

Something went wrong
Try again later.
Hugo
Hugo is a hopeless orphan living in the walls of the train station in Paris in the past. This boy inherited from his father and uncle how to repair watches and other tools that are his profession. Perhaps there is something else that inherited Hugo that is a robot that does not work without a special key. Hugo made sure he needed the key to unlock the secret, which he believed contained many hidden objects. During the search for the key, Hugo meets George Meles, a shopkeeper and a train station employee and his daughter as well. Hugo will open some memories that have been going on for many years.
















5 July 1968, Long Beach, California, USA

14 July 1966, East Brunswick, New Jersey, USA

29 December 1972, Lewisham, London, England, UK


31 July 1947, Thornaby-on-Tees, North Yorkshire, England, UK

27 May 1922, Belgravia, London, England, UK

15 August 1998, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia


12 August 1984, Lanarkshire, Scotland, UK

30 July 1944, Bovingdon, Hertfordshire, England, UK




10 February 1997, Atlanta, Georgia, USA


17 August 1968, London, England, UK

1963, Ruddington, Nottinghamshire, England, UK

16 November 1999

17 November 1942, Queens, New York City, New York, USA


24 August 1970, Pitesti, Romania







September 25, 2013
"Hugo" is a magical cinematic experience, and a masterpiece so unlike anything Scorsese has made before. Captivating and original, it is the director's most human film yet.
December 28, 2012
A children's film for grownups - grownup film buffs.
March 04, 2013
Scorsese's moving and magical tribute to the pioneers of filmmaking.
January 07, 2016
A gorgeous, moving and amorous love letter to the very cinema it is born from, and a celebration of the youthful wonder that is concealed in everyone - yes, even those of us resolved to the cynicism of adult thinking.
May 26, 2013
Henceforth when people speak of movie magic they will think instantly of Martin Scorsese's mind-blowing 'Hugo.'
November 29, 2011
It might be curtains for celluloid, but Scorsese, a boyish 69, clearly isn't leaving the stage any time soon. He directs every film with the ion of his first. And it shows.
October 07, 2015
But once the "Cinema Paradiso"-esque celluloid nostalgia bits kick in, it makes total sense why he succumbed to paying lip service to family entertainment in order to make the movie he really wanted to make.
January 03, 2012
Being a hardcore cinephile (like Scorsese) might add a layer of enjoyment, but it certainly isn't a prerequisite for walking in the door. A sense of wonder, however, is.
November 28, 2011
Thematic potency and cinematic virtuosity -- the production was designed by Dante Ferretti and photographed by Robert Richardson -- can't conceal a deadly inertness at the film's core.
November 28, 2011
For all the wizardry on display, Hugo often feels like a film about magic instead of a magical film...
December 01, 2011
Scorsese transforms this innocent tale into an ardent love letter to the cinema and a moving plea for film preservation.
December 02, 2011
Leave it to Martin Scorsese to use 3-D not as a gimmick, but as a means of drawing us into a unique and magical environment...