If movies have been feeling a wee bit
ordinary lately, allow this one to throw you
for a loop. Jamie Sives plays Wilbur, a
cynic who has never gotten over the death
of his mother and constantly tries to kill
himself. His older brother, Harbour
(Adrian Rawlins), takes care of him,
picking up after each death attempt and
trying to make life comfortable for his
troubled sibling. A wayward-soul single
mom (Shirley Henderson) marries
Harbour and has an affair with Wilbur,
leading to obvious difficulties. Director
Lone Scherfig has put together a most
unusual film, one that can make the
viewer feel extremely uncomfortable at
one instance, and then laugh out loud
shortly thereafter. Funny, shocking, sad
and remarkably clever, this establishes
Sives as a major acting talent, and it
perhaps gives Rawlins the best role of
his career. Henderson, who did an
unusual turn in the recent
Intermission, is great yet again.
This is dark comedy at its darkest.