Screened as part of NZIFF 2014

Force Majeure 2014

Turist

Directed by Ruben Östlund

Swedish director Ruben Östlund’s Cannes sensation combines black comedy, social satire and probing psycho-drama as a model family comes apart on a skiing holiday in the French Alps.

Sweden In English and Swedish with English subtitles
118 minutes CinemaScope / DCP

Director, Screenplay

Producers

Erik Hemmendorff
,
Marie Kjellson
,
Philippe Bober

Photography

Fredrik Wenzel

Editors

Ruben Östlund
,
Jacob Secher Schulsinger

Production designer

Josefin Åsberg

Costume designer

Pia Aleborg

Sound

Kjetil Mørk
,
Rune Van Deurs
,
Jesper Miller

Music

Ola Fløttum

With

Johannes Bah Kuhnke (Tomas)
,
Lisa Loven Kongsli (Ebba)
,
Clara Wettergren (Vera)
,
Vincent Wettergren (Harry)
,
Kristofer Hivju (Mats)
,
Fanni Metelius (Fanni)

Festivals

Cannes (Un Certain Regard) 2014

Award

Un Certain Regard Jury Prize, Cannes Film Festival 2014

Elsewhere

Cannes observers were stunned that this provocative and improbably entertaining new film by Swedish director Ruben Östlund wasn’t selected for competition. A sardonic connoisseur of social disintegration, Östlund blends psycho-drama and explosive black humour to potent effect. 

Östlund, who may have never composed a banal image in his life, began his career as a director of skiing films. He returns to the slopes (Les Arcs, in France) for this drama of a model Scandinavian family taking a break in an upmarket ski resort. While they pose for their perfect holiday portraits, we are aware of the looming icy vastness of the landscape that they don’t exactly see. Ironically, the disaster we anticipate comes in the form of a ‘controlled avalanche’ that causes no physical damage at all. But when the perfect husband bolts – not forgetting his phone – and leaves his wife to rescue the kids, there’s bound to be some questions asked. 

Other holiday-makers ask questions too or get drawn into the marital fallout, complicating all attempts to come up with a version of events to match those beaming holiday snaps. Obliging any of us to wonder whom we might rescue first in the same scenario – or who might first tend to us – Östlund negotiates deeply uncomfortable territory with his sense of humour dangerously intact. 

“Ruben Östlund’s fourth feature took the Jury prize in the Un Certain Regard section at Cannes, but also, more importantly, took the coveted honor of being The Film We’d Heard Nothing About Prior That Gained So Much Buzz While There We Had To See It.” — Jessica Kiang, The Playlist