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Lorna’s Silence (2008)

 
Lorna's Silence 2008
Lorna's Silence 2008
Lorna's Silence 2008

 
Film Info
 

Director(s): Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne
 
Writer(s): Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne
 
Starring: Arta Dobroshi, Jérémie Renier, Fabrizio Rongione
 
Genre: Drama
 
Synopsis: Lorna's sham marriage to Claudy, a drug addict, is getting in the way of her dreams of owning a snack bar with her boyfriend and her marrying a rich Russian man. Her handler Fabio agrees.
 
US Release Date: 31 July 2009
 
UK Release Date: 28 November 2008
 
Original Title: Le silence de Lorna
 
Acting
 
 
 
 
 


 
Direction
 
 
 
 
 


 
Enjoyment
 
 
 
 
 


 
Soundtrack
 
 
 
 
 


 
Story
 
 
 
 
 


 
Total Score
 
 
 
 
 
3/ 5


User Rating
no ratings yet

 

Peaks


Arta Dobroshi's Lorna is fantastic.

Troughs


There's not much story, less than usual for the Dardenne bros.


The Quote

Lorna’s sham marriage to Claudy is getting in the way of her dreams of owning a snack bar. The film is a fraught drama that stays inscrutable till the end.

0
Posted January 12, 2013 by

 
Content
 
 

Our Film Review:

The Dardenne brothers expand their range a little bit with Lorna’s Silence by taking a more hands-off approach and allowing the action to progress in a more traditional style. The film, unfortunately, isn’t any better for it. Their usual style of staying close to the action, forcing the viewers to confront the emotional grindstone, is abandoned in favour of a a more detached style that leads to a less emotional resolution in what is probably their weakest film thus far.

Lorna (Arta Dobroshi) is an Albanian immigrant involved in a sham marriage to Claudy (Jérémie Renier), a drug addict. Fabio, the agent of this arrangement, wants the marriage done with to get Lorna married off to his next client, a rich Russian businessman. Meanwhile Lorna and her shifty boyfriend Sokol are trying to get enough money together to buy and run their own snack bar, a dream that gets further and further from reality as the film progresses.

The “silence” referred to in the title could relate to any number of things – the silence that Lorna is supposed to maintain about her pregnancy, the silence she keeps about her feelings towards her boyfriend Sokol, her silence about Fabio’s plans for Claudy; she’s a woman of many secrets, the majority of them other people’s.

The film’s progression is confused, and a pivotal moment is inexplicably left out completely, in the clumsiest way possible. The Dardenne brothers themselves call it an “ellipsis”, but it’s executed so poorly that it adds nothing but confusion to the viewing experience.

While the performances are as strong as ever, the unrealistic situations and unbelievable character progression that Lorna takes lends the film an air of fiction and mechanism that is usually absent from the brothers’ work. Jérémie Renier’s performance as Claudy the drug addict is typically fantastic; he’s so pathetic but hopeful about the money he thinks he’ll receive in his divorce from Lorna but he is a small highlight in what is ultimately a middling movie from the usually brilliant Dardenne brothers.

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Rob Batchelor

 
Male, midlands, mid-twenties.