Ohjaus:
Itonje Søimer GuttormsenKäsikirjoitus:
Itonje Søimer GuttormsenSävellys:
Erik LjunggrenNäyttelijät:
Birgitte Larsen, Marte Wexelsen Goksøyr, Andrine Sæther, Kyrre Hellum, Lars Brunborg, Lars Øyno, Maria Grazia Di Meo, Mattis Herman Nyquist (lisää)Juonikuvaukset(1)
Gritt is a Norwegian woman with big ideas. She wants to make a socially critical theatre production entitled ‘The White Inflammation’, but can never put into words exactly what it’s supposed to be about. Norway, and maybe the West in general, she says, overcome by apathy. “An inability to act.” The tragedy is that no one wants to hear what she has to say. Stylistically, this feature debut reflects Gritt’s ever more erratic course through the world. Everywhere she goes, doors slam in her face; she sees her dream of creating a play of her own going up in smoke. Initially, her agitation seems to be a kind of curiosity about the unknown, but with each new disappointment the restless camerawork becomes more oppressive. Along the way, the burlesque undertone of Gritt becomes a painful metaphor for desperately clinging to life. Gritt expresses how she experiences life in terms of difficulty making contact with what we perceive as reality. But it could all have been so different, the film subtly suggests. She could have been Lars, the successful artistic director of The Theater of Cruelty, a theatre company she asks to produce her play. But she isn’t Lars. Somewhere along the road, she missed a turning. (International Film Festival Rotterdam)
(lisää)Videot (1)
Arvostelut (1)
Oh boy, this film was a huge disappointment. Gritt is a character with no sympathy whatsoever, just drifting through life, her only goal being to make her performance happen. The whole film is very oddly shot in a mockumentary style, which doesn't work at all, and the whole thing is mainly pulled through dialogue windows of zero value. For two hours of film time there is no action, no passion. I didn't finish the last half hour because I didn't really care how it ended (if at all)... Still, I have to give a shout out to Marte Wexelsen Goksøyr's performance, because she's really great! ()