Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.02.2019, Side 7

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.02.2019, Side 7
VISIT OUR WEBSITE LH-INC.CA Lögberg-Heimskringla • 1. febrúar 2019 • 7 Stefan Jonasson At a time when the challenge of what to do about refugees and border security is making the daily news in both Europe and North America, the Icelandic film And Breathe Normally (Andið eðlilega) brings some of the issues into focus through its imaginative portrait of a single asylum seeker and how her plight affects not only her own life, but also that of an Icelandic mother who struggles to keep herself together. The movie is currently playing on Netflix. Lára (played by Kristín Þóra Haraldsdóttir) is a single mother in desperate financial straits, who we first meet as she is being quietly humiliated at the checkout of a grocery store where not even a combination of cash and plastic will allow her to purchase everything in her basket. When she picks up her son, Eldar (Patrik Nökkvi Pétursson), he demands that she keep a promise to visit the local animal shelter where he hopes to adopt a cat. Soon, Lára, Eldar, and the cat find themselves living in Lára’s car after they are evicted from her apartment. In the meantime, Lára takes a position as a trainee in border security at the Keflavík International Airport, where she is training to work in passport control. Despite the turmoil in her personal life, she struggles to do well at work since this is a real opportunity for a woman with a somewhat chequered past. While assisting another officer in the passport control booth, she spots a fraudulent passport that’s presented by Adja (Babetida Sadjo) a gay refugee from Guinea-Bissau who is attempting to get to Toronto with her daughter and sister in an effort to seek asylum in Canada. Adja is arrested, although her companions get through passport control, and she is tried and convicted, ultimately facing deportation. These two mothers’ paths cross again when Adja finds Lára, along with her son and the cat, sleeping in the car along the fence surrounding the airport. Over time, a bond develops between the two and Adja finds herself caring for young Eldar, sharing her room at the refugee house with this homeless family, and saving Lára from a predicament at Eldar’s school. In the end, although Lára is taken on to the passport control staff at the airport, which is a branch of the police service, she contrives to help Adja escape to Canada before she can be deported back to her home country, where she would face certain violence and possibly even death. Throughout the film, the Icelandic landscape seems as bleak as the fortunes of these two women and it is often raining and cold. Eldar is the ray of light that shines through their lives as they grow to understand one another and help each other in their respective misfortunes. The dialogue shifts back and forth between Icelandic and English and, like most Icelandic films, it is somewhat sparse. Icelandic filmmakers use visuals to make their point and Ísold Uggadóttir, the director of this film, does the same, even as she masterfully exploits the facial expressions and gestures of her actors. At every step, And Breathe Normally is understated but powerful. I’ve seen the film four times now – twice on the plane and twice on Netflix. I’m sure to watch it again before it stops playing because it speaks so powerfully to important issues of our day, but it does so through the daily lives of two unlikely companions. It raises questions about the ethical choices we make, especially when we hold positions of authority that might otherwise shield us from wrestling with moral dilemmas, as well as our judgments about those who are strangers to us. At the same time, it reminds us of the virtues of our individual actions, large or small, when we seek to help the strangers among us – the strangers who may ultimately prove to be our best friends. And Breathe Normally playing on Netflix Kristin Þóra Haraldsdóttir as Lára with Patrik Nökkvi Pétursson as Eldar. At right: Babetida Sadjo as Adja with young Eldar. PHOTOS: ZIK ZAK KVIKMYNDIR Terry Fallis will be the featured speaker at this year’s Iceland Travel Show in Toronto on Sunday, February 10, 2:00 p.m., at the Morningside-High Park Presbyterian Church, 4 Morningside Avenue. This popular event is hosted annually by the Icelandic Canadian Club of Toronto and draws curious travellers – both armchair and active – from far beyond the city’s Icelandic community The Iceland Travel show is a great source for information about visiting Iceland, stories about others’ adventures, and pictures of this strikingly beautiful land. Coffee and treats are provided. This year’s featured speaker, Terry Fallis, will talk about his participation in the Iceland Writers Retreat and his travels in Iceland. Terry Fallis grew up in Toronto and earned an engineering degree from McMaster University. Drawn to politics at an early age, he worked for cabinet ministers both provincially and federally. His first novel, The Best Laid Plans, began as a podcast and was then self-published, winning the prestigious Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour. It was re-published by McClelland & Stewart to great reviews, was crowned the 2011 winner of CBC’s Canada Reads as “the essential Canadian novel of the decade,” and became a CBC television series. His next two novels, The High Road and Up and Down, were finalists for the Leacock Medal, and in 2015, he won the prize a second time, for his fourth book, No Relation. A skilled public speaker, Terry is also co-founder of the public relations agency Thornley Fallis. He lives in Toronto with his wife and two sons, and blogs at www.terryfallis.com. Admission is $10 for the general public and $8 for ICCT members. For more information, contact Gail Einarson-McCleery at gaileinarsonmccleery@gmail.com. Name Address City/Town Prov/State Post/ZIP Code Tel: CONTACT THE INL OF NA OFFICE 103-94 First Avenue, Gimli, MB R0C 1B1 • 204-642-5897 • inl@mymts.net (or the INL Chapter/Society nearest to you) OR, within North America, clip and mail this order form. Send to: Lögberg-Heimskringla, 835 Marion Street, Winnipeg, MB, R2J 0K6 Yes, I’d like to order _______ (qty) of the 2019 Our Fa ily Album 1919-2019 calendar from L-H. Please send to: I enclose $12.00 plus $3.00 CDN / $3.00 USD / $8.00 INT shipping for each. Make cheques payable to: Lögberg-Heimskringla, Inc. 2019 INL of NA Calendar now available ONLY $12 PLUS SHIPPING Our Family Album 1919-2019 Name Address City/Town Prov/State Post/ZIP Code Tel: CONTACT THE INL OF NA OFFICE 103-94 First Avenue, Gimli, MB R0C 1B1 • 204-642-5897 • inl@mymts.net (or the INL Chapter/Society nearest to you) OR, within North America, clip and mail this order form. Send to: Lögberg-Heimskringla, 835 Marion Street, Winnipeg, MB, R2J 0K6 Yes, I’d like to order _______ (qty) of the 2019 Our Family Album 1919-2019 calendar from L-H. Please send to: I enclose $12.00 plus $3.00 CDN / $3.00 USD / $8.00 INT shipping for each. Make cheques payable to: Lögberg-Heimskringla, Inc. 2019 INL of NA Calendar now available ONLY $12 PLUS SHIPPING Our Family Album 1919-2019 “Like” Lögberg-Heimskringla on Facebook for instant updates, event listings, & everything Icelandic! www.facebook.com/LogbergHeimskringla “Like” Lögberg-Heimskringla on Fac book for instant updates, event listings, & everything Icelandic! www.facebook.com/LogbergHeimskringlaTORONTO’S ICELAND TRAVEL SHOW WILL FEATURE ACCLAIMED AUTHOR PHOTO: TIM FALLIS

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