"Lorna's Silence" is the newest film by two of the world's best filmmakers: the Dardenne brothers, Jean-Pierre and Luc. Although still fairly obscure to the majority of Americans, anyone with a passion for cinema can easily recognize their vast amount of imitators and devoted fol...( read more)
Arta Dobroshi, Jeremie Renier, Fabrizio Rongione
In order to become the owner of a snack bar with her boyfriend, Lorna, a young Albanian woman living in Belgium, becomes an accomplice to a diabolical plan devised by mobster Fabio. Fabio has orchestr...( read more
)
DVD Release Date: May 20, 2008
Stats: 220 reviews
Photos
Your Rating
Flixster Reviews (220)
-
October 28, 2009
-
May 3, 2009
Moving portrayal of a woman's struggle for financial security in a shady world of unscrupulous men. Dobroshi gives a wonderfully understated but nuanced performance as Lorna's detached facade cracks and her emotions win through.
-
April 6, 2009
The Dardenne brothers are among the very few directors working today with the intention of delving into the darkest recesses of the soul. In a world obessesed with easy pay offs and enjoyable stories, they instead present ideas - about morality, and humanity. The pay off is effec...( read more)
-
April 10, 2009
After seeing Rosetta, I was kinda disappointed with that movie from the Dardennes brothers and it was not my favorite. Now Le Silence of Lorna is their latest and I decided to give it a try, and I was happy I did.
The story was fairly interesting,complex and well written. The wa...( read more) -
November 27, 2009
In Lorna's Silence, there is little of the convention. The fine-written screenplay says it all. The film is so dark with hidden emotions that are overwhelmingly revealed in the end. It is conscience over desire. It is an easy movie to watch for some reasons, the cinematography, t...( read more)
-
July 6, 2009
Con una historia compleja y sobrecogedora, los hermanos Dardenne nos adentran al mundo de los inmigrantes, de la esperanza y los sueños que los mueven, y de los sacrificios y abnegación inherentes a esa situación de vida.
Critic Reviews
Belgian filmmaking brothers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne have become festival darlings with rigorously minimal ethical thrillers. full review
The Dardennes' film offers a portrait of a fragile yet determined woman set on making a home for herself in the world, even as that world unravels before her eyes. full review
It's a very good film nevertheless, and in Dobroshi it has a face that passes through every conceivable shade of sorrow. full review
What power is here. What affecting acting by Dobroshi, Renier and Marinne. full review
It leaves the audience with neither a sense of uplift nor devastation, but, rather, with something more akin to intellectual appreciation. full review
Lorna's Silence, with a narrative that turns partly on a mysterious pregnancy, evokes, subtly but unmistakably, a range of maternal biblical associations. full review
Like earlier Dardenne films, Lorna's Silence is naturalistic, yet this one, beautifully shot in 35 mm film by Alain Marcoen, achieves a poetry of bereftness. full review
Belgian film team Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne do small things profoundly. full review
A penetrating, deceptively sly interior portrait. full review
Comments
This board looks lonely. Be the first to talk about "Le Silence de Lorna (The Silence of Lorna) (Lorna's Silence)" !
Critic ratings and reviews powered by RottenTomatoes.com
Fresh (60% or more critics rated the movie positively)
Rotten (59% or fewer critics rated the movie positively)
All Rotten Tomatoes content is used under license from Rotten Tomatoes. Rotten Tomatoes, Certified Fresh, and the Tomatometer are the trademarks of Incfusion Corporation, d/b/a Rotten Tomatoes, a subsidiary of IGN Entertainment, Inc.









