It’s been a slower start to the Cannes Film Festival than usual this year, with Hollywood staying away and more muted receptions to the movies premiering so far.
But audiences finally broke through into the double-digit standing ovations this week, with Sebastian Stan’s new film Fjord leading the way on a reported 12 minutes of applause.
Screening in competition for the Palme d’Or, Fjord’s writer and director Cristian Mungiu is a previous winner of the prestigious prize for his searing abortion drama 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days in 2007, as well as picking up the award for best screenplay in 2012 (Beyond the Hills) and best director in 2016 (Graduation).
And it finally feels as though one of the most hyped films at the festival has delivered.
However, if you were looking for anything boundary-breaking or flashy, that isn’t Fjord at all.
Rather, it’s a movie of subtle, realistic storytelling centred around two impressively non-showy turns from its stars, Stan and fellow Oscar-nominee Renate Reinsve.
It also really pulls you in on a topic that’s going to cause huge conversation, gently interrogating both sides and focusing on the nuances.
Stan and Reinsve play Mihai and Lisbet Gheorghiu, a Romanian and Norwegian couple and conservative Christians who move with their five children back to their mother’s birthplace, a remote and liberal village in Norway.
And this is Stan as he’s not been seen – or heard – before, balding and speaking his native Romanian in the film, as well as English. He’s completely convincing as a strict father but mild-mannered person, stripped of any swagger or star charisma. Sentimental Value’s Reinsve matches him in her meekness, avoiding any over-the-top displays of emotion, instead focusing quietly on her family and evangelising.
While they are initially welcomed with open arms by the close-knit community – the children’s headteacher is their neighbour – things begin to dramatically unravel when bruises are spotted on the body of their eldest daughter, Elia (Vanessa Ceban), raising suspicions about potentially abusive behaviour at home.
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What’s clever about Fjord is you never see anything disturbing happen, but the way Mungiu uses certain phrases and slowly reveals information throughout the film means viewers continually question what they’re told and who they may seek to blame.
Fjord begins with Elia clearly having just been punished by her father, and being told to – reluctantly – apologise and hug him. Then she and her brother Emmanuel (Jonathan Ciprian Breazu) begin to taste a little rebellious freedom with neighbour Noora (Henrikke Lund-Olsen), with their parents painted as controlling and overly-severe – potentially even abusive.
There are unsettling comments too; Mihai and Lisbet say they moved their children from Romania ‘for their own good’ when asked if the kids were upset with the change, and Mihai refuses to relent on a punishment for Elia and Emmanuel when Noor asks, simply responding ‘they can be cheerful when they’re grown up’.
Key details: Fjord
Director
Cristian Mungiu
Writer
Cristian Mungiu
Cast
Sebastian Stan, Renate Reinsve, Lisa Carlehed, Ellen Dorrit Petersen, Markus Tønseth, Lisa Loven Kongsi, Vanessa Ceban, Henrikke Lund-Olsen
Age rating
TBC
Run time
1hr 49m
Release date
A UK release date is yet to be confirmed.
But as Child Protection Services become involved, questioning the Gheorghius, separating them from their children and pursuing prosecution to the full extent of the law, the couple find it challenging to stand up for themselves. The local police chief (Thorbjørn Harr) has Mihai sign a ruinous statement that almost certainly wouldn’t have got past him if it had been written in his native Romanian.
At 146 minutes, Fjord certainly takes its time. However, the quality of its performances and the all-too-real detail included in proceedings largely prevents it from feeling like it drags.
The film isn’t afraid to engage with the knottier elements and ironies of a more liberal society, as well as discrimination, racism and the rights of the state versus those of the parents.
For a quiet film on the surface, it has a lot to say.
Verdict
Fjord is smaller and more straight-laced than the usual favourites at Cannes, but it gently works its way into your mind with its examination of a tricky issue, ably supported by a solid cast.
Fjord premiered at Cannes Film Festival on May 18. A UK release is yet to be announced.
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