''Border'' ( sv, Gräns) is a 2018 Swedish
fantasy film
Fantasy films are films that belong to the fantasy genre with fantastic themes, usually magic, supernatural events, mythology, folklore, or exotic fantasy worlds. The genre is considered a form of speculative fiction alongside science fiction f ...
directed by
Ali Abbasi with a screenplay by Abbasi,
Isabella Eklöf
Isabella Eklöf (born 10 February 1978) is a Swedish screenwriter and film director.
Eklöf attended the National Film School of Denmark. She served on the crew as a "runner" for the 2008 Swedish film ''Let the Right One In (film), Let the Right ...
and
John Ajvide Lindqvist based on the short story of the same name by Ajvide Lindqvist from his anthology ''
Let the Old Dreams Die
''Let the Old Dreams Die'' is a short story collection by Swedish writer John Ajvide Lindqvist. The bulk of the stories were originally published in Sweden in 2005 under the title ''Pappersväggar'' (''Paper Walls''). Quercus published the first E ...
''. It won the ''
Un Certain Regard'' award at the
2018 Cannes Film Festival
The 71st annual Cannes Film Festival was held from 8 to 19 May 2018. Australian actress Cate Blanchett acted as President of the Jury. The Japanese film ''Shoplifters'', directed by Hirokazu Kore-eda, won the Palme d'Or.
Asghar Farhadi's psycho ...
,
and was selected as the Swedish entry for the
Best Foreign Language Film at the
91st Academy Awards but was not nominated.
However, it was nominated for
Best Makeup and Hairstyling.
Plot
Tina works for the
Swedish Customs Service and uses her heightened olfactory sense to detect
contraband
Contraband (from Medieval French ''contrebande'' "smuggling") refers to any item that, relating to its nature, is illegal to be possessed or sold. It is used for goods that by their nature are considered too dangerous or offensive in the eyes o ...
, as well as human emotions such as guilt and shame. She has a strongly
Neanderthalic appearance and lives in a secluded house in the woods with Roland, a dog trainer. One day at the border, Tina sniffs out a memory card containing
child pornography, and her superior asks her to help with the subsequent investigation.
The next day, a strange man with facial features similar to Tina's appears at customs. His bag is revealed to contain maggots and a device that the man claims is a maggot incubator. Tina lets him pass, but he soon returns and volunteers to be strip searched. Tina is taken aback when she learns that the man has female genitalia and a large scar on his tailbone. The man introduces himself as Vore and states that he will be staying in a nearby hostel.
Tina goes to a nursing home to see her father, who does not look like her. Upon being asked about the origin of her scar, Tina's father tells her she fell on something as a small child. She then visits the hostel where she finds Vore eating maggots off a tree. He gives her one, which she eats. Tina offers him a room in her guest house and he accepts. Tina brings him home. He tries to kiss her. Roland's suspicions are aroused.
Tina accompanies the police when they search the apartment where the suspected pedophiles live, and detects a camera with footage of an infant being sexually abused. The police arrest the occupants, but cannot identify who is trafficking the infants.
During a thunderstorm, Vore enters Tina's house, and the two of them huddle under a table, terrified by the lightning. They finally kiss. Tina later confesses that she has a
chromosome deformity which makes it difficult to have sex and impossible to bear children. Vore tells her that it's not a deformity, and she should ignore what humans say about her. Tina is astonished as an erect penis emerges from her groin. The two make love, after which Vore tells Tina that she is a
troll, just like he is, and that he is hoping to get in contact with a group of trolls who maintain a furtive existence in Finland.
Tina is excited by her newfound identity and begins living more like a troll, finally mustering the courage to evict Roland. She notices that Vore has taped his refrigerator shut. Upon opening it, she finds a strange infant in a cardboard box. Vore tells Tina that the baby is a
hiisi, an unfertilized troll embryo that will soon die. Vore plans to use the hiisi as a
changeling, and is waiting to secretly replace a real human infant with the dying troll embryo.
While one of the arrested pedophiles is being transferred, Vore stops the van and kills him. He tells Tina it was to prevent him from telling the police that it was he, Vore, who was trafficking human infants. He also confesses that the infant trafficking is part of a plot by trolls to get their revenge on humans for all the trolls that humans tortured in the 1970s. This disturbs Tina, who believes that past human mistreatment of trolls does not justify such vengeful acts.
The next day, Tina's neighbors call for an ambulance because their baby is ailing. Unbeknownst to them, it is not their child, but a changeling. Realizing that Vore has followed through on his planned deception, Tina goes to the guest house. Vore and his belongings are gone, but he has left a note instructing Tina to meet him on the ferry. She finds him on the deck. She explains that her compassion towards humans doesn't mean she is one herself and that trolls are capable of compassion too. She signals to the police, who close in and handcuff Vore, but he manages to escape by jumping overboard. His body is not found.
Tina's father finally tells her the truth about who she is: that he used to work as a caretaker at a
psychiatric hospital where trolls were tortured and experimented on; that it was from there that he adopted Tina, whose original troll name was Reva, to raise as a human; and that her real troll parents are dead and that he knows where they are buried. Later Tina drives to the old hospital and finds her parents' graves.
A few months later, Tina finds a parcel on her porch. Inside is a troll infant and a postcard from Finland.
Cast
Production
John Ajvide Lindqvist wrote the first draft of the screenplay, and then Abassi hired Isabella Eklöf to add more "psychological realism" to the story. Casting for the film took 18 months. To transform into the character of Tina, Eva Melander gained a considerable amount of weight and wore prosthetics that took four hours each day to apply.
The port scenes were filmed at
Kapellskär.
Release
''Border'' screened at
Cannes, where it won the 2018 ''Un Certain Regard'' award,
Telluride, and the
Toronto International Film Festival. The director Ali Abbasi holds an Iranian passport, which could have prevented him from traveling to the United States due to a
travel ban
A travel ban is one of a variety of mobility restrictions imposed by governments. Bans can be universal or selective. The restrictions can be geographic, imposed by either the originating or destination jurisdiction. They can also be based on indiv ...
, but he was granted a rare exception to attend the Telluride Festival.
Reception
Box office
''Border'' grossed $771,930 in the United States and Canada, and $1.4 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $2.2 million,
plus $110,829 with home video sales.
Critical response
On review aggregator
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of , based on reviews, and an average rating of . The website's critics consensus reads, "Thrilling, unpredictable, and brilliantly acted, ''Border (Gräns)'' offers a singular treat to genre fans looking for something different." On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 75 out of 100, based on 25 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
Alissa Simon of ''
Variety'' described the film as "an exciting, intelligent mix of romance, Nordic noir, social realism, and supernatural horror that defies and subverts genre conventions," and Stephen Dalton of ''
The Hollywood Reporter'' wrote, "A couple of sharp curveball additions to Lindqvist’s original plot also elevate ''Border'' beyond genre trappings and into stranger, sadder, more generally relatable territory."
Accolades
See also
*
List of submissions to the 91st Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film
*
List of Swedish submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
References
External links
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Border
2018 films
2018 drama films
2010s fantasy drama films
2010s Swedish-language films
Swedish fantasy drama films
Best Film Guldbagge Award winners
Films about trolls
Films based on short fiction
Films about child sexual abuse
Neon (distributor) films
Films shot in Sweden
Magic realism films
Films directed by Ali Abbasi
2010s Swedish films