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FAR NORTH, starring Michelle Yeoh and Sean Bean, gets a review!!

Published at:  Dec 29, 2008 6:00:06 AM CST

Ahoy, squirts! Quint here with a review from one of our many spies out there of a little publicized flick called FAR NORTH from director Asif Kapadia, who did a film called THE WARRIOR a while back, then dipped his toe into the studio filmmaking waters with THE RETURN, then ran back to the indie world.

What's interesting to me about this flick is the cast. I'm a big fan of Sean Bean and Michelle Yeoh is still awesome... I'll forget she was in the last shitty Mummy movie for the time being. It's been in the can for a while, which usually isn't the best sign in the world, but a reader went to a BFI screening and Q&A for the flick recently and felt compelled to write in about it. Here's Der Kaiser with his review (followed by the trailer for the flick):



I watched Far North a couple of weeks ago at the BFI, the film was followed by a short Q&A with the Director Asif Kapadia. His first film 'The Warrior' is a personal favourite of mine, a film that demands to be seen. Between that and Far North he made a studio picture in the US starring Buffy which is called The Return, which I paid no attention to.

'Far North' was based on a short story and stars Michelle Yeoh, Sean Bean and Michelle Krusciek (hotness) as the three principal characters and much like The Warrior the environment is almost a fourth character. Kapadia shot on location in the northernmost regions of Norway and the cast and crew's hard work pays off well as he makes the most of the stark desolate landscapes of the near Arctic, it's quite stunning in parts.

The narrative itself is fairly simple Saiva (Yeoh) and Anja (Krusciek) are two women that have lived together, alone for an indeterminate number of years. Into this comes Loki (Bean) a man Saiva finds one day close to death. As he is nursed back to health Saiva and Anja find themselves vying for his attentions. Of course nothing is ever that simple and it all resolves in tragedy.

Michelle Yeoh aside I felt the acting a little ropey in parts, the scenes requiring Krusciek and Bean to flirt come across as fake but those moments aside the performances are good. The ending is almost worth the price of admission alone. Kapadia plays with the viewer by giving you exactly what you expected but when the moment transpires it's over and above anything you expect. Seriously you will not see this coming.

Like his first film 'Far North' is undeniably beautiful to look at thought I don't feel the narrative is quite as well thought out. What it seems is a moral fable or bad fairytale is in some ways too grounded in reality to really be effective. I also got the sneaking feeling that the film makers were enthralled by the shock ending and thought it was enough reason to make the film.

Yeah.. almost but on reflection I think it was a little ambitious despite some nice ideas which I felt were left undeveloped; for example, if we are to believe that Anja has been raised alone by Saiva her whole life, why does she not seem uneasy by the sudden presence of a man for the first time in her life. Also despite the attempt at creating something mythical and timeless there is the slightly cliched plot device of two women fighting over a man - it seems when it comes to guys women can be right bitches to one another. Whatever happened to chicks before dicks? I guess that's what happens when men write women's roles.

Still I'd recommend it as good alternative to all the festive crap out at the moment, at least they tried something original.

The Q&A that followed was informative as the writer and director both spoke about the develpment process of the script and the arduous task of making of the film. Though neither spoke about possible next projects. Kapadia did say that Krusciek chased him for her role and felt an affinity to it because she is adopted herself.

Hope all is well love your site

if you use this sign it off as Der Kaiser :)





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    Readers Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 6:07:12 AM CST

    Asian women are hot.

    by mr spork

  • Dec 29, 2008 6:27:21 AM CST

    What are two Chinese women doing in the Arctic?

    by metaluna

    Looks nice, but I bet like most of Asifs' films, they are wafer thin.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 6:34:47 AM CST

    Thankyou for Christmas, Sean Bean

    by iammrmonkey!

    The History Channel over here in the UK has been running all of the 'Sharpe' episodes pretty much back to back, and so my dad and I ended up watching a lot of them. Good stuff! We need a 'Sharpe' movie before Sean Bean is too old to run around a battlefield.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 6:51:08 AM CST

    Where are the Nazi Zombies????? WTF?????????

    by landrvr1

  • Dec 29, 2008 6:51:49 AM CST

    Is Wilfred Brimley in this?

    by landrvr1

  • Dec 29, 2008 7:10:15 AM CST

    Looks like its worth watching.

    by judge_dredd

  • Dec 29, 2008 7:16:00 AM CST

    I wish they'd do a big budget Sharpe movie

    by brody77

    Sean Bean deserves it.
    It'll probably never happen though after ITV cocked up Challenge & Peril.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 8:25:58 AM CST

    Aren't there like ten others movie with the same plot?

    by evilwizardglick

    Fuck I recall a recent one with two beach living Brit women nursing some guy back to health.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 8:34:52 AM CST

    If anyone is interested

    by dogrobber

    if you are a member Netflix has this as one of their instant watch movie downloads.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 8:38:49 AM CST

    Northlander made me think Outlander.

    by geteveryone

    Did that ever get a major release? What of the open-letter? looked ridiculous enough to justify a cinema viewing.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 8:49:29 AM CST

    'The Beguiled'

    by lone_wolf_mcquaalude

  • Dec 29, 2008 9:28:00 AM CST

    Sean Bean

    by nuck81

    I don't get this guy. He's a solid Character actor who has had major roles in huge movies. He always does a great to good job, and yet for every great movie he does five or six others that year that are DTV. Does he owe the mob money or what?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 12:01:14 PM CST

    Roger that on Sharpe

    by charlie_allnut

    The series wasn't given the care it should have been. I'd even like a new series on HBO - bloody, sexy, massive battles and gore.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 1:33:25 PM CST

    I had chili for lunch.

    by godovhellfire

  • Dec 29, 2008 2:13:09 PM CST

    The ending

    by mastidon

    Is out there. I first saw this one last year at the London Film Fest. It is eye candy but the story is a bit too out there for me - http://www.aintitcool.com/?q=node/34718

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 2:40:30 PM CST

    "when men write women's roles"??

    by toonol

    You think that since in this movie it "seems when it comes to guys women can be right bitches to one another" it is the fault of male writers?

    No, it is simply written by somebody who knows something about women. Backstabbing vicious infighting over men may be the defining characteristic of women. Just like men thinking with their d**k is a defining characteristic for them.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 4:20:35 PM CST

    The curse the Shaman put on her...

    by sid 8.0

    Every woman has that curse on her.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 29, 2008 6:55:24 PM CST

    saw this movie months ago

    by slimballs

    I thought it was boring until the end. the ending fucked me up big time

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 30, 2008 1:46:37 AM CST

    poor Michelle Yeoh...

    by the milf lover

    between this, Babylon AD and Mummy 3, she's had a lousy year...

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 30, 2008 5:13:46 PM CST

    where are the lezbo scenes?

    by iamzardoz

    AKA "The Fox" of the Tundra.

    Reply to Talkback

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