Sick of Myself

Sick of Myself is a sharp black comedy from Norway concerned with the narcissism of youth and the pretentiousness of the contemporary art scene

Film Review by Eilidh Akilade | 17 Apr 2023
  • Sick of Myself
Film title: Sick of Myself
Director: Kristoffer Borgli
Starring: Kristine Kujath Thorp, Eirik Sæther
Release date: 21 Apr
Certificate: TBC

In constant competition with her egotistical artist boyfriend, Signe (Kristine Kujath Thorp) seeks status and sympathy by purposefully taking pills known to cause a severe skin disorder. It’s a dark comedy that rejects any form of sentimentality to examine our own self-obsession with shameless honesty.

Signe wants care, attention, and clout; through the clearly polished yet effortlessly natural script, we’re reminded that we want all this too. Whether she’s taking a selfie in a hospital gown or imagining her funeral mid-sex, Signe is horrifically relatable, albeit extreme. Thorp carries the character with a magnetism that has us unable to look away – which is, ironically, exactly what Signe wants. It’s compelling – disturbingly so.

The couple’s relationship is hilarious in its somehow seamless abrasion. Meanwhile, Signe’s fantasies are comically contrived, always offset by a quick cut back to reality, leaving us and Signe dripping with guilt and amusement at our own disgustingness. It’s obviously not a universal comedy; rather, it’s a precise one, tapping into a specific audience. The narcissism of youth, the contemporary art world, the quiet resentment of romantic partners. Under director Borgli’s lens, the somewhat surface-level symptoms of wider societal issues become all the funnier. 

Towards the film’s end, the narrative arguably slips too far into something of a cautionary tale. However, overall, its unsentimental and uninhibited navigation of body horror is deeply thoughtful. Sick of Myself demands a critical watch; but it’s a force nonetheless.


Released 21 Apr by Modern Films; certificate TBC