Movie Review By Andrea Chase
The Kingdom is a hospital built on a marsh, and occupied by doctors,
patients, and ghostly shadows of the past. "Kingdom part
II" is a Danish television show about life in that metropolitan
hospital. Part soap-opera and part damnation of the human condition,
"Kingdom II" is four episodes from the second series
of that show and don't worry about the narrative structure of
the preceding episodes. You'll pick up the plot as you go along
following the quirky, sometimes fatal, behavior that the denizens
of this film engage in with psychotic abandon.
In nominal charge of this medical miasma is a barely tolerated
Swede, played with loopy determination by Ernst-Hugo Jaregard,
whose shortcomings in mental health should be more help than hindrance.
If only he hadn't dabbled so ineptly in voodoo. His staff members
are devotees of snuff films. Patients insist on allowing their
tumors to grow unmolested. The hospital harbors a semi-secret
society with rituals that include tests of nerve involving citrus
fruits and swords. And then there's the problem with both Satan
worship and crushing paperwork.
Meanwhile, in the basement, a pair of down's syndrome dishwashers
comment on life with unusual prescience. As one observes, "Everything
is decaying, nobody notices."
Lars Von Trier, the man who brought us "Breaking the Waves,"
has fashioned a ominously surreal vision, comic and ghastly at
the same time, where the metaphysical and the profane exist side
by side and not necessarily at odds with each other, whereas science
and superstition are mortal enemies. It's a cross between Chicago
Hope and Twin Peaks. There's even a running joke in which coffee
figures prominently and a detour into the spirit realm. The tone
is low key and dead pan, but the camera work, with its edgy, hand-held
look and quick cutaways, make for a universe in which vertigo
is the norm.
Yet, in this hellhole of a metaphor on life, everything means
something. Even the tiniest action, seemingly innocuous, has consequences
of great import. What's it all mean? We return to the dishwashers
in the basement, the resident philosophers of "The Kingdom."
They sum it up best. Everything not only means something, it's
also silly. And in that silliness, there's a whole passel of evil.
Andrea Chase - Air Date: 5/27/98
