Valhalla Rising (film)
This article is missing information about the film's production.(November 2017) |
Valhalla Rising | |
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Directed by | Nicolas Winding Refn |
Written by |
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Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Morten Søborg |
Edited by | Mat Newman |
Music by |
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Production company | Nimbus Film Productions |
Distributed by | Scanbox Entertainment |
Release dates |
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Running time | 92 minutes[1] |
Country | Denmark |
Language | English |
Budget | $5.7 million[2] |
Box office | $731,613[2] |
Valhalla Rising is a 2009 English-language Danish period adventure film[3] directed by Nicolas Winding Refn, co-written by Refn and Roy Jacobsen, and starring Mads Mikkelsen. The film takes place "most certainly during the twelfth century of our era"[4] and follows a Norse warrior named One-Eye and a boy as they travel with a band of Christian Crusaders by ship in the hopes of finding the Holy Land. Instead, they find themselves in North America where they are assailed by Natives and dark visions.
Shot entirely in Scotland,[5] the title is derived from the combination of Kenneth Anger's films Scorpio Rising and Lucifer Rising with a Viking theme.[6] While the film garnered generally positive reviews, it only made back about $731,613 of its $5.7 million production cost.[2]
Plot
[edit]A mysterious mute one-eyed thrall is held captive by a Norwegian chieftain from Sutherland and forced to fight to the death against others. He receives his meals from a young thrall boy, who seems to sympathise with him. After dreaming of finding an arrowhead in a pool, One-Eye actually finds it when bathing. Using the arrowhead, he breaks free, kills the chieftain and his entourage and impales the chieftain's head on a nithing pole. As he sets out across the land, he realizes that the boy is following him. 'One-Eye' takes him in and has a vision of them travelling on a ship.
They reach a small group of Christian Norsemen who are persecuting the heathens of Scandinavian Scotland. The leader of the group asks the boy about the man's origins and he answers that One-Eye came from Hel. 'One-Eye' and the boy agree to sail with them to the Holy Land on a Crusade. The expedition soon encounters thick fog and gets lost in the North Atlantic. After many days, with supplies dwindling, land is sighted.
Sailing up a river, they are attacked by Skrælings armed with stone arrowheads. The party realises they are nowhere near the Holy Land. Their leader, a Christian zealot, nevertheless advocates conquering the locals and claiming the land in the name of God. 'One-Eye' has a vision of him building a cairn, as one of his travelling companion was being violently sodomized into a peat bog by his fellow traveller, as the boy watches on in horror. Some of the group members angrily blame 'One-Eye' for their predicament and attack him; he kills them in self-defence. 'One-Eye' and the boy then leave and walk into the forest, followed by the group's second in command who has been stabbed by the leader for choosing to follow them. The leader's son then arrives to follow, as the leader stays behind to be killed by arrows. As the remainder of the group reaches the peak of a mountain, the son asks 'One-Eye' why he had to go through the horrible journey, but receives no answer. The leader's son decides to go back to his father, and the second in command is left on the mountain. Their eventual fate is unknown.
'One-Eye' and the boy eventually reach the coastline and are met by over a dozen clay-covered warriors. 'One-Eye' regards them knowingly, having seen them in a vision. He silently bids the boy goodbye, then walks into the middle of the tribesmen. He drops his axe and his knife and closes his eye. One warrior fells him with one blow to the back of the head, and the others finish him off. 'One-Eye's' spirit walks into the estuary next to his cairn and disappears below the surface. On the beach, the remaining tribe members quietly withdraw back into the forest, leaving the boy looking out at the ocean. The sky darkens, becoming that of the misty Highlands of the beginning of the film, and 'One-Eye's' face appears in the clouds.
Cast
[edit]Nicolas Winding Refn deliberately did not give formal names to the film's characters, save for One-Eye, although it is not the character's real name but a moniker given by The Boy. Names were assigned in the script to differentiate parts. This article addresses the characters as they are addressed by Refn on the DVD-commentary.
- Mads Mikkelsen as One-Eye
- Maarten Stevenson as The Boy
- Ewan Stewart as The General
- Gary Lewis as The Priest
- Alexander Morton as The Chieftain
- Jamie Sives as The General's Son
- Stewart Porter as The Chieftain's Son
- Gordon Brown as Christian Viking
- Gary McCormack as Lost Viking
- Charlie Allan as Viking
Release
[edit]The film premiered at the 66th Venice International Film Festival where it was shown out of competition on 4 September 2009. The Danish premiere followed on 31 March 2010. Vertigo Films released it in the United Kingdom on 30 April the same year.
Reception
[edit]On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 74% approval rating based on 61 reviews with an average rating of 6.6/10 with the consensus “Visually gripping and anchored by a magnetic Mads Mikkelsen, Valhalla Rising delves into violence and faith in brutally uncompromising fashion.” [7] Metacritic gives the film a "generally favorable" average score of 61% based on reviews from 15 critics.[8]
The reaction from Danish critics was split. Berlingske Tidende gave the film a rating of two out of six and called it "unbearably self-important".[9] B.T., called it a masterpiece and gave it a perfect score of six out of six.[10]
Philip French wrote in his review in The Observer that it felt "like watching woad dry, but hypnotic, densely atmospheric in a portentous way, and weirdly beautiful."[11]
Soundtrack
[edit]The score of the film was composed by Refn's frequent collaborators Peter Peter and Peter Kyed. Originally Refn had intended Mogwai as the composers of the score. The soundtrack was commercially released on 7 October 2013 by Milan Records who also released the score to Refn's films Only God Forgives and The Neon Demon. The soundtrack contains the complete score and sections of the soundscapes sound designers Giles Lamb and Douglas MacDougall created for the film.[12][13] Some sites incorrectly credits the track Free to Giles Lamb & Douglas MacDougall and the track Christians to Peter Peter.
- Track listing
- "Introduction" – Peter Peter & Peter Kyed (1:03)
- "Caged" – Giles Lamb & Douglas MacDougall (1:41)
- "One Eye Fights" – Giles Lamb & Douglas MacDougall (0:53)
- "Montage" – Peter Peter & Peter Kyed (4:22)
- "Arrowhead" – Giles Lamb & Douglas MacDougall (4:19)
- "Escape" – Peter Peter & Peter Kyed (1:02)
- "Return" – Peter Peter & Peter Kyed (3:03)
- "Free" – Peter Peter (1:56)
- "Christians" – Giles Lamb & Douglas MacDougall (4:03)
- "Men of God" – Peter Kyed & Peter Peter (4:49)
- "The Boat" – Peter Peter & Peter Kyed (12:02)
- "Into Hell" – Peter Peter & Peter Kyed (3:40)
- "Hell" – Peter Peter & Peter Kyed (9:34)
- "Forest'" – Giles Lamb & Douglas MacDougall (2:14)
- "Valhalla Rising (End Credits)" – Peter Peter & Peter Kyed (5:33)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Valhalla Rising (15)". British Board of Film Classification. 1 April 2010. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
- ^ a b c "Valhalla Rising (2010) - Financial Information". The Numbers.
- ^ "Valhalla Rising (2009) – Nicolas Winding Refn | Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related". AllMovie. Retrieved 6 April 2020.
- ^ According to Quentin Dispas Questions de mythologie nordique : Valhalla Rising in the magazine Projections.
- ^ Harkness, Alistair (1 May 2010). "Film Review: Valhalla Rising". The Scotsman. Edinburgh.
- ^ Romain Le Vern, "Interview Nicolas Winding Refn (Valhalla Rising – Le guerrier silencieux)," MYTF1News, 6 March 2010. (Refn: "Rien que pour le titre, on peut être tenté d'y voir une résonance. Kenneth Anger a réalisé Scorpio Rising et Lucifer Rising dans les années 70. Je propose Valhalla Rising en 2010.")
- ^ "Valhalla Rising (2010)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
- ^ "Valhalla Rising (2010)". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
- ^ Iversen, Ebbe (30 March 2010). ""Valhalla Rising" er ulideligt selvhøjtidelig". Berlingske Tidende (in Danish). Retrieved 5 April 2010.
- ^ Wendt Jensen, Jacob (30 March 2010). "Seks stjerner til Valhalla Rising" [Six stars for Valhalla Rising]. B.T. (in Danish). Retrieved 5 April 2010.
- ^ French, Philip (2 May 2010). "Review: Valhalla Rising". The Observer. Retrieved 24 December 2022.
- ^ "Valhalla Rising". Amazon UK.
- ^ Video on YouTube
External links
[edit]- Valhalla Rising at IMDb
- Valhalla Rising at Box Office Mojo
- The road to Valhalla
- BBC Film Network: Nicolas Winding Refn on Valhalla Rising
- Europe’s Times and Unknown Waters, Cluj-Napoca, Ormeny, Francisc-Norbert (30 December 2012). "Valhalla Rising – Of Wrath, Might and Meat" Archived 26 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- 2009 films
- 2000s adventure drama films
- British adventure drama films
- English-language Danish films
- Films set in the 11th century
- Films based on Norse mythology
- Films set in the Viking Age
- Scottish films
- Films shot in Scotland
- Films set in North America
- Films set in pre-Columbian America
- Films set in Scotland
- Films directed by Nicolas Winding Refn
- Vertigo Films films
- Nimbus Film films
- Scanbox Entertainment films
- Danish adventure drama films
- 2009 drama films
- 2000s English-language films
- 2000s British films
- English-language adventure drama films