When uncovering a story about injustice at work, young journalist Asta sees her personal life in a new light.
Trailer
Pemeran
Amalie Ibsen Jensen
Asta
Maria Agwumaro
Live
Lars Halvor Andreassen
Geir-Åge (Fotograf)
Pål Bakke
Kollega
Karoline Isaksen
Resepsjonist
Per Dagfinn Kvarsvik
Daglig leder asylmottaket
Kjetil Dyb Lied
Lars Tore
Kornelia Melsæter
Demonstrant
Anita Valderhaug
Redaktør
Per Jan Vinje
Vegvesenet
Mungkin Anda Juga Suka
The Ugly Stepsister
Troll
Troll 2
Rig 45
Sistas
Youngins
The Oval
All the Queen's Men
Bel-Air
The Witcher
Legacies
Power Book II: Ghost
Reacher
Siren
The Wheel of Time
Ruthless
The Summer I Turned Pretty
Suits
Never Have I Ever
Alchemy of Souls
Outer Banks
All of Us Are Dead
You
Spartacus: House of Ashur
Komentar
6 Komentar
Some of the longest shots in cinema history, totally static, showing, among others, pictoresque views of the city of Aalesund (I think), Norway. Asta, the protagonist, is a journalist in a local newspaper; her girlfriend (I couldn't catch her name) is just a chair-collector, and nothing else (yes, you heard me: she collects and refurbishes chairs) and a bad musician who practices and creates on a little-more-than-toy keyboard. Sitting on a chair, the two elucubrate, is a thing only humans do, it's a "human position". They fail to note that even watching films is something only humans do (though, I must say, sometimes the cat I'm living with shows some interest in the TV screen). Speaking of cats, their cat is present in almost all the interior shots. But some issues are at stake. First of all, Asta is recovering from a wound in her belly, whose origin is mysterious. Then there is the question: what is Norway best at, its mountains or its wellfare state? And there is the problem of an asylum seeker, who, after many years is sent back home. Will any of the issues eventually find an explanation? None.
Billed by some as "a love letter to the banality of life," this utterly pointless offering could just as easily be billed as "a love letter to the banality of pretentiously esoteric filmmaking." Writer-director Anders Emblem's second feature follows the life (if you can call it that) of a bored journalist living in the Norwegian seaport of Alesund, reporting mostly on fluff pieces and minor news stories. She lives a reasonably comfortable life with her girlfriend while recovering from an undisclosed medical procedure, spending much of her free time refurbishing chairs, doting on her cat and playing board (or is it bored?) games. But, when she stumbles upon a story involving the unexplained disappearance of a foreign asylum seeker, her work gives her life new meaning - or so the film's production notes claim. The fact is, there's really no telling that anything has changed with this revelation, given that the picture's tone and style remain just as flat and uninteresting at this juncture as they do at the outset and throughout the entire duration of this tedious slog. The protagonist's deadpan performance is a genuine snooze, and the film's countless overlong incidental exterior shots supply enough cinematic padding to try the patience of even the most tolerant viewer. But, above all, given how banal real life truly can be, do we honestly need a longwinded cinematic tribute to it? This one is easily skipped - a phenomenal waste of time, energy, talent and celluloid. Don't waste yours watching this.
