Talk:Miss Smilla's Feeling for Snow
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[edit] A few critical remarks to start this page..
The pretext of a highly respected Danish surgeon having married an Inuit (Smilla's parents) is strained beyond the breaking point (roughly like one of President Bush's daughters falling for an illegal ailen/migrant farmer), and the denoument - a meteorite of supposedly remarkable scientific value - a disappointing contrivance (what's so exciting about a big rock?) Too bad, because along the way Höeg deals interestingly with some social issues in an exciting, tightly written story. The film is also worth seeing, including nice shots of Copenhagen for those who can take their eyes off Julia Ormond long enough to notice. I've been waiting to see what P Höeg comes up with as he matures, but after this one book, nothing else of his has penetrated the public consciousness, at least not outside of Denmark.
--Philopedia 01:03, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
Who said Smilla's mother and father were married? There is no such evidence that show those two were married, in the movie.Isatay 06:55, 16 February 2007 (UTC)