For his second directorial feature, Tobias Lindholm
(co-writer of The Hunt) delivers the
kind of indifferent, matter-of-fact realism not experienced since the early
days of Dogme 95. And because it cuts through all the fluff and artifice that
has invaded commercial films without compromising momentum as a situationist
thriller, one must concede that A
Hijacking has upped the ante on Danish rebellion against the Hollywood
system.
The refusal to include actual scenes of the hijacking in a
film specifically titled "A Hijacking" is no accident.
A cargo ship MV Rozen is hijacked by Somali pirates in the
Indian Ocean. Among the eight men crew taken hostage is Mikkel (Pilou Asbæk),
the ship's cook. A translator for the pirates issues demand for $15 million in
exchange for release. But back in Copenhagen, CEO of the shipping company Peter
(Søren Malling) learns that gaining the upper hand demands patience. And so
negotiations play out in silence like a sociopathic Fischer-Spassky game: cold,
calculated, unyielding.
I can't think of any movie in which I have wanted so much to
resist and cease watching, yet fail to do so because it has a quality so raw,
unsympathetic and intuitive. In keeping with Lindholm's debut feature, an unforgiving
prison drama (“R”); A Hijacking is filmed on location, in
chronological sequence and on board a sea freighter that was hijacked in the
Indian ocean. Casting also features a real life hostage negotiator as the central
figure and naturally, Somali pirates.
Arguably, mechanical reproduction of genuine conditions
doesn't guarantee a convincing film but in this case, it does — A Hijacking looks so suitably stained
with normality that one instantly recognizes the absence of gimmicky
aesthetics. Unmanipulated, you resonate with the film's fabric of reality while
searching for something more, and in the process, gain access into
psychological domains that underpin both Peter and Mikkel.
It's not for nothing that Lindholm went through great
lengths to replicate an uncomfortable, pressing scenario because the film
offers reflection on an overlooked form of terrorism. Corporations may be
showing it to employees as a resource on how to respond during such crises, but
A Hijacking’s master stroke — is the
revelation of an impasse between the moral versus the practical. There is no
payoff at the end of this film, it is one the most sophisticated vérités I have
seen, the meta-argument leaves you deliberating, and the film takes off like a
thinker on paradox.
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