Tove
- 2020
- 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
4.2K
YOUR RATING
Depiction on the life of Tove Jansson, showing both her personal relationships, and the creation of the popular Moomin books.Depiction on the life of Tove Jansson, showing both her personal relationships, and the creation of the popular Moomin books.Depiction on the life of Tove Jansson, showing both her personal relationships, and the creation of the popular Moomin books.
- Awards
- 11 wins & 6 nominations total
Featured reviews
This biopic about the artist Tove Jansson opens the Festival, which focuses on her relationship with her great love, not fully reciprocated. Leaving on a secondary plane other relationships that seem more interesting to us, such as the one she maintains with her father, this biopic is conventional. There is an unrequited double relationship, but the script unbalances her interest. Everything is in its place, but nothing stands out especially, except the work of the actress Alma Pöysti.
The Finnish film Tove (2020) was directed by Zaida Bergroth. It stars Alma Pöysti as Tove Jansson, "one of the most beloved Finnish writers/cartoonists/artists," according to a knowledgeable reviewer.
Tove was the creator of the Moomins, important characters in Swedish-language books and comic strips. (Jansson was a member of the Swedish-speaking minority in Finland.) She also wrote novels and children's fiction.
Alma Pöysti is a brilliant actor, and she makes Jansson's character come alive. This is important, because Pöysti is on the screen almost all the time. The movie rises or falls based on her skills.
The movie has two major plots. One plot revolves around the fact that Jansson wanted to be a recognized artist, not a cartoonist. Another plot involves Jansson's sexuality.
We saw this film at Rochester's wonderful Dryden Theatre, presented by ImageOut, the great LGBT film festival. (Of course, all safety protocols were in place.)
Tove has an IMDb rating of 7.2. I thought it was better than that, and rated it 8.
Tove was the creator of the Moomins, important characters in Swedish-language books and comic strips. (Jansson was a member of the Swedish-speaking minority in Finland.) She also wrote novels and children's fiction.
Alma Pöysti is a brilliant actor, and she makes Jansson's character come alive. This is important, because Pöysti is on the screen almost all the time. The movie rises or falls based on her skills.
The movie has two major plots. One plot revolves around the fact that Jansson wanted to be a recognized artist, not a cartoonist. Another plot involves Jansson's sexuality.
We saw this film at Rochester's wonderful Dryden Theatre, presented by ImageOut, the great LGBT film festival. (Of course, all safety protocols were in place.)
Tove has an IMDb rating of 7.2. I thought it was better than that, and rated it 8.
Be warned although based on the life of author of a kid's creation, this one is definitely not for the kids.
Although it's heartwarming and quite sad in places, it's one of the better biopic's on artists I've seen in a while. Carried by a excellent performance from Alma Pöysti as Tove Jansson, probably best known for Aki Kaurismaki's recent film Fallen Leaves. She's really a likeable presence on screen.
The film doesn't really shy away from Tove's Bisexuality or her sex life. Although I did think the film did underplay Tove's lifelong partner Tuulikki Pietila role in her life (she gets a few minutes near the end) and it's mostly based around her love affair with Vivica Bandler.
At 1hr 40mins, it doesn't overstay it's welcome. The cast are really excellent. It's not breaking any new ground or anything but having such a likeable lead actress in Pöysti carrying the film does help it. I hope that with success of Fallen Leaves, that we see more of her working outside of Finland.
Although it's heartwarming and quite sad in places, it's one of the better biopic's on artists I've seen in a while. Carried by a excellent performance from Alma Pöysti as Tove Jansson, probably best known for Aki Kaurismaki's recent film Fallen Leaves. She's really a likeable presence on screen.
The film doesn't really shy away from Tove's Bisexuality or her sex life. Although I did think the film did underplay Tove's lifelong partner Tuulikki Pietila role in her life (she gets a few minutes near the end) and it's mostly based around her love affair with Vivica Bandler.
At 1hr 40mins, it doesn't overstay it's welcome. The cast are really excellent. It's not breaking any new ground or anything but having such a likeable lead actress in Pöysti carrying the film does help it. I hope that with success of Fallen Leaves, that we see more of her working outside of Finland.
I wish they could have found more subject matter, to make a film about a great artist and author, than to shove as many "bohemian artist drinking", "look at me, I'm dancing", and lesbian sex scenes, into this film as possible. It gets unfortunately dull pretty quick.
Tove: Tove Jansson (Alma Poysti) wasn't just the creator of the Moomins, she was an artist, a writer, a playwright. Tove illustrates this as it covers her life from 1944 to the late 1950's. Her passion for people and for the Arts is vividly depicted, as is the poverty of her early days, denied grants she paid her rent with paintings. She finds her studio/apartment after Helsinki is bombed in 1944 and turns that into a work of art as well. Though the Moomins brought her financial security she felt it took away from her real work and her demanding sculptor father Viktor (Robert Enckell) criticised it as not being art. Her love life was unconventional, she had ongoing affairs with politician/philosopher Atos Wirtanen (Shanti Roney) and theatrical director Vivica Bandler (Krista Kosonen). Vivica's polyamory caused her heartbreak, she had even left Atos for her. The relationship was central to her life and work until she could finally find love elsewhere. A moving tale of Art, Love and Friendship. Directed by Zaida Bergrothy from a Screenplay by Eeva Putro and Jamo Elonen. 8/10.
Did you know
- TriviaAlma Pöysti, who plays Tove Jansson, is the granddaughter of Lasse Pöysti and Birgitta Ulfsson, who worked with Tove Jansson and portrayed Moomin in the theatre and on TV in the series Mumintrollet (1969). That series was directed by Vivica Bandler, Tove Jansson's lover.
- GoofsTove is ordered to make an invitation card for Mayor Erik von Frenckell's 70th birthday, which would have been in 1957 and having done that, is ordered to make a wall painting in Helsinki City Hall, which was made in 1947, so the birthday would have been EVF's 60th.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Arto Nyberg: Episode #18.4 (2020)
- SoundtracksThe Penguin, Opus 5
Composed by Raymond Scott
Tenor Saxofon - Gustav Rådström
Kontrabas - Vilhelm Bromander
Klarinett - Johan Arrias
Trumpet - Johan Norin
Piano - Johan Graden
Trummor - Andreas Hiroui-Larsson
- How long is Tove?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- €3,600,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $96,182
- Runtime
- 1h 43m(103 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content