"After the Wedding"
Date: 22nd February following the AGM, 14th
March 6.00 p.m.
Danish director Susanne Bier and screenwriter
Anders Thomas Jensen return with one of the richest and
most satisfying family dramas of the year. This
strikingly mature exploration of fate, loss and familial
ties was nominated for a Best Foreign Language Oscar,
but its proper place is at the end of Bier and Jensen's
trilogy of emotional-disaster films, along with Open
Hearts and Brothers. All three films deal with
emotionally and psychologically dense material, grey
areas and moral ambiguity - and all three films, just
like life, will break your heart. Danish exile Jacob
runs an orphanage in India, lavishing what love he can
spare on one of its inmates, an eight-year-old boy named
Pramod. Saintly, yes, but there's a sense that Jacob's
missionary zeal masks various personal demons. When he
is invited back to Copenhagen to meet a billionaire
hotelier who hints that he might bankroll the orphanage,
it turns out that Jacob is a man with secrets. Jørgen,
the boorish and boozy billionaire has an agenda of his
own; he introduces Jacob to his beautiful wife Helene,
invites him to his daughter's wedding, and appears to
protract Jacob's visit with mysterious new afterthoughts
and provisos. "By the [conclusion of the film], his
encounter with Jørgen has transformed his life,
replacing the responsibilities he had taken on willingly
with others he never imagined, and believed he had
escaped. Life is like that, and so is Susanne Bier's
tragic yet optimistic film, an experience you shouldn't
miss." - Andrew O'Hehir, salon.com