Mifune
Søren Kragh-Jacobsen's film is the third release from Dogma 95 (after
Lars von Trier's Idiots and Thomas Vinterberg's The Celebration),
and under the title Mifunes sidste sang ("Mifune's Last Song") it won
the Silver Bear (second place, behind Terrence Malick's The Thin Red
Line) at last year's Berlin Film Festival. Yuppie Kresten (Anders W.
Berthelsen) has just settled into Copenhagen life with new bride Claire (Sofie
Gråbøl) when the news of his father's death arrives and he has to
return to the Danish countryside to care for Rud (Jesper Asholt), his mentally
handicapped brother, who's the Toshiro Mifune fan. Naturally Liva (Iben
Hjelje), the housekeeper Kresten hires from the city to look after Rud, turns
out to be a hooker, and complications, some grim, some amusing, ensue.
Kragh-Jacobsen fulfills the official Dogma precepts of simple and
straightforward (and the unofficial requirement of quirky), but his film
eventually gives in to sentimentality, and no points will be awarded for
guessing whether our hero winds up with Claire or Liva. At the Cable
Car.
-- Jeffrey Gantz
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