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6/23/2019

Murk/Mørke (2005) or, Shutter Jutland



+ Best Mega-flop of the Year


Star Nikolaj Lie Kaas' face is planted in a fog over a man in a boat on this poster for Jannik Johansen's Murk, which has the tagline 'Ingen bør dø alene', translating to, No one should die alone


Jacob and his wife are journalists on the newspaper Politiken. When Jacob's fragile sister takes her life on her honeymoon, Jacob goes to the site of her tragedy in the little town of Mørke in Jutland to investigate her suspicious husband-to-be.

Murk is written by Anders Thomas Jensen (Men & Chicken/Mænd & Høns (2015)) and co-writer/director Jannik Johansen (Stealing Rembrandt/Rembrandt (2003)). Mørke is the name of a real town in Jutland, and the name translates to 'murk'.
Nikolaj Lie Kaas (Clash of Egos/Sprængfarlig Bombe (2006)) plays the protagonist as a really sour, sullen, skeptical, doubtful man; Nicolas Bro (People Get Eaten/Mennesker Bliver Spist (2015)) is frightening as the psychopath brother-in-law Anker. Together the two keep things lively in a somewhat anemic script, which trots around more than necessary in things we have already figured out. The film is handsomely shot (by Rasmus Videbæk (Island of Lost Souls/De Fortabte Sjæles Ø (2007))), if also sometimes stating the obvious, and well scored (by Antony Genn (The Look of Love (2013))).
Bit parts, especially the country cop, lack color. Laura Drasbæk (Daisy Diamond (2007)) is good but has ridiculous hair here. Murk is an overall good, quiet thriller.

 

Related post:

 

2005 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I] 



Watch an automatically generated Wikipedia video of Jannik Johansen here

Cost: 22 mil. DKK, equal to approximately 3.33 mil. $
Box office: In the neighborhood of 1.068 mil. $
= Mega-flop (returned around 0.32 times its cost)
[Murk premiered 23 August (Copenhagen International Film Festival, Denmark) and runs 124 minutes. Both of Kaas' parents committed suicide, when he was young. The film sold 100,682 tickets in its production country Denmark, making a gross of somewhere in the neighborhood of 1.068 mil. $, which would make the film a mega-flop. It only played in 3 other markets, only at relatively small festivals. The film was nominated for 5 Robert awards (Danish Oscars) and 2 Bodil awards (Danish film critics awards). There was talks of a US remake in the following years, which never came to fruition. Johansen returned with White Night/Hvid Nat (2007). Kaas returned in Allegro (2005), also with Bro. 2,510 IMDb users have given Murk a 6.8/10 average rating at Rotten Tomatoes.]

What do you think of Murk?

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