A mother is called to her child鈥檚 school for an urgent meeting with his teachers in the a riff on a claustrophobic courtroom thriller set in a primary school classroom.
The film, which won the best first feature prize at , dolls out bits and pieces of information slowly and purposefully, building not a solid set of answers but a web of complications and ambiguities. It is a strange and fascinating experience that may be a bit frustratingly inconclusive but is never not compelling.
Even the inciting incident is withheld from the audience for a time. We鈥檙e thrown into a conversation between a junior teacher, Sunna (Thea Lambrechts Vaulen), an administrator type Asja (Vera Veljovic) and the school鈥檚 principal, Jarle (脴ysten R酶ger). Asja and Jarle are entrusting Sunna to lead this conversation (though they'll have to join eventually). None of them are even quite sure what exactly happened, whether it was innocent or malicious, or what to do if they can get to the bottom of it. Jarle advises Sunna to treat it soberly, whatever that鈥檚 supposed to mean.
Not even Armand鈥檚 mother Elisabeth ( ) gets a hint as to what the meeting is about. She鈥檚 a famous actress whose career has come to a halt and who has been tabloid fodder recently. Elisabeth arrives at the classroom first and wants answers, understandably. Sunna must awkwardly delay providing any information until the other parents arrive to Elisabeth鈥檚 increasing frustration. Sunna even stammers something reassuring that it鈥檚 not too bad. She is, of course, lying because the accusation is serious and beyond any of their depths. Armand鈥檚 classmate Jon has apparently told his parents, Sarah (Ellen Dorrit Petersen) and Anders (Endre Hellestve) that Armand has sexually abused and threatened him. They鈥檙e both 6-year-olds.
These aren鈥檛 just schoolmates either but cousins and that鈥檚 only the tip of the iceberg of trauma and shared history in this room, haunted by characters who aren鈥檛 even present: Armand and his dead father, Thomas. Neither of the kids is shown through the duration, and there鈥檚 much debate over whether 6-year-olds would use the language that the adults allege.
鈥淎rmand鈥 is the directorial debut of writer-director Halfdan Ullmann T酶ndel, who has the daunting pressure of being a descendant of cinema royalty. As if making a movie isn鈥檛 hard enough on its own, T酶ndel鈥檚 grandparents are Liv Ullmann and Ingmar Bergman. And perhaps because of that 鈥淎rmand鈥 pushes away from the conventions of a straightforward, talky character study and plays with our perception of reality. Twice Elisabeth breaks into choreographed dance 鈥 both expressions of her emotional state and one of which takes a particularly sinister turn.
One might expect that two unexpected dance sequences would be the standouts in a film, but 鈥淎rmand鈥 has another. It鈥檚 also a release, in a way. After a while of back and forth, debates, reveals and non-starters, Elisabeth breaks out into uncontrollable laughter. This stretches on for several agonizing, astonishingly impressive minutes of mad exertion. It鈥檚 really quite an acting marvel from Reinsve 鈥 and everyone else in the scene watching it all play out. A broken fire alarm that goes off sporadically helps keep the atmosphere nice and tense, as does Asja鈥檚 random nose bleeds that always seem to derail pivotal decision-making moments.
鈥淎rmand鈥 engages in some stylish wheel spinning, broken up by some revelations and cathartic moments. And yet every time you feel like you have a grasp on the situation, something else arises that seems to undermine it. Ambiguity and inconclusiveness can be satisfying in cinematic storytelling, but this feels a little too underbaked either way. Ideas are introduced and abandoned, or not fleshed out well. Why, exactly, has she stopped working, for instance. And what鈥檚 the story behind Anders鈥 and Elisabeth鈥檚 relationship? It鈥檚 a promising debut from T酶ndel, nonetheless 鈥 a film that will keep you engaged if not entirely satisfied.
鈥淎rmand,鈥 an IFC Films release in theaters Friday, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for 鈥渟exual material and some language.鈥 Running time: 116 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.
Lindsey Bahr, The Associated Press