'Lorna's Silence'
Review: 5/5
The story centers around Lorna and her husband. They're Albanian emigrants in Belgium that maintain an unusual desire to open up a snack shop, but, in order to do so, they need money, and a permanent resident status. An Italian mobster, Andrei, helps Lorna and her husband with this issue, concocting a plan to have Claudy, a heroin junkie, marry Lorna in order to gain citizenship, then divorce and remarry her real husband. Yet, as is obvious, affairs are not carried out in the proper manner. Without giving away spoilers, suffice it to say Lorna finds herself guilt-ridden, spiraling downward into the fringes of insanity. Watching Dobroshi slowly implode, both mentally and physically, is to be witness to an incomparable exhibition of the malaise caused distinctly by various forms of exhaustion. The performance is worthy of an Oscar. She will be nominated.
Much credit needs to be attributed to the Dardennes brothers for creating a tone of harrowing disquiet by utilizing such a limited formal technique. The tension in this film is comparable to that displayed effectively in the Coens' 'No Country for Old Men,' constructed not by a lingering soundtrack or long stretches of dialogue, but by a naturalistic technical style, and, equally, Dobroshi's multilayered portrayal of Lorna, whose gradual decline occasionally results in self-mutilation. That no one involved in the affair bothers to notice the extent of Lorna's desolation, not because they are unconcerned with her, but because her level of hubris is abnormally high, subtly proves her resolute willingness to exert herself far beyond her boundaries to live the life she wants.