Perfect Sense
Director: David McKenzie
Starring: Connie Nielsen, Eva Green, Ewan McGregor
Details: UK/Denmark / 92mins (15A).
There's a global epidemic afoot: following a bout of depression – "people are suddenly hit with everything they've lost… all the people they've hurt…" – people are losing their sense of smell. Shortly, after experiencing a fiendish desire for food, their sense of taste is also lost. As Green prepares for the loss of the rest of the senses, she embarks on a relationship with commitment-phobe chef McGregor, whose restaurant is suffering from the crisis as people are staying home...
It's an odd idea for a movie. Usually, this kind of story is covered in a pre-credit sequence where one man/woman is left to wander the deserted streets as they come to terms with the devastation of the world's population. Working on what must have been a minimal budget, McKenzie can't go for grandiose money shots and is reduced to toppling a car or two and scattering rubbish about the place. The director takes the global problem and makes it personal, concentrating on the little world McGregor and Green have created for themselves as they try to make sense of it all.
Perfect Sense can veer close to the ridiculous at times – it might have sounded great on paper, but watching a bunch of actors scramble over each other as they eat mustard from a jar, a bouquet of flowers and live rabbits as they succumb to an 'eating rage' looks silly. Somehow, though, McKenzie pulls the film back from the brink and gets the audience back on the board with the characters' plight. There are touches of brilliance too: when hearing vanishes, the director has no qualms spending ten minutes of the film in silence. It's an eerie sequence.
McKenzie leaves a lot unsaid too: the why and the how this is happening is left unchartered and why Green, who specialises in these kind of things, doesn't actually work hard at figuring it out, preferring instead to fall into bed with McGregor.
Odd but being a bit different, regardless of the end result, is always welcome.
Review by Gavin Burke
Your Comments
FilmBuff76
After Melancholia last week, there's more end-of-the-world drama in this low-key but reasonably good little film. If you've seen Blindness, then you'll have some idea of what to expect here - people all of sudden start losing their senses, while the social fabric of society breaks down as a result. Whereas Blindness only concentrated on one sense, Perfect Sense goes the whole way and shows all of the senses gradually being lost. At the centre of it though is a touching love story, which gives it resonance. It does make you wonder though... and give you food for thought after the film has ended.
Posted 08/10/2011 00:36:10
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