Critical response 's performance as the
title character received universal critical and popular acclaim with reviews praising in particular, her naturalistic, subtle and nuanced approach to such a tragic character which helped the movie and Lilya feel even more realistic and sad without being purely manipulative tear-jerker or award-baiting flashy spectacle. It garnered her multiple European accolades and many consider to be one of the finest breakout performances by an young actress, as well, one of the best female acting of the 21st century. Swedish critics were very positive to
Lilja 4-ever upon its release with unanimous acclaim towards Oksana Akinshina's performance. Malena Janson started her review in
Svenska Dagbladet by hailing Moodysson's ability to address different themes and emotional spectra, thereby escaping comparison between his pictures. Janson went on to compare the directing to
Lars von Trier's
Breaking the Waves and
Dancer in the Dark, but found
Lilja 4-ever to be superior: "What particularly distinguishes Moodysson's from von Trier's destruction tales and makes it so much more gruesome, are the ties to reality. While we're sitting in the movie theatre and delight and torment ourselves through this masterpiece, happens outside exactly what Lilja encounters perhaps only a few kilometres or miles away from us." The film was fairly successful at the Swedish box office, although significantly less so than Moodysson's previous films.
Lilya 4-ever sold 270,000 tickets during the theatrical run, compared to 867,584 for
Show Me Love and 882,000 for
Together. The film was embraced by most English-language critics as well. As of December 2023, it holds an 85% approval from 72 reviews listed at
Rotten Tomatoes, with an average rating of 7.6/10. The consensus states: "A tragic, hard-hitting story about a teenager trapped in a life of prostitution."
Metacritic gives a score of 83 out of 100, based on 26 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". It was rated with four out of five stars by Michael Hayden in the British film magazine
Empire, where he praised the performance by Oksana Akinshina and wrote that the film was "the darkest of fairy tales, complete with wicked aunts and guardian angels" while being "reminiscent of
Ken Loach at his most socially aware".
Manohla Dargis of the
Los Angeles Times noted that the image of the girl lured into prostitution might be a cliché, but held the director's honest intention as an acceptable excuse: "Moodysson wants us to see that there's a real person under the platitudes". She also noted that while the story might be unpleasant to take part of, the discomfort is surpassed by the sheer quality of the film: "This isn't an easy film -- only a memorable one." A negative review came from
Sight & Sounds
Tony Rayns. Rayns dismissed the film as melodramatic and lacking in substance, while also criticizing the stylistic choice of the dream sequences, as well as the soundtrack's composition: "The most extreme case is [the] use of Rammstein's 'Mein Herz brennt', played at woofer-challenging volume over the opening and closing scenes. ... Even if we take the volume as a metaphor for the girl's wish to block out the world, it's absurd to imagine that Lilja would ever relate to or even listen to a Rammstein track in German. So the wall of sound comes from some 'higher' version of MTV, not from the character or story."
Awards and honors Lilya 4-ever won several awards from film festivals around the world including Best Film at
Gijón International Film Festival. Akinshina won the awards for Best Actress both in Gijón and at
Rouen Nordic Film Festival. Ulf Brantås won the award for Best Cinematography at
Zimbabwe International Film Festival and Moodysson for Best Director at Brasília International Film Festival. The film was the big winner at the 2003
Guldbagge Awards where it received prizes for
Best Film,
Best Direction, Best Screenplay, Akinshina as Best Actress and Best Cinematography. Bogucharsky was also nominated for Best Actor. It was nominated for Best Film and
Best Actress at the
European Film Awards. It was
Sweden's submission for the
Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the
75th Academy Awards, which sparked some controversy when the academy considered to deem it ineligible since the primary language is not Swedish. Eventually it was accepted, but failed to be nominated. In November 2009 the film magazine
FLM published a list of the 10 best Swedish films of the decade as voted by 26 of the country's leading critics.
Lilya 4-ever appeared as number three on the list, surpassed only by
Involuntary and
Songs from the Second Floor. ==See also==