Noi
Albinoi Movie Review:
This
quirky Icelandic fable is an intriguing and extremely clever
blending of comedy, tragedy and coming-of-age angst. Noi
(Lemarquis) is a 17-year-old albino with no drive at all.
He's very bright, but he can't be bothered to attend classes
or do his homework, preferring instead to wander around
his tiny, isolated village getting in trouble ... or hiding
out in the box-sized cellar beneath his house. Then he spots
a new girl (Hansdottir) working in the local cafe and develops
an interest in life again.
Meanwhile, his drunken father (Gunnarsson) is trying to
reconnect with him, his spiky grandmother (Fridriksdottir)
is quietly spurring him on, and a grouchy shop owner (Rognvaldsson)
is trying to keep him away from his daughter. Then Noi visits
a fortune-teller (Bjargmundsson) who makes a rather scary
pronouncement.
Obviously
a Jim Jarmusch fan, writer-director Kari creates an astonishing
tone that brilliantly blends dry humour with impending tragedy.
The film pokes along randomly (just like Noi), observing
each quietly comic scene and building an overwhelming sense
of nature out of balance. Like a tragic hero, Noi is stubbornly
unaware of his moral blindness, refusing to acknowledge
the consequences of his behaviour. Yet even as life begins
to bite back with a vengeance, we're never prepared for
where Kari takes us! Performances are spot-on from the entire
cast; each memorable character is finely detailed and full
of eccentricities that are beautifully underplayed.
And even though it moves at an extremely slow pace, the
film looks fantastic, with a wacky 1970s-style design (clothing,
decor, cars) contrasted against the bleak wasteland around
the snowbound village. And it's in the ironic conclusion
that Kari delivers his powerfully resonant punch. A terrific
feature debut from a filmmaker to watch.
Rich
Cline
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