SLIFF 2010 Review: VALHALLA RISING

Review by Dana Jung

‘Valhalla’ is a Norse mythological concept, defining a place where warriors slain in battle go after death. In most texts, it’s described as a great hall in the home of Odin, king of the Norse gods. A sort of warrior’s heaven, the dead go there to prepare for Ragnarok, the Norse equivalent to the Second Coming or Final Judgment in Christianity. These and many other complex themes are woven through the Danish film VALHALLA RISING. Though the film will no doubt be marketed as a sword-fest action flick akin to 300 or CENTURION, it is far removed from both of those movies. The story is simple, yet sets up a fascinating and thoughtful rumination on Christianity vs religious mythology, civilization vs nature, sacrifice vs coercion, and more.

Mads Mikkelsen (familiar as the Bond villain in CASINO ROYALE) is a mute anonymous warrior in an anonymous land. He is a fierce and brutal fighter being used in primitive gladiator-styled fights to the death. The time period is roughly 1000 AD, and Christianity is spreading. There is already conflict between the newer more zealous Christians and all other ‘pagan’ religions. The warrior falls in with a band of early Crusaders as they set off for the Holy Land. Needless to say, things don’t go as planned.

The film opens with a violent combat scene, followed by a nearly silent 10 minute sequence that establishes the story. Nearly all the fight action in the movie appears in these opening segments. Director & co-writer Nicolas Winding Refn isn’t interested in action scenes, but in showing some incredible vistas (mostly shot in Scotland) with an eerie, naturalistic style that is reminiscent of Herzog’s FITZCARRALDO or more recently, Malick’s NEW WORLD. Nature is not just a background, it is a player in the story, which Refn uses to question the ability of religion to bond people together. And is the Mikkelson character some sort of Christ metaphor? He mysteriously has only one eye (Christian symbolism) and seems to be the only person who bathes (baptism?) regularly. He is almost Zen-like in his demeanor when not disemboweling an enemy. The young boy (innocent?) who tags along and acts as the observer/translator is left unharmed and perhaps unaffected by both the primitives and the Christians at the film’s somewhat obscure conclusion. Perhaps the rise of Christianity is the true Ragnarok, as it slowly but steadily overtake – whether by force or sacrifice – all other beliefs, even those more symbiotic with Nature. The viewer is left to decide whether this is a good or bad development in human history, long after this beautifully shot but frustratingly obtuse film ends.

VALHALLA RISING will play during the 19th Annual Stella Artois St. Louis International Film Festival on Sunday, November 14th at 9:15 pm at the Hi-Pointe Theatre.

New Trailer for VALHALLA RISING

For the movie geeks out there looking for edgy films, director Nicolas Winding Refn is one filmmaker to keep an eye out for, which is why I’m excited to share this new trailer for VALHALLA RISING. Refn, who directed such great films as the PUSHER trilogy and 2008’s BRONSON, has a unique visual style and sense of intense storytelling.

Plot Synopsis:

Mute slave HARALD escapes his Scottish masters with the help of 10 year old ARE, torturing and killing them before joining a band of dispossessed Vikings. They go to sea, determined to return to Scandinavia to fight the spread of Christianity, but for HARALD the journey is also a personal one to discover his own origins. Caught in a terrible storm, the group drift for 40 days until, on the verge of death, they find themselves in a freshwater river. The land seems at once strange yet familiar.

When they come under attack by unseen assailants, the groups’ quest for their homeland takes on a bitter urgency as one-by-one they succumb to the onslaught, dying at the hands of the invisibles. Worse, they are no clearer about where they are or if this place even exists outside their imagination. Have they finally reached the new world, or Valhalla?

Meanwhile, HARALDS’s search for identity is compromised when ARE is captured. As the enemy reveal themselves, HARALD realizes he has finally found his identity but at too high a price. As ARE’s life is threatened, HARALD is faced with an impossible choice; save the boy or save his soul?

VALHALLA RISING officially hit US theaters in a limited capacity on June 4, 2010 but hopefully more small theaters will pick this one up throughout the country as word gets out.

NEW TRAILER:

And, in case you missed it… here’s the first trailer:

Movie Melting Pot…’Pusher’ (Denmark, 1996)

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Director Nicolas Winding Refn is becoming a name around the world for his unflinching blow to your visual sense with ‘Bronson.’   Many will look back in years down the road and look at that film that launched Refn’s career as a mainstream filmmaker.   However, ‘Bronson’ is far from Refn’s debut as a director.   It has been 13 years since his first film, ‘Pusher,’ and, though he has grown more confident as a filmmaker, his debut is just as riveting and stark as anything he has done since.

Kim Bodnia stars as Frank, a mid-level drug dealer on the streets of Copenhagen.   Frank wants to make it big, and he sees his opportunity for great things when he is confronted by a former cellmate.   The two set up a large deal, and Frank must go to a local supplier, Milo, to get the drugs.   Frank owes Milo money from previous deals, and he does not have the money to cover what he is about to take from Milo.   Milo, being the generous drug supplier that he is, gives Frank the drugs on the condition that Frank returns with the money as soon as possible.   All seems to be going well, until the police intervene, and Frank is forced to throw the drugs into a local lake.

What follows is an intense ride through Frank’s life as we witness him doing everything he can to get back the money he owes Milo.   Things go from bad to worse to even worse as Frank’s window of time begins to close in on him.

While there is so much to like about ‘Pusher,’ Kim Bodnia really is the star of the show here.   Frank is in every scene of the film save for one, and even moreso than being a drug dealer, he is a despicable man.   Never thinking about plans for the future, Frank does exactly what is necessary to get him from situation to the next.   He has a girlfriend, a prostitute named Vic, who has deep-rooted feeling for Frank.   Frank only uses Vic for his own purposes, and the only times he makes any indication of having a life with her is when it suits needs first and foremost.   He won’t even have sex with the Vic, because her profession disgusts him so much, yet he keeps going back to her, dragging her along just to get what he needs from one moment to the next.

This level of egoism is made all the more evident when Frank breaks down and goes to his mother for help.   Having not seen her son for years, she wants to know that he is okay, that he is taking care of himself.   All Frank wants is money, and, when he realizes she has none to give, he turns on her, shutting her out of his life once again.   It is a hard moment to watch in a film full of them, and Refn’s implacable sense of place and movement projects the viewer into Frank’s world.

Despite the aversion one might, and probably should, have for Frank, you cannot help but hope he makes it through this situation unscathed.   You keep thinking maybe, just maybe, he’ll come around, find a way to pay off Milo, and run off with Vic to some secluded part of the world.   Most of this level of hope stems from Bodnia’s performance.   Bodnia is extremely likable, almost sympathetic in his portrayal.   You believe Frank, because you want to believe Frank, and you want to believe Frank, because you believe Bodnia’s sincerity in the performance he gives.

You believe the character, also, due to the incredible style Refn gives the film.   Like an unstopping train through the streets of Copenhagen, Refn shoots the city with a vitality that makes the city come alive, the streets Frank must work become a character unto themselves.   Mid-way through the film, you almost begin to believe that the story is Frank against the city, but it becomes all the more evident as time passes that this is a story of one man against himself.

And that is what ‘Pusher’ truly boils down to.   Frank is an addict, but his drug is not anything you can buy or steal.   It’s chaos, and it follows Frank wherever he goes whether he is the source of it or not.   Even when things are beginning to take a turn for the better, Frank finds a way turn it on its ear and come out the worse for it.   He pushes away anyone who might care for him, anyone who might love him, and that alone gives the film’s title a shadowy, comfortless dual meaning.

As absorbing as ‘Pusher’ is, it didn’t find release in the United States until a limited release in 2006.  By that time, the film had spawn two sequels, each delving a little deeper into a secondary character.  ‘Pusher II,’ released in Denmark in 2004, follows Frank’s former partner, Tonny, played with colorful fascination by Mad Mikkelsen.  Mikkelsen is probably the most recognizable of the actors in the ‘Pusher’ trilogy, as he went on to play the villain, Le Chiffre, in 2006’s ‘Casino Royale.’  ‘Pusher III’ follows the Serbian drug lord Milo, whose story comes full circle in this final chapter of the ‘Pusher’ saga.  Each film opens with each of the lead actors standing against a dark background, hard music driving the beat and bottom-running subtitles giving their names.  Each film is a powerhouse from Refn, but it is his first that is the most memorable.

That goes for all of Refn’s films.  Even the inescapable power from ‘Bronson’ isn’t told with as much raw nerve as ‘Pusher.’  The director has become more polished in his later years, but it is still his first film that remains his crowning achievement.  Told with a cutting style and cinema verite at its grittiest, ‘Pusher’ is a film that, 13 years later, is just as staggering and as weighty as it ever was.

Keanu Reeves gets Conflicted for ‘Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde’

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Erwin Stoff and Red Wagon Entertainment are co-producing yet another new adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic tale of “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” and may get a stellar director at it’s helm.

Nicolas Winding Refn (Bronson) is in talks with producers to possibly direct this story’s retelling, written by Justin Haythe (Revolutionary Road), of a doctor who concocts a formula that develops an evil version of himself, or alter personality if you will. Haythe should be capable of writing a decent script, so long as it doesn’t end up being Jekyll and Hyde arguing with and yelling at each other for two hours like he did for Leo and Kate.

So, that’s the potentially great news about this project. The slightly less-encouraging news is that Keanu Reeves is attached to star as the doctor with the wild mood swings. An unconventional choice, if you ask me, seeing as Reeves hasn’t shown much emotional range in his past films. Maybe he’ll do a good job, but I can think of countless better choices for this role than Neo.

Coincidentally, Universal is also developing an adaptation of this classic Gothic tale with Guillermo del Toro. Needless to say, this pretty much guarantees the two films, despite the same source material, will be drastically different.

[source: Hollywood Reporter]

Awesome Trailer for ‘Valhalla Rising’

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I’ve been seeing all kinds of cool still and information about ‘Valhalla Rising’ coming down from Twitch, and, now, finally, we get a trailer.   No, this isn’t an adaptation of the Clive Cussler novel.   This is a badass Viking film from the director ‘Bronson.’   Though I haven’t seen that film, I’ve heard nothing but great things about it.

Check out the trailer for ‘Valhalla Rising’ right here:

‘Valhalla Rising’ comes out in June in France.   There is no word yet on a US release date.

Source: First Showing