
SMILLA'S SENSE OF SNOW (PG-13)
Director: Billie August
Stars: Julia Ormond, Gabriel
Byrne, Robert Loggia, Richard
Harris, Vanessa Redgrave, Bob Peck,
Jim Broadbent, Peter Capaldi, Emma
Croft, Tom Wilkinson, Mario Adorf,
Jurgen Vogel
Running Time: 121 minutes.
Fans of Danish author Peter Hoeg's acclaimed novel
Miss Smilla's Feeling For Snow may be a little
disappointed by this workmanlike screen adaptation,
which has drastically changed the thrust of the book.
Screenwriter Ann Biderman (Copycat, Primal Fear,
etc) has transformed Hoeg's colorful novel into a
more conventional thriller in the Alistair MacLean
mould. Although Biderman has made some
fundamental changes to the book, she still manages to
retain its unsettling atmosphere.
The most obvious changes concern the heroine,
Smilla Jasperson (Julia Ormond, who is nothing like
the character described in the novel), a reclusive
geologist who believes that the death of a six year old
boy, who fell from the roof of her apartment block, is
not an accident. Although the official investigation
suggests otherwise, Smilla is convinced that the boy
has been murdered. Her conclusion is based both on
her friendship with the boy and her ability to read
footprints. Smilla is a fairly cold and aloof person,
more comfortable with the impersonal nature of
science and numbers rather than the real world. She
enlists the help of her father (superbly played by
Robert Loggia), a brilliant doctor, to help her
understand some vital medical clues. She is also
unsure of how far she can trust her neighbor
(Gabriel Byrne), an enigmatic character whose
motives for becoming involved remain ambivalent.
Smilla's relentless probing uncovers a sinister web of
deception and ruthless men prepared to commit
murder to protect their secrets. This eventually brings
her into conflict with Thor (Richard Harris), a
renowned scientist embarking on yet another
mysterious expedition into Greenland.
Danish director Billie August (House Of The Spirits,
etc) maintains a rather pedestrian pace throughout,
although he manages to imbue the material with a
steadily increasing atmosphere of betrayal and
violence. Events are never quite clear until the end,
and even then some of the plot exposition is murky
and unclear.
Breaking away from her lightweight image, Ormond
projects a rare strength and resourcefulness as the
resilient and determined Smilla, capturing her sense of
displacement, her complex emotions and her motives.
August has assembled a strong cast to flesh out the
peripheral characters. Vanessa Redgrave makes the
most of her small role as a former secretary, who is
wracked by guilt, and who reluctantly points Smilla in
the right direction. Jim Broadbent captures the sense
of discomfort experienced by the coroner, who feels
that his integrity has been compromised, while Bob
Peck brings an understated menace to his role as a
policeman with dubious loyalties.
Jorgen Persson's cinematography beautifully
captures the vast, snow covered wilderness of the
locations in Denmark, Sweden and Greenland (the
first time in decades that the country has been used as
the setting for a major feature film), and he brings a
palpable sense of chill to the film's surface.
© 1996-97 Greg King / Used With Permission