Open Hearts (2002) Poster

(2002)

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8/10
Susanne Bier's best
stensson27 December 2002
We are living in a Golden Age concerning Danish films. One didn't think Susanne Bier would get into the Dogma genre, but there she is now.

This is really good. There's a loving couple, where the man is badly hurt in a car accident and becomes lame, with all the complications, also sexually of course, this means. It wasn't the driver's fault, but she feels guilty and her husband tries to comfort the girl. But the comfort goes much too far.

This is about big feelings, but Bier leads you right into them, without rushing away from you. The acting is absolutely brilliant, especially the plain virtuosity from Paprika Steen and Mads Mikkelsen. I've seen more than 50 films this year, but this might be the best one. Strongly recommended!
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8/10
Respect
kostprober6914 December 2004
I am not very much into dogma movies - but this one is really worth looking. As always, the danish acting is superb (by the way: can anybody explain me, why actors from Denmark are so convincing every time?) I also liked the open ending, which doesn't pretend to find a solution to a nearly unsolvable problem. Furthermore, the beginning was gorgeous. Susanne Bier presents her characters in slightly normal situations - but yet that charming and vivid, you just have to love the young couple. And so you also will suffer from the incident and its consequences for them. Another interesting aspect is, that there is absolutely no antagonist in this movie - and, surprise, surprise: you won't miss one! All the characters have two sides, are protagonist and antagonist at the same time - just like in real life!
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8/10
A sober tragedy about love and guilt
chanrion_d20 March 2003
This movie has a sober sense of tragic : It shows how life is fragile and uncontrollable, whether it is a young couple passionately in love hit by a terrible accident or a double-kid mature couple whose husband will be unfaithful to his wife. The cleverness of the story-telling lies in the fact that the two stories are highly intertwined and all through movie you find yourself recognising everything the characters struggle through. You want to judge them but you are left with you own guilt without any conclusion fro the film. The documentary-style and the dogme do not prevail over the meaning and even give some realistic strength to the beautiful acting. To sum up : a simple tale of two destinies where tragedy reveal our fragility and love can redeem guilt. (7 out Of 10)
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9/10
finding new love the hard way
helenhowell4718 March 2004
Another one of those small Euro digital films that explores human emotion so much better than the mega-bucks equivalents from the States.

When a loving couples unity is shattered by a horrific road accident that cripples the boyfriend, the story explores how a moment can destroy a lifetime or create alternate paths. Superbly acted with deep pathos and unflinching torment, I have yet to see a better performance this year of a female lead. You leave the cinema questioning how the happiest moment in your life can be stolen in a blink of an eye. Life is fragile and all too brief. Not a minute should be wasted.
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10/10
Outstanding film
k-barton17 December 2005
Having just watched this film, I had to write something. Totally stunned by the film and its depth. The acting was superb, with totally believable characters involved with an amazing script. I would rate this as probably the most impacting film I have watched. I would recommend watching this film with a loved one. Don't miss any chance to watch this.

The music score is first class, and fits exactly with the tone of the film. Having not seen the actors before, my next task will be to find out what else they and the director have been involved with, in the hope that another gem exists of similar quality.
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Open Hearts is devoid of superficial movie cliches
bluesquid7 March 2003
Halfway through Open Hearts, it becomes more obvious that you're watching a fictional account. The plot becomes slightly predictable, which is a good thing. For the most part, this new Danish film feels like a reality documentary and pulls you in like reality itself. Director Susanne Bier follows the technical requirements to earn a Dogme 95 certification, which means the film has to be devoid of any unnatural camera movement, lighting and sound among other rules. As a result, Open Hearts is also devoid of superficial movie cliches and full of heartfelt human situations.

The film follows a young, newly?engaged couple and a married couple with kids, whose lives are interrupted and complicated by a road accident. Bier stays clear of the external effects of the drama and instead focuses on the characters' inner effects. Her protagonists lose emotional control and appear ill?equipped to handle the consequences of an unexpected tragedy. The film's appeal is not only universal, but timely as well, shattering the modern belief that everything is controllable. Once tragedy strikes, our lives seem far more fragile than we thought.

Stephan Paschalides
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7/10
A Compound Tragedy, Well Told
lawprof2 March 2003
Warning: Spoilers
In "Open Hearts" director Susanne Biers tackles a very realistic story that easily could have been but a maudlin soap opera (well, that is an oxymoron) but which comes across as serious, compelling drama.

The Danish film begins with a comical proposal scene in which grad student Joachim (Nikolaj Lie Kaas) proposes to live-in girlfriend, Cecille (Sonja Richter) before leaving for a foreign outdoor adventure. Unfortunately Joachim makes the not uncommon mistake of exiting his car from the driver's side without checking for oncoming traffic.

Fast forward to a hospital's ICU where first Cecille and then Joachim learn he is now a quadraplegic. The attending doctor gently tells Cecille that her fiance only will be able to "think and speak," that's it. Great news. Especially after the point has been made that they had a roaring sex life.

The driver of the car which struck Joachim is the wife of a physician, Niels, at the hospital. What a coincidence. Subtle hint that this film IS a soap. But the doctor extends sympathy, empathy and personal caring to the stricken Cecille and, of course, a romance develops. Or maybe it's just an affair. Or maybe it's sort of both. The protagonists themselves don't seem to know. Since it's a Danish film there isn't even a whisper about a possible lawsuit against the doctor's wife.

Niels is no philandering, hormone-driven male. He's never been unfaithful to his loving wife, Marie (Paprika Steen), the strongest and best-acted character in the film. They have three kids, two little boys and a teenage girl halfway between maturity and auto-destruct.

Using minimalist filming and directorial techniques ("Open Hearts" has a Dogme 95 certificate, emblazoned on the screen before even the first opening credit), the story develops movingly albeit with hints as to the likely resolution.

Paprika Steen is a powerful actress who simultaneously exposes Marie's vulnerability as well as her strength. She truly loves her husband but her ardor for the welfare of her children is all-powerful and dominating. And wholly admirable.

Stine Bjerregaard as the teenage Stine gives a terrific performance as a kid with a typically normal plate of adolescent issues. She takes on, fiercely, the weight of her father's threatened abandonment of his family. No child should be shouldered with problems like that, often they are and Stine grows in the process. At a price.

With a strong cast, special mention of Kaas as the life-altered Joachim is merited. His journey from mindless rage to cruel attacks on a devoted nurse to slow acceptance of a new life is painfully real, his bare and shifting emotions making me forget I was watching a story, not a documentary.

"Open Hearts" is painful to watch at points but, ultimately, it's a strong film because of the excellent cast.

7/10.
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10/10
I am in love with Susan Bier Films. This film is a dogme POWERHOUSE.
dfwforeignbuff15 February 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Open Hearts (2002) Elsker Dig For Evigt. ("I'll Love You for Ever" or "Eternal Love" are better titles than "Open Hearts") Open Hearts (Danish: Elsker dig for evigt), (2002), is a gritty Danish drama directed by Susanne Bier using the minimalist film-making techniques of the Dogme 95 style. It stars Mads Mikkelsen, Nikolaj Lie Kaas, Sonja Richter and Paprika Steen. Also referred to as Dogme #28, Open Hearts relates the story of two young couples whose lives are traumatized by a tragic car accident and adultery. Cecilie is devastated when her fiancé Joachim is seriously injured in a car accident and is paralyzed from the waist down. She begins an affair with Niels, a doctor at the hospital where Joachim is being treated. Their relationship is further complicated by the fact that the doctor's wife Marie was the driver that caused the accident in the first place I have recently seen 2 of Susan Biers other films. I was not aware she had made a Dogma95 film. As I stated in reviews of her other films I am generally not a great fan of melodramas. I am a great fan of melodramas by Susan Bier. Her films make that magical transformation into REAL life (lives) and living (and dying). Open Hearts was filmed with video cameras--almost like the expert connoisseurs home movie. A young couple has plans for getting married. Joachim (Nikolaj Lie Kaas) and Cecilie (Sonja Richter) Fate intervenes when Joachim steps in from of a car (accidentally) and is hit and paralyzed never to walk again or movie his hands. Susan Biers films do not use sentimentality but go directly to the emotions of the human heart when dealing with her protagonists. Joachim does not accept his fate well- rejecting his girlfriend and hurling anger at all around him. The films craftsmanship is evident and honest emotions and interactions are tackled very directly by Bier. The film is emotionally dark and bleak look at the 2 main characters. Things go for even a more spin of fate as the girlfriend makes a strange involvement with the husband of the woman who actually caused the accident. the film streams on to its gut wrenching heart rendering end. There is a resolution of sorts and here at the very end the movie but that resolution was weak for me. I have put in my queue every film by Susan Bier. Highly Recommended--but be aware this is not general entertainment movie viewing. This movie will make you feel -think- cry and more. It is a very powerful film. hats off to Biers. Certainly one of the best films of 2002. Bier skillfully captures the feeling of real emotions that extreme trauma creates within the lives of the characters in her film. five stars highest recommendation.
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7/10
Open Hearts
lasttimeisaw25 June 2013
Dogme movement (1995-2005) is a terra incognita for me, although now it has officially existed only as a terminology thanks to the ubiquitous evasion of shooting on location with any cellphones or other hand-held lighter gizmos, and its spirit has been ingested by more advanced mutants (e.g. mumblecore). But Susanne Bier is not merely a Dogme enthusiast, AFTER THE WEDDING (2006 7/10) is a redoubtable relationship dissection and OPEN HEARTS (the new Hannibal Mads Mikkelsen star in both films) treads the same territory to examine the complexity of humans' conundrum between desire and responsibility, ethics and emotions.

Two couples, one is engaged, another has 3 children, a car accident (not entirely abides by the Dogme rules though) turns their worlds upside down, a threat is common-or-garden both in the cinematic and real world; the life-changing mishap prompts an adultery between a middle class doctor and the disheartened fiancée, whose fiancé undergoes a permanent quadriplegia from the car accident where the doctor's wife is the offender.

The face-fixated close-ups extensively put those characters under scrutiny for their rational and irrational behaviors, natural light commingles with saturated palette (during the beginning and the ending) and a black & white lens of the blurry and grainy illusory fancy. The cast is sterling, a quartet of tug-of-war from Mikkelsen, Richter, Lie Kass and Steen, a humdrum-weary family man holds his seven-year-itch infatuation to a damsel-in-distress; a comfort-seeker with abiding guilt of abandoning her bed-ridden fiancé; a young paralyzer who ruthlessly deserts his fiancée for his incompetence as a proper man but still hankers for her company; a wife is rueful of her road rage and its tragic repercussions, suddenly devastated by her husband's utter betrayal; Steen's impromptu slapping and Mikkelsen's reaction are among the best on-screen intensified scenes I have even seen, three of the four leads end up in my yearly top 10 list (guess who narrowly missed the spot?).

But on the other hand, the melodramatic core of the story hobbles a soul-searching catharsis and empathetic introspection which would put the film onto an upper notch, Bier and DP Morten Søborg's camera is erratic but not dizzily shaky, the fly-on-the-wall intimacy allows us to take a much closer look at the symptoms and the cause of the frailty resides in every soul on earth, and offers us staying in a paralleled world, munches with palliative pills to ease our own troubles.
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9/10
Realistic and painful with some wonderful performances!
Travis_Bickle018 July 2005
Warning: Spoilers
What I love the most about these small, foreign movies is the fact that they aren't afraid to face difficult human subjects and situations. For the ones who don't know where it is about, I'll give a brief summary. It's about two families: a young couple who has recently engaged and a family who with 2 little boys and a 17 year old girl. On a morning there is an accident caused by the mother while her daughter is sitting next to her. The mother hits the guy from the engaged couple. What are the consequences? The guy is paralysed up to his neck and he can only move his head. He is very bitter and he feels sorry for himself (of course, who can blame him? The life he had is history.) But then things are getting complicated when the husband starts an affaire with the girlfriend of the paralysed guy.

To start with, I loved the story. It's beautiful, touching, human and above all it's real. The characters are real human beings who need love and comfort and attention and someone who listens to them, take care of them, or just hold them… All the actors delivered excellent performances. Although the story is something completely different, this movie reminded me of "Festen", another brilliant Danish movie I saw a couple of months ago. The resemblance was caused by the style of the movie and the style of the story. Both stories handle unexpected, but real situations. "Open Hearts" is another brilliant Danish movie!

8,5/10
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6/10
Unsatisfying but a nice try: ***WARNING: Possible mild spoiler***
jonr-310 September 2003
Warning: Spoilers
I got the feeling a lot of care went into the production of this film, but ultimately I walked away unsatisfied. Instead of catharsis, this mournful story left me with feelings of frustration. I heard another viewer express the same reservation after the show.

Wonderful acting all around; decent photography; interesting and fairly believable story. But nothing really clicks. I suspect part of the reason for this is that the main character simply isn't easy to sympathize with: her motivation throughout the story seems, to me, to be selfish and thoughtless. ***POSSIBLE SPOILER*** When she complains to the neurosurgery nurse, at the bedside of her now paralyzed boyfriend Joachim, "I'm as unhappy as he is!" I voiced an objection aloud: "Oh, no, you're not!" She seemed to me totally self-centered and unlikable. Others may disagree with my take on her personality.

The use of one photographic effect irked me. There's a frequent shift to grainy black-and-white, apparently signifying a character's fantasy or notion of what he or she wishes were happening, instead of what is in fact happening. I found this awkward, confusing, and distracting. The soundtrack music seemed tacky and inappropriate. And the "arty" negative and blurry sequences that began and ended the film could happily have been dispensed with.
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8/10
Dogme modern everyday-drama about love and family
hstilling27 April 2005
Enough has been said about the Dogme rules, and the many movies that have been made with the certificate. No matter if you like the concept or not, Dogme will always ad a great amount of realism into a movie. And in "Elsker Dig Forevigt"/"Open Heart" the realism is very strong. Probably stronger in any of the other Dogme-films I have seen.

Even more realistic the movie gets from the acting, which is outstanding. I found Mads Mikkelsen a bit under-achieving in the beginning, but as the drama gets more intense – so does Mikkelsen. He is Niels, the soft, modern, Danish family-man, who is as good with the kids as he is with his job. Other of Mikkelsen's parts has been very far from that, not least playing Tonny in Refn's "Pusher" and "Pusher II".

The wife of Niels, Marie, is well performed by Paprika Steen. Danish movies have had a reputation (in Denmark) that they are all dull, everyday-dramas with Paprika Steen in a leading role. "Elsker Dig..." has probably played a part in creating this reputation. It's not really fair, firstly because Danish movies are a lot more than that and secondly because Steen is really good. In "Elsker Dig…" she shows great dept in her acting, and in one of the best scenes in the movie Marie's 'house-wife-facade' breaks down, showing that Marie is a lot stronger than what you could have expected. It's a difficult scene, but Steen carries it out very well.

As the third corner stone of the triangle Sonja Richter is the young woman Cæcilie who's boyfriend Joachim (Nikolaj Lie Kaas) is severely injured, when he gets run down by Marie, driving a bit too fast. The performances by Richter and Kaas are as spotless as they are outstanding.

I have to comment on the children in this movie. It rarely works really well, because children aren't actors. But the teenage daughter of Niels and Marie, Stine (Stine Bjerregaard), has a lot to offer. She too has a big scene, again it works, and it's brilliant. The younger brothers, Gustav and Emil, works very good too. These kids aren't 'acting' they are 'living' their parts. Stop casting wonder-kids, and look this way!

This thing is normally not my thing. But still I rated this movie high – because it is a good movie. I generally like realism in movies (which I guess this review unveils) and that is 100% here.
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7/10
Very engaging film with minor distractions
basilisksamuk22 October 2012
This is the second Susanne Bier film I've watched and I found it to be completely absorbing. It probably didn't need to be a movie and would have been quite suitable as a TV film. As a Dogme movie it mostly worked well though occasionally I thought it used gimmicks, which I thought were perhaps not Dogme in nature. Specifically there was the use of what looked like thermal imaging segments at the beginning and end of the film and I've no idea why. There was also a section near the beginning where characters dialogue was clipped before they had finished speaking and again I didn't know why.

What carries the film is the acting and characterisation and, apart from the odd weird choices already mentioned, the Dogme style of filming serves the story very well, drawing you in as a viewer and not distracting you with flashy directorial flourishes. I read someone complaining that it didn't make sense to dispense with the language of film that has been built up over years and years but this stripped back approach makes perfect sense to me for the right story.

It isn't perfect but it's much better than the average mainstream film. I thought the ending was a little weak. It seemed right to leave the resolution ambiguous but, for me, it wasn't quite ambiguous enough. I also thought Niels' wife was much more attractive than the Caecilie character he falls in love with but that's probably just me!
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3/10
Low budget doesn't necessarily mean high quality
tomas-344-90257420 June 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I probably am going the path of the contrarian here, but I really don't understand the high ratings here. I'm all for indie movies on low budgets, but this is just bad.

The fuzzy-focus, shaky-camera documentary feel of this movie is totally fine.... But whether it's deliberate or part of the whole Dogme thing, there is absolutely NO editing.

There doesn't seem to be any actual script either. It feels like the actors improvised their lines (which is OK) but without much preparation. Dialogue seems forced and unnatural, and you can tell that something is in the dialog because it was a plot point. The video jumps from one thing they say to something else. It was almost like the director was going down a written bullet list of things that need to happen or be said, and was leading them on to improv as they were being videorecorded. "Talk about how your daughter is in trouble", "Ok now cry", "Ok now shout", "Ok now run down the hall", etc... Only bits and pieces to a conversation were recorded, just enough to cover all the plot points, but not enough to seem coherent. The behavior of the actors were not smoothly transitioned from one cut to the next (despite it being only a few seconds/minutes later in 'reality'). It was all dialog without any mood. I don't think this is how people are in real life. It seemed more like 100 cuts of random small little independently acted moments rather than anything coherent. You can tell (whether deliberate or incidental) that the actors weren't paid enough to actually memorize lines (making smooth video scenes possible) and anything more than 15 seconds at a time being recorded.

It's just awful. Cuts are not smooth and honestly bothersome. Totally absent of any sort of emotional depth and exploration. The actors weren't allowed to really express much emotionally, it was more about the lines they were saying and the over-the-top reactions that seemed to be about as quality as a first year drama student.

The jumping around in dialog make it impossible to actually sympathize or understand any of the reasoning behind what is said. One moment Cecile calls Niels, the next moment he suggest buying furniture for her, then he goes to the supermarket just to have a conversation with her saying how he can't stop thinking about her and thinks he's in love with her. Absolutely zero emotional exploration or transition justifying how he feels. It's out of the blue. Later you see the two seemingly in love, in the middle of having sex, and then the hospital nurse calls to tell Cecile that Joachim finally wants to see her. She of course jumps to the occasion and the literal next scene is Niels in his coworker Finn's basement, implying that he must have moved out of Cecile's place - but without bothering to explain it all. Not even a conversation "oh Niels I'm sorry but I love Joachim and want to be with him".

About the best part of the movie was the acting by the supporting people - the daughter, Joachim, the wife, etc. They were more real-life believable. The main actors were just a joke, though.

Beyond all that, there was obviously no budget for a costume designer or scene designer. I couldn't decide whether Niels was a doctor or a nurse, with that plain all-white outfit that was clearly purchased at a department store. For all the time he was at the hospital, none of it actually was of him remotely doing a second of his actual work. So I could never figure out what he did there at the hospital. And just because he has an oversized cell phone from 1995 doesn't mean that somehow raises his status to some sort of doctor. He "must" be important with a giant phone! There was nothing 'real life' about moments that showed no actual every day actions (outside of the 'script') of people.

The dialog where it is first brought up that Joachim will be forever paralyzed is so made up that there's no sliver of authenticity. Not one line suggests anyone did any research as to medical conditions or even to what might a doctor say. Not one doctor actually said a single medical term or medical condition, no medical explanation as to what happened with Joachim physiologically. Not even something as simple as "his spine was crushed". With the car driving no more than 25mph, how he became paraplegic is beyond me. Not a single bit of dialog justifying his medical condition. Usually a doctor would at least start going into medical details once a family member starts asking about any hope/treatment. Awful.

I suppose there is some supposed "real life" feel, but it really seems poor quality. Blair Witch seemed much better. It's fine the car accident scene seemed totally fake, but it really is sub-par for all the actors involved. Low budget doesn't need to be void of intelligent/in-depth dialog, a thought out script, emotional expression, or reasonable editing. With the splices of so many small clips there is really no emotional or psychological exploration of the characters, or transition from one major set of circumstances (the two hanging out) to another (the two living together).

This is most definitely NOT Suzanne Bier's "best" as others suggest. All her other movies were light years better. I feel that Mads Mikkelsen's talent was wasted on this film here. Pretty much any other movie of his was far superior, and many of them were also low budget. With Lars Von Trier as the brainchild behind the Dogme rules, I can understand why this movie here is just awful. There isn't a movie of his I can stand. I otherwise really like Scandinavian films.
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9/10
Pure emotions
rainking_es9 June 2007
A girl whose boyfriend went paraplegic because of a car crash falls in love with the husband of the woman that ran her fiancée over. Though the plot may look like a twisted soap opera the fact is that the movie of Akeson & Olesen is such an intense and wise portrait of human emotions. Feeling of guilt, love, infidelity... no flowery stuff and no useless decorations. "Open hearts" is a piece of life.

Despite the directors probe to know their job their movie wouldn't be the same without the impressive work of the extraordinary actors she chose. Propably none of them will won an Oscar, and they're not very popular, but they'd deserve to be big stars.

Another great contribution of DOGMA movement to last decade's cinema.

*My rate: 9/10
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9/10
Stirring film
WilliamCKH30 April 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I recently purchased OPEN HEARTS, having enjoyed immensely Susanne Bier's AFTER THE WEDDING. I realized it was a dogme film and was looking forward to seeing the great MADS MIKKELSEN in digital format. Watching the story unfold was both harrowing and exhilarating. The emotional roller coaster Bier takes you through in this film touches on so many corners of human emotion that I'm left really in admiration of how well she understands human nature. And I also must not forget writer Anders Thomas Jensen, who as a writer, can go to so many places ..not only in human dramas such as this and AFTER THE WEDDING, but vicious, wicked comedies like FLICKERING LIGHTS, and ADAM'S APPLES (both also with MADS MIKKELSEN)

The writing was superb, the acting from all parties exceptional. I must say the two characters that really left an impression were Nikolaj Lie Kaas' Joachim, who is so vile during the middle portion of the film, but sympathetic at the same time, and he earned that moment of grace at the end....and also Paprika Steen's Marie, who has a tough role straddling her anger and her need for forgivness from Cecilia. In a scene where you expect Marie will curse Cecilia out, she speaks softly and tells Cecilia she understands. She is also walking this same line with her husband Niels. In a scene where she yells at Niels to get out of the house...She yells the same lines Joachim yells to Cecilia at the hospital, telling her to stay away.....neither character means what they say. It's very interesting that these two scenes would marry each other. I was really impressed with the emotional complexity of all the characters and the hints the director gives us as to a possible outcome....which if life goes accordingly...chance might also undo.
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Scenes from a Marriage
LordLucan17 March 2003
A Bergmanesque study of a marriage that is turned upsidedown by one part mishap and one part momentary lapse of reason. What's provocative here, and makes for an intelligent and moving film, is the way in which the spurned wife (played with quiet dignity by the estimable Paprika Steen) doesn't dish up deserved revenge, quivering hatred or physical or mental violence. but, rather, offers an attempt to understand, to accept, and to hold the family together regardless. How rare is this? The line that stays with me - and it's a casual aside but one that cuts straight to the bone - is Paprika telling her husband's mistress that `we can't even afford' the new furniture he has lavished on her.

Once the film hits its groove, its DOGME origins are forgotten and we're left with intimacy and the thousand and one little tragedies that unfold on any given day of any given week. It could be said to be modest in scope, somewhat uninventive in form, and it does immerse itself uncritically in the middle class milieu (and in this respect, I would liken it to Moretti's `La Stanza del Figlio' - except that film does seem to express a suppressed distaste for Berlusconi's Italy), but there's an honesty and maturity that make it a valuable experience - particularly for any teenager used to a soap opera diet of hysterical marriage operatics. or for anyone still recovering from `Festen'.

At its best, and there's a frisson of that here, DOGME-95 has delivered fresh slices of life (or, to elaborate, privileges a panorama of personal battles against a recognisably familiar backdrop) - its Vows of Chastity whittling the camera down to something akin to a microscope.
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7/10
More than satisfactory
r96sk2 October 2023
A real feel-good mov... yeah, maybe not!

'Open Hearts' is actually a film that doesn't really evoke many thoughts in my head. It's a solid watch, the story is standout and the acting is more than satisfactory. Apart from that, I don't have much elese to say, to be honest.

Sonja Richter and Mads Mikkelsen are very good together in this, as are Paprika Steen and Nikolaj Lie Kaas in fairness. The whole plot that they are all involved in is rather depressing, the relationship between Richter's Cecilie and Mikkelsen's Joachim is uncomforting to see unfold. Stine Bjerregaard's character is annoyingly used (just there to twist the story) but the Bjerregaard herself does do well.

I will say that I didn't overly like the editing/camera work, though that's pretty much only early on as it becomes less noticeable as the film ticks by. That's the only real negative that I have.
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8/10
High quality drama with great sense of humor. (Spoilers)
McBuff9 September 2002
Warning: Spoilers
Susanne Bier hits all the right notes in her first "Dogme 95"-film, which on paper may look quite conventional (an engaged couple is torn apart when he is paralyzed in a horrible accident, and she falls in love with the doctor husband of the woman who caused the accident), but exceptional acting, writing and directing lift this drama way above average. Lead actor Mads Mikkelsen as the doctor is good as usual, newcomer Sonja Richter as Cæcilie is a talent to watch, Paprika Steen (in her 4th Dogme film) is excellent as his wife, Nikolaj Kaas gives one of his best performances as the bitter quadroplegic and every character is given a voice in this highly charged emotional drama, written by the director and the ubiquitous Anders Thomas Jensen, who adds his trademark sharp, funny dialogue and avoids the worst clichés of the genre. Realistic and gripping, with the rather redundant Dogme label its only liability, this is one of the best Danish films of 2002. Some may find its deliberate pace and stylistics a drawback, but rewarding for a mature audience. ***½
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9/10
An Excellent Film by Susanne Bier
ronchow22 November 2013
I have never been a fan of Dogme style film making. To me it means jittery frames due to the use of hand-held cameras, little background music, and often grainy images. But 'Open Hearts' is one big exception.

The story is about forbidden love. There are plenty of miserable people in this film and yet there are no 'bad' people here. Mads Mikkelsen delivered one of his strongest performance by portraying the tormented lover. He was a good man - a practising doctor, a caring father and husband to his children and wife. Yet he fell in love, madly and beyond his control, with a younger woman who was traumatized by a recent accident. I can totally relate to his agony and sentiment - not being able to remove her from his mind every single waking minute, while fully knowing his obligation to his family.

The film concludes without offering a feel-good ending, as life often does. I was left to think about it, and to muse over the dilemma faced by the characters. It made me think for a long time.

I strongly recommend this film to anyone who enjoys European cinema. And if you are a romantic, you should not miss it.
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10/10
Two or three things I learned about Denmark
anniemarshallster20 September 2012
Warning: Spoilers
1. If your ex-lover turns up drunk at your door in Denmark he is going to cry rather than beat the hell out of you - EXCELLENT. 2. You can leave your car unlocked at the scene of an accident in Copenhagen and it and the contents will still be there in good working order several weeks later - Excellent. 3. Medical care in Denmark is to a very high standard - EXCELLENT. 4. There is a lot of mackeral served at hospital staff canteens - OKAAAY. 5. It is still pitch dark at breakfast time - NOT EXCELLENT. Now that I've got the cultural differences out of the way this is one of those perfect little films which are an object lesson in acting from every member of the cast, to say nothing of a subtle script and sensitive direction of course. When you have diamonds (Mads Mikkelsen)you don't surround them with zircons and so every performance is strong - particularly the actress playing the wife who is a perfect foil for the nuanced performance of Mikkelsen. Note - woman director, another cultural point in its favour.
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2/10
Stupid marriage drama with unpleasant lead characters
blott2319-113 January 2022
In the first ten minutes of Open Hearts I had no idea what was coming. When the inciting incident occurred I was shocked and sad. I never expected for that to happen, and didn't know where the movie might go next. But then Mads Mikkelsen entered and after one conversation with Sonja Richter I knew exactly where this movie was going. In fact, I stopped the video and said "Oh great, so it's one of those movies." Two days later I returned to the film and suffered through the rest. I hate movies about infidelity with a passion, particularly when the characters in the protagonist roles are the ones who get involved in the affair. Then I find myself hating the protagonists and feeling sorry for everyone else who is hurt by their actions. By the way, this is only a spoiler if you don't look at the poster for the movie (or the DVD cover, or any image advertising the film whatsoever.) There's simply nothing good or enjoyable about Open Hearts. It is just an exercise in misery and doesn't even take advantage of an interesting setup to explore how horrible life events can break down relationships that seemed strong enough to survive anything. It's just a relationship drama that made me mad for 2 hours.
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8/10
Susanne Biers and the Star-Cursed Love Story
ThurstonHunger24 July 2007
Warning: Spoilers
My second film from Ms Bier...and another impressive outing. I can see why she'll soon be working with Benicio Del Toro and Halle Berry. She seems to be drawn to awkward love stories, like daisies growing in concrete.

Having a hard time avoiding spoilers, so if you've not seen this film, but appreciate the other films I've reviewed, I'd strongly recommend seeing this and we can discuss reviews afterward.

SPOILERS...

So for those who have seen this film, and perhaps also Brodre, it seems Ms. Bier has some consistency between them.

1) a teenage girl helps to jeopardize a relationship (rightly or wrongly?)

2) she has an aversion to tidy endings

3) she gets excellent work out of Nikolaj Lie Kaas

And again, singlehandedly she seems to pioneer awkward love, something that happens in real life much more often than in reel life. Hmmm, "awkward love" has a clunky sound to it...maybe it would be better to refer to these as star-cursed love stories.

Kaas is so good early on, even in his sweetness there is a little edge that portends the larger edge that erupts. It is interesting that both the male leads in this spurn women who love them, when arguably those men need the women the most. Very heart-stirring for me. Kaas as the paraplegic (and as a powerful actor) could have drawn the film about him, and it could have triggered a wrong focus on the issues of his damaged body and psyche.

Thus his pushing away of Cecilia I think is importantly indeterminate. You could read it as his love for her, or his brutally frank assessment of his situation, or having listened to hard to pragmatic nurses and doctors, or as him seeing his condition as sort of life-ending. No one knows really, and again while that is a difficult and interesting angle, it is not at the heart of this film.

With "Brodre" the tension was amplified, huge emotions swirled around that center of awkward love...war, death, spousal abuse. Here the "bomb" that is dropped is foreshadowed excellently by concerns about an upcoming mountain climbing trip, the car accident is a sudden, swift and oddly almost poetic piece of violence.

So much so that every time someone set forth towards the streets afterward, I felt my heart lurch in my throat. Proof that I've seen too many movies, and was sensing an almost superstitious fear of parallel plotting. I'd be curious if others felt this, or if Biers intended this...

I was often nervous through this film, albeit less so in Brodre where the soundtrack was needed as an anti-anxiety tablet. Here the nervousness often came from just the feeling that people were drifting from themselves. And yet each faux pas rang true. Mid-life crises aren't clichés...and I think they are the elephants many people try not to think of.

Sonja Richter was scintillating as Cecilia, she didn't need soft focus to shed ten years off her actual age. As she wades through the aftermath of the emotional accident following the physical accident, she gathers more grace in dealing with both the men, as well as the "other" woman and the aforementioned teenager. I wish we had been privy to more of the latter interaction...but I understand why we could not be, it would have deflated the tension in the scene with Niels and Marie.

And how about the alternate reality/dream sequences...almost toying with what the audience would like as much as what the individual characters might be wishing for. Capturing those moments when for some reason, we can't seem to find the true thing to do...and not necessarily because we are physically unable to do so! I wasn't sure I liked them as they occurred, but in hindsight they resonate.

The translated title appears to be an odd one, maybe open hearts means open for love and for hurt? Or maybe, as we see with Brodre, Bier has a true love for open endings. Another excellent film that left me painfully curious at the conclusion to know more about the characters.

Thurston Hunger 8/10
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10/10
An incredibly credible story
nicnik61 February 2015
As an amateur movie watcher I don't know much and I care even less at this point about visual effects and studio gimmicks, and I didn't even know about the 95 manifesto until I read some of the reviews for this title; instead, what I care about is the story and the message it sends, how and indeed if it manages to do so, and how the actors act. And for all those, this is a masterpiece.

This is a story about how life gets, the message is that love just happens, it just happens to some of us at the weirdest of times, and, if one cares to understand this, it's for the better, while if they don't, they will just suffer anyway. It is not the first Susanne Bier film I see and this is the sort of message she knows how to convey.

As for the acting, it is brilliant. Just thank God for Mads Mikkelsen. If you like this actor, see Open Hearts today! There is at least one scene which you will rewind. More than once.
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8/10
An earlier Bier work, and it shows!
ikanboy14 July 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I have become a fan of Bier's work. "After the wedding" and "Brothers" were engrossing "relationship" movies fraught with emotion, crackling dialog and unpredictable twists. This one starts with a shock. A man who has just proposed to his lover is run over by a car and paralyzed for life. We've been here before. The question is where does Bier take it? True to her fashion she takes it off on a tangent that essentially sidelines the initial plot line.

Cecilli, the female lover is rejected by her paralyzed fiancée, who implodes into self hate and loss and takes it out on the people who try to take care of him. This is of course not uncommon, especially for males. Hating their dependency and helplessness they attack those who inadvertently rub this helplessness in, simply by being caretakers. Cecillia finds solace with a Doctor in the hospital, but in this case he's the husband of the woman who ran down her lover! This is where the movie goes off into another area, and while that area is fascinating and difficult to watch - adultery, bad ethics, stupidity, and moral cowardice - it leaves completely behind one vital part of the movie and that is the emotional state of the wife who caused the accident!

Bier chooses to focus instead on the triangle of the Doctor: Niels (played by Mads Mikkelsen from after the wedding) Cecillia, and the Doctor's daughter who was in the car driven by her mother and feels she is the cause of the crash, because she was arguing with her mother. The daughter, Stine, seems to read her father better than the wife, and is on to his infidelity from the start while the wife allows herself to be talked out of it by a mendacious Niels. If Bier is trying to show us that the wife is shunted aside because she is out of touch emotionally it isn't portrayed in any convincing fashion.

The script, as usual, is the key here. It is the dialog that keeps the movie interesting. The people come off as humans engaged in the difficult job of life. No-one is heroic, and no-one is atrocious, merely emotionally selfish. Cecillia for seducing a married man in order to feel wanted, and Niels for caving to his mid life urges at the expense of his family.

I eagerly await Bier's foray into Hollywood with her movie about racism (Halle Berry and David Duchovny.)
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