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King of Devil's Island

King of Devil's Island (2010)

December. 20,2010
|
7.5
| Drama Action

Based on a true story: Norwegian winter, 1915. On the island Bastøy, outside Oslo, a group of young boys aged 11 to 18, are held in an institution for delinquent youth, notorious for its sadistic regime. One day a new boy, Erling, arrives, determined to escape from the island. After a tragic incident, he ends up leading the boys in a violent uprising. When the boys manage to take over the island, 150 soldiers are sent in to restore order.

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Lawbolisted
2010/12/20

Powerful

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StyleSk8r
2010/12/21

At first rather annoying in its heavy emphasis on reenactments, this movie ultimately proves fascinating, simply because the complicated, highly dramatic tale it tells still almost defies belief.

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Lucia Ayala
2010/12/22

It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.

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Philippa
2010/12/23

All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.

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swedeandsour
2010/12/24

I was surprised by the level of brutality in this film, both physical and psychological. The psychological abuse was even more of a weight than the physical - mind games, blame, isolation, collective responsibility and punishments, shaming, repeated shows of system's strength and of the children's weakness and helplessness - it felt like a mix of a nightmarish boarding school, a kind of cult or Nazi camp for brainwashing and a slave-labor camp for prisoners of war, not of young offenders, many of whom sent for petty crimes.The kids don't have any visitors from family, they don't seem to have any kind of free time for any leisure whatsoever - there is no escape from the drudgery, yet despite being putting their heads down and accepting their lives as slaves, the corrections officers still abused the prisoner-laborers physically, mentally and sexually.Yet it's the hope that sometimes kills you. The location of the island, so close to the mainland yet so far from everyone, makes it worse. Unlike Siberian prisons where there really is no hope of escape, this one is close enough to freedom that kids get the idea that they could make it. The guards have no dogs, no fences, no barbed wire, so there's hope for escape, but winter and hunger will catch up with you.The soundtrack is haunting and fits perfectly with the desolate, hopeless environment. The movie really sucks you in and you empathize with the kids in it, getting enraged at the injustice of it all.It's difficult to watch, but it's a must watch for fans of film.

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Bene Cumb
2010/12/25

Based on true events, this one of the most expensive Norwegian (+Swedish, Estonian) film was shot primarily in my home country - thus, apart from a good film experience, I had a joy of recognition vis-a-vis places and actors (although Estonian ones had mute or 1-2 word roles only). Anyway, the Norwegian background and spirit with gloom and misery in a closed penal institution were well captured, and all the leading characters were skillfully elaborated and performed (especially Stellan Skarsgård as Håkon, Benjamin Helstad as Erling "C19", Trond Nilssen as Olav "C1"). Most of the screenplay is focused, however, on the "normal" routine in the establishment, boys versus staff, the rebellion itself and its consequences are shown in a limited time and space (I would have liked to know what happened to the revolting boys, and how the usual living was restored). Nevertheless, Kongen av Bastøy is a strong drama, giving food for thought long after the credits disappear.

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secondtake
2010/12/26

King of Devil's Island (2010)A very straight forward, hard hitting, well acted account based on a true story of a boy's penal colony on a Norwegian Island early in the 20th Century.That says it all. It is what it is, and there is the almost inevitable rebel and leader among the boys against the sometimes evil, sometimes indifferent adults who rule the group with false benevolence. You know who is right and who is wrong, and you follow the plot with a mixture of expectation and outrage. It's dramatic great stuff. Yes, been there and seen that somehow before, but it's severe and beautiful in its setting and intense and provocative within.It might be interesting to compare this to more famous prison movies (the dubious "Shawshank" and earlier classics like "Birdman from Alcatraz") to realize how much this one is holding to a line of truth. As much as the events are extreme (eventually), the filmmaking is filled with restraint. Compare further to a movie like "Shutter Island" and you know that this one is practically a grey, subdued documentary.And this is to its advantage. It's not a mind-blowing experience in cinema terms--it's just a really well done, focused, sensitive telling of a forgotten story of repression and survival and maybe, in the end, the every lifting human spirit.

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gradyharp
2010/12/27

KING OF DEVIL'S ISLAND (Kongen av Bastøy) is an experience more than a film. It dares to take the viewer where all is black and white, emotionally and visually, and while the film is shot in color, the only moment of color in this dark, atmospherically eerie snow bound island boys prison is the occasional blood and fire that creates even more of an impact because of the bleak screen that serves as background for the story. Based on a true story by Mette M. Bølstad and Lars Saabye Christensen and adapted for the screen by Dennis Magnusson and Eric Schmid, the fine cast is directed by Marius Holst.In 1915 on the island Bastøy, located in the Oslo fjord, live a group of delinquent, young boys aged 11 to 18 in the Bastøy Boys Reform School. The boys daily, sadistic regime is run by the guards and Governor Bestyreren (Stellan Skarsgård) who is stern but seemingly fair in his management of the reform school (his wife lives with him in an opulent manner). But the Housemaster, a smarmy pedophile names Master Bråthen (Kristoffer Joner), is cruel and malicious and bestows both mental and physical abuse on the boys: the boys are used for cheap manual labor rather than being schooled and 'corrected' to return to society. The boys attempt to survive by adapting to their inhumane conditions. One day a new 17 year old boy, Erling who is assigned the 'name' C19 (Benjamin Helstad), arrives with his own agenda: how to escape from the island. How far is he willing to go in order to get his freedom? There is a stalwart lad Ivar/C5 (Magnus Langlete) who is due for release and a rather frail lad Olav/C1 (Trond Nilssen) who falls victim to the Master: these lads are C19's colleagues. After a tragic incident takes place, Erling ends up forced into the destinies of the other boys by leading them into a violent uprising. Once the boys manage to take over Bastøy 150 government soldiers are sent in to restore order. How he maneuvers the escape fantasy brings a surprising ending to the story.The acting is first rate from a fine group of young actors. The cinematography is by John Andreas Andersen and the haunting musical score is by Johan Söderqvist. In Norwegian with English subtitles. A moody, deeply moving work. Grady Harp, February 12

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