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Ett hål i mitt hjärta (2004)

GENRESDrama
LANGSwedish
ACTOR
Thorsten FlinckBjörn AlmrothSanna BrådingGoran Marjanovic
DIRECTOR
Lukas Moodysson

SYNOPSICS

Ett hål i mitt hjärta (2004) is a Swedish movie. Lukas Moodysson has directed this movie. Thorsten Flinck,Björn Almroth,Sanna Bråding,Goran Marjanovic are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2004. Ett hål i mitt hjärta (2004) is considered one of the best Drama movie in India and around the world.

Eric is a teenager who lives in a shabby flat with his father, Rickard. Eric spends most of his time holed up in his room, blaring industrial music in order to drown out what's going on around him. He has just cause to be a bit disturbed by his surroundings -- Rickard is an amateur filmmaker specializing in extreme sex videos, and he's taken over the living room, where his emotionally disturbed friend Geko and a blank young woman, Tess are "starring" in his latest project. As shooting progresses over the course of several days, Rickard and his cast lose track of the outside world and become increasingly desensitized to their own decadence. As the sexual play becomes more and more extreme, edging into violence, Eric feels no choice but to intervene.

Ett hål i mitt hjärta (2004) Trailers

Ett hål i mitt hjärta (2004) Reviews

  • A pretty angry film

    PaulLondon2005-05-21

    Moodysson's latest is an intense and disturbing barrage of shocking imagery and an unflinching view of broken people who form an attachment built as much on hatred as it is on need for companionship. The film takes a claustrophobic look at four people who live in a small flat; a porn film making man, his son and the man and woman who 'star' in his porn films. Moodysson blurs the boundaries between the porn they film and their bizarre antics to create a bewildering world of obsession a Marat Sade of contemporary mores. This is a profoundly disturbing film; ugly and noisy but with occasional moments of calm and beauty amongst the ugly sex scenes and close ups of heart and genital operations and doll mutilation. It seems that Moodysson is angry and wants to scream his anger full into the viewers face - neither easy or essential viewing but challenging and interesting.

  • Moodysson's increasing challenge to his audience

    saareman2004-09-16

    (Some spoilers about plot) This is not by any stretch of the imagination an easy film to watch or then to attempt to explain and defend after watching it. It is quite likely that the most common description of it will be made with words such as 'gross' and 'disgusting' which are examples of what I've overheard in movie theatre lines during the rest of the week at the Toronto International Film Festival Sept 9 -18, 2004. In fact, the reactions of 'gross' and 'disgusting' against the actions on display in the film are likely the very ones that Moodysson is hoping to provoke, but I don't think that many will love the film itself for doing it. At the world premiere screening in Toronto on Friday September 10, 2004 (projected onto 2 screens in 2 separate theaters simultaneously, to Moodysson's amusement) the director gave a brief greeting at the beginning and brushed off festival programmer Steve Gravestock's introductory comments of it being 'an unforgettable film' and then dedicated the screening to his children as he said he was missing them. We were then rocked for 98 minutes with a barrage of various scenes usually revolving around sexual images and actions, several of which can only be described as being of a perverse and sado-masochistic nature and which were also sometimes accompanied by a soundtrack resembling electronic feedback and static white noise (although sometimes it was conventional pop-rock music and it ended blessedly with Bach's St. Matthew Passion). The plot in brief involves Rickard who is shooting a home-made porno film with his friends Tess and Geko inside the very apartment he lives in with his teenage son Eric. Most of the scenes for the amateur porno start to veer from the realm of any sort of conventional pornography into simulated violence and degradation to the disgust of the son who is the only voice of reason in the apartment but often retreats into his room to listen to music on head phones. Fortunately, several of the worst actions are performed with or on dolls and rubber/latex sexual organ molds. Rickard the filmmaker has some personal demons which are revealed during the course of the film and although he is supposedly the main instigator of the porno he is not portrayed as being evil but rather as pitiful. Tess the young woman in the porno is desperate for fame and dreams of making a career whether through reality TV (she auditioned but didn't get on the Swedish 'Big Brother' TV programme) or pornography (she asks Rickard if he has sent the tape yet to a supposed porno distributor he knows in Los Angeles). Geko the porno actor is at a loss as to how people really connect with each other (when Rickard asks him for advice on how he should relate to his son, Geko suggests taking him to a gun shooting range) but has some sort of innate joy in life as he runs around in a field perhaps making crop circles. Even when Rickard and Geko go too far and start to terrify Tess with simulated violence for the porno she eventually returns to the apartment joyous and full of mothering and bringing food and drink back for everyone. The feast soon deteriorates into a disgusting food fight however. Tess is barely out of her teens herself and eventually connects with the teenage son Eric on a playful childish level as they go off to the laundry and each try to climb inside the washing/drying machine (likely a metaphor for returning to the womb). We were mostly all too stunned to know how to react at the end and to even know what to ask at the Q&A session after the film. One audience member's question of whether the film was a statement against reality television was answered by Moodysson saying that they were very close to one of the statements being made by the film, of which there were eleven in total. Moderator Gravestock's quick take on that was to ask whether anyone wished to try to guess the other ten. No one did at the time, but here is an attempt (in no particular order) after thinking about this film for several days already. This film is a statement against: 1) Self-abasement of self and others for the purposes of garnering a temporary and illusory fame through the media. 2) The degradation of women in various media (not only pornography). 3) Violence against women. 4) The objectification of women in various media (again not only pornography). 5) The superficiality of modern day pop psychology 6) The gluttony and greed of the Western World 7) The waste of food and resources by the same Western World 8) Self-mutilation via cosmetic surgery in order to supposedly improve/beautify one's appearance. 9) Gun 'culture' and/or any other sort of violence oriented entertainment past-time 10) The indifference of people to other people who are in crisis or need. 11) The abuse of children And finally, an all encompassing statement that: Everyone has to potential in themselves to do evil things, so don't go looking to blame others for the problems such as the above, you yourself are part of the problem especially if you are not actively working against it. Due to the extreme subject matter and images, it is not likely that this film will receive a wide release distribution outside its production countries of Sweden and Denmark and the film festival circuit, so if it is of interest, you should make the most of any rare opportunity to see it. Moodysson continues the provocation and raging that he kicked into overdrive with 'Lilja 4-ever', but that even began with the portrayals against intolerance and narrow-mindedness and stereotyping in 'Show Me Love' and 'Together' (I have not seen 'Terrorists'). It is difficult to imagine that he will ever do a more difficult film, but with Moodysson every film has been an increasing challenge to his audience.

  • harsh truths

    whalley_what2004-09-26

    You'll probably hear a lot about how shocking and unrelenting this film is. My first reaction was to call the film "Pink Flamingoes"-esque, but I knew this was wrong, as this movie never shocks for the sake of shock itself. I've never seen another Moodysson film (although I will now), but his fury really came through and spoke to me here. He is taking our civilization's obsessions with seeing everything, with pushing limits, and shoving it in our face, making us hurt for it. That said, there is much beauty here as well, and a pitch black humour that carries viewers through the darkest moments. The protagonist, a teenage boy who spends most of his time in his room with headphones on, attempting to block out the increasingly depraved porno being filmed by his father and friends in the living room of a tiny apartment, tells a couple of stories based around the theme of beauty existing under the most impossible conditions, life flourishing where no one would've thought it could, and he is referring both to himself and the moments of grace that Moodysson places throughout the film. He even manages to give a feeling of hope by the end, which stuck with me as I walked down the street, although my stomach gave a serious churn as I walked by an adult video store.

  • A Serious Misfire From Moodyson

    zoothorn212006-03-21

    Having loved 'Together' and admired, for the most part, 'Lilya 4-Ever' (as well as his short films), I was dreadfully disappointed with this new work from Moodyson. In an interview about 'A Hole On My Heart' Moodyson stated that he thought it was his best and most complex film, before saying that he didn't know what the film was supposed to be about, not offering any explanation other than 'it has many layers'. Such statements reveal entirely the reason behind the film's failure. Depsite Moodyson's assertion of complexity, there is simply nothing in this 90+ minute film that could not have been adequately communicated in a short. Simply juxtaposing unpleasant images of cosmetic surgery and action men figures with home-made pornography does not constitute a complex statement on anything. In fact the film is hopelessly meandering and one has the increasing feeling that it was 'discovered' in the editing room. I'm very interested in non-narrative film-making, and I don't need a 'story' to communicate events to me, but it is evident to me when there is a severe paucity of drive and ideas, and that feeling was evident throughout a viewing of this film. It concerns me that this film will be defended by people who feel that sitting through the unpleasant content constitutes some sort of test of intellectual rigour and that those who didn't like it are not prepared to 'face up' to the reality this film purports to present. In fact the simple truth is that this is an empty film, with a painful lack of understanding of how to dramatise ideas. I really hope Moodyson comes up with something better next time - I think his talents outstrip nonsense like this.

  • Excellent movie

    jptoivonen2007-12-11

    A very underrated movie. A powerful comment on the disgusts of the modern world: alienation, the lack of care and the ever-present porn (I'm not against all porn). Lukas Moodysson wants to show us that there is a lot of sickness in this world, and he succeeds. Yes, it's disgusting in some parts and yes, it shows vomiting and sex. I understand people who say it's too much. But: why should we live our lives without seeing disgusting things at all, ever? This film makes you think of the world, and I don't see anything wrong with that. I believe this is a must to see for everybody, especially for those who think there are no real problems in the Western world.

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