Screened as part of NZIFF 2016

The Idealist 2015

Idealisten

Directed by Christina Rosendahl

A plane crash, government corruption and nuclear warheads are just some of the ingredients for this taut Danish docu-drama, set in the aftermath of the Cold War. Based on a book by the award-winning journalist Poul Brink.

Denmark In Danish, English, Greenlandic and Spanish with English subtitles
114 minutes DCP

Rent

Producers

Jonas Frederiksen
,
Signe Leick Jensen
,
Ane Mandrup

Screenplay

Lars K. Andersen
,
Simon Pasternak
,
Birgitte Stærmose
,
Christina Rosendahl. Based on the book Thulesagen, løgnens univers by Poul Brink

Photography

Laust Trier Mørk

Editors

Janus Billeskov Jansen
,
Olivier Bugge Coutté
,
Molly Malene Stensgaard

Production designers

Nikolaj Danielsen
,
M. Wan Sputnick

Costume designer

Louize Nissen

Music

Jonas Struck
,
Christoffer Møller

With

Peter Plaugborg (Poul Brink)
,
Søren Malling (Marius Schmidt)
,
Arly Jover (Estíbaliz)
,
Thomas Bo Larsen (Carl Dinesen)
,
Jens Albinus (Blicher)
,
Nikolaj Caderholm (Læge Pontoppidan)
,
Henrik Birch (Ole Damgaard)
,
Filippa Suensson (Eva
,
journalist)
,
Jesper Hyldegaard (Lars Krogsgård)
,
Claus Bue (Per Strandgaard Jensen)

Elsewhere

In the vein of a classic investigative journalism thriller, Christina Rosendahl’s gripping drama The Idealist unravels the deeply compromised relationship between her home nation of Denmark and the United States during the fraught tensions of the Cold War. The titular idealist is Poul Brink, a real-life Danish radio journalist who began working a story on plutonium poisoning in the late 80s, and ended up exposing a 20-year-old international cover-up – in which a military plane crash, missing nuclear weapons, secret documents and sprawling governmental deceit are some of the more alarming elements.

As Brink’s investigation takes him from hospitals and union meetings right into the corridors of power, Rosendahl pulls out all the suspenseful stops of the genre: the thinly veiled threats warning our hero to tread lightly, the mounting pressure on his news network to back off, the ominous black cars that start appearing in his rear-view mirror. But what distinguishes Rosendahl’s entry is her incorporation of real television footage from Danish archives into the narrative. Seeing the actual locations and figures in question works to ground these events in a contextual immediacy, which seems to make the effect of its revelations all the more powerful and sobering.

In an age of galloping globalisation and inscrutable international agreements around security and trade, The Idealist feels like a particularly resonant reminder of the concessions that arise when a little nation aligns itself with the powers of a major one. — JF