Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA headstrong textile student tries to overcome her problems by accepting a summer job offer in Kyrsyä, an offbeat, remote village.A headstrong textile student tries to overcome her problems by accepting a summer job offer in Kyrsyä, an offbeat, remote village.A headstrong textile student tries to overcome her problems by accepting a summer job offer in Kyrsyä, an offbeat, remote village.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 5 premios y 3 nominaciones en total
Reseñas destacadas
Is this horror or parody? Feels like a love child of Kuutamosonaatti and Kummeli.
The Oscar success Get Out is a very similar movie that was produced the same year and did very well. Roope Olenius' debut feature is slow phased and reveals information with admirable patience. Veera W. Vilo brings exactly what this style needs - a captivating presence when very little happens. She is also spot on believable as raising her voice taking charge. Despite a clumsy clarity blunder very early on, the two first acts prove well structured and are a joy to watch. The third act however falls apart, when the original tone escapes the cage and the heroine is turned dumb for convenient reasons.
There's suppose to be a bit of dark humor in this, but if this is Finnish humor then those long winters have frozen some brain cells (that or along w/this script the Finns have cold dark isolated community incest problems). Not sure if there is a point to the story - urban girl is unlucky w/work, boyfriend etc. & takes an internship at an isolated supposedly textile community. Well, inbreeding has made them a little "quite-not-there-mentally". The textiles turn out to be little pompoms, and her invite may have more to do w/fresh breeding stock. Acting was over-the-top exaggerated; dialogue weak; subtitling to English was really bad making it difficult to understand what's going on.
I managed to get through about an hour of this awful rubbish before calling it a day. There is no redeemable feature here just a badly acted ludicrous story. Don't bother, dental surgery is more rewarding.
"Kyrsyä" is a short (about 80 minutes), low-budget independent movie ("Findie") based on a play by Neea Viitamäki. A city girl going through a bad break-up is tricked into accepting a summer job at a small village - by the title - which has turned its back to the rest of the world. The village of Kyrsyä is seemingly a self-contained paradise living at peace with nature. However, it turns out that the village is a little too self-contained.
Viitamäki's story is a clever take on the anxiety dwelling among citizens too far removed from nature and, in juxtaposition, the consequences of not accepting to move with the times. In its pursuit of running away from the cacophony of the modern society, Kyrsyä has stuck to the ways of the 19th century, which causes all kinds of perversions. The film version deals with these themes, at times, inspiringly, but handles them in a noticeably uneven manner. This makes the viewing experience a trying but fascinating one. Especially weak is the clumsy ending, which is really unfortunate.
On the other hand, the village community, dialogue and depiction of nature are well presented. Acting is especially good, apart from a couple of exaggerations shooting for comedy - and, sadly, the leading actress, who can only offer a one-dimensional performance.
"Kyrsyä" aims for a blend of dark comedy and horror, but doesn't quite reach either. The pacing of the comedy is always a bit off and there is no sense of urgency regarding the horror. Even so, the movie does somehow weave its own sort of a spell through interesting topical ideas and some inspired acting.
Viitamäki's story is a clever take on the anxiety dwelling among citizens too far removed from nature and, in juxtaposition, the consequences of not accepting to move with the times. In its pursuit of running away from the cacophony of the modern society, Kyrsyä has stuck to the ways of the 19th century, which causes all kinds of perversions. The film version deals with these themes, at times, inspiringly, but handles them in a noticeably uneven manner. This makes the viewing experience a trying but fascinating one. Especially weak is the clumsy ending, which is really unfortunate.
On the other hand, the village community, dialogue and depiction of nature are well presented. Acting is especially good, apart from a couple of exaggerations shooting for comedy - and, sadly, the leading actress, who can only offer a one-dimensional performance.
"Kyrsyä" aims for a blend of dark comedy and horror, but doesn't quite reach either. The pacing of the comedy is always a bit off and there is no sense of urgency regarding the horror. Even so, the movie does somehow weave its own sort of a spell through interesting topical ideas and some inspired acting.
¿Sabías que...?
- Curiosidades'Siiri' is played by Neea Viitamäki, who wrote the stage play on which this film is based; 'Pertti' is/was played by Miikka J. Anttila in both.
- ConexionesFeatured in From Stage to Screen: Kyrsyä - Tuftland (2018)
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- How long is Tuftland?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Tuftland
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 399 US$
- Duración
- 1h 29min(89 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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