troubled prodigy child, the unbearable grandmother… even the supporting roles feel like they’ve been copied and pasted. Whatever the scene, you already know what’s going to happen. The child protagonist, instead of inspiring tenderness, ends up being exhausting. His portrayal as a “special genius” is so overused that he feels more like a screenwriting trick than a nuanced character. The father isn’t any better: exaggerated to the point of caricature, written without subtlety. It all reinforces the sense that we’re not watching an honest portrayal, but rather emotional manipulation poorly disguised. The only one who manages to shine is Anna Castillo, as the psychologist and piano teacher. Her role brings a bit of freshness and naturalness that stands out among so much artificiality. Whenever she’s on screen, the film breathes a little. But it’s not enough to balance a story weighed down by clichés. In the end, Wolfgang feels more like a product than a movie. It tries to move you through formulas and well-worn tropes, but ends up doing the opposite: pushing viewers away with a forced dramatization and postcard-like imagery. There are Sunday TV films with fewer pretensions that manage to surprise far more. Here, everything feels too calculated, too perfect, too empty. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 08/21/25 Full Review Marian C I really loved this movie. It was touching and sweet but not in a sappy way. I highly recommend it. The actors are excellent and the storyline was great. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 05/03/25 Full Review Read all reviews
Wolfgang (Extraordinari)

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Movie Info

Director
Javier Ruiz Caldera
Screenwriter
Laia Aguilar, Yago Alonso, Carmen Marfà
Production Co
Institut Català de les Empreses Culturals, Telecinco Cinema, Nostromo Pictures, Instituto de la Cinematografía y de las Artes Audiovisuales, 3Cat
Genre
Drama, Comedy
Original Language
Catalan
Runtime
1h 40m