Thelma **** / *****
Directed by: Joachim Trier.
Written by: Eskil Vogt & Joachim
Trier.
Starring: Eili Harboe (Thelma), Kaya
Wilkins (Anja), Ellen Dorrit Petersen (Unni), Henrik Rafaelsen (Trond), Grethe
EltervÄg (Young Thelma).
If
you can imagine Stephen King’s Carrie directed by Ingmar Bergman, who can get
close to seeing what Joachim Trier is going for with his film Thelma. This is a
horror story, about a teenage girl with psychic powers in the first throes of
love and lust, and who naturally loses control over everything, without really
realizing it. The first scene in the film sets things up so we know this isn’t
going to be a typical story, as a father and daughter (around 6) go plodding
through the snowy forest. The father sites a deer and raises his rifle – his
daughter is transfixed by the deer – and doesn’t realize that her father has
changed his aim, and is now pointing the gun at the back of her head.
Eventually, we will figure out why.
But
most of the action takes place in the present – where Thelma is a college
freshman, away from her parents for the first time. We assume that they are
just a little strict – they get nervous if she doesn’t immediately answer their
phone calls, and know her class schedule better than she does – and even comes
down to stay with her, in her apartment, on a weekend. The whole family is
religious, and while it doesn’t seem to be the fire and brimstone type
Christianity of Carrie, it is quietly strict. Things seem to be going okay with
Thelma – she’s lonely, but smart – until she becomes friends – and then more –
with Anja (Kaya Wilkins). Whatever has been lying dormant in Thelma is suddenly
not dormant anymore.
On
the surface, Thelma is a genre film – a horror film going over some well-worn terrain,
combining the coming-of-age, sexual awakening of a teenage girl, and unleashing
of her power upon those around her. Trier, however, takes this story seriously
(perhaps a touch too seriously – I’ll get to that), making a film that really
does look at this young woman, her faith, her sexuality, her family, her past
and letting it play out as naturally and realistically as it can, given
Thelma’s powers. None of the deaths or action is played for thrills at all. The
film ends up, perhaps, where you expect it to, but it takes a different, more
serious route there.
This
approach mostly works for me – but left a few nagging complaints for me. For
one, I don’t think Trier needs to spend as much as he does showing Thelma
playing detective looking into her family history – savvy audience members will
get there before the film even starts, so move it along. As well, it always
bugs me a little – just a little – when filmmakers making a genre film seem to
think that theirs is “above” the genre, and therefore doesn’t want to offer any
of the baser pleasures of the genre. Carrie is a masterpiece of its kind, has a
lot to say about its subject – but doesn’t hold itself above the genre. Same
with Raw. Thelma wants to cloak some of those genre trappings behind a prestige
sheen.
Still,
that’s a minor complaint – and something that didn’t bother me much when
watching the film. This is an engrossing film, and one that is expertly
directed by Trier – more than making up for his thuddingly dull English
language debut Louder Than Bombs a few years ago. Eili Harboe is terrific in
the lead role as well, delivering a sympathetic performance, even as the film
goes along, and she starts making increasingly questionable choices. She slowly
reels you in, as does the film. I just wish Trier had loosened the reigns just
a little bit – and let the genre loose.
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