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THE
KINGDOM I AND II
DVD region 2. Second Sight.
Lars
Von Trier made The Kingdom between 1994 and 1997,
and while some may be familiar with the movie edits taken from
the two series, the full-length story has been a little more elusive.
So this four-disc collection is welcome indeed, especially as
the show has lost none of its impact over the years.
Set in Denmark’s biggest hospital, the show is a Twin
Peaks-style mix of soap opera and weirdness, the latter
element steadily increasing as the story progresses. The hospital,
we are informed, was built on the site of ‘bleaching ponds’
and is now slowly crumbling, both physically and morally, as ghosts
start to haunt the building.
Each of the lead characters has his or her own story – Stig
Helmer (Ernst-Hugo Järegård) is a Swedish surgeon how
finds himself in a country he hates (the digs at the relationship
between Sweden and Denmark are clearly a local joke, though most
people will recognise parallels with their own national neighbours)
and facing a malpractice lawsuit after a botched operation has
left a child brain-dead – the evidence for which he is desperate
to cover up; Hook (Soren Pilmark) is equally determined to find
the evidence for his own purposes – he runs a black market
medical supply service, as well as dabbling in drug dealing and
blackmail; Sigrid Drusse (Kirsten Rolffes) is an elderly psychic
determined to help the ghosts, forcing her orderly son Bulder
(Jens Okking) to help; Consultant Moesgaard (Holger Juul Hansen)
is having a crisis of confidence, while his medical student son
(Peter Mygind) is regretting stealing a corpse’s head as
a prank; and Bondo (Baard Owe) is trying to grow a record-breaking
tumour inside his own body. Meanwhile, a Greek Chorus of two kitchen
workers with Downs Syndrome pass comment and set up future events,
and Von Trier himself pops up during the closing credits to comment
on what has been happening and remind us to take ‘the good
with the evil’.
The
supernatural elements are introduced slowly, but by the end of
the first series (which closes on a moment of outrage to match
any of Von Trier’s more controversial movies), it’s
getting very strange, and the second series gets much more bizarre,
as Udo Keir turns up as a mutated baby that grows too quickly
for its own body to handle – the result of the mother, Judith
(Birgitte Raaberg) having been impregnated by a ghost (also Keir).
The mutant ‘baby’ is both laughably ridiculous and
rather creepy, and this mix of absurdity and genuine horror permeates
throughout the show. The ghost elements start to give way to Satanism
and the whole story becomes odder and odder, in a rather wonderful
way.
Shot in muted colours (those of you still sexually aroused by
HD will be shocked by the deliberate grain here) and with hand-held
cameras, the show looks unlike anything you’ve seen on TV
before, and with some seriously graphic moments (including gruesome
brain surgery), it’ll be a challenge for many viewers. But
if you are open to it, this is a great show – gripping,
often funny, genuinely scary and always very strange – much
like the Twin Peaks that inspired it, in fact.
Unfortunately, it ends with multiple story threads unfinished
– a third season was planned, but the deaths of a few cast
members during the delay in production effectively scuppered those
plans. As screenplays (or at least story outlines) exist, it might’ve
been nice to have seen them included on the DVD. But if you can
put up with knowing that the story will not be neatly wrapped
up after nine hours of viewing, then this is well worth checking
out, even if you are not normally a Von Trier fan.
The four disc set includes plenty of extras – two documentaries
about Von Trier, a –behind-the scenes (in fact, mostly cast
interviews) from the first series, TV commercials from Von Trier
(including the famous ‘naked man in sauna peeps on naked
women then hides his erection under a newspaper’ one that
has cropped up on British TV shows from time to time) and selected
scene commentaries..
DAVID
FLINT
BUY
IT NOW (UK)
BUY
IT NOW (USA)
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