Review of 1001 Grams

1001 Grams (2014)
7/10
Hamer's Latest is Typical Hamer
15 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
I'll readily admit I am a fan of the acclaimed Norwegian filmmaker Bent Hamer, having especially liked two of his previous films "O'Horten" and "Kitchen Stories". Here again Hamer displays his satirical and droll humor along with his impeccable cinematography. However, this movie will probably appeal to a very thin slice of filmgoers with its extremely slow pacing, and I think you really have to like this kind of tongue-in-cheek humor to enjoy it.

Ane Dahl Torp is simply captivating here as Marie, who works for the Norwegian Metrology Service, and has been entrusted to transport the all-important national kilo of Norway to a conference in Paris. There, at the BIPM (International Bureau of Weights and Measures), the kilo will be weighed and re-calibrated, if necessary. Meanwhile her life is filled with troubles as she's going through a divorce, and her father Ernst (Stein Winge) has suffered a severe heart attack.

However, once in Paris, she meets Pi, most ably portrayed by Laurent Stocker, who's a professor and scientist, but after difficulties in his life has chosen to get away from it all by being a part-time gardener at BIPM and is conducting a project on birdsong. He's living with his mother who has Alzheimer's. I thought the chemistry between Marie and Pi really was quite believable and worked well.

All in all, this film will certainly not appeal to everyone, but for those who like Hamer's droll and satirical humor you may very well end up enjoying this movie as well, with Torp and Stocker's performances adding much here.
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