MovieDB
MoviesTop RatedComing SoonActorsWatchlist

Reviews

Please login to write a review.

+2
Alex Morgan
•
5 min ago
★★★★★4/5

Just finished watching this. Visuals were stunning but the pacing felt a bit off in the second half. Still worth a watch!

+4
Daniel Cooper
•
2 days ago
★★★★★2/5

I don't get the hype. The plot was predictable and the characters felt flat. It seems like style over substance to me. Maybe I missed something, but I was bored throughout.

+142
Priya Sharma
•
15 days ago
★★★★★5/5

An absolute masterpiece. The director managed to weave complex themes into a compelling narrative without it feeling forced. The cinematography is some of the best I've seen in years. Truly a cinematic experience that stays with you.

0.0
0h 12m

The Super

Scuggs, the utterly unpleasant super of a Bronx tenement is driven to desperate measures by an innocent-appearing, but manipulative 11 year-old girl. Based on the graphic novel by American Master Will Eisner, Meinecke combines larger-than-life characters, borrows from the traditions of melodrama and applies a visual language derived from German Expressionists to create a haunting tale, that won particular favor with New York critics.

Top Cast

Erich Bar

Erich Bar

Scuggs

Natalia Bitnar

Natalia Bitnar

Rosy

Eva Maria Meineke

Eva Maria Meineke

Mrs. Farfell

Horst Pasderski

Horst Pasderski

Mr. Levinsky

Similar Movies

Sun in My Mouth

Sun in My Mouth

⭐ 4.0

Hot

Hot

⭐ 0.0

3:10 to Yuma

3:10 to Yuma

⭐ 7.3

Maraschino Ruby

Maraschino Ruby

⭐ 7.5

The Sacrifice

The Sacrifice

⭐ 8.5

Jake Gyllenhaal Challenges the Winner of the Nobel Peace Prize

Jake Gyllenhaal Challenges the Winner of the Nobel Peace Prize

⭐ 3.8

Mountains Clad in Green

Mountains Clad in Green

⭐ 9.0

War Mornings

War Mornings

⭐ 10.0

Overview

The Super (1985) is rated ⭐ 0/10.
Scuggs, the utterly unpleasant super of a Bronx tenement is driven to desperate measures by an innocent-appearing, but manipulative 11 year-old girl. Based on the graphic novel by American Master Will Eisner, Meinecke combines larger-than-life characters, borrows from the traditions of melodrama and applies a visual language derived from German Expressionists to create a haunting tale, that won particular favor with New York critics.