It's overtly about provocation, set in a tony Danish suburb where a group of men and women living commune-style in an empty house are discovering their "inner idiots" by pretending to be developmentally challenged.
50
L.A. WeeklyManohla Dargis
L.A. WeeklyManohla Dargis
Becomes guilty of the very prejudice that his film has so obviously tried to subvert. It's too bad -- the rest of it is hilarious.
The group's intent is not to insult those physically or mentally challenged in any manner of degree but, rather, to disturb middle-class types as much as they possibly can.
25
Christian Science MonitorDavid Sterritt
Christian Science MonitorDavid Sterritt
Tries to be daring and iconoclastic but winds up seeming as spoiled and childish as its main characters.