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Imagine
Of Mice and Men if George and Lenny were both boobs, The
Odd Couple if Felix and Oscar were Norwegian, or Dumb and
Dumber without the scatological humor, and you'll most
likely conjure up Elling, one of the overlooked nominees
for Best Foreign Language Film in the most recent Oscar race
(all the attention went to Amélie
and eventual winner No Man's Land).
Yeah, it's a comedy about a couple of mentally challenged guys,
but it manages to be funny without being exploitive or preaching
the upbeat Forrest Gump message that, no matter how
damaged we seem to be on the outside, we're all the same on the
inside (in my case, guts, black stuff and about 50 Slim Jims).
Based
on a play adapted from a very popular Ingvar Ambjørnsen book, Elling
opens with the diminutive title character (Per Christian
Ellefsen), a forty-something mama's boy, being sent to the
nuthouse when his mother dies. It is here that he is assigned to
live with the hulking Gerard Depardieu lookalike Kjell Bjarne
(Sven Nordin), a similarly aged man obsessed with both food and
pussy, although he's a virgin.
Two
years later, and without much explanation, Elling and Kjell
Bjarne get their own apartment in Oslo.
It's kind of a halfway house, with social worker Frank Åsli
(Jørgen Langhelle) checking in on the duo to make sure they
haven't burned the place down. Elling and Kjell Bjarne are very
apprehensive about the whole living-on-their-own thing, as they
were much happier within the safe confines of their psych ward.
The situation is made worse, at least in their eyes, by
Frank, who insists they do things like learn to use the phone
and, occasionally, even leave the apartment to get groceries.
Much of the first half
of Elling is fish-out-of-water stuff that is made tolerable via
strong writing, the whole Odd Couple angle (Elling and Kjell
Bjarne – or fussy superego and slobby id – bicker like an
old married couple), and the fact that both characters are
extreme agoraphobics. The
second half has them opening their minds and venturing out into
the world a bit, with Kjell Bjarne falling in love with a
pregnant neighbor (Marit Pia Jacobsen) and Elling writing poetry
and hiding it in sauerkraut packaging at the grocery store.
Director
Petter Næss, who also helmed the stage production of Elling,
has a knack for the timing of physical comedy and set pieces,
and is blessed with wonderful performances from his two leads
here. There aren't
too many films that can be as simultaneously funny, offbeat and
heartwarming (without a thick shmear of the goo, at least), but Elling
manages to do all three quite well, making it one of the year's
most enjoyable releases.
| 1:29
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for
language and some sexual content |
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