The Saddest Music in the World
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Are you ready for something strange? This is it! Isabella Rossellini stars as an eccentric Canadian heiress, Lady Port-Huntley, who offers $25,000 to the person who brings her beer company the saddest music in the world. She suspects that prohibition in America will be lifted soon, and she intends to get the thirsty Americans’ business. So everyone tunes their radios to the contest and listens for the saddest music in the world—in between beer ads.

Of course, there’s more. Rossellini, unfortunate beauty that she is, is missing her legs, which were amputated by a drunken doctor by mistake. She was cheating on the doctor with his son, and the doctor got a bit jealous, but he’s never stopped loving her. To win her back, he has invented her a lovely pair of beer glass legs, complete with foaming ale! (I told you it was a weird movie.)

Will she forgive the doctor, who’s also in the contest for having the saddest music in the world? Will she instead choose Chester (Mark McKinney), the doctor’s son, whom she fell for years before (and who’s also in the contest)? Or how about the doctor’s second son, Roderick (Ross McMillan), the one who carries his dead son’s heart in a jar and believes he’s from Serbia? And will Roderick find out his brother, Chester, is having an affair with his long lost wife, Narcissa (Maria de Medeiros)?

Directed by Guy Maddin and filmed in black and white, this movie certainly isn’t for everyone. It’s odd. You never know what will happen next—because you’re not sure you know what just happened. I do know you’ll be craving a cold one after watching almost two hours of beer flowing and pouring, though, so you might as well buy a six-pack before you start the movie. It’ll save you a trip later.

I liked this movie because I go for the bizarre. However, it’s definitely a rental, not one to buy—unless, of course, you’re a fan of Guy Maddin’s films. I see this one as too weird for most audiences—but a good film for people who like the unusual.

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