Samenvattingen(1)

Het is bijna zomer in Zweden en kleine vergrijpen en slecdht gedrag vieren hoogtij. Leffe haalt graag kattekwaad uit, zeker wanneer hij dronken is. Een jonge docente wil haar collega's laten zien hoe het wel moet en twee tienermeisjes houden van feesten en poseren voor foto's. Op een avond wordt een van hen dronken en bewusteloos gevonden in een park. (Filmmuseum Distributie)

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Recensie (3)

claudel 

alle recensies van de gebruiker

Engels I decided to explore Ruben Östlund's filmography a little. After watching The Square, I got the impression that he is a creative and remarkable director. First, I chose In the Power of the Mob, which brought me back slightly to the time of my university studies, specifically a sociological seminar that I considered one of the best subjects. Once we talked at length about the mob and its power, aggression, and often inexplicable energy and pathology. In this film, we had the opportunity to see many vivid examples, but the scene with the two lines at school fascinated me the most - I rubbed my eyes, wondered if I was tired or if my eyesight was weaker, until I got the point. Indeed, the teacher evoked the most ambivalent feelings in me. ()

angel74 

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Engels A remarkable sociological study that at times sends shivers down one's spine, as it makes one realize our often involuntary herd mentality. At least I often get the feeling that there is no escape from it. It is certainly a timeless film with an almost documentary approach, but it may not be to everyone's taste. (75%) ()

Reclame

Matty 

alle recensies van de gebruiker

Engels A sociological experiment – can you tolerate watching people you don’t know for one hundred minutes? Because the director doesn’t want us to get to know them; instead, he prevents us from doing so through “unempathetic” filming from a greater distance and in long, static shots. We often don’t see the faces of the characters as they speak and we rarely know their names. Sometimes the distance and the impression of eavesdropping are enhanced by filming the characters in a reflection (a mirror, the side of a car) or – in one case – by “filtering” them through a computer camera. The only thing we can do is silently watch them. The witnesses in the film behave in the same way. And the consequence? The innocent become victims and the guilty remain unpunished. Each of us has probably found ourselves in one of the depicted situations. The film manages to elicit feelings of guilt. It’s a very cruel approach – both to the characters and to viewers – but it forces us to think. It’s a shame about the two unnecessary deviations from the drily observational style to a more standard narrative (one brief pan during the scene involving harassment on a bus and a later flashback). Or were these meant to serve as a reminder – for those who have given in to the illusion of a film without a narrator – that there is someone behind the camera manipulating us a little? It’s hard to say. It’s also hard not to give in. 75% ()

Galerie (7)