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Inheritance, The
This 2003 Danish film is an excellent drama about the price of big business, a dark tale of how one man sacrifices his happiness. Ulrich Thomsen is the decent fellow who doesn't realize what the pressure of responsibility will do to his soul. The production design is modern and stylish; director Per Fly has a keen eye for his filmed-on-video visuals.
According to its director, The Inheritance is the second part of a trilogy about Danish life. The first was about the poor, this one about the working wealthy, and the third will be about the middle class. Shooting every scene with telephoto lenses and digital video gives the film a sleek look, and the loosely improvised scenes play with an engaging, unforced quality.
Leading man Ulrich Thomsen resembles Laurence Olivier, which unavoidably recalls memories of Hamlet. Christoffer is very much a Danish prince who finds himself unequal to the responsibility of rescuing the family company. The stress and tough decisions bring a rage out of him that seemed impossible back in Stockholm, where the toughest problem was deciding on the next day's menu for the restaurant. He knows he hasn't the right temperament for the job when he cannot share his unpleasant decisions with Maria. She could probably adjust to the new life if it weren't for Christoffer's violent attitude changes. As soon as he locks her out, the relationship is doomed.
Lisa Werlinder is compelling as the hopeful actress ruined by Christoffer's decisions. The early scenes show a relationship that borders on paradisical. Her Maria is not a materialist and doesn't need the advantages of Christoffer's wealth, so we don't feel that her decision to leave him is influenced by economic factors. They eventually have a son together, and the breakup of their family is truly painful.
As pointed out by Richard Shickel in the disc's liner notes, the lives of Christopher's wealthy Danish family all revolve around large gates, which are constantly seen closing - at the mill, at the various estates and homes. The informal laughter when dining in Stockholm is contrasted with stiff family dinners that are rigidly enforced (the first Sunday of every month). Christoffer is supposed to be a powerful man but he's a prisoner of his work and his offices and his time is budgeted down to ten-minute bites. As a study of a man broken and warped by his work, The Inheritance is every bit as powerful as Godfather Part II.
(spoiler) In fact, although it is not made explicit in the movie, it would seem that the pressures of work are what drove Christoffer's father to do himself in. As soon as Christoffer returns home, his mother is on his back to fulfill his obligations and do whatever is necessary to keep the business going. She doesn't care who he fires and she's constantly harping at him that Maria is an 'uncooperative' liability who needs to be ditched. Not content with running her husband into his grave, Annelise wants to force Christoffer into the same ill-fitting role.
Annelise's relationship with her son Christoffer becomes even more strange. She's the one who comes to pick up the pieces after he has broken down at the French vacation house and tried to rape the made. Mommy has created a monster, and she knows how to get him back to work.
For once, a flashback structure adds to the enjoyment of a story. We see a dispirited Christoffer stuck in Stockholm after a cancelled business meeting. When he spies Maria in her apartment, we flash back five years to see them the happiest of couples. The question, "What happened?" keeps our interest at a high level.
Home Vision Entertainment's DVD of The Inheritance is presented in a very good enhanced version. The movie was filmed on video and has the characteristic shallow range of contrast along with strong digital 'grain' in some scenes, but the image is always attractive. A 'making-of' docu is a multi-part interview piece mostly with the director and featuring a lot of behind-the-scenes video. Everyone speaks in subtitled Danish; the director's audio commentary is subtitled as well. Richard Shickel's liner essay is enthusiastic on the picture, as is a quote by Kenneth Turan on the attractive disc package. Home Vision's release slate seems evenly divided between controversial Japanese films, American documentaries and intriguing, high-quality European dramas like this one.
On a scale of Excellent, Good, Fair, and Poor, The Inheritance rates:
Movie: Excellent
Video: Very Good
Sound: Excellent
Supplements: Director commentary, 60-min interview behind-the-scenes docu.
Packaging: Keep case
Reviewed: June 12, 2005
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