Middle Ages Now (TV Movie 1986) Poster

(1986 TV Movie)

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6/10
I'm Twelve Years Old and What is This?
MidoriFiore26 July 2020
To say this is different is an understatement from the ages. As far as historical films in Sweden goes, you have the very theatrical films of the 50's and 60's and the mostly very stiff and valium-based films of the 2000's and 2010's. Then there is this.

The story follows a nameless smith who is visited by three bandits played by the boss from Evil Ed, Jonathan Lionheart and infamous Swedish actor Thorsten Flinck. The bandits force the smith to melt down some stolen silver when the reeve and his posey, played by Per Oscarsson & Kjell Bergqvist, attack. The bandits flee and the poor smith is dragged off as to the headsman to be beheaded, despite his innocence. But when the headsman rapes and kills a female prisoner in a drunken rage, the reeve anoints the smith the new headsman. His first gig is the beheading of the old headsman. Satisfied with his new headsman, the reeve drops the former smith off at a brothel to spend his fee. At the brothel, the transsexual madame introduces him the new "asset" of the brothel, Ursula, who the smith falls in love with.

If we take the positive elements first, this has some of the strongest world building I've ever seen in a Swedish film. There is a constant presence of strange background elements and details the immerse you into the world of the film, the eve of the 18th century. A skeleton hanging outside the headsman's house, a drunk man cursing the whores outside the local brothel, corpses hanging from the city walls and the incredibly strange scene where a man does a breakdance on the execution block. The films was shot in Visby and at the outdoor museum of Skansen in Stockholm, which normally are scenic and idyllic. Here they are shot in darkness and smoke and looks like an absolute hellhole. Everybody except the smith, Ursula and the headsman's kind assistant, the knacker, comes off as a complete psychopath. The cinematography is fantastic with Hrafn Gunnlaugsson's signature flowing camerawork and editing doing wonders.

What really drives the film down is the atrocious acting and dubbing. At times it's laughable. Niklas Ek who plays the smith was clearly chosen for his expressive face, because every line he says comes off as unnatural. Ursula, played by Icelandic model Stephanie Sunna Hockett, was equally chosen for he looks and not her acting talents. She is dubbed unconvincingly by Inga-Lill Andersson. Kjell Bergqvist is terrible and overacts. The only actor with some dignity is Per Oscarsson who despite the bad dubbing for the only time in his career comes off as bad ass. That he manages to get his part to work despite all is a testament to what a talent he was. The pacing of the film is off too. The second half of the films really drags and it seems Hrafn had trouble extending the short story the film is based on into feature length. The 80's music is out of place, but the more period accurate pieces fit perfectly.

In the end, Bödeln och Skökan/the Headsman and the Whore/Middle Ages Now is a uneven but very memorable film which does not hold up to Hrafn's the Raven Flies or The Shadow of the Raven, but is well worth a watch for it's visuals, atmosphere and just bonkers content.
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9/10
Middle Ages Now!
jonvangelis27 September 2013
In 2010 this film was released on DVD in Iceland under this title. Hrafn Gunnlaugsson shows us the story of the blacksmith from the 17th century (truely from Early Modern times, but that's no problem here, because the director shows us Europe as traditional society). By the twist of fate former honest blacksmith turns into the executioner, meets his love, but the life in that epoch is too complicated and means of solving problems are too cruel and too simple. Hrafn was influenced by the paintings of Rembrandt and films by Bergman and Tarkovsky. The director recreated the atmosphere of the epoch very impressive. Though this film shows us the dark sides of our life, it was made with true humane feelings.
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5/10
Infamous period film
gekarlin13 November 2013
Warning: Spoilers
"Bödeln Och Skökan" which means "The Executioner and The Harlot" is an infamous Swedish period drama from 1986. Its is directed by Hrafn Gunnlaugsson (When The Raven Flies) and based on a novel by Ivar Lo Johansson. SVT which is the biggest public owned TV station in Sweden, has recently made a lot of classic TV productions viewable online on their website, and among them is this movie.

It is an extremely dark tale about a Blacksmith in the early 18th century who gets innocently accused of theft and sentenced to death. By circumstance, he is pardoned, if he agrees to take over as the new executioner. He agrees of course, and soon he is hated by the entire village as executioners were during that time. At the local brothel he meets a beautiful young prostitute named Ursula whom he falls madly in love with. But is she really who she seem to be?

Swedish public television had almost never before shown something this violent and with this amount of disgusting imagery. The scene where the executioner first enters the brothel is nauseating. A bunch of dirty, decrepit peons are sitting around and loudly eating what looks like raw chicken with their bare hands, while the fat naked prostitutes are tending to their equally fat and naked customers in explicit detail. Stephanie Sunna Hockett was underage when shooting this movie, and yet she is seen completely naked and share some rather risqué scenes with Niklas Ek.

If Hrafn Gunnlaugsson was inspired by Samurai movies and Westerns when he made his Viking films, then this one is more reminiscent of British Renaissance-era Horror/Drama like "Witchfinder General". The normally scenic Gotlandic landscape is wreathed in fog and darkness, as the black-clad Reeves are riding by with a wagon full of prisoners behind them. The chopping block is perpetually smeared in blood as the executioner swings his sword to the delight of the cheering crowd.

Visually impressive as this movie is though, it is very lacking in the acting department. Niklas Ek does not convey the proper emotions i would expect to find in a person faced with such a horrible fate as him. Stephanie Susanna Hockett is very poorly dubbed which also takes away from the experience. There is also a whole bunch of weird "Monty Python and The Holy Grail" type humor at some points in the movie, like when the executioner is having a party with his three work colleagues and they are all sharing funny anecdotes from their work or the Igor-like tongueless jester who has been accompanying all the executioners in the cabin.

This movie has a strong story and Gunnlaugssons usual keen visual sense, but the mediocre acting and random silly parts really keep it from raking among his best.
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