Monday, November 30, 2015

A Second Chance

Suzanne Bier’s A Second Chance is an emotionally complex expansion of the buddy cop genre. Buried in the rich psychological texture of the four main characters remains the classic whodunit. Who killed baby Alexander?
Hero Andreas is a unique film cop because he’s so open to his emotions, both as he caresses his lovely wife Anna and as he’s dedicated instantly to the infants, the psychotic druggie’s beshat waif as well as the cop’s own helpless son. This cop dotes on babies. Andreas is a man strong enough to show his feelings, which of course prompts the irate Tristan to call him “faggot.”
It’s hard to recall another film hero, especially in the crime genre, who shows such tenderness to babies and women. This softness leads Andreas over the line into his own irrational action: swapping his dead son for the druggies’ neglected one, to give that kid a second chance.
Andreas’s motive is not entirely generous. Through that swap, his hysterical wife Anna would also get a second chance to be a parent, as he will as a father. Instead she gets a second chance to lose control. The new baby doesn’t keep her from the suicide she threatened if Andreas were to call the ambulance to take away their Alexander, however dead. 
At risk of sounding clinical, both Anna and Tristan’s Sanne have forms of postpartum depression. Sanne’s life is further complicated by Tristan’s violence that forces her to neglect their son Sofus. Paradoxically, the downtrodden Sanne proves a better mother than the rich and classy Anna. 
In a brief scene Anna’s mother reveals an intense sunken rage at her husband’s rejection of their daughter, presumably for marrying down to a cop. One central theme is the power of male authority and its maddening effect on women. With his remarkable sensitivity, though, Andreas experiences a grief and disorientation as profound as his wife’s. Hence his plan to swap babies, fine for Sofus’s second chance but an unwarranted cruelty to Sanne.
Simon, Andreas’s partner in crime-fighting, is typically his opposite. The bad cop and the good cup switch roles. When Andreas is initially stable and ethical, Simon is a basket case, drunken and belligerent, living a bum’s life since his wife left him, taking their son. 
As Andreas goes to pieces Simon recovers his character, self-respect and discipline. He even tidies his flat. He deduces Andreas’s secret and leads him to return Sofus to Sanne, confess his crime, take his punishment and start a new life, however smaller. The drunken Simon and maddened Andreas prove as hysterical as the women. 
The happy ending completes the theme of justice and proper compassion. We share the busted Andreas’s satisfaction when he glimpses a clearly rehabilitated, stable Sanne and meets the bright young Sofus. The once helpless infant has a hammer now and his mom is buying screws. Andreas had to abandon his plan and his career to give Sofus and Sanne a true second chance.
     This buddy cop film is less about law and order than the pain of emotional commitment and vulnerability. 

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