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Wilbur
15Wilbur (Wants To Kill Himself) (2003)

updated 02 December 2003
reviewer's rating
4 out of 5
Reviewed by Jamie Russell


Director
Lone Scherfig
Writer
Lone Scherfig
Anders Thomas Jensen
Stars
Jamie Sives
Adrian Rawlins
Shirley Henderson
Julia Davis
Mads Mikkelsen
Lisa McKinlay
Length
109 minutes
Distributor
Icon
Cinema
05 December 2003
Country
Denmark/UK/Sweden/France
Genre
Comedy
Drama
Web Links




You'd better believe the title: Wilbur (Jamie Sives) really does want to kill himself and he's ready to try anything, from jumping off bridges, to swallowing pills, to sticking his head in gas ovens to get a chance to say hello to Death. The only problem is Death isn't interested. Which is what makes this morose Scottish comedy so heartbreakingly funny.

"A FILMMAKER WITH FLAIR"

Don't get us wrong. Death isn't a subject that should usually be taken lightly, but Danish director Lone Scherfig just can't resist looking on the bright side. As anyone who saw her debut film Italian For Beginners already knows, she's a filmmaker with a flair for finding both the bitter and the sweet in every situation.

Wilbur is an immature young Glaswegian lad who's determined to kill himself, even though he's got a loving brother Harbour (Adrian Rawlins) who's ever the optimist and a shop full of second-hand books left to him by his recently deceased father. When Harbour falls in love with shy hospital cleaner Alice (Shirley Henderson), Wilbur's got one more reason to do the deed. Not because he needs the attention, but because he rather fancies Alice himself.

"IT'S LIKE BEING IN WALES"

Set in a strange, fantasy Glasgow, this Danish-Scottish-Swedish-French co-production is a truly European film. There's plenty of Scots humour: when someone asks Wilbur what a near-death experience is like, he replies, "It's like being in Wales." But there's also lots of carefully observed character drama, the kind of stuff that would be more at home in a Danish Dogme movie. Perhaps that's why Scherfig uses morose Danish actor Mads Mikkelsen (Open Hearts) to inject some real misery into the proceedings.

With terrific performances from Sives (definitely an actor to watch out for) and Henderson (who remains one of Britain's most under-appreciated actresses), this quirky little movie's more charming than morbid, more funny than sad.

Find out more about "Wilbur (Wants To Kill Himself)" at



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