(aka "Evil" )
directed
by Mikael Håfström
Sweden 2003
Being
a mean bully and defiant youth, Jan Guillous was expelled from high school and
subsequently barred from any high school in Sweden, as the headmaster wrote a
warning letter to his colleagues, condemning Guillous as an incurable criminal.
As a last chance to graduate, his mother managed to get enough money together to
send him to one of Sweden’s finest boarding schools, Solbacka. An elitist
school, where older pupils were in charge for "educating" younger
pupils in the importance of tradition and order, Guillous experienced it as the
living hell. The older pupils sadistic overlords, who would punish anyone at the
slightest whim - The teaching staff blindly accepted this. Jan Guillous was
determined to bring the school down and went on to study law, but fate played in
on his revenge, and it was an article about the inhumanities that eventually
created a nationwide scandal and forced the ministry to close the school.
Based on the autobiographical book by Jan Guillous, “Evil” tells the story
of the coming of age of young Erik, who is full of hate and anger. At home he is
regularly beaten and punished by his stepfather and takes out his frustration on
random victims at school, ultimately causing him to be expelled and bared.
Arriving at the boarding school, Erik is, as any new pupil, assigned humiliating
tasks, but refuses to do them, thereby not only setting him up against the older
students, especially the leader Silverhielm, but also the entire body of
traditions, the school is based upon.
What makes “Evil” so tense is the fact, that Erik virtually is able to beat
the entire school up, but he has promised his mother not to pick any fights,
because a fight would get him expelled and thus ruin any chance to get an
education: Erik can nothing but rebel by being passive. But we all know that a
man only can take so much, and to know that drives the tension.
Nominated as best foreign film at the Academy Awards and awarded the FIRPESCI
prize in Cannes, “Evil” is a haunting depiction of a cruel and inhuman
system, based upon a caste system, where the few and chosen maintain power by
humiliation and physical punishment., while the teachers wash their hands clean
by ignoring what goes on. Taking place in Sweden in the fifties, it is almost
ironic to see, that some of the very principles upon which the Third Reich was
build, is well and alive in a Swedish boarding school. (5 of 5)
Posters
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Theatrical Release: May 16, 2003 (Cannes Film Festival)
Reviews More Reviews DVD Reviews
DVD Review: Nordisk Film (Sverige) - Region 2 - PAL
Big thanks to Henrik Sylow for the Review!
DVD Box Cover |
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CLICK to order from:
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Distribution |
Nordisk Film (Sverige) Region 2 - PAL |
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Runtime | 1:48:47 (4% PAL speedup) | |
Video |
1.85:1 Original Aspect Ratio 16X9
enhanced |
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Bitrate:
NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes. |
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Audio | 5.1 Dolby Digital Swedish, DTS Swedish | |
Subtitles | Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish, English and None (16x9 friendly) | |
Features | Release
Information: Studio: Nordisk Film (Sverige) Aspect Ratio: Edition
Details: Chapters 12 |
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Comments |
NOTE: While etailers and backcover of “Ondskan” may indicate that no English subtitles are available, they are. Nordisk Film simply forgot to add them when designing the cover and the mistake is currently being corrected. English subtitles are available on all Nordisk Film versions of “Evil” in Scandinavia. Being an Oscar
nominee, the DVD has been cared for by Nordisk Film. Sound and vision is
in top and the additional material is well produced and presented. We
get a look behind the scenes and into the production, we have an in-depth
interview with Guillous, we get deleted scenes with audio commentary.
And most important here, Nordisk Film adds English subtitles, which
allows an international audience to enjoy this great film. We need more
DVDs of Scandinavian films as this, because we do make great films and
its about time that the world realizes it. |
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