Rocks in My Pockets (FILM REVIEW)
Rocks in My Pockets
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Dysfunctional Latvian Family Serves as Fodder for Gallows Humor about Suicide
Signe Baumane hails from a
dysfunctional Latvian family whose females have historically been haunted by suicidal
thoughts and bouts of depression to a disturbing degree. Signe traces the
inherited predisposition back to her grandmother who tried to drown herself in
a river in Riga
but failed because she forgot to put rocks in her pockets.
That
aborted attempt explains the title of this animated misadventure written,
directed and narrated by Ms. Baumane in her heavy Latvian accent.
Intriguingly
illustrated courtesy of an arresting mix of drawings and paper mache, the
production is basically a captivating group portrait of weird women, each with
a definite death wish
“Her body had a stronger will to live than her mind had a will to die,”
Signe reflects about one relative’s unsuccessful attempt on her own life.
Later, during a lesson on the etiquette of hanging oneself, the director
suggests donning a pair of adult diapers because you‘ll otherwise poop and pee
in your pants and leave a heck of a mess for loved ones to clean up.
Such gallows humor is par for the course in this relentlessly-dark
comedy, and this offbeat departure into depravity is engaging enough, provided
you’re in the mood to look at the lighter side of suicide. At least the story ends
on a high note, namely, with Signe expressing gratitude to her mother for forcing
her to socialize instead of just sitting around the house and listening to the
self-destructive voices inside her head.
Who
knew that hara-kiri was such a hilarious subject?
Very Good
(2.5 stars)
Unrated
Running time: 89 minutes
Distributor: Zeitgeist
Films
To see a trailer for Rocks
in My Pockets, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJcVnFripdc
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