Brothers (Brødre)

Wednesday, June 21, 2006 - 7:30pm
Denmark 2004. Director: Susanne Bier.
Colour, 35mm, in Danish with English subtitles. 110 mins.
Cast:
Connie Nielsen, Ulrich Thomsen, Nikolaj Lie Kaas, Sarah Juel Werner, Rebecca Løgstrup


BrothersSometimes keeping the peace can have catastrophic results. Winner of the Sundance Audience Award for World Cinema, Susanne Bier's Brothers tells the story of how a UN peacekeeper is captured and faced with a bleak choice that leaves him a broken man, and turns the dynamics of his family upside down.

Michael (Ulrich Thomsen) has everything under control: a successful military career as a major in the Danish army, a loving wife (Connie Nielsen [Gladiator, Rushmore, The Devil's Advocate]), and two beautiful daughters. His younger brother Jannick (Nikolaj Lie Kaas) is an aimless ne'er-do-well, drifting through life in an alcoholic haze. The film opens with Michael picking up Jannick from prison, where he has just served time for bank robbery. Soon after, Michael is sent to Afghanistan on a UN peacekeeping mission. When his helicopter is shot down, Michael is missing in action and presumed dead. No longer feeling bound by his established family role, Jannick rises to the occasion. He stops drinking, gets a job, and helps his brother's family cope with their loss. But Michael isn't dead, he's a prisoner of war, and he's been traumatized by the ordeal. When he returns home, his reactions are those of a highly damaged man: he has no patience for his children, is wracked with jealous rage over his brother's friendship with his family, and is filled with self-loathing over an act he can't reveal to anyone.

Frames of Mind is a monthly film event run utilizing film and video to promote professional and community education on issues pertaining to mental health and illness.

Post-screening discussion with Dr. Greg Passey, MD, FRCPC, Director of Vancouver General Hospital's Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Clinic and a specialist in trauma psychiatry. In 1995, Dr. Passey received the Laughlin Fellowship from the American College of Psychiatrists for research and leadership in the field of Psychological Consequences of UN Peacekeeping.

Moderated by Dr. Harry Karlinsky, Director of Continuing Medical Education and Professional Development, Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia.

Categories: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
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