Iceland review - 2019, Side 72

Iceland review - 2019, Side 72
68 Iceland Review characters, the police officer Ásgeir from Trapped. “He’s so clever in so many ways but in other ways, he’s totally useless. Sometimes you just want to yell at him through your screen, ‘What are you thinking? Are you an idiot?’ But every time viewers felt that way was when he thought he’d found a lead and was going to sort it out himself, without asking for any help.” Hidden people Even though the emotions are restrained and the characters reserved, Ingvar says there’s something about Icelandic stories that appeals to film viewers abroad. From the legion of films that are produced yearly around the world and vie for the adoration of the public, an astonishing number of Icelandic films manage to cut through the noise. “It’s such a delight that every year it seems more Icelandic films are get- ting the attention that so many films aspire to. You feel it at these festivals. Every time they screen an Icelandic film, it’s played to a full house and people are expecting to be wowed.” While Ingvar regularly gets asked about that X factor that sets Iceland films apart from the rest, he can only guess as to what the secret is: the nature, the perceived exoticism, or the way we tell stories. “I’ve sometimes said that we’re a people of the sagas, and that’s what we’re proud of. We have literature reach- ing almost back to the time when we first settled here. Telling stories, in books or in any other form, is something we’ve nurtured.” He also has the feeling that there’s something a little bit extra helping things along. “I think it’s this hidden thing that is hard to explain. I’m a sceptic if anything, but I think there’s something beautiful in saying ‘I believe.’ And I believe that there’s something hidden, something that we can’t quite explain. I think it’s connected to the land we live in and the energy here, that which is unsaid, and can’t be grasped. I think that’s what that ‘special Icelandic thing’ is. People can call it elves or hidden people or whatever they like but I just think it’s better not to ignore the power that is in the land.” "We’re always dealing with the same subjects. How we deal with life, how we deal with the people we live with, in our communities or our families."
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