8/10
Good despite a story of usual suspects.
10 April 2004
Warning: Spoilers
The Danish movie, Twist and Shout, turned out to be a better movie than I had expected, despite using tired themes of the similar coming-of-age movies.

The movie concentrates on the stories of two young friends, Erik and Bjørn. Bjørn is a flamboyant, outgoing kid with a passion for Rock N' Roll and Erik is his reserved, conservative friend. Both learn tough lessons about growing up, each in his own way.

For Bjørn, his experiences come from first love when he falls for a lovely young girl named Anna. And we see Bjørn's first love in a way that reminds us of our own experiences that we have had (or will have) towards someone. Says Bjørn, glowing to his friend Erik, "I have never felt this way about anyone before." Sadly, these experiences also lead to a tragedy which force the relationship apart. Bjørn's friend, Kirsten, a wealthy, but empty girl, takes advantage of Bjørn's vulnerability and somehow forces him into a situation so that Kirsten may delude herself that Bjørn will forget all about Anna and find comfort in this new relationship. Bjørn's lessons are of the impossibility of substituting one thing for another. It seems that the value of his first love will live on with him forever.

For Erik, his experiences involve his controlling father and a neglected and misunderstood mother. Erik is the shy, conservative kid that he is because of the strict upbringing by his father. Eventually, he comes to doubt his father's rules and loses respect for him as he draws closer to his mother.

From his father's stories, it seems that his mother entered some sort of state of schizophrenia, though he said they called it Post Natal Psychosis, and I suppose Erik feels that this is partly his own fault for being born. Embarrassed by his mother at first, he gradually draws closer to her and discovers that she is actually quite a lovable person in that way you find something you love about your mom. And he finds out that his mother starts to feel better, and appears much more vibrant, although Erik's father tries to stop their time together. Erik is forced to defy his father to save his mother.

Though it appears that the movie, simply judging by the title, is about two youth's experiences in the Rock N' Roll era, the music is only there as a condition of setting, but not as a drive of story. And though sad, it is still a wonderful film about growing up.
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