Reykjavík Grapevine - 12.08.2016, Blaðsíða 47

Reykjavík Grapevine - 12.08.2016, Blaðsíða 47
Probably the most Icelandic mo- ment in ‘Nói albinói’—and this is a very Icelandic movie, about Malt Extract, carrot cake, winter, and depression—is the scene in which our hero romances a girl by teaching her to smoke cigarettes. Indoors. In 2003. There is a town- that-time-forgot quality to Bolun- garvík as captured in Dagur Kári’s domestic and international criti- cal hit. Vinyl tablecloths still cover kitchen tables, and the peak of Bolafjall looms above everything, icy-blue in the permanent twi- light, deadening the spirit. Played by French-Icelandic ac- tor Tómas Lemarquis, Bolungarvík high-schooler Nói albínói—“Nói the albino”—in fact has alopecia universalis, and he covers his shiny head and hairless eyebrows with a knit cap, though he wears trainers and a Members Only jacket through the depth of the Westfjörds winter. He lives with his wobbly grand- mother, who passes her days with an inexorably progressing jigsaw puzzle and curiously retro aero- bics; his father, an alcoholic taxi driver and huge Elvis fan, often enlists him as a drinking buddy. Dad’s advice about girls concludes with an exhortation to please wear a condom; Nói’s mother is nowhere to be seen. Nói is a willfully terrible stu- dent, sleeping through class and handing in blank test papers when he bothers to go to school at all, though he’s quick with a Rubik’s Cube and often kills time in a used bookstore (whose owner, wear- ing a t-shirt emblazoned with the words “New York Fuckin City,” is the sceptical father of the gas- station checkout girl Nói begins to romance). Lemarquis gives a fan- tastic performance, channeling his natural charisma into expres- sions of sullenness and simple joy, and flashes of defiance, conveying Nói’s burning desire for a better life somewhere more meaning- ful—or at least different. It’s no wonder Nói eventually begins to reenact the lyrics to his father’s favourite song, “In the Ghetto.” While so many indie films, from all around the world, unfold entirely in minor-key “quirky” or “well-observed” touches of small- town life, ‘Nói the Albino’ is ro- bustly funny and achingly dire. Writer-director Dagur Kári, mak- ing his first feature film, stages jokes expertly, with long takes, wry cutaways, and apt block- ing, and his comic flourishes are grand, particular a set piece in- volving a blood sausage bloodbath. His invocation of small-town de- spair is lofty and literary, with rhyming motifs of Kierkegaardian existentialism and gravedigging (the Icelandic word for graveyard is “kirkjugarður”), and a devas- tating ending ripped from recent Westfjörds history. The film swept the Icelandic Edda awards and received admir- ing reviews abroad; Dagur’s sub- sequent films, both Icelandic and American, went on to play pres- tigious festivals like Cannes and Tribeca. It’s a running joke in the Icelandic film industry that the typical Icelandic film is about an unfulfilled man, either brooding or inept, in a crisis of inertia, usu- ally in a remote place: think of the recent ‘Á annan veg’, ‘Bakk’, or the Westfjords-set ‘Paris of the North’. But ‘Nói’ remains the definitive version, and one of the best of all Icelandic films. How to watch: The film was released on DVD by Palm Pictures (US) and Artificial Eye (UK), and is available to stream with English subtitles at www.icelandiccinema.com. SHARE: gpv.is/noi12 Words MARK ASCH On a cold and gray Bolungarvík morn’… ‘Nói the Albino’ NORDIC DESIGN FOR CHILDREN FROM 1900 TO TODAY OPEN EVERY DAY FROM 11AM–17PM CENTURY OF THE CHILD Sturlugata 5, 101 Reykjavík www.nordichouse.is Movies Saga of Icelandic Cinema46 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 12 — 2016 @bioparadis/bioparadis @bioparadis @bioparadis s Full schedule at www.bioparadis.is
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