

Submarino
Two brothers meet at their mother's funeral, each in his way on a path of self-destruction, both haunted by a tragedy in their youth.
Synopsis
As children, Nick and his little brother take care of their baby brother while their mother drinks herself senseless. But the baby dies, and both brothers blame themselves. Many years later, Nick is out of prison after serving time for an assault. He drinks, lives in a shelter and tries to help an old friend. When their mother dies, Nick meets his brother at the funeral. The brother, who remains nameless, is a single father to a young boy, but also supports a drug habit that is spiraling out of control. When an opportunity presents itself, he becomes a drug dealer to secure his son's future. Eventually, the two brothers meet again.
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User Reviews
CinemaSerf
Initially I thought that not giving one of these siblings a name might have been more of a gimmick, but as we progress through this distressing story of his life with brother "Nick" (Jakob Cedergren) it becomes quite symbolic of the anonymity of the lives of many in a civilised society that turns it's lights out at eleven pm. Our introduction to them is fairly harrowing. Their mother lives in a permanent alcoholic stupour which leaves them, still in their early teens, to look after their baby brother. Unsurprisingly, that goes wrong resulting in a bedrock of trauma for both as they go their separate but not entirely indistinct ways. We begin with the adventures of the recently incarcerated "Nick". He is rudderless and has a bit of a drink problem, but as he quite literally stumbles over his old friend "Ivan" (Morten Rose) we realise that he isn't an evil man, just one who is emotionally lost. His sibling (Peter Plaugborg) isn't doing that much better. He has a drug habit which despite his adoration for his young son "Martin" (Gustav Fischer Kjærulff), he simply cannot kick. Indeed, when things become really desperate he decides to listen to an old junkie and set up a distribution network of his own. Lucrative? Well it might be for a short while, but there is always someone prepared to do some snitching to the cops. There is something touching about the scenes with Plaugborg and the entirely natural young Kjæerulff and they also illustrate clearly just how addiction can take over a life, even when there are other things - better things - for a man to live for. This isn't a man wanting to deal drugs for the sake of it; he wants to make his lad's life better, but without realising that's at best a short-term and truly hollow solution. Neither character has any real sense of an anchor in their lives, they never have had and that is also well demonstrated by a Cedergren whose place in the film takes up less screen time, but whose activities are no less poignant as we all sense another tragedy for these men can be but a page or scene away. There's some contemplative effort been put into the dialogue and the whole design of the film reflects a degree of urban decay to compliment the psychological elements that dog them throughout. It's not without some joy, and at times there might even be grounds for a little optimism, but somehow I don't think rose tinted glasses are on the cards.
















