Danish Film festival in Chennai : Keepers of lost causes
Danish Film festival in Chennai : Keepers of lost causes
During the last
week, while browsing through my Newspaper Daily, the one particular
advertisement that caught my attention repeatedly was a certain Danish Film
festival that was taking place in Chennai. Strictly speaking, my knowledge
about Nordic cinema was limited to Lars von Trier of the brilliant and moving
‘Dancer in the dark’ and Sweden’s Ingmar Bergman apart from prominent Swedes
masquerading as actors such as Max Von Sydow, Stellan Skarsgard, and the
‘Rocky’ star as well as similarly faced Dolph Lundgren (I am strictly joking
here as I really love them all). Barring this, I am not quite acquainted with
the Rasmussens and Amundsens of World Cinema, to be honest.
The French
cultural organization Alliance Française together with the Royal Danish Embassy
in New Delhi and the Indo Cine Appreciation Foundation, Chennai were organizing
this 5 day event with screenings conducted in the locally famed ‘Edouard
Michelin’ Auditorium of the Chennai centre of Alliance Française. I happened to
catch the last bogie of the train viz. the last film of the festival ‘The
Keeper of Lost Causes by Danish film maker Mikkel Nørgaard on Saturday night
last week.
Once entering
the hall I was greeted by the all too familiar sight of groupings of the
intellectual brotherhood of Chennai, a few expatriates seated here and there,
enthusiastic film students and budding film makers, not to mention the
occasional retired senior citizen who had mistakenly entered the hall and would
repent for his mistake later, with his conservative and traditional way of life
about to be overlooked so conveniently and nonchalantly in the foreign film he
is just about to watch. The hall which was earlier filled with animated
discussions drops into a tranquil silence with remarkable speed and
coordination upon the dimming of lights and the subsequent appearance of moving
images on the screen.
Keepers of Lost
causes, opens with a grim and dark scene with 2 cops in plainclothes waiting
inside their car to enter the house of a suspect. One of the cops is the main
protagonist of this film, Police inspector Carl Mørck played by Nikolaj Lie
Kaas who seemed extremely familiar to me in spite of my limited exposure to
Scandinavian cinema. It is after a while that I recognized him from the clever
contract killer that he portrayed in “Angels and Demons” starring the hugely
popular Tom Hanks and Ewan Mcgregor. After entering the house, both the cops
are shot at by a hidden suspect and the story begins 3 months after the
incident with the recuperation of Carl and his colleague who is left crippled
after the incident.
Carl whose own
life is depressive after his wife had left him is infamous throughout the force
for his rude and arrogant behavior. He is relegated by his superior to the Q
department which had just been created to foresee the closure of cold cases up
to a back period of 20 years. His assistant Assad played by Fares Fares tries
his bit to gel with Carl and brighten up things but with little success as Carl
refuses to open up or budge in. They come across an unclosed case of a missing,
young rising politician Merete Lynggaard- played by Sonja Richter, which had
been partially closed as a suicide case with eyewitness suggesting that she
jumped off a ferry while traveling with her mentally ill younger brother. Her
body was never found though and Carl sensing something amiss digs up the cold
case and starts investigating in to it, incurring huge expenses to the bureau
and much to the chagrin of his superior as well as fellow officers. The
subsequent findings of the case by Carl with his bold stance & intuitive
thinking forms the rest of the plot in what can be described as a fairly
engaging and entertaining thriller. The clever and cruel pressure chamber
tactics employed by the main antagonist to torture his unfortunate victim form
a novel as well as scary backdrop and the director’s success and mastery over
his craft was visible when the audience waited with prayerful anticipation for
the rescue to happen. A Hollywood style and standard thriller film that it was,
‘Keepers of Lost causes’ ended with cheerful applause and appreciation from the
Chennai film fest audience.
Vijay Ramalingam
Comments
Post a Comment