Screendaily review of Michael Noer's Before The Frost from Tokyo International Film Festival

By Sarah Ward

01-11-2018

 

 

Michael Noer´s period drama set in 1850s Denmark is grim but never less than gripping

 

In Danish director Michael Noer´s (Papillon) Before the Frost, rural life is bleak and unforgiving, the pursuit of power and glory is the road to folly, and sacrificing a loved one´s happiness for money can only lead to misery. While this 1850s-set period effort trades in obvious truisms, it weaves its familiar elements into a grim and gripping drama powered by a masterful turn from Jesper Christensen (Melancholia, The King´s Choice) as aging landowner Jens, a man striving to retain his fading place within a close-knit, quick-to-judge agrarian community.

 

Noer layers his fifth film with the themes of oppression, austerity, sacrifice and revenge typically seen in a western.

Bowing in Toronto and now competing in Tokyo, Before the Frost will release in its homeland in January 2019; but arthouse purveyors elsewhere should take note.

 

Desolate wheat crops, skinny livestock and empty plates have become a harsh reality for Jens, his attractive daughter Signe (Clara Rosager), and nephews Peder (Elliott Crosset Hove) and Mads (Bertil De Lorenzi). Though he´s holding onto one of the biggest properties in the area, his fortunes are slipping, and if the current harvest fails as winter approaches, the family will be ruined.

 

Wealthy Swede Gustav (Magnus Krepper) and his right-hand man Holger (Rasmus Hammerich) offer a reprieve, offering to take Jens´ sodden marsh off his hands. But the old man declines to sell even a fraction of his holdings - until he realizes that it´s his best option.

 

Through determined negotiating by Jens, the deal involves Gustav marrying Signe, taking on Peder and Mads as workers, and giving Jens a healthy pension. Alas, it´s not the best outcome for everyone involved. Jens has already shaken hands on an agreement with another neighbor, Laurits (Gustav Dyekjær Giese), betrothing Signe to his brother Ole (Oscar Dyekjær Giese), whom she actually loves. The fallout from the last-minute switch is not only swift and angry; ultimately, it´s also tragic, leaving Jens to live with the unshakeable consequences of his actions.

 

Before the Frost´s cast wear the stress, pain and sorrow of rural 19th century existence. Jens might be the feature´s showiest role, but Rosager, Hove and De Lorenzi each ensure that the rest of his family are just as memorable. In a rural society that values land and status above all else, as well as a patriarchal and God-fearing community where a father´s decree comes second only to the church´s, the plight of Jens´ dutiful daughter and otherwise orphaned nephews are no mere subplots.

 

Co-writing with Jesper Fink, Noer layers his fifth film with the themes of oppression, austerity, sacrifice and revenge typically seen in a western, set to a needling, string-heavy score from Rune Tonsgaard Sørensen. Although its color scheme favours greys and murky browns, and its vast expanses are toiled and sodden, the feature looks the part as well. The characters might not always voice their feelings, but the terrain they traverse - and that Victoria and Rams cinematographer Sturla Brandth Grøvlen captures with restless, emotionally loaded framing - speaks volumes in every shot.