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Life goes on in My Life Without Me
15My Life Without Me (2003)

updated 03 November 2003
reviewer's rating
5 out of 5
Reviewed by Jamie Russell


Director
Isabel Coixet
Writer
Isabel Coixet
Stars
Sarah Polley
Amanda Plummer
Scott Speedman
Leonor Watling
Deborah Harry
Length
106 minutes
Distributor
Metrodome Distribution
Cinema
07 November 2003
Country
Spain/Canada
Genre
Drama
Romance
Web Links




A fragile, tender entry in the weepie genre, My Life Without Me burrows under the skin and goes straight for the tear ducts. Its unsentimentally-played story concerns a young wife and mother who discovers she's only got a few weeks left to live.

"CONVINCINGLY MOVING"

It's not exactly the most uplifting tale, but this intelligently pitched emotional melodrama avoids every pitfall of the few-weeks-to-live theme. It also justifies its unusually high pedigree (Pedro and Agustín Almodovar are executive producers) with some convincingly moving moments.

At just 23-years-old, Ann (Sarah Polley) has barely lived her life. Knocked up with her first child at the age of 17, saddled with a loving but unambitious husband (Scott Speedman), and blessed with two adorable little daughters, she's a working class mom working a dead end cleaning job while desperately hoping she won't end up like her own lonely mother (Deborah Harry). Then comes the pain: a trip to the hospital and the news that she's terminally ill.

Cleverly setting up the story so that Ann decides not to tell anyone about her illness, Spanish writer-director Isabel Coixet (Things I Never Told You) effortlessly avoids effusive gushing, homing in instead on this woman's attempts to put her house (well, trailer) in order.

As Ann draws up a touchingly unambitious list of "Things To Do Before I Die" and unexpectedly falls in love with a bookish stranger (Mark Ruffalo) she meets in her local Laundromat, My Life Without Me plays a dangerous game of brinkmanship with the usual weepie clichés - but emerges all the stronger for it.

"DIGNIFIED AND HEARTFELT"

Veering off at unexpected tangents - including a hilarious discussion about Milli Vanilli, and a convenience store fantasy sequence where staff and shoppers dance through the aisles, blithely proving Ann's assertion that nobody ever thinks of death in a supermarket - Coixet's dignified, heartfelt little indie drama proves that dying young doesn't always come with the schmaltz of a Julia Roberts movie. Outstanding.

Find out more about "My Life Without Me" at



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