Interesting Film


A character & social context study. A Danish priest scourges himself crossing the Icelandic tundra to reach a community to build a church (when he could have easily sailed there directly). It almost kills him.

What I found compelling about the drama was how both civilized and brutal, or at least brutally utilitarian, the community was.

The relationships between the main male characters were weighty, tense. As, I suppose, life on the frontier at times must have been. Not in a Hollywood flashy way, but in a flinty Nordic way.

A harsh Nordic morality play. I like not being pandered to, occasionally getting some cold water splashed in my face. This film does that, has that.

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Watched it last night. Thought it was wonderful. Possibly the best film I've seen from the 2020s so far. Certainly one of the best photographed. Not sure I've seen a landscape put to quite such brutal and alienating use -- and becoming a character in itself -- since Nic Roeg's Walkabout.

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A White White Day - also by this director. Worth seeing.

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I immediately put that and Winter Brothers on my watchlist after finishing Godland. All three have the same cinematographer too, which cannot hurt.

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Is it depressing? I love depressing movies.

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I don't know about depressing. Austere, and certainly not a feel-good film though.

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I'm sold. Added it to my watchlist.

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