Eagerly anticipating this month ... (6-25)

Eagerly anticipating this month ... (6-25)
Joachim Trier's Sentimental Value (2025)
Showing posts with label Fares Fares. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fares Fares. Show all posts

1/30/2020

Department Q: The Absent One/The Absent One/Fasandræberne (2014) - Nørgaard's second Q movie picks up some slack

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At least three elements are ominously superimposed on this dark poster for Mikkel Nørgaard's Department Q: The Absent One

Special investigator Carl and his work partner Assad get engaged in a 20 year-old double murder case, as new evidence makes indicate that the wrong individual was punished.

Department Q: The Absent One is written by Nikolaj Arcel and Rasmus Heisterberg (Fighter (2007), both), with great Danish director Mikkel Nørgaard (Klown Forever/Klovn Forever (2015)) supplying concept elements, adapting The Absent One/Fasandræberne (2008) by Jussi Adler-Olsen (The Scarred Woman/Selfies (2016)).
It is the second in the Department Q franchise, which spans 4 films so far, and as such another loud crime thriller without psychological or thematic depths worth mentioning.
Nikolaj Kaas (Parterapi (2010)), Fares Fares (Fakiren fra Bilbao (2004)) and Danica Curcic (Nobel (2016, miniseries)) do well, and the plot is a good deal better than the one from the first film, Department Q: The Keeper of Lost Causes/Kvinden i Buret (2013).
The big problem is again that we get no explanation of Carl's enormous personal investment in his job and in the case in this film. The film draws on cliches: The new secretarial colleague to Carl and Assad is a well-organized and caring younger woman; Carl smokes like a chimney nonstop; and one of the rich, evil villains is into bondage and is a violent psychopath. The original Danish title translates to 'the pheasant killers', a title which is pointless and silly: No pheasants are killed in the film, and what should be egregious about it, if there were?

Related posts:

Mikkel Nørgaard: 2015 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess

Klown Forever/Klovn Forever (2015) - A raunchy laugh smash
The Keeper of Lost Causes/Kvinden i Buret (2013) or, Grumpy and Ethnic Find a Woman in a Pressure Chamber
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED III]
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess     

Klown/Klovn - The Movie (2010) - Nørgaard, Hvam and Christensen strike comedy gold





Watch a teaser for the film here

Cost: 5.2 mil. €, approximately 5.72 mil. $
Box office: 11.5 mil. $
= Flop (returned 2.01 times its cost)
[Department Q: The Absent One premiered 18 September (Austin Fantastic Fest, Texas) and runs 120 minutes. 7.15 mil. DKK, or approximately 1.05 mil. $, was awarded the film as co-financing from the Danish Film Institute; total financing came from 14 companies. Shooting took place in Germany and Denmark, including Copenhagen, from September 2013-?. The film had a simultaneous  limited theatrical and VOD release in North America in 2016 but all of its gross numbers are from European markets: In main production country Denmark the film set a new opening record for a Danish film and sold 753,837 tickets in total, the year's best-selling movie in the country, making up the vast majority of the gross, 11.1 mil. $ (96.5 % of the total gross). The 2nd and 3rd biggest markets were Poland with 120k $ (1 %) and Norway with 118k $ (1 %). It won 2/13 Robert nominations. The Department Q franchise returned with Department Q: A Conspiracy of Faith (2016) by Hans Petter Moland, with returning stars Kaas and Fares. Nørgaard returned with Klown Forever/Klovn Forever (2015). Kaas returned first in Men & Chicken/Mænd & Høns (2015)); Fares in Child 44 (2015)). Department Q: The Absent One is fresh at 92 % with a 6.5/10 critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]

What do you think of Department Q: The Absent One?

10/16/2014

The Keeper of Lost Causes/Kvinden i Buret (2013) or, Grumpy and Ethnic Find a Woman in a Pressure Chamber



Nikolaj Lie Kaas and Fares Fares stare down at Denmark's underbelly on this heavily animated poster for Mikkel Nørgaard's The Keeper of Lost Causes


A rebel murder detective gets send down into the basement of the police HQ with some old, unsolved cases and a friendly immigrant cop, and they go after a case of a woman who has been missing for 5 years, who is said to have committed suicide.

Keeper is a dead movie, an exercise in form and fixed ideas, nurtured out of the European film support system as a Danish-Swedish-German co-production. It hasn't an ounce of personality behind it, no soul or meaning or ideas; The Keeper of Lost Causes is sheer Nordic noir surface.
Nikolaj Lie Kaas (The Green Butchers/De Grønne Slagtere (2003)) and Fares Fares (Jalla! Jalla! (2000)) are agreeable as the two partners, and technically, Keeper is a neat film.
But the script, written by Nikolaj Arcel (A Royal Affair/En Kongelig Affære (2012)), based on the first 'Department Q' crime novel by bestselling Jussi Adler-Olsen (Fasandræberne (2008)), ends prematurely, and the psychology, which 'explains' the killer's motivation, is wholly unconvincing and almost ridiculous. In addition, the cage of the film's title (the original Danish title translates to The Woman in the Cage) turns out to be a pressure chamber, which is not a cage, really, and the scenes in there aren't dramatically exciting in any way.
The Keeper of Lost Causes is, in short, a bad film.
It is directed by Mikkel Nørgaard (Klown/Klovn - the Movie (2010)). 

Related posts:

2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED V]
2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED IV]
2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED III]
2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]  
2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]



Watch the trailer with English subtitles here

Cost: 6.6 mil. $ (39 mil. Danish kr.)
Box office: Unknown
= Unknown
[Keeper did get more than 700,000 to buy tickets for it in Denmark alone, but, reportedly, more than half of them through Biografklub Danmark (a cinema club), meaning that they only paid half prize. Though the number makes it a success in the Danish context, it is most likely still a financial failure due to its relatively high budget.]

What do you think of The Keeper of Lost Causes?
If you have seen the sequel, Fasandræberne (2014) (in Danish cinemas right now), how was it?

Eagerly anticipating this month ... (5-25)

Eagerly anticipating this month ... (5-25)
Kleber Mendonca Filho's The Secret Agent (2025)