|
Film |
Elling - Norway - 2002 |
|
|---|---|---|
|
Director |
Petter Naess |
|
|
Cast |
Per Christian Ellefson, Sven Nordin, Jorgen Langhelle, Marit Pia Jacobsen |
Notes
"'Elling' is a warm-hearted, refreshingly unsentimental feel-good movie that deservedly won a Best Foreign Film Oscar nomination in 2002. Sensitive, middle-aged Elling is sent to an asylum after the death of his mother, where he becomes room-mates with Kjell Bjarne, a huge doltish man, whose main mode of expression is to bang his head against the wall. Two years later, both men are released from the asylum and move into a state-run apartment. With the help of their social worker, they try to adjust to the 'normal' world and its seemingly impossible tasks.
Naturally the plot is less important than the relationship between the two men, which is frequently very moving and very funny. Both actors (Per Christian Ellefson, Sven Nordin) are excellent. They complement each other perfectly and each man reveals surprising depths. 'Elling' dispenses with clichés and sentimentality and provides an awful lot to enjoy. It deserves to find as wide an audience as possible."
London Review - March - 2003
"Elling is the gentle tale of two mentally disturbed Norwegians struggling to make their way in the world. Obsessive-compulsive oddball Elling and his dense loutish room-mate Kjell Bjarne are released from a provincial mental hospital and are re-housed in a state-subsidised Oslo apartment. At first they are too scared to go outside but with the encouragement of social worker Frank, they pluck up the courage to take the first tentative steps back to normality. Such sympathetic treatment seems the stuff of fantasy but it sets the tone for a good-natured comedy, in which eccentricity is something to be cherished, not shunned. The Director Petter Naess keeps too much sentiment at bay by grounding the plot in recognisable human foibles and failings.
Per Christian Ellefson (Elling) and Sven Nordin (Bjarne) inhabit their roles with an almost unsettling naturalism."
BBC Film Review - 2007

