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Terribly Happy

Like a John Ford Western, it reminds us of how thin is the veneer of law and civilization.

There's a lot to like in Henrik Ruben Genz's Terribly Happy (Frygtelig Lykkelig), a Danish film released in its native country in 2008 but now, finally, making its way to the American market. Like a John Ford Western, it provides reminder of how thin is the veneer of law and civilization upon the most primitive impulses of human nature. That autochthonous -- meaning sprung from the earth -- sort of nature is underlined by Mr. Genz's setting his story in the village of Skarrild in the desolate marshlands of South Jutland on the Danish coast. The image of people, animals, cars, bicycles -- all the trappings of everyday life -- sinking into or emerging out of the bog is constant throughout the film and a metaphor for the symbiotic relationship, moral as well as practical and economic, between the people and their watery land. It is a relationship that owes nothing to the big city of Copenhagen, from which Robert (Jakob Cedergren) is dispatched at the beginning of the picture to be the town's sole policeman.

At first he is treated with suspicion as an outsider. The villagers are outwardly polite and even friendly, but they also make it clear that they don't want him there. When he is befriended by a young woman called Ingerlise (Lene Maria Christensen) who claims that her brute of a husband, Jørgen (Kim Bodnia), beats her, it is hinted that she is really just a self-dramatizer who gives herself the bruises she sports in order to cause trouble for Jørgen. For his part, Jørgen shows Robert the scar where, he says, Ingerlise put a bread knife in him. She won't file a complaint about Jørgen's treatment of her, so there is nothing Robert can do anyway. But she wants him to take her away from the village, back to Copenhagen from where she, too, originates. The tangled and obscure family relationship between Jørgen and Ingerlise can stand for the stifling intimacies with which the whole village has had to learn to deal without outside help.

As the town policeman, Robert is called "Marshal," which only underlines the connection to the Western, Hollywood's former stock in trade where once were found similar themes. Like Ford's great film, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, this is a meditation upon the frontier -- but it is more explicitly the frontier between civilization and savagery. In both films, an outsider comes to town as a representative of law and civilization and doing things "by the book" only to be told by the villagers that "we handle things ourselves here," without any need for intervention by law or government. But in Ford's film, the frontier town is eventually civilized, even though it prefers not to know the dark secret of how this came about. In Mr. Genz's movie, the town's primitive honor culture appears to be more evenly matched with the forces of law and civilization. By the end, Robert too is saying to outsiders that "we handle things ourselves here." The villagers tell him, "You're our man now, Robert."

As part of their way of handling things themselves, the villagers have a rough and ready way of dealing with troublemakers, who are invited at gunpoint to take themselves off to the bog and not return except as a corpse. Then they'll get a nice funeral and a friendly send-off, though the Lutheran parson may mention that the deceased "never quite fit in here." Robert himself at first seems to fit into this category. He arrives from Copenhagen with a secret, which emerges in the course of the film, about two-thirds of the way through, though hints of it are given frequently before its final revelation. We know, for instance, that his posting to God-forsaken Skarrild is a punishment for having done something to embarrass the police when he was on the force in Copenhagen, and that his hope in coming to the town is to redeem himself sufficiently that he is invited to return to the city and civilization.

That he doesn't want to be in Skarrild, or to be part of the peculiar village life there, that he misses his wife and child, who are estranged from him in some way that seems to be connected with his misbehavior and resulting punishment -- all these are pertinent facts, as is the nature of his offense which, when we find it out, creates a curious bond between him and the villagers. The suspense comes from the doubt as to whether Robert will be dragged down, as into a bog, by the moral morass of village life or if he will eventually escape back to civilization. I hope it is not giving away too much if I say that the film could do with a little more of Ford's optimism and belief in progress, a little less of the flirtation with nihilism that is too typical of Danish, as of other European cinema. But if you don't mind the darkness of Mr. Genz's vision -- and if you do you've probably given up going to movies anyway, especially European ones -- you may find this a thoroughly enjoyable way to spend a couple of hours.

About the Author

James Bowman, our movie and culture critic, is a resident scholar at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. He is the author of Honor: A History and Media Madness: The Corruption of Our Political Culture, both published by Encounter Books.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (9) | Leave a comment

L. Ross| 3.25.10 @ 10:39AM

Mr. Bowman,

I understand as a movie critic, you must get tired of remarkably similar plot lines recycled over and over, and CGI effects endlessly standing in for acting or dialogue. But why is it the only movies you consistently like are dreary, inaccessible foreign films like this one. What is the criteria you have for enjoying a movie?

It seems the only films you enjoy play in two theaters nationwide, and are viewed by fewer people than live in the town of Skarrild. Sir, you have very odd taste, and I don't understand why you have been given a platform here to share that odd taste.

Troy| 3.25.10 @ 2:22PM

Hear, hear,

I understand that Hollywood, the bellwether of the left coast churns out anti-conservative screeds by the bushel, but come on. Aside from "Avatar" when was the last time you reviewed a blockbuster, or at least a moderately popular movie. I would rather read a review attacking a liberal piece of entertainment than a review like this. You make it sound dreary and depressing while you praise it: "But if you don't mind the darkness of Mr. Genz's vision ... you may find this a thoroughly enjoyable way to spend a couple of hours."

Alan Brooks| 3.26.10 @ 12:26AM

Don't be hypercritical, just be glad he is James Bowman, and not one of those gullible scribblers who go:
"this film explodes our jingoistic, repressed, silly wittle bitty witty anti-sensual and crypto-Victorian myths that prevent us from selling our wares at High Schools everywhere to dumb punks whose parents are so clueless they DESERVE to have kids who will buy our overpriced effluvia, the uncool, non-Hollywood shits!"

Alan Brooks| 3.26.10 @ 12:12AM

There is no veneer of civilization, because there is no civilization-- we live in a state of controlled barbarisn, which is not the same as civilization.

When we don't have to lock our doors at night, then we will know civilization; a very long time from now--
perhaps in Heaven?

Stuart Koehl| 3.25.10 @ 12:47PM

Oh, you noticed that, did you, L.Ross? Perhaps like Robert the policeman, Mr. Bowman has been exiled to film review until he redeems himself enough to be promoted back to political or social commentator, which is what he wants really wants to be.

There is a fundamental difference between a film like Terribly Happy and John Ford westerns (or any John Ford film, for that matter)--the latter are both morally serious and entertaining, works of art that are not relentlessly didactic, and thus a pleasure to watch, not just once, but over and over again.

There is a reason why Danes, Italians, Spaniards and even Japanese emulate those John Ford westerns, and why nobody--except parodists--emulates French and Scandinavian "art films".

Ken (Old Texican)| 3.25.10 @ 12:49PM

Mr. Bowman
Thank you. Screw Denmark. I just ordered "Liberty valence" again from net-flix, just for fun instead.

Coco lee| 3.27.10 @ 11:45AM

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Skip| 3.27.10 @ 8:03PM

Although I am unlikely to watch this film, I am glad Mr. Bowman did, and that he shared his perspective with us. Liberty Valance is my favorite Ford film, as its sad sweet story of loss; perception and redemption has never stopped echoing in my heart. The savage brutality of life in the West and the civilizing power of courage and love is monumentally understated by Ford. That Mr. Bowman can glean this and then compare it to modern cinema is what makes him my favorite film reviewer. My only hope is that he resurrects the Culture Vulture column so deftly penned in the past by Mark Steyn, and absent from TAS for too many months.
Vlady, Bob; woddaya think?

elliep| 7.25.10 @ 3:24PM

Good etiquette to watch the film before commenting. This is an entertaining and dark movie, not "inaccessible" at all - no apologies required. Because I saw the movie and read this review, I'm going out to rent "Liberty Valance."

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