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Tales from the Gimli Hospital

  • 1988
  • 1h 12m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Tales from the Gimli Hospital (1988)
Watch Tales from the Gimli Hospital Redux - official trailer
Play trailer1:11
1 Video
59 Photos
Dark ComedyComedyDramaFantasyHorrorThriller

While their mother is dying in the modern Gimli, Manitoba hospital, two young children are told a tale by their Icelandic grandmother about Einar the Lonely, his friend Gunnar, and the angel... Read allWhile their mother is dying in the modern Gimli, Manitoba hospital, two young children are told a tale by their Icelandic grandmother about Einar the Lonely, his friend Gunnar, and the angelic Snjofridur in a Gimli of old.While their mother is dying in the modern Gimli, Manitoba hospital, two young children are told a tale by their Icelandic grandmother about Einar the Lonely, his friend Gunnar, and the angelic Snjofridur in a Gimli of old.

  • Director
    • Guy Maddin
  • Writer
    • Guy Maddin
  • Stars
    • Kyle McCulloch
    • Michael Gottli
    • Angela Heck
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Guy Maddin
    • Writer
      • Guy Maddin
    • Stars
      • Kyle McCulloch
      • Michael Gottli
      • Angela Heck
    • 15User reviews
    • 30Critic reviews
    • 71Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Tales from the Gimli Hospital Redux - official trailer
    Trailer 1:11
    Tales from the Gimli Hospital Redux - official trailer

    Photos58

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    Top cast69

    Edit
    Kyle McCulloch
    • Einar the Lonely…
    Michael Gottli
    • Gunnar
    Angela Heck
    • Snjófridur
    Margaret Anne MacLeod
    • Amma
    Heather Neale
    • Granddaughter
    David Neale
    • Grandson
    Don Hewak
    • John Ramsay
    Ron Eyolfson
    • Pastor Osbaldison
    • (as Ronald Eyolfson)
    • …
    Chris Johnson
    • Lord Dufferin
    Donna Szöke
    • Fish Princess
    Tiffany Taylor
    • Gunnar's Strolling Companion…
    Linda Schinkel
    • Dying Mother
    Jeff Solylo
    • Angry Husband
    Randy Kray
    • Angel
    George Toles
    • Angel With Mustache
    Carmen Snidal
    • Sigvalda Sigurdsdottír
    Brent Neale
    Brent Neale
    • Valdimar…
    Greg Klymkiw
    • Gravedigger I
    • Director
      • Guy Maddin
    • Writer
      • Guy Maddin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.61.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8jonr-3

    Unexpected pleasure

    The comments made above by "Spearin" express my own reaction to this film.

    I rented it on DVD because it sounded intriguing, but fully expected to yank the disc before it fairly got underway. To my pleased surprise, I was caught up in the story and captivated by the photography from the first seconds, and thoroughly enjoyed the experience--so much so, in fact, that I immediately replayed the movie with the director's often droll narration superimposed.

    Also on the DVD I rented was a short film by the same author, "The Dead Father," which is well worth watching. It, perhaps even more than "Tales from the Gimli Hospital," evokes early French surrealist film, but not in a slavish way.

    Both films gave me food for thought--about film and about human relationships. I guess this "nourishment" aspect of film-viewing is my basic criterion for judgment. On that basis, I voted an "eight" for "Tales from the Gimli Hospital."

    By the way, I was very interested to learn (from the director's commentary) some of the actual history of Gimli and its settlers. These were tough, courageous people.
    6Jonny_Numb

    a "6," just for the images

    Guy Maddin's "Tales from Gimli Hospital" is a surreal locomotive of a film that never for a second pretends to make a lick of sense. Characters and events lack logic and motivation, leaving the proceedings within an oddball world of duck feathers, Indian burials, and mute men (some in blackface). The result is intriguing yet pretentious and too deliberately ambiguous (while "Eraserhead" made less narrative sense, its 'clues' were more meticulously assembled), but shows promise from writer-director Guy Maddin, who successfully invokes the classic styles of German Expressionism and even "Hour of the Wolf"-era Ingmar Bergman.
    8Boba_Fett1138

    A great, strange, unique little film.

    As strange and surreal as this movie is, I just love it. Shockingly enough I seem to be quite fond of this strange, art-house type of movies.

    It's a very surreal movie, that is shot in 1920's/1930's style. It means that the entire movie is black & white and even old fashioned looking, with all of its sets, costumes and make-up effects but also its style of acting and the way some scene's are being set up and executed. It's also a throwback to old European surreal and more stylish type of movies, from the '50's and '60's. Movies that were not just style over substance but also ones that had a good effective story in it, no matter how well it got hidden all underneath its surreal images and strange moments.

    And yes, this movie as well has a very strange but fascinating story, set at a strange hospital, about patients with a strange disease, in a strange time, in a strange far off place. It's apparently set in Gimli, Canada, which is also know as the capital of New Iceland, despite it being a very small town. It also explains some of the strange Scandinavian names and accents the characters have.

    If you just happen to stumble upon this movie somewhere and decide to watch it, without knowing anything about it, you would not believe that this movie got actually released in 1988. It's that good looking in its very old fashioned way. It's amazing the amount of detail they spend on this movie and director and writer Guy Maddin truly managed to capture an unique, old fashioned, grainy type of atmosphere. But it's also thanks to the casting of some old fashioned type of looking persons, that makes the movie and its story work out convincing as an old one.

    Clearly, it's a movie that will not appeal to every person and some mind find it just a bit too strange and not fascinating enough. This movie is really a matter of taste, more than anything else but if you're fond of some surreal type of films (like David Lynch movies), European type of old films (lets say Ingmar Bergman type of movies), or some of the movies from the 1920's and 1930's, this movie is really worth a watch and changes are you might end up really liking it.

    8/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    bob the moo

    The narrative is a bit of a problem but like most Maddin films, there is plenty to carry the load

    In the modern town of Gimli, two young children watch their mother dying in hospital. To distract them they are told a story of old Gimli by their grandmother. In the story it is Gimli years ago when live was disrupted by an outbreak of smallpox. With poor medical facilities available to him, Einar finds himself in a nightmarish half-waking state of "care" with other sufferers, including his friend Gunnar, who are somewhere between life and death. The two friends grow close but shared secrets threaten to tear them apart as the world around them changes quickly.

    As someone who actually likes Guy Maddin I still have to be honest and say that, while my favourite films of his have narratives I like, usually his work is not where you want to come for stories that grip you and make a lot of sense. And so it is with his first feature film, a story that is being told to two children who, for some reason, are in the room where their mother is dying; it sounds strange and indeed it is. The narrative is interesting enough but if that's all there was here of value then you'd have given up quite quickly; happily there is enough of interest going on to engage the audience despite the narrative being rather incoherent at times. This is not to say that it will appeal to all viewers because of course it will not, but for those that "get" his other films, the story will not be a problem.

    The reason for this is that his unique style is fully on display here (albeit with a lower budget) and this makes it interesting if not totally engrossing. At times the style overwhelmed the lesser substance to such an extent that it did feel rather hollow but this was a rare feeling for me. Normally I have that problem with his shorts but, with a low running time, it usually doesn't matter so much. With his features it can be a problem but he mastered it with the wonderful Cowards Bend At The Knee and he does enough to cover it here. It did feel a bit sparse at times although that is probably more to do with me being used to his bigger budget films (bigger being a comparative term) rather than the film being weak visually. The cast don't really give much in the way of performances so much as be carried along with the direction but this isn't that much of a problem since the film was never about them.

    Overall this film is an acquired taste that will not appeal to those who dislike other Maddin films. Compared to his later films, this feels a lot less flashy and sparse but it still works and will please fans of Maddin. Narrative-wise it has some problems that viewers may find difficult to get past but the many strange and imaginative touches to the overall delivery of the film more than cover for these issues and, while not an equal to some of his recent work, this is still worth a watch.
    Spearin

    Unpredictable and evocative

    Here's a movie that took its miniscule budget and really made the most of it.

    How? Well, take a look at the looping synchronization. It can't be done well without being expensive, so they do very little of it, and get around the problem by shooting characters from obtuse angles that hide the problem. Color's expensive too, so it's in black and white. And music? You can hear the needle drop on the record.

    But the money they spent went in the right areas. The visuals are so strong and the camera placement sometimes so unexpected that you find yourself wondering what it is you're looking at--and then something moves, and the tableau breaks apart into a conventional scene. The opening sequence, a long sfx pan down to the Gimli hospital, going through clouds and angels, evokes the 1940s so well that you halfway expect to see William Bendix in one of the beds. The costuming is strange and the plot seems totally unworkable, and yet it pulls you in and keeps you there, never seems to make a horrible misstep, and at times hits exactly what it's aiming for.

    Sure it's an amateur film. But look at the nice smooth camera work, the well-paced editing, the good choices in music for mood. While it's all too easy to cite Cocteau, Blood of a Poet comes to mind often while watching Tales from the Gimli Hospital, thanks to the surprising interruption of the narrative by little bits of surreal magic. You don't walk away from this one saying that it could have been done better--instead, you wonder how it was done so well for so little.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Guy Maddin the plot of Tales from the Gimli Hospital (1988) was inspired by "The Eternal Husband," by Fyodor Dostoevsky, and Maddin's own experience of cuckolding a friend.
    • Quotes

      Amma: It all happened in a Gimli we no longer know.

    • Connections
      Featured in Guy Maddin: En attendant le crépuscule (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      The Vikings
      (uncredited)

      from Les Vikings (1958)

      Music by Mario Nascimbene

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    FAQ14

    • How long is Tales from the Gimli Hospital?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 12, 1997 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Languages
      • Icelandic
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Geschichten aus dem Gimli Hospital
    • Filming locations
      • Gimli, Manitoba, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Extra Large Productions
      • The Canada Manitoba Cultural Industries Development Office (CIDO)
      • Winnipeg Film Group
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $25,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 12 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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