Home > Comedy >

Eila, Rampe and Baby Girl

AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

Eila, Rampe and Baby Girl (2014)

December. 26,2014
|
5.5
| Comedy
AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

Baby Girl, 30, a poet with a bachelor's degree in arts, is anguished because of her relationship with Pirkka, a relatively smart, young man. Baby Girl's parents, Eila and Rampe, do their best to become friends with Pirkka and his elegant mother. Through coincidence and error Eila occupies her summerhouse neighbors' empty luxury villa. When Pirkka's mother drops by, Eila lies that she and Rampe own the fancy house. The showing off and lying escalate when Eila's mother and sister show up. The real owners of the house, an upper-class couple, Thomas and Monica, are driven away to Eila and Rampe's modest cottage.

...

Watch Trailer

Free Trial Channels

AD
Show More

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Solemplex
2014/12/26

To me, this movie is perfection.

More
Libramedi
2014/12/27

Intense, gripping, stylish and poignant

More
MamaGravity
2014/12/28

good back-story, and good acting

More
Mehdi Hoffman
2014/12/29

There's a more than satisfactory amount of boom-boom in the movie's trim running time.

More
kikeham
2014/12/30

A true theater comedy. There's nothing pretentious and I'm not pretentious. All actors behave professionally and give characters real consistence. The movie drives you smoothly to the end in a continuous entertainment with easy to find everyday human profiles. The natural scenery makes yet lighter and wild the plot. A plot that has nothing new on the subject but, I just found healthy to remember us from time to time the many useless and stressful lies human urbanites live and put on. It doesn't matter the latitude, we lie. This light comedy, supposedly inexpensive, brings out a Nordic often forgotten society which reflects exactly all other more on view similar. Director Mäkelä quite finely uses her knowledge of common women patterns, well accented for the opera, making them as funny as a cartoon; she's too compassionate with men though, well, the works turns around peculiar Eiia anyway. Our societies are full of these behavioral social illness - often hidden under "good manners" labels - Why pretend they were argument of the 50-60s when they are at our side (or parts of us) in everyday life? Ah, if critics used some humbleness! Words can be tiring. I much enjoyed this movie

More