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Border

Titre original : Gräns
  • 2018
  • 12
  • 1h 50min
NOTE IMDb
7,0/10
37 k
MA NOTE
Eero Milonoff and Eva Melander in Border (2018)
Tina is a border guard who has the ability to smell human emotions and catch smugglers. When she comes across a mysterious man with a smell that confounds her detection, she is forced to confront hugely disturbing insights about herself and humankind.
Lire trailer2:31
3 Videos
91 photos
Comédie noireCriminalitéDrameFantaisieMystèreRomanceScience-fictionThriller

Après qu'une agente des douanes ait développé une étrange attirance pour le suspect sur lequel elle enquêtait, les révélations de l'affaire remettent bientôt en question toute son existence.Après qu'une agente des douanes ait développé une étrange attirance pour le suspect sur lequel elle enquêtait, les révélations de l'affaire remettent bientôt en question toute son existence.Après qu'une agente des douanes ait développé une étrange attirance pour le suspect sur lequel elle enquêtait, les révélations de l'affaire remettent bientôt en question toute son existence.

  • Réalisation
    • Ali Abbasi
  • Scénario
    • John Ajvide Lindqvist
    • Ali Abbasi
    • Isabella Eklöf
  • Casting principal
    • Eva Melander
    • Eero Milonoff
    • Jörgen Thorsson
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,0/10
    37 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Ali Abbasi
    • Scénario
      • John Ajvide Lindqvist
      • Ali Abbasi
      • Isabella Eklöf
    • Casting principal
      • Eva Melander
      • Eero Milonoff
      • Jörgen Thorsson
    • 156avis d'utilisateurs
    • 186avis des critiques
    • 75Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 Oscar
      • 20 victoires et 30 nominations au total

    Vidéos3

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:31
    Official Trailer
    BORDER Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:31
    BORDER Official Trailer
    BORDER Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:31
    BORDER Official Trailer
    Border
    Clip 1:49
    Border

    Photos91

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 84
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    Rôles principaux29

    Modifier
    Eva Melander
    Eva Melander
    • Tina
    Eero Milonoff
    Eero Milonoff
    • Vore
    Jörgen Thorsson
    Jörgen Thorsson
    • Roland
    Ann Petrén
    Ann Petrén
    • Agneta
    Sten Ljunggren
    Sten Ljunggren
    • Tinas pappa
    Kjell Wilhelmsen
    • Daniel
    Rakel Wärmländer
    Rakel Wärmländer
    • Therese
    Andreas Kundler
    • Robert
    Matti Boustedt
    Matti Boustedt
    • Tomas
    Tomas Åhnstrand
    • Stefan
    Josefin Neldén
    Josefin Neldén
    • Esther
    Henrik Johansson
    • Patrik
    Ibrahim Faal
    • Vårdbiträde
    Åsa Janson
    • Sjuksköterska
    Donald Högberg
    • Receptionist
    Krister Kern
    • Polisman
    Viktor Åkerblom
    Viktor Åkerblom
    • Ulf
    Robert Enckell
    Robert Enckell
    • Heikki
    • Réalisation
      • Ali Abbasi
    • Scénario
      • John Ajvide Lindqvist
      • Ali Abbasi
      • Isabella Eklöf
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs156

    7,036.5K
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    Avis à la une

    7dar0417

    Weird and wonderful at the same time

    This one was a weird one but it worked on the level. Felt like watching a horror and romantic comedy that in the end felt like something completely different.
    7themadmovieman

    Original, but just a little too strange to really grab you

    This is undoubtedly one of the strangest films I've ever seen, and although I cannot fault Border for being an original and striking piece, I can't say that it's the most enthralling film ever made either. Despite a unique and quirky premise, the film doesn't quite have the same depth in its originality, while some of its more disturbingly weird moments come across as a little too unpleasant, failing to wrap you up in the sense of bizarre wonder that could have made it a little more special.

    So, the story revolves around a woman who works as a border agent, and her life as she experiences differences with those around her, as well as developing a bond with a more similar man. With a lot of prosthetic make-up, Eva Melander and Eero Milonoff are transformed into rather brutish-looking people, but through their strange, almost animal-like behaviour throughout, they begin to feel closer and closer.

    That's the part of the movie that works well - the sheer bewilderment you feel at watching two people act in the least human manner possible, and the intrigue that that breeds as you attempt to figure what on earth they really are, and why they act in such a strange way. It's a unique idea that the film pushes forward with confidence and persistence, and it definitely makes Border a striking watch throughout.

    However, while it's an interesting and equally confusing film from the start, Border hits a little bit of a roadblock about halfway through, as it runs out of surprises to keep you enticed and weirded-out to the same extent as its opening act.

    Moving at an incredibly slow pace, the film resists giving you too much information about the true nature of these two characters, but after a while, it just becomes a point of frustration rather than intrigue. And then when you do get somewhat more of a reveal, the film is then completely out of ideas and mystery for the remainder of its runtime, failing to engross you with any sense of wonderment in a final act that's a lot more unpleasant than it is mystical.

    And that's my other big problem with Border: it's just a bit too weird. At its heart, the film tells a story about accepting and understanding who you truly are, but that central theme really pales in comparison to the stranger surface of the movie. However, in an attempt to keep surprising and intriguing you, the film goes all out with some of the most bizarre elements of drama and even fantasy, to the point where it actually becomes a little disturbing, and extremely uncomfortable.

    Overall, then, I found Border an intriguing and immensely bewildering film. Starting strongly with a vague yet original premise, the film does unfortunately fall apart due to a lack of real depth, a painfully slow pace, and a disturbing desire to show the weirdest things it can possibly think of. It's a unique film that did grab me, but it's definitely not for everyone.
    8OJT

    On the borderline of human existance

    If you liked the Norwegian movies Troll hunter or Thale, you'll also like this Swedish-Danish co-production, which has been a festival hit at both Cannes and Karlovy Vary, and probably a lot more festivals to come. You could say the Swedes and Danes seem inspired by the folkloric tales from Norwegian directors, having huge success the latter years.

    Saw this at the screening in the Thermal grand hall (cap. 1150) and hardly any went away during the showing, due to the this film being quite captivating.

    Border (Originally: Gräns) first appears to be a drama about an odd looking and rather strange woman in her late thirties with a seemingly unique talent in semlling fear, and she has a suitable job as a customs inspector at a Swedish ferry port. She can sniff out guilt, shame, fear and rage. Off-duty, she is a loner, loving quietness in the woods close to her rural home, with a redneck living with her, in separate beds, and she visits her seemingly half demented father in a nursing home. But one day she meets a man which looks surprisingly like her.

    This is only the beginning, as the film now takes a slide into a different genre.

    Director is Ali Abbassi, who has the equally strange concepts before in the movie Shelley. Well directed and well played. This is far from being a comedy, but there are many funny moments and the audience had huge outburst of laughter.

    The title "Border" is really well suited in all ways. Very much recommended, and really something else.
    7Bertaut

    Supremely weird and morally ambiguous; certainly not for everyone

    Based on the short story of the same name by John Ajvide Lindqvist, written for the screen by Lindqvist, Ali Abbasi, and Isabella Eklöf, and directed by Abbasi, Gräns is an intimate character drama, a study of loneliness, a romance, a police procedural, a body-horror, an investigation into what gives us our humanity, and a psychological thriller, set in a half-realist/half-fantastical milieu which sees a woman who can smell guilt and commune with animals working as a customs agent at a small Swedish port. Because, obviously! However, no matter how fanciful the plot becomes, it remains grounded in an emotional realism which serves to normalise the outrageous events we're witnessing.

    Also a socio-political allegory and a mythological fable, Gräns is indefinable, switching fluidly from one genre to the next and one idea to the next, taking in such issues as the Other, the tribe, social ostracisation, social assimilation, and our tendency to rush to superficial judgements of that which we don't understand or which is different. There are, of course, a few problems; a subplot that feels disconnected from the main narrative, a ridiculous coincidence (the likes of which only ever happens in films), a twist you can see a mile away, and a pronounced moral ambiguity which is extremely difficult to parse. Nevertheless, this is unique filmmaking, which raises all manner of questions about how we act towards others, a crucial theme in a political arena which has seen unprecedented growth in casual racism and xenophobic hatred.

    The film tells the story of Tina (a superb Eva Melander, acting under heavy prosthetics), a customs officer with the ability to smell guilt, which makes her exceptionally good at her job. Suffering from deformities that give her a somewhat Neanderthal-like appearance, she lives an isolated life with her boyfriend Roland (Jörgen Thorsson), who is more interested in his pet Rottweilers that he is her. Unable to have sex because it hurts her too much, she and Roland sleep in separate beds. As the film begins, Tina intercepts a man carrying child pornography, and is subsequently invited to join the police task force investigating the child porn ring. Meanwhile, she is shocked to encounter Vore (an extraordinarily physical performance by Eero Milonoff), who has the same deformities as herself. Although she smells something on him, she isn't sure what it is, and she lets him through customs. A few days later, he passes through again, this time volunteering to be searched. Her colleague conducts the body search, but quickly discovers that Vore has a vagina. When he tells Tina that Vore also has a large scar on his back, at the base of his spine, she is shocked, as she too has such a scar. Intrigued by Vore, Tina meets up with him and offers to let him stay in her guest house, much to Roland's chagrin, where she and Vore begin to grow closer.

    Given the fantastical elements of the plot, one of the most interesting things about Gräns is how grounded in realism the aesthetic is. One of the strongest elements of the film is how emotionally engaging and relatable Tina's arc is; the events are fantastical in places, but the emotions are very much grounded in the every day - loneliness, shyness, fear, love, disgust etc. The magic realist aesthetic allows the more unusual elements to exist without seeming (too) ridiculous, whilst also establishing that the world of the film is essentially the real world, just with some garnish added.

    Abbasi does set up a contrast, however, between the scenes in the forest which surrounds Tina's home and the rest of the locations. The forest is presented as a somewhat magical place from the start - it is where Tina is most comfortable (an early scene in which she chills with a gigantic moose is both illustrative of her psychology and extremely beautiful), where she goes when life starts to overwhelm her, often taking her shoes off so as to feel better connected to the natural world. Later, the forest is where Tina and Vore spend a lot of their time, where they give in to their attraction to one another (in what is easily the most bizarre sex scene outside a Lizzy Borden film you're likely to see all year), and where they explore their history. Whilst everything else is filmed with a cold palette dominated by grey and washed out light blues and greens, with relatively unattractive locations, the forest is presented very differently - the colours are richer and deeper; the design elements more imaginative; the camera work more fluid; even the sound design is different, heightening the crunch of feet on the forest floor, the scurrying of insects, the wind blowing through the trees, the crash of water at a small waterfall, suggesting the whole place is vibrant and alive, in stark contrast to the cold concrete and steel world seen elsewhere.

    Thematically, Gräns functions as both a straightforward narrative about loneliness and morality and as a political allegory about the Other, belonging, tribalism, hatred based on difference. The opening scene establishes Tina as the emotional lynchpin of the story, showing both her kindness and her attraction to the animal world, as she gently handles a bug, before carefully placing it back into the grass. This theme continues throughout the film - there's the aforementioned scene with the moose, a scene with a fox at Tina's window in the middle of the night, a scene in which she is rushing her neighbour to hospital to give birth and stops to let a family of deer cross the road. These scenes are shot by cinematographer Nadim Carlsen with a sense of wonder, and an almost ethereal quality. It's as far removed from the mundanity of the customs desk or the brutality of the child porn ring as you can imagine. This is also reflected in the sex scene, which Abbasi and Carlsen shoot in such a way as to imply that Tina and Vore attain an emotional and spiritual transcendence far removed from the commonplaceness of an orgasm.

    For all her closeness to animals, however, Tina is just as distant from humans, and she's desperately lonely, in a society that shuns based on appearance. Indeed, one of the most salient themes in the film is the question of how we treat the Other, people who don't fit into our definition of normal, or whom we don't understand. Vore himself is introduced as something of a rebel against social norms; whereas Tina is ashamed of and tries to hide her differences from everyone else, he is proud of and leans into his - seen most clearly at a buffet, where he takes all the smoked salmon, and then hungrily eats it with little concern for social etiquette (or buffet etiquette).

    The film also touches on issues such as what gives us our humanity, suggesting that in a world populated by humans lacking in humanity, maybe Tina and Vore are the most human characters, or certainly the most humane. Tied to this is the notion of finding one's tribe, and what kind of sacrifices and subversions of one's moral code, if any, are acceptable in that search. However, the film does end in an extremely morally ambiguous manner. I'm not sure if it had a happy ending or not, and although I got most of the symbolism and the allegories and the socio-political critiques, I've rarely come out of a movie with such a pronounced case of "what was the director trying to say with that?"

    Elsewhere, the whole child porn subplot is troubling from a narrative point of view. For starters, it's not very convincing in its concrete details (for example, Tina is allowed sit in on a suspect interrogation). Additionally, for the most part, the subplot serves to do little but detract from the main plot. I get that it's there to show us Tina's abilities and her moral code, but too much time is given to it without it being made to seem in any way urgent or important. And when it is finally integrated into the main narrative, it happens with a plot twist so telegraphed, if you don't see it coming, you've never seen a movie before. Also, when we learn how the two plots connect, and when we backtrack to the start of the film, we find that the entire house of cards relied on a monumental coincidence which cheapens both plot strands.

    These missteps aside, Gräns posits a message about how being different isn't that bad when you still have your morals and self-respect. It also suggests to those of us that consider ourselves normal, that we shouldn't be so quick to judge the Other, whether that Other is physically different, of a different ethnicity, a different religion etc. Exposing the layers upon which our society is built, the film is unafraid to suggest that hypocrisy and exclusion are major facets of Western civilisation, an important topic at a time when there are increasing calls for closed borders, increasingly irrational fear of the Other, and increasingly jingoist and xenophobic hatred of anything not perfectly in line with established societal norms. The plot does go off the rails in the third act, and the morality of the dénouement is a little questionable, but this is still a fine piece of work with a lot on its mind.
    9kosmasp

    Different beauty

    Now some things may not look "pretty", but it's always in the eye of the beholder. We are used to a certain look, to a certain beauty standard. The makeup is amazing in this, again if you don't mind this going against what you might find enticing and beautiful to look at.

    Now I really wanted to stress this, because we are used to glamour and all that. But it's not just those things the movie goes up against. It's also tough to put a mark on this. It is kind of a love story, but it's also more of a drama and then there is also a thriller in there. So you get quite a few things, not to mention the fairy tale aspect of it (or at least fantasy portion). It really won't be something for a lot of people, for a lot of reasons. But if you are ok with odd, if you are ok, with not conventional storytelling, with weird characters, with outsiders overcoming things and reputation, then this will entertain you, but not in the sense a Hollywood movie would.

    It's hard to describe, but there is beauty within

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      To transform into Tina, Eva Melander gained weight and spent four hours in the makeup chair. She would invariably start her makeup process at 2 am every day.
    • Gaffes
      In the end credits, "Stockholms Hamnar" (Stockholm Harbors) is misspelled as "Stockholms Hamner".
    • Citations

      [last lines]

      Tina: I don't see the point of evil.

      Vore: So you want to be human?

      Tina: I don't want to hurt anyone. Is it human to think that way?

    • Connexions
      Featured in Conan: Aubrey Plaza/Jenny Zigrino (2019)
    • Bandes originales
      På väg
      Performed by Turid

      Music by Shel Silverstein

      Lyrics by Jan Hammarlund

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Border?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 9 janvier 2019 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Suède
      • Danemark
    • Sites officiels
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Langues
      • Suédois
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Criaturas fronterizas - Border
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Kapellskär, Norrtälje, Suède(ship terminal)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Meta Film Stockholm
      • Black Spark Film & TV
      • Kärnfilm
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 771 930 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 73 700 $US
      • 28 oct. 2018
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 2 177 678 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 50min(110 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.39 : 1

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