Smilla's Feeling For Snow review

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When a film breaks with tradition to marry stunts, explosions and effects with realistic characters and bizarre philosophies, you get cynical. And Smilla's Feeling For Snow (based on Peter Hoeg's bestseller) is a patchy mongrel of a movie. On the one hand it's an intelligently-structured, sci-fi psychic thriller, with Danish director Bille August (Pelle The Conqueror) proving it's possible to blend an action-packed crime thriller with an arthouse slant. On the other, it's a bizarre movie with a wacko plot. But then you can't have everything.

There's hardly time to catch your breath as Ormond's Smilla ("The only thing that makes me truly happy is mathematics. Snow, ice, and numbers") unravels a series of tiny clues to the boy's death, finding herself in numerous 007-style tight spots. But while other thrillers are satisfied with delivering predictable plots and caricatured characters, Ann Biderman's (Copycat, Primal Fear) well-sprung script supplies each scene with dialogue that deals well with fashionably intellectual issues such as Smilla's cultural identification and Hoeg's philosophies.

A surprisingly action-packed and fast-moving Scandinavian thriller with the added bonus of having something deeper to think about. Moody, tense and atmospheric, even the oddball plot can't detract from the strangely intriguing momentum. Captivating.

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