Mistaken for Strangers

Film Review by Lewis Porteous | 10 Jun 2014
Film title: Mistaken for Strangers
Director: Tom Berninger
Starring: Tom Berninger, Matt Berninger, The National
Release date: 27 Jun
Certificate: 15

”I feel like I'm on the outside looking in,” opines Tom Berninger, halfway through this brilliantly idiosyncratic documentary in which he is both the director and star. Hired as a roadie for brooding indie rockers The National, a band fronted by his older brother Matt, Tom spends much of the movie enviously orbiting his employers as they bask in the adulation of a devoted fan base and attend private audiences with Barack Obama. The viewer can't help but share Tom's sentiments while being shown life on the road from his perspective, but the film takes a disarming turn in its second act.

When his immature behaviour results in him being relieved of his services on tour, the kvetching knucklehead returns home to lick his wounds and sift through hours of recently acquired documentary footage. What emerges is a surprisingly weighty meditation on success and self-actualisation that renders Mistaken for Strangers altogether more thoughtful and touching than the average hilarious rockumentary. 

Read Josh Slater-Williams' Mistaken for Strangers review

Mistaken for Strangers is released 27 Jun by Dogwoof

A special preview screening of Mistaken for Strangers takes place 14 Jun, which will be followed by an on stage Q&A with Tom Berninger and Matt Berninger that will be broadcast live via satellite to 57 participating cinemas nationwide, including FACT in Liverpool, The Lowry in Manchester, The GFT in Glasgow and Vue in Edinburgh

http://dogwoof.com/mistakenforstrangers