Los hermanos Aske y Bastian viven con su padre, Lasse, en un mundo de miedo, violencia y alcohol, pero la fuerte y estrecha relación entre los hermanos lo es todo para ellos.Los hermanos Aske y Bastian viven con su padre, Lasse, en un mundo de miedo, violencia y alcohol, pero la fuerte y estrecha relación entre los hermanos lo es todo para ellos.Los hermanos Aske y Bastian viven con su padre, Lasse, en un mundo de miedo, violencia y alcohol, pero la fuerte y estrecha relación entre los hermanos lo es todo para ellos.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
Christoffer Jensen
- Bastian
- (as Christopher Friis Jensen)
Oliver Skou
- Magnus
- (as Oliver Skou Due)
Jonathan Meinert Pedersen
- Bastian 5 år
- (as Jonathan Tage Pedersen)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
I thought this was a really well made movie. The acting is always good enough, and even brilliant in some parts. The scenery is amazing. The characters are endearing, and make you really care about them.
I will say that there were parts which were not perfect. The beginning was a little weak, but good enough to provide just enough backstory, without going overboard.
I actually LIKE the shaky camera work. It really added to the emotional connection. There were scenes where the camera would jerk right as something horrible happened, and it mirrored the emotional jerk that I experienced. In fact, that makes it a bit metaphorical. Everything happening is so chaotic, frustrating and unstable, and the camera makes you feel that way inside which helps the viewer to connect to what the characters are feeling inside. I think it is absolutely genius.
The scenes of the natural tranquil beauty conveys the sense of isolation and contrasts nicely with the chaotic ugliness and violence which is happening unnoticed, as if nobody, even the natural environment cares. This, again, gives you a sense of compassion, and helps you to understand what the victims feel like.
The whole movie is full of poetic metaphor, and analogy. It is a true work of art, and actually pretty well made for such a low budget. You get a sense that a lot of thought went into it. And, all of this without the use of CGI, cutaways, sudden flashbacks, or any of the other usual Hollywood devices. It was so emotionally engaging, and thought provoking.
I like how the ending drops you off, and leaves you wondering how things are going to turn out. It was truly painful to watch, because you really understand how this affects the main boy, and how horrific this experience is for him. Several parts brought me to tears, especially the ending. Any movie which can achieve that is a good movie. Personally, I think that they pulled off something truly magical with this one, and now I want to see more by this director.
As for the subject matter, I think the writer was a little heavy handed in their approach, but it is something which does happen, and we really owe it to those silent victims to watch this movie, and understand what is happening to them. I think they managed to really make that possible with this movie, and I would strongly recommend it as something which all of us should watch.
I will say that there were parts which were not perfect. The beginning was a little weak, but good enough to provide just enough backstory, without going overboard.
I actually LIKE the shaky camera work. It really added to the emotional connection. There were scenes where the camera would jerk right as something horrible happened, and it mirrored the emotional jerk that I experienced. In fact, that makes it a bit metaphorical. Everything happening is so chaotic, frustrating and unstable, and the camera makes you feel that way inside which helps the viewer to connect to what the characters are feeling inside. I think it is absolutely genius.
The scenes of the natural tranquil beauty conveys the sense of isolation and contrasts nicely with the chaotic ugliness and violence which is happening unnoticed, as if nobody, even the natural environment cares. This, again, gives you a sense of compassion, and helps you to understand what the victims feel like.
The whole movie is full of poetic metaphor, and analogy. It is a true work of art, and actually pretty well made for such a low budget. You get a sense that a lot of thought went into it. And, all of this without the use of CGI, cutaways, sudden flashbacks, or any of the other usual Hollywood devices. It was so emotionally engaging, and thought provoking.
I like how the ending drops you off, and leaves you wondering how things are going to turn out. It was truly painful to watch, because you really understand how this affects the main boy, and how horrific this experience is for him. Several parts brought me to tears, especially the ending. Any movie which can achieve that is a good movie. Personally, I think that they pulled off something truly magical with this one, and now I want to see more by this director.
As for the subject matter, I think the writer was a little heavy handed in their approach, but it is something which does happen, and we really owe it to those silent victims to watch this movie, and understand what is happening to them. I think they managed to really make that possible with this movie, and I would strongly recommend it as something which all of us should watch.
Aske and Bastian are favourite brother pair of all time for sure! The acting was awesome and the cast perfection. This is truly one of the saddest movies of all time but one of the best movies ever made. The plot and script are so well-written and flawlessly performed and the struggles Aske goes through are very heartfelt. I will be checking out Elias Munk's work after this masterpiece he deserves all the praise and awards.
In Denmark, a filmmaker named Brian Bang (not to be confused with American pornographer Brian Bangs) made a film about paedophilia and incest ten years ago called «For My Brother», with a certain sensationalist and voyeuristic touch, which was rejected by cinemas and television and in November 2014 it was released on DVD and Blu-Ray.
It tells the story of a paedophile pornographer (Allan Karlsen) who has been raping his eldest son Aske since he was a child, sells him to whoever wants to "use" a 15-year-old's body or see him in an erotic video, and threatens to replace him with his little brother Bastian if he does not submit to his designs. Needless to say, the film is not easy to watch, because Bang left little to the imagination and revelled in nudity on camera.
Bang took on almost all the key roles: he directed, wrote, produced, photographed, edited, was head of casting and art director. For some, the sloppy, "home movie" style photography seems like an aesthetic choice, but if you watch other films by the filmmaker (also photographed by him) the handling of the camera is equally capricious and careless, as an amateur would. The editing is gimmicky, and the script is an endless accumulation of tragic events that undermines the level of probability of the story.
Bang was luckier in choosing a cast of unknown and natural actors, who give the film some credibility, although the performances in general are poor. Perhaps the actor playing Aske (Elias Munk, who was 22 years old when he made the film and has since made a career as an actor and writer) has convincing moments, but they are few. The best scenes are when the two brothers Aske and Bastian (Christoffer Jensen) are together and seek affection, protection and tranquility.
Finding information about Bang (Denmark, 1978) on the internet is not easy either. Before this film, he made «Bunkeren» (2009) and «Ouija» (2012), and in 2019 the short about children «Zombies». There is little information about all three on the internet, although you can watch them (in Danish without subtitles) on his Bang Entertainment channel on YouTube and notice the emphasis on children and teenagers.
I'm not telling you not to watch it, but if the film makes you uncomfortable, you were warned.
It tells the story of a paedophile pornographer (Allan Karlsen) who has been raping his eldest son Aske since he was a child, sells him to whoever wants to "use" a 15-year-old's body or see him in an erotic video, and threatens to replace him with his little brother Bastian if he does not submit to his designs. Needless to say, the film is not easy to watch, because Bang left little to the imagination and revelled in nudity on camera.
Bang took on almost all the key roles: he directed, wrote, produced, photographed, edited, was head of casting and art director. For some, the sloppy, "home movie" style photography seems like an aesthetic choice, but if you watch other films by the filmmaker (also photographed by him) the handling of the camera is equally capricious and careless, as an amateur would. The editing is gimmicky, and the script is an endless accumulation of tragic events that undermines the level of probability of the story.
Bang was luckier in choosing a cast of unknown and natural actors, who give the film some credibility, although the performances in general are poor. Perhaps the actor playing Aske (Elias Munk, who was 22 years old when he made the film and has since made a career as an actor and writer) has convincing moments, but they are few. The best scenes are when the two brothers Aske and Bastian (Christoffer Jensen) are together and seek affection, protection and tranquility.
Finding information about Bang (Denmark, 1978) on the internet is not easy either. Before this film, he made «Bunkeren» (2009) and «Ouija» (2012), and in 2019 the short about children «Zombies». There is little information about all three on the internet, although you can watch them (in Danish without subtitles) on his Bang Entertainment channel on YouTube and notice the emphasis on children and teenagers.
I'm not telling you not to watch it, but if the film makes you uncomfortable, you were warned.
We're all used to watching bad movies, and if you don't mind obscure b-flicks, you get used to inept ones also. But what is less common is a marriage of genuinely upsetting real-world material that could be plucked from any newspaper, with handling so amateurish that it would be better suited to a Godfrey Ho movie with the word "Ninja" in the title.
"For My Brother" is a movie that makes you realise so-bad-it's-good material like "The Room" and "Samurai Cop" aren't really as inept as you may have thought. At least they didn't feature shockingly graphic footage of abuse, handled so badly that you can't believe what you're watching.
Take the opening scene, for example, which just ladles on distressing material well past breaking point until what we're left with just feels ridiculous. A husband and wife are on holiday in the woods with some random guy who is obviously there simply to molest the couple's son. Somehow the wife is unaware of this arrangement, but when the man leads the kid off into the anonymity of the woods, with the father's blessing, she realises immediately and hysterically goes looking for him. She finds him in time, resolves, loudly, to call the police on the duo of husband-and-stranger, and runs off with a mission - until, boom, she's hit by a car.
The fact that this collision is shown totally unconvincingly doesn't help, but this whole sequenceis so unconvincing it doesn't matter. It is catastrophe upon catastrophe, none of it is believable, but the inclusion of abuse and incest into the equation leaves a truly bad taste in the mouth; you certainly can't enjoy it as camp.
The movie jumps ahead some years and we see what this disastrous family situation has turned into: the alcoholic pederast father not only abuses his oldest son, he also pimps him out to friends and films the sex to sell on DVD. He even has a female client who pays to have sex with the son. There is a younger son, and the whole purpose of the eldest's life is to prevent the dad from doing to him what he has long done to the first born.
This is pretty unbelievable. How is the eldest able to keep his violent father from his younger brother? The movie seems to think this is achieved by making sure he is always available for the old pervert. Even if this is possible... what about the other abusers the old man apparently makes his living off? He is not merely a pederast, he's also a pimp and pornographer. Clearly he is not beholden to any form of morality, so it doesn't make sense that the younger boy isn't involved in it already.
Clearly the reason for this lack of involvement is that the movie is supposed to be a touching depiction of the older boy's concern for the younger. These actors actually do what they can with their parts - in some scenes they are convincing, in others not - but we never see anything like insight into how kids in their situation might really feel about each other.
They are cardboard cut-outs, forced to act out the stupid morality play the inept director has constructed for them.
"For My Brother" is a movie that makes you realise so-bad-it's-good material like "The Room" and "Samurai Cop" aren't really as inept as you may have thought. At least they didn't feature shockingly graphic footage of abuse, handled so badly that you can't believe what you're watching.
Take the opening scene, for example, which just ladles on distressing material well past breaking point until what we're left with just feels ridiculous. A husband and wife are on holiday in the woods with some random guy who is obviously there simply to molest the couple's son. Somehow the wife is unaware of this arrangement, but when the man leads the kid off into the anonymity of the woods, with the father's blessing, she realises immediately and hysterically goes looking for him. She finds him in time, resolves, loudly, to call the police on the duo of husband-and-stranger, and runs off with a mission - until, boom, she's hit by a car.
The fact that this collision is shown totally unconvincingly doesn't help, but this whole sequenceis so unconvincing it doesn't matter. It is catastrophe upon catastrophe, none of it is believable, but the inclusion of abuse and incest into the equation leaves a truly bad taste in the mouth; you certainly can't enjoy it as camp.
The movie jumps ahead some years and we see what this disastrous family situation has turned into: the alcoholic pederast father not only abuses his oldest son, he also pimps him out to friends and films the sex to sell on DVD. He even has a female client who pays to have sex with the son. There is a younger son, and the whole purpose of the eldest's life is to prevent the dad from doing to him what he has long done to the first born.
This is pretty unbelievable. How is the eldest able to keep his violent father from his younger brother? The movie seems to think this is achieved by making sure he is always available for the old pervert. Even if this is possible... what about the other abusers the old man apparently makes his living off? He is not merely a pederast, he's also a pimp and pornographer. Clearly he is not beholden to any form of morality, so it doesn't make sense that the younger boy isn't involved in it already.
Clearly the reason for this lack of involvement is that the movie is supposed to be a touching depiction of the older boy's concern for the younger. These actors actually do what they can with their parts - in some scenes they are convincing, in others not - but we never see anything like insight into how kids in their situation might really feel about each other.
They are cardboard cut-outs, forced to act out the stupid morality play the inept director has constructed for them.
Very powerful, real , dark movie and EXTRAORDINARY acting! it is honestly one of the best movies made. I've never witnessed such a strong, pure, beautiful real brother relationship ever I am simply shook!
and Aske is for sure the BEST big brother ever it's just unbelievable how gentle and loving he is toward Bastian after all he's been enduring <33..
He reads him stories, puts him to sleep, protects him, is there for him ALWAYS and supports him emotionally and in every other way possible...
it is insane to think how he was able to protect Bastian for over 5 years considering how his 'mother' even failed to protect him from all that evil. Aske truly deserves the world and beyond and Bastian is also such an angel. These 2 are the best, most innocent brothers I've ever watched on TV and real life!
Aske will forever remain in my heart forever <3
This movie and Elias Munk (Aske) deserve so many awards <3
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
- How long is For My Brother?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 57 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.78 : 1
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta
Principales brechas de datos
What is the English language plot outline for For min brors skyld (2014)?
Responda