Polizeikommissar Carl Mørck wird die Verantwortung für eine Abteilung mit lauter ungeklärten Fällen übertragen und wird dabei lediglich von seinem Assistenten Assad unterstützt. Als Erstes n... Alles lesenPolizeikommissar Carl Mørck wird die Verantwortung für eine Abteilung mit lauter ungeklärten Fällen übertragen und wird dabei lediglich von seinem Assistenten Assad unterstützt. Als Erstes nehmen sie sich den Fall einer verschwundenen Frau vor.Polizeikommissar Carl Mørck wird die Verantwortung für eine Abteilung mit lauter ungeklärten Fällen übertragen und wird dabei lediglich von seinem Assistenten Assad unterstützt. Als Erstes nehmen sie sich den Fall einer verschwundenen Frau vor.
- Auszeichnungen
- 3 Gewinne & 21 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Viggas Rasmussen
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Anne Hauger)
- Serveur de comptoir
- (as Patric Neves Lindström)
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In the aftermath of an ill-fated mission that leaves one colleague dead and another seriously injured, police inspector Carl Mørck (Nikolaj Lie Kaas) is bumped from his department and tasked with setting up Department Q, a dead-end desk job that requires him to spend the next few years ensconced in a dusty basement with a new partner, Assad (Fares Fares), tying up the loose ends on old cases. Instructed to close three cases per week, Mørck and Assad begin with the investigation of a politician, Merete Lynggaard (Sonja Richter) who disappeared five years previously. Written off as a suicide, Mørck is determined to prove there is more to the case and delves into a murky case of abuse, murder and kidnapping.
With both Kaas and Richter alumni of the original series of The Killing, and Fares a star of both Easy Money and Zero Dark Thirty, the central trio makes for a very solid human triptych, even if displayed as separate components (he wrote carefully, determined not to lead or hint or give anything away). The relationship between Mørck and Assad, particularly, is a sufficient variation of the 'cop buddies' partnership to make it feel new. Both policemen have their foibles, their differences and their similarities; Mørck is out of favour, Assad has been trusted with something vaguely resembling a promotion, Mørck is silent and brooding, Assad celebrates his new found 'freedom' with ear-bleeding music, Mørck is a battering ram, Assad invests time to achieve his results
As an aside, The Keeper of Lost Causes succeeds magnificently in portraying a Muslim character in a positive light in a film that isn't about that issue. Assad could be anyone; he just happens to be a Muslim.
Though The Keeper of Lost Causes will invariably be compared to The Killing, it is closer in tone to the thoughtfulness of Wallander and the cynicism of French series Spiral and is spiced with the dark violence of Larsson's Millennium trilogy. There is humour within the gloomy folds of this thriller but it is cold and cynical as befits a yarn of kidnap and murder.
I saw much of the outcome in the first fifteen minutes of The Keeper of Lost Causes but it was a still an electrifying journey that has a great deal to celebrate, not least of all a sublime accident sequence. Think 'ballet with cars' and you're getting close.
Like all good thrillers, The Keeper of Lost Causes works on the terror factor that it could happen. We don't tend to believe in zombies and vampires, although I'm up for a short-term zombocalypse armed with a crossbow and a katana, but humans with a vindictive streak and a penchant for malevolent revenge? Yep, they're far too real to ignore.
The Keeper of Lost Causes is a rare treat for another reason: it clearly sets itself up for a sequel and director Mikkel Nørgaard has duly obliged with the second adaptation of author Juss Adler-Olsen's novels, The Absent One (Fasandræberne), released in Denmark this autumn.
Roll on the end of the summer!
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The acting is really good (even if it feels a bit moody and broody at times) and the story is even better. There are more things here to judge than just some bad guys, with even the cop having his flaws (transparent from the beginning). We also get nice touches (the coffee thing) to elevate the watching experience. An all around good take on a criminal story
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesFares Fares, who lives in Sweden, had to learn Danish for the role of Assad.
- PatzerThe leader of the sanitarium tells the two main characters that Uffe was 8 years old when he had his brain injury in the car accident. But we are also told that Uffe was born on the 10th of may 1982 and that the accident, that gave Uffe his brain injury, happened on the 23rd of December 1988, making Uffe 6 when he got his brain injury.
- Zitate
Carl Mørck: [to Assad] Let me do the talking... she's only seen your kind on TV
- VerbindungenFeatured in Dansk films bedste: Børneliv og På kant med loven (2022)
- SoundtracksSummer Dresses (featuring Cecilia Stalin)
Written by Jeroen van Olffen (as Jeroen van Olffen)
Performed by DJ Come of Age
(C)+(P) Zentropa Music
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Box Office
- Budget
- 5.000.000 € (geschätzt)
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 13.656.380 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 36 Min.(96 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1