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July 2007

DVD REVIEW:
AFTER THE WEDDING (Efter brylluppet)

By Kam Williams

DVD REVIEW:
AFTER THE WEDDING (Efter brylluppet)


Cast: Mads Mikkelsen, Rolf Lassgård, Sidse Babett Knudsen, Stine Fischer Christensen, Christian Tafdrup
Director: Susanne Bier
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Language: In Danish, Swedish, Hindi and English
Rating: Unrated
Studio: IFC
DVD Release Date: July 10, 2007
Run Time: 119 minutes

   

 

Oscar-Nominated Drama from Denmark Out on DVD

Jacob (Mads Mikkelsen), a Danish expatriate, is dedicated to his job working with children at a fledgling orphanage in India. So, he finds himself on the horns of a dilemma when a mysterious rich benefactor (Rolf Lassgard) makes a generous offer of assistance, but with strings attached. This stranger named Jorgen pledges $4,000,000 to the struggling charity, only asking in return that Jacob come to Copenhagen to attend the wedding of his daughter, Anna (Stine Fischer Christensen).

After consulting with his boss, and assuring the kids in his care that he will return, Jacob sets out for his homeland, though clearly with mixed feelings. Upon his arrival, he soon sees that Jorgen’s wife is, Helene (Sidse Babett Knudsen), an ex-girlfriend he hasn’t seen in about twenty years. And as if that isn’t enough of a shock, he next learns the devastating news that the blushing bride-to-be is the long-lost daughter he never knew he had. The daunting disclosure places Jacob in an unanticipated predicament, whether to return to his expectant, doubting orphans in Mumbai right after the nuptials as promised, or to remain in Denmark to share some quality time with his own flesh and blood, a girl who has heretofore considered herself half-orphaned. This quandary underpins After the Wedding, a deceptively-sophisticated soap opera directed by Susanne Bier.

The movie was nominated for the Academy Award in the Best Foreign Language Film category, a well-deserved accolade given its dealing with baby-daddy drama in a way which puts relatively-flip Hollywood fare to shame. A paradoxical, if ultimately plausible portrait of a fractured family whose emotions can not be contained when the skeletons belatedly come bursting out of the closet.