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Reviews
Wilbur Wants to Kill Himself (2002)
Twisted, modern take on 'Harold and Maud'
Interesting film, but this viewer was far less impressed than the Scandinavian reviewers. Performances were great overall, though some deliveries of the clumsiest lines clunked (and Henderson's babydoll voice really irritates) Some great scenes, but the black comedy is uneven (lost in translation?)/ script patchy. All that bloody backstory for Wilbur-- was Harbour meant to be justifying the selfishness of his brother or.... what? Scherfig does a wonderful job in finding the humanity of difficult, odd characters (in 'Italian for beginners' too) Wish she'd cut the stuff that didn't work because it tries to hard to be odd. And more Mikkelsen please... what he evokes in the twitch of an eyebrow-- much more impressive than all that talk. Interesting but flawed... a director to watch, however.
Tillsammans (2000)
a writer/ director with a superb grasp of human nature
A very human tale told with great humanity. With wit and warmth rather than cynism, Moodyson explores the contradictions of human selfishness and greed vs. ideals and altruism. The end result is a redemptive, optimistic tale which manages to avoid the usual pat and cloying happy endings of Hollywood.
It was a delight to watch the film in a full London cinema with a audience of various ages, the majority of whom (judging from the laughter throughout and comments after) thoroughly enjoyed the film.
Sadly this is the sort of picture that is rarely ever financed (now) in Britain-- too much characterisation and not enough plot for the financial powers that be. More's the pity....
Honest (2000)
pop not art
Despite the pathetic protestations of the Director and production company, this film was nothing more than a 'Spice World II'. Nothing wrong with that as Spice World had an ardent audience of pre-teens/ teens and made money. But no, Honest Productions seemed to think that 'Honest' was serious art for adults. Very misguided, but apparently they persuaded their distributors of same. Had the Director curbed his ego (and obvious desperation to be seen as a serious director), cut the violence and sex so that the REAL audience for this film: teen and pre-teen fans of the All Saints had access, this film might actually have found its true audience and made some money. Yet it seems only adults went to see movie, in hopes of getting a good look at the Appleton sisters' breasts. In casting three non-actors who obviously couldn't muster up the ironic edge to give a silly story any real comic value; attaching an aging pop star who clearly can't direct; and trying to sell this as 'serious art', the team behind this pic cut their own throats. Why didn't the distributors, who ought to know better, insist that this be edited to get a 15 certificate? That's even more idiotic than the film itself.