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IMDbPro

Pour l'éternité

Original title: Om det oändliga
  • 2019
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
8.4K
YOUR RATING
Tatiana Delaunay and Anders Hellström in Pour l'éternité (2019)
ABOUT ENDLESSNESS is a reflection on human life in all its beauty and cruelty, its splendor and banality. We wander, dreamlike, gently guided by our Scheherazade-esque narrator. Inconsequential moments take on the same significance as historical events: a couple floats over a war-torn Cologne; on the way to a birthday party, a father stops to tie his daughters shoelaces in the pouring rain; teenage girls dance outside a cafe; a defeated army marches to a prisoner-of-war camp. Simultaneously an ode and a lament, ABOUT ENDLESSNESS presents a kaleidoscope of all that is eternally human, an infinite story of the vulnerability of existence.
Play trailer1:28
5 Videos
39 Photos
ComedyDramaFantasy

Roy Andersson adds to his cinematic oeuvre with a reflection on human life in all its beauty and cruelty, its splendour and banality.Roy Andersson adds to his cinematic oeuvre with a reflection on human life in all its beauty and cruelty, its splendour and banality.Roy Andersson adds to his cinematic oeuvre with a reflection on human life in all its beauty and cruelty, its splendour and banality.

  • Director
    • Roy Andersson
  • Writer
    • Roy Andersson
  • Stars
    • Jessica Louthander
    • Tatiana Delaunay
    • Anders Hellström
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    8.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Roy Andersson
    • Writer
      • Roy Andersson
    • Stars
      • Jessica Louthander
      • Tatiana Delaunay
      • Anders Hellström
    • 38User reviews
    • 116Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 13 nominations total

    Videos5

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:28
    Official Trailer
    About Endlessness
    Trailer 1:37
    About Endlessness
    About Endlessness
    Trailer 1:37
    About Endlessness
    Official U.S. Trailer
    Trailer 1:30
    Official U.S. Trailer
    About Endlessness: Stairway
    Clip 1:25
    About Endlessness: Stairway
    About Endlessness: Wine Pouring
    Clip 1:25
    About Endlessness: Wine Pouring

    Photos38

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    Top cast64

    Edit
    Jessica Louthander
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    Tatiana Delaunay
    • Flying Woman
    Anders Hellström
    • Flying Man
    Bertil J. Nyberg
    • Mannen på parkbanken
    Inger Hernmyr
    Jan-Eje Ferling
    • Man in the Stairs
    Conny Block
    • Sverker Ohlsson
    Florencio Urbano
    • Restaurant Guest
    Jan Steen
    • Waiter
    Kristina Ekmark
    Lars Sandström
    • The Man in The Song
    Martin Serner
    • The Priest
    Nina Törmark
    Ville Elfving
    Olivia Hatamian Sjölund
    • Young Woman
    • (as Olivia H. Sjölund)
    Bengt Bergius
    • Psychiatrist
    Erik Igelström
    • Street Musician
    Anne Lindblom
    • Grandmother
    • Director
      • Roy Andersson
    • Writer
      • Roy Andersson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews38

    6.88.4K
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    Featured reviews

    9TakeTwoReviews

    Potato or tomato...

    This is really why I signed up to MUBI. Andersson's work isn't for everyone. A bit too avant garde, surreal, down right weird and okay fine it's all that, but indulge his work and you'll be rewarded. His latest About Endlessness follows his signature style of slightly hyper real looking shots, held with a locked frame for long periods of time, whilst sparse movement and dialogue sits within. These frames are made to be poured over, for meaning or simple appreciation. This is just the canvas though. Andersson's strength is what he paints on top. It's the patience in each scene, not hindered by the need to cut and trim with multiple cameras. Everything's allowed to breathe. So we get a varied cast going about their mundane lives. Sometimes with some dialogue, often in complete silence other than the sounds around them, usually with a simple narration. It's a wild trip to be honest from the waiter pouring red wine all over the pristine white table cloth, to the old man dragging a crucifix up a narrow hillside street as he's whipped. He's dreaming thankfully, but all the scenes have that quality to them. The priest who's lost faith, the boys yet to find love, the grieving parents, the woman with a broken shoe, they could all seem incidental. But then there's the floating couple above a war ravaged city where only a cathedral remains standing. On the whole it feels a little more accessible than Andersson's other films, but packs no less a punch. Some scenes will make you smile or laugh, others study in a confused awe. One or two will stop you in your tracks, for reasons of horror, sympathy or joyful retribution. You find yourself wondering which scene is your favourite, but it's impossible to choose. The shots with lots of people seem masterful in a way over the more minimal set ups, but there's always a control present that marvels. What does it all mean you might ask. Well that's the fun isn't it, whether trying to decide, interpret or simply immerse yourself in it. I'll shamelessly say I tend to favour the latter. These scenes are like paintings with a gorgeous even light and pale faced characters, but I'd say it's simply about people, moments, the things that make us human, that make us the same and distinguish us from others, all wrapped up in the fragility of our existence. Time is irrelevant. Maybe I'm wrong, who knows. What I do know, is that this is brilliant, a wonderful addition to Andersson's stunning body of work and I think we'd all rather be a tomato.
    6ferguson-6

    keeps us hovering just above depression

    Greetings again from the darkness. A quarter-century once elapsed between feature films for Swedish filmmaker Roy Andersson. He only directed a handful of short films between "GILLIAP" (1975) and SONGS FROM THE SECOND FLOOR (2000). Mr. Andersson makes Terrence Malick look prolific. He's certainly not a traditional filmmaker and this latest is not a typical movie. In fact, its highest and best use may be in a graduate Psychology or Philosophy class, so that the mental capacity of students can be stretched and tested to determine whether Andersson is celebrating life or bemoaning our existence.

    The narrator begins most segments with something along the lines of: "I saw a man ...", "I saw a woman ...", "I saw parents ...", and "I saw a couple floating ...". These lead us into static one shot vignettes with little or no dialogue. For example, in the first segment, a woman on a park bench concludes with, "It's September already." There is a priest who makes a recurring appearance as one who has lost his faith. In another, parents have lost a son. The emphasis is on the artistic impression and one's own interpretation.

    Over the opening, and again later in the film, we see a couple floating over the ruins of Cologne. It's Andersson's take on Chagall's 1918 painting, "Over the Town". Another segment is a recreation of Hitler's bunker in Kukryniksy's 1946 painting, "The End". These are simple, stark, low-key snapshots in time. The color palette seems to be off-gray, and the sun never shines in this world - there's no tanned skin in the bunch. Andersson offers just enough moments of hope/happiness to prevent this from being 80 minutes of full-on depression. We always think he's trying to tell us something, but can't always decipher what the intended message is. Like the best art, it's up to your interpretation, and surely dependent on individual perspective.

    Release delayed due to COVID-19.
    6thedarkhorizon

    Liked his other films more: not a fan of voice-over narrators and in general felt less structured throughout the story.

    Yes. We know Anderson and his style by heart. Yes, we love him with all our heart!

    But... I was a bit de-mystified by the fact that in this (potentially very meta-physical) story-composition there was MANY TIMES a voice over telling us what we just saw on our own. Chances are I truly missed the point of this, but after few minutes I felt truly annoyed by it... "yes I see myself a man with a problem that is xy" I thought many times. Was this the point?

    Overall, apart from the seemingly unnecessary narrator, some of the scenes were "too light" for my taste, but I guess taste is just taste. Young people, dancing in sunlight; young people staring at each other. More profanity without the dark, underlying melancholy. Most of his other scenes in older movies feature also way more "mystical" (unexplained/riddled) situations, might they be more absurd, more surreal, more melancholic, more dramatic. Many scenes in this film felt quite "un-dramatic"... but again, maybe this was his point, finally giving us more light, more normal situations, more insight into happiness?

    Apart from this point ( that I maybe didn't get): loved the absurdity, some of the actors, most of the sets (splendid as ALWAYS), the groteque, the paintinglike style, the "Andersonesque" techniques to tell a story.

    Maybe one of you "unlocked" the solution to this film's mystery?
    9nikxatz

    Comedy and existensialism have never been a greater couple

    This movie is a thrill, trust me. I really wanted to watch this one because i loved its look and how unique and gloomy it is. The storyline seemed also really promising, something about human connection and our desire to understand life and explain its power and darkness and infinite but absurd beauty always gets. It is what makes "Synedoche, New York" or "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" so great. They are sad, but lead to a greater realisation about humanity or left things and questions to digest. I personally expected something of the same feel, but what I got was... a comedy? Now, now wait a minute.

    This film is one of the most funny films of the year and what is so striking is that it magages to poke fun at people and situations but at the same time it is so consistent in its sad tone and it feels so clear and to the point. Its flow is unbeatable. Yes, its basically a series of short stories, two of which are exlored more. Some moments are everyday simple moments that we give zero attention, but they are presented i nsuch a poignant way that we see how we sometime miss the overall beauty of simplicity and nothingness, bercause we have the idea that the big moments matter and are of great importance and we are often so blinded by our sadness and everyday issues that we don't allow ourselves to take a step back, look afar and see that everytihng hides a beauty, from a historical moment ,like war images, to a walk to school.

    Personally, I feel like I've missed so many good moments becauseI was stuck in small problems and rubbish and I forget that a conversation or a kind gesture might be what we need to feel so that we can deal with our sad and torubled lives. Maybe looking from afar at anything and stopping to try to deal with every single thing we feel or suffer from, can lead to a small taste of salvation.

    The film talks about faith, religion, bureaucracy,politics, existence, identity, the desire to feel and love and experience and find importance in true beauty and search for a way to feel complete, but its tone is sad and funny and I really loved her voice as the narrator.

    The sad blues, the stylish browns, the dark reds and finally the hopeful yellows create a brand new world so distinct but so familiar to ours. The consistency in the framing and presentation, the delicate and socially and politically active script with tons of funny and satirical dialogue and coscepts and the truly entertaining storytelling, lead the viewer to a significant, enlightening and kind of cathartic and profound experience about the human struggle and joy.I don't want to analyse or dig any short story up. Just definatley watch this one and experience it.

    It's like the most fullfilling and beautiful poem cmae to life to tell its story in the most interesting and hillarious of ways.
    7TheVictoriousV

    "Isn't it fantastic?" "What is?" "Everything."

    Of all the great Swedish filmmakers, none is quite as easily identifiable as legend Roy Andersson. He is known for his quirky yet miserable films where each scene -- or rather, vignette -- is done in a static, uninterrupted wide shot (barring a few highly deliberate exceptions) and showcases pale everyday Swedes with the weights of modern life constantly on their shoulders, but also ultimately basking in its beauty.

    This is what made his Living trilogy iconic; About Endlessness (Om det oändliga) shakes things up a bit by having a clear leading lady, yet is still very much an Andersson movie. Like all his films, it seems so hopeless on the surface, yet we cannot escape the feeling that Andersson genuinely hopes that things will get better (suffering is simply part of the wonder). Another oxymoron is the deliberate "fakeness" of the visuals (the movie willfully looks like a stage play at points) versus how "real" the movie's being. As usual, the scenes range from simple to large and intricate - with entire lives going on in the background, usually indifferent to the main subject. The colors are as pale and sickly as the characters.

    Now, I've been a huge fan of Andersson since I started the Living trilogy with A Pigeon Sat on a Branch last year (I'd say he's up there with the Bergmans and Östlunds of our sausage-shaped country). I then moved on to Songs from the Second Floor and eventually finished the journey with You the Living not too long ago. I adored all three and maybe it helped that I let each film sit with me for a while. I was ready to put About Endlessness on my 2019 list.

    But since I checked on Andersson's catalog rather recently, and had seen his unmistakable style done in two more pictures before then, I'm sad to say a lot of what I saw in About Endlessness felt a little been-done. I've seen these maudlin Swedes in these hilariously sad situations before. I still enjoyed the cringe comedy, visuals, music, and the delightfully old-school Swedishness of it all, but it is no longer as extraordinary.

    What sets this one apart from the Living trilogy, however, is the presence of a narrator who identifies reoccurring themes in all the vignettes, such as loneliness, love (or lack thereof), and faith. I have read that she is supposed to be an angel, and she seems to be experiencing a series of moments, similarly to how Dr. Manhattan perceives his own memories; we see past and present events in non-chronological order.

    Strangely, this does not necessarily tie all the sketches together in an especially neat way. The movie may have felt more fully-realized if the different characters we meet ran into each other in sketches focusing on someone else. You the Living used this "hyperlink" method of tying together vignettes but my favorite instance of Andersson doing this must be the final shot of Songs from the Second Floor, which haunts me to this day. One might suspect that the vignettes we see here are scenes that Andersson deleted from his previous films since they didn't fit together with the rest anyways, but Andersson is hardly so thoughtless.

    I will say this, though: this was an inordinately pleasant screening. The local multiplex didn't play it, of course (factory-made stuff like Charlie's Angels and The Lion King is clearly more important than art), so I had to go to the arthouse cinema/cultural center, where you can have a burger and alcohol before the film and whatnot; my first time going there since the Die Hard anniversary screening one year ago (I'll be there with someone special for their celebration of Akira next week, as well). I was the only attendee under 60.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In a scene's setup with Hitler's appearance Roy Andersson copied the painting titled "The End" depicting Hitler during his final days in his bunker in Berlin by Kukryniksy.
    • Goofs
      From 45:26 and over the next 20 sec. the dead woman blinks her eyes at least four times.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 723: Parasite + TIFF 2019 (2019)
    • Soundtracks
      All of Me
      Written by Gerald Marks and Seymour Simons

      Performed by Billie Holiday

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    FAQ14

    • How long is About Endlessness?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 4, 2021 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Sweden
      • Germany
      • Norway
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Language
      • Swedish
    • Also known as
      • About Endlessness
    • Filming locations
      • Stockholm, Sweden
    • Production companies
      • Roy Andersson Filmproduktion
      • 4 1/2 Film
      • Arte France Cinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €4,558,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $51,386
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $8,809
      • May 2, 2021
    • Gross worldwide
      • $434,977
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 18m(78 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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