Review of The Danish Girl (2015) by Caroline M — 10 Jan 2016
A surprisingly delicate take on a heavyweight topic, The Danish Girl covers important ground in a palatable manner without ever really digging too deep into the emotional turmoil beneath. Redmayne is immensely watchable as Einar/Lily, though I did start to tire of his tearful performance which at times verged on affected.
For me the heart of the tale was Gerda, fiercely brought to life by a committed, heart-felt and more varied performance from Vikander. Her journey of shock, acceptance and inevitable loss was engrossing and captured my sympathy in the end, far more than Lily's - who although undoubtedly brave, I felt became selfishly engrossed in her own battle and marginally unlikeable by the end.
The script did truncate some of the much needed confrontations between Gerda and Lily, which gave a slightly saccharine coating to what would surely have been a Herculean journey of acceptance for Gerda.
It was a well acted, well-intentioned film, which was safely enjoyable throughout. Just given the importance of the content matter I was left feeling The Danish Girl could have been a bit more daring.
This review of The Danish Girl (2015) was written by Caroline M on 10 Jan 2016.
The Danish Girl has generally received positive reviews.
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