KING OF DEVIL’S ISLAND
Norway, 2010
Running Length:
116 minutes
Cast: Benjamin
Helstad, Stellan Skarsgard, Trond Nilssen, Kristoffer Joner
Director: Harius Holst
Screenplay: Dennis
Magnusson
Cinematography: John
Andreas Andersen
Based on the true story of a rebellion in a boys’ borstal on
a Norwegian island, this is a striking and unusual film.
Director Holst uses the island location to great advantage,
showing the young prisoners as being both trapped and free to roam. The ocean surrounding the island cuts
them off from the rest of the world and is as effective as bars for keeping the
detainees detained.
The crimes that have landed the boys here are not huge. One boy has been incarcerated for six
years for stealing from the church collection plate. You get the sense that in many cases the boys have been sent
away because they were difficult rather than criminal.
But when Erling arrives on the island, the dynamic of the
prison changes. Erling is a real
criminal and coming to Bostoy is the only thing keeping him from prison. A former sailor on a whaling ship,
Erling has a powerful physiology and refuses act or feel like a prisoner.
Time and time again he pushes against those who detain him,
and refuses to be broken by even the most brutal punishments. His polar opposite is Olav, the boy
accused of stealing from the collection plate. Olav is about to be released and has the role of leader in
the overcrowded boys’ dorm. Olav
is tasked with getting Erling settled into the routine of the prison and soon
finds himself enmeshed in a strange kind of friendship.
Small indignities add up, and when one of the housefathers
is revealed to be fiddling with a young boy, Olav’s repressed anger surges to
the surface and rebellion is unleashed, the power shifting from the guards to
the prisoners.
The cinematography is gorgeous, capturing the starkness of
the buildings and the surrounding landscape. Shots of the sea crashing in on snow-coated beaches are
particularly gorgeous. While the
adult characters are not given much in the way of character development outside
being brutal authority figures, the boys are all too human. They fit the roles perfectly and it is
their performances that make this a compelling, exciting and tragic viewing
experience. If the final scene
doesn’t break your heart, then your heart is as cold as the ice Olav and Erling
struggle to cross.
If you've seen it, what did you think?
It sounds like one of your books! I'm glad you fond something you liked so much.
ReplyDeleteThe best films I've watched this year were the Benjamin Button one (we get films really late on TV here) and after many years I saw ET for like the 6th time. That movie still makes me cry -- and I'm not a crier -- but ET dies! *blubbery, sniffly noises* And then he comes back to life and goes home! *more blubbery, sniffly noises*
ET always makes me cry too. So does the Shawshank Redemption. And.... Well, lots of movies make me cry.
DeleteSounds really interesting. I'd never heard of it.
ReplyDeleteI love true stories though the last movie I watched based on real events was Hotel Ruwanda. this one sounds interesting though never I heard of it.. Unlike Lexa, I'm a crier. Cried watching ET like a baby though, lol
ReplyDelete