Iceland review - 2012, Side 12

Iceland review - 2012, Side 12
10 ICELAND REVIEW Sticky Situation BLAck’S GAMe Óskar Þór Axelsson When the thriller Black’s Game (Svartur á leik) by director óskar Þór axelsson opened in icelandic cinemas in March 2012, it became an immediate hit with 60,000 tickets sold (that’s almost 20 percent of the population). i too was tempted to see what all the fuss was about and was thoroughly impressed, mainly by the performance of the three male leads. Jóhannes haukur Jóhannesson is brilliant at comedy but proved to be equally at ease in his role as the brutal and buff gang leader tóti. rising star Þorvaldur davíð Kristjánsson convincingly portrayed the troubled and torn youngster Stebbi, whose inner demon gets him caught up in a sticky situation, and damon younger really made me detest the twisted and ruthless Brúnó. Based on a novel by Stefán Máni, Black’s Game belongs to a new generation of dark icelandic thrillers, in which each new film has to top the next in terms of sex, drugs and violence. the movie is fast-paced, keeping the viewers on the edge of their seats. My attention certainly never trailed off, although i generally prefer a clever plot that riddles the mind to a ride on the superhighway to destruction. however, the film also includes a hint of a love story and the ending is sure to leave viewers with a lot of questions. overall, Black’s Game is a solid thriller, featuring a star league of icelandic actors—unlikely to disappoint fans of the genre. ESA 04 Culture Club 05 the ProfuSion of the Meandering Mind from the mouth of the WhALe Sjón From the Mouth of the Whale, the second novel by the icelandic writer Sjón to be translated into english, was shortlisted for the independent foreign fiction prize for 2012. the story is set in seventeenth-century iceland, the pre-enlightenment period when science was just beginning to challenge religious authority. the protagonist and narrator, Jónas pálmason the learned, is a self-taught healer who is exiled for blasphemy and sorcery to a desolate island in the year 1635. Jónas is steeped in the superstition and lore of his time, predominantly Catholicism and an embryonic science that sought to understand the world through cataloguing all its wonders. Jonas’s fantastical story is told as a stream of consciousness that reveals his meandering mind. he tells of his career as a healer of women’s diseases, his struggle to conquer a gruesome ghost, the deaths of his children, and his exile. in typical postmodern style, the characters in Sjón’s book overlap, and time and boundaries blur and fade with tantalizing surrealistic echoes. and the language of this translation is so rich that it evokes a kind of alchemy in which the original wonder becomes a new kind of wonder. AS

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