"The Commune" at the center of Thomas Vinterberg's film isn't
typical of the communes I knew back in the day. For a start, the
members of this one are reasonably well off and are mostly middle-aged
and, of course, they bring to this 'living together' thing all the
baggage you would expect. Things come to a head when commune founder
Erik, (Ulrich Thomsen), falls for one of his students and moves her in
leading his wife Anna, (Trine Dyrholm), to have a nervous breakdown.
Vinterberg's
film began life as a play and it's certainly very theatrical but
despite the emotional conflicts at the film's heart, it's also fairly
conventional with everyone other than Erik and Anna fading very much
into the background. You never get to know any of them. Subplots come
and go and it just trudges on. On the plus side, it's very well acted
particularly by Dyrholm who won the Best Actress prize at Berlin; she's
the only one you actually care about. It might have worked better on
stage where at least you could feel 'in the same place' as these
commune-dwellers. On screen, it just feels like another piece of
Vinterberg navel-gazing.
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