Terribly Happy

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Terribly Happy

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Colour, 35 mm
Denmark, 2008, 105 min
WP – World premiere
Section: Official Selection - Competition

Director: Henrik Ruben Genz
Screenplay: Henrik Ruben Genz, Dunja Gry Jensen podle románu Erlinga Jepsena / based on the novel by Erling Jepsen
Dir. of Photography: Jørgen Johansson
Music: Kåre Bjerkø
Designer: Niels Sejer
Editor: Kasper Leick
Producer: Thomas Gammeltoft
Production: Fine & Mellow
Sales: TrustNordisk
Contact: Danish Film Institute
  
Cast: Jakob Cedergren, Kim Bodnia, Lene Maria Christensen, Lars Brygmann

Synopsis

A Copenhagen policeman called Robert (the superb Jakob Cedergren, familiar from Dagur Karí’s film Dark Horse) moves to a provincial town, where he has been temporarily reassigned after a recent case of professional misconduct. Another lingering cloudy day comes to an end in South Jutland and the arrival of the young man from the big city is met by a look of curious satisfaction on the rigid faces of the local inhabitants. The constable, who does everything “by the book”, is soon confronted with the local customs and begins to sense that troubling secrets lurk behind the façade of what appears to be quite ordinary small-town life. Inspired by the novel by Erling Jepsen (who wrote the novel on which the successful film The Art of Crying is based), Genz’s grotesque drama, with its deviations into the crime, western and horror genres, is striking for its original stylisation and spellbinding evocation of the atmosphere pervading this disturbed community. “I wanted the film to be experienced as a nightmare in a surreal, parallel world, where things are fairly realistic, but everything is always shifting ever so slightly”, says the director of his film.

About the director

Henrik Ruben Genz (b. 1959, Gram, Denmark) graduated in 1995 from the National Film School of Denmark. That same year, Cross Roads (Omveje) won Best Film and Best Screenplay at the Munich International Film School Festival. Of his documentaries and short feature films, the most successful has been Theis & Nico (Bror, min bror, 1998), which brought him an Oscar nomination and a Glass Bear at the Berlinale. Genz’s first feature, Someone Like Hodder (En som Hodder, 2003), was honoured by the juries of several festivals, including Chicago, London and Buenos Aires. Genz had a film in competition at the KVIFF back in 2005, Chinaman (Kinamand), which won the Ecumenical Jury and FIPRESCI prizes.

Kim Bodnia, Jakob Cedergren, Thomas Gammeltoft, Henrik Ruben Genz, Astrid Hytten, Rikke Lassen, Kasper Leick

Danish Film Institute
Gothersgade 55, DK - 1123 Copenhagen
Denmark
Tel: +45 33 743 400
Fax: +45 33 743 435
E-mail: dfi@dfi.dk

Fine & Mellow
Mosedalvej 14, DK-2500 Valby
Denmark
Tel: +45 361 885 00
Fax: +45 363 017 00

TrustNordisk
Filmbyen 12, 2650 Hvidovre
Denmark
Tel: +45 36 868 788
Fax: +45 36 774 448
E-mail: info@trustnordisk.com

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