The Northman - South Sydney Herald
Thursday, January 16, 2025
HomeCultureFilmThe Northman

The Northman

The Northman
Director: Robert Eggers
Starring: Alexander Skarsgård, Nicole Kidman, Claes Bang
Genre: Thorless

If your taste in film is Shakespearean drama, Tarantino level violence and Viking legend then The Northman hits your sweet spot. For the rest of us, there’s still plenty to like so long as you can deal with graphically realistic cinematic blood and gore and thousand-year-old Viking practices that range between the surreal, the extraordinary and the horrendous.

Perhaps the most interesting discussion point about The Northman is the fine line between gratuitous violence and historical accuracy. Context is everything in this debate. The Northman claims to be based on real Viking history – the “landnámsöld” (the age of land-taking) and the Danish historical legend that inspired Hamlet. Indeed, almost everything in the film is Norse mythology such as raven familiars, catching spears mid-air, pickled heads and almost every piece of clothing.

There is almost no CGI to ensure historical accuracy and everything was built on set, including viking long-boats, villages and swords, although all the men are hairless and buff with perfect teeth (a realism problem I also had with The Power of the Dog).

So, the argument goes that if the legends are full of murder, rape and pillaging then so should the film. Indeed, if it wasn’t for the level of violence then the amazing battle and fight scenes wouldn’t have nearly the same impact on the viewer, and the extraordinary final battle scene, the culmination of what is ultimately a straight-forward obsessive revenge drama, wouldn’t work at all.

And if that’s too much for you then there’s always the Marvel Studios Thor series where buff bodies, perfect teeth and computer animation are essential and expected. And dull.

Rating: Four-and-a-half swimming pools of blood.

_______________

film@ssh.com.au

 

 

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img

Peace Prize awarded to the Movement

The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement (the Movement) has been selected as the recipient of the 2024 Sydney Peace Prize, for courageous and highly regarded humanitarian work that serves our common humanity.

Learning to use AI responsibly and productively

A new online resource, co-designed by students and staff at the University of Sydney, shows how generative AI can be used productively and responsibly in assessment and learning.

Volunteers’ News – December 2024

Volunteers’ News – December 2024.

The Birdman of Glebe

GLEBE: Outside Le Petit Tarte Café and Patisserie, most days of the week, is Jethro and his lorikeet, Rosie.

Transforming a Redfern car park into affordable aged care

REDFERN: The City of Sydney is calling for expressions of interest to redevelop a council car park into a not-for-profit aged care facility for at least 50 older people.

Ambour Hardware – end of an era

It’s the end of an era for Redfern. After 55 years of serving the community, Joe and Marie Ambour, longtime owners of Ambour Hardware, are closing the doors.