Atlantica - 01.11.2002, Side 46

Atlantica - 01.11.2002, Side 46
44 A T L A N T I C A i-site FILM❍ Baltasar Kormákur has no reason to apologise. While some movie-goers have expressed anger over the manner in which the director’s latest film portrays life in a small Icelandic fishing vil- lage, it’s still racking up receipts at the box office. In fact, The Sea is so popular that producers are screening the film in Iceland with English subti- tles, something never before done while the original version has been in general release. With so many expats living here, “Iceland’s become so international that there is a good market for the English-subtitled version,” Baltasar says. “This film is also partially about these people,” he adds, referring to the many foreigners living in Iceland’s small villages, employed by the fishing industry. The Sea is a dark film about a father struggling to keep his fishing business alive by passing it on to family members who have no desire to entrench themselves in the daily mire of the local village. Despite its comic undertones, the film certainly destroys the myth of the ideal seaside village, full of residents at one with the rhythms of the sea, which provides them sanctuary. Like the critically acclaimed 101 Reykjavík before it, The Sea brings to the screen some of the trou- bles simmering in Iceland’s small towns, paint- ing a cinematic portrait much different than what the local tourist brochures propagate. “I’m not trying to build a negative picture of Iceland,” Baltasar says frankly. “I’m just trying to be honest.” But also like 101 Reykjavík, The Sea is hopeful, which might at first glance seem at odds with the dark cadence of the picture and the hardships the characters endure. “When you treat your characters with humanity then you can put them through hell and they will come out standing. That is uplifting,” the cagey director says. It’s this disparate mix of darkness and hope that makes Baltasar’s films so popular. The current buzz surrounding The Sea is so strong that the film has already secured US distribution and it will make its US premiere this January at the prestigious Sundance Film Festival. So is a possible Oscar nomination on the horizon? “I don’t really think so because my films are probably too controversial for those awards. Of course, I would love to have one. They make a nice deco- ration for your house,” the renegade director says in jest. Despite all the accolades the film has received, and the various awards it will undoubtedly collect, a sardonic Baltasar maintains his perspective. When asked how long the English-subtitled version will show in Iceland, he says: “We’ll give it a run and see how big a market there is for it. Hopefully it will run until Christmas, unless nobody comes.” The Sea is now showing at Háskólabíó. For more information on show times, contact (+354) 530-1919. Edward Weinman is a staff writer. P H O TO P Á LL S TE FÁ N S S O N English Subtitles Director Baltasar Kormákur stirred up audiences with his first film, 101 Reykjavík. Icelanders are currently flocking to the cinema in record numbers to see his latest effort, Hafid (The Sea), which is now showing with English subtitles. So why are some movie-goers so upset, asks Edward Weinman. 047-058 I-siteAtl502 20.10.2002 11:35 Page 44

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