Kraftverk 3714 (2005) Poster

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3/10
If IKEA made a film...
wkduffy31 May 2006
Being a completely broke film buff with a house to furnish, I'm a big fan of IKEA. My whole domicile, practically, is packed to the brim with the cheap particle-board stuff. And you know how all those stylish household items at IKEA have those funny names--a bookshelf called "Holika" and a bathroom mirror called a "Grundtal"--well, it just adds to the whole Euro-charm.

Like those interestingly-named (but horribly translated) items on the shelves at IKEA, I'd like to provide a bit of translation to some of the reviews I've read about the Swedish-made "Kraftverk 3714."

Original Comment: "For a low budget film, this is pretty cool stuff. It would be great to see what these guys could do on a Hollywood budget!"

Translation: The film stock is crappy, the lighting is pedestrian, the cinematography is uninteresting, the sound recording is hollow.

Original Comment: "David Lynchesque sci-fi drama set in a strange forest town with equally strange characters!"

Translation: These "actors" are acting for free, the storyline is circular and tiring, the ideas that undergird the flick desperately try to be existential but are simply mundane, and the settings (especially the interiors) are dull and filled with ugly wallpaper.

Original Comment: "The editing is well-done, and the conservative use of computer graphics shows that compelling CGI effects don't have to come out of a Hollywood studio!"

Translation: When you've got sketchy cinematography to begin with, hide the imperfections by digitizing all of it onto a Mac and blending vigorously for three minutes. Ingenious!

I took a chance on this DVD because I'm a sucker for independent films, especially those that attempt to tackle the often-expensive and awe-inspiring genre of science fiction. I mean, some of the best sci-fi flicks of all time have been realized with little or no budget, spfx, and specious actors. Take Peter Fonda's eco-warning-time-travel flick "Idaho Transfer" for example! A classic.

But "Kraftverk 3714" doesn't fit the category of "carefully-crafted, low-key, idea-dependent sci-fi." It relentlessly focuses on characters that don't do much and don't say interesting things. It goes round and round in circles. It is much too long (this coming from a major Tarkovsky fan). Worse, its concept of "reality shifting aliens" is Twilight Zone fodder from 40 years ago. It's just not a well-made film -and I really wanted it to be, dammit!

However, being the IKEA fan I am, I did make one ground-shattering observation. First, anyone who has shopped at IKEA knows how their tricky shopping carts work--all four wheels being multidirectional. The carts can spin a perfect 360 degrees, and it takes some familiarity to handle them like a pro, as any avid IKEA shopper knows. Well, I'll be damned, but one of the lead actresses in "Kraftverk 3714" goes to some inky-dinky grocery store in the middle of nowhere and what is she pushing around? A multidirectional shopping cart! So, that's not an IKEA invention after all, but is yet another wonderful invention (let's call it a "Tacklebee" for the hell of it) from the land of hei-doo!
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1/10
God-awful
folkoeel8 August 2006
After hearing that some of the people behind the low-budget flicks "Terror in Rock'n'Roll Önsjön" and "It came from outer space... and stuff" were involved in making this movie, I decided to buy it unseen on DVD. I wish I hadn't. The other movies were funny, tongue-in-cheek and kinda stupid. While Kraftverk 3714 is devoid of any humor at all. And it is so god-awful that I'm getting angry just thinking about it. The worst actors possible, the worst script possible, the worst special effects available. And the most unsexy sex scene ever. Uhhh. And the whole thing goes on for 2 hours and 45 minutes. Please, do not ever make another movie.
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8/10
Bizarre low budget
dynamit0614 November 2005
Well I must say that this is one of the most bizarre Swedish movies ever made. The budget is very low but it's still a very interesting and pretty well-made movie.

Johanna is returning to her hometown, only to find out that things have changed in a bizarre manner. People are behaving strangely, people are disappearing and so on. Everything that happens seems to be connected to the old power-plant by the river. The movie is not really a horror movie but more of a surrealist art-movie with horror-elements. It has a lot in common with the work of people like David Lynch. On the downside it's a bit long with it's 136 minutes and the low budget is sometimes a bit too apparent in picture and sound-quality. The direction, cinematography and editing is however great. It would be really interesting to see what these guys could do if they had a more normal budget.

Not to be missed if you're into low budget experimental cult-movies!
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6/10
Weird in the wrong way
lordmola16 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This movie is actually pretty cool, especially for being Swedish. I think though that the creators spoils it all in the end, trying to be so mystical and everything. In the "behind the scenes"-material one of the guys says that he's influenced by Twin Peaks. This doesn't really show too much, nothing good from Twin peaks are in there. But I get the feeling that they want it to be weird in a David Lynch way. They do not succeed, it feels so forced.

The movie is a little bit slow in the beginning, but the whole middle-part of it is really good. And if they just hadn't spoiled it in the end this film would be a must-buy.
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10/10
This one is great!
info-64348 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Bought it here in the states, had never seen a Swedish horror movie before, but this will not be the last! Surrounded by endless forest, close by a river, a small community exists where everyone seems to lead idyllic lives. After a few years away, Johanna returns to the village, and becomes aware that things have changed. William, a writer, has inherited his grandfather's house. Gradually, he starts to get the feeling that the circumstances surrounding Vladimir's death are more complicated than they initially appear.

This is one hell of a weird flick, and weirdness is what I like! Very Twin Peaks and looks like some of David Lynch's early work.

I didn't understand a word they said, but the English text on the DVD made me understand some stuff. Anyhow, this movie is for all horror fans! But don't expect gore and blood. This is an art piece. Hope to see more!
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6/10
surprisingly entertaining
imdb-1309111 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
(mild spoilers that would probably not actually spoil your enjoyment) i'd like to give it a higher mark really, i was literally rolling with laughter for the whole of the last half hour! but i suppose i have to be fair, it won't be to everyone's taste.

it was a bit slow for the first 60 minutes, looking like a fairly amateurish work, but nonetheless some interesting ideas (cinema-wise, not story-wise). the next 30 minutes i really started to get interested - a couple of very well put together scenes, including i think the best use of formless humanoid i've ever seen, really put the willies up me, and i got into that place where i was quite ready and willing and looking forward to having the s**t scared out of me. the film makers, however, had an amazing ability to put together a great few seconds of footage and then stamp on it with an awful minute or so following right behind. what the...? what happened to the...? i wanted to see where that was going, you had me...? crazy.

then something happened - i don't know if the money ran out, the ideas ran out, or the film makers just decided it was time to skip the suspense and pull a peter jackson. whatever. the last half hour was quite simply hilarious - i think we first began to laugh when the old man started laying out the drivel that passed for an explanation of what had happened up to that point (granted, often the biggest failing of would-be-horror movies).

the first appearance of the two dudes in red robes, with one speaking in tongues, and the other using a replacement hip joint as a prop was what really set us off, however. when the two of them broke into a subtle but unmistakable dance routine under the guise of performing some unbeknown-to-the-humans elastic trickery, was i think when i wet myself for the first time. incidentally the hip replacement was a multi-purpose prop - it was later used as a brain scrambler, and was even used by another actor as a medical instrument. when this actor and his medical colleague waved us off after the operation in a way that wouldn't have looked out of place at the end of an episode of Rod, Jane and Freddy, I was all but ready to leave the room to save myself from a respiratory episode. it just didn't let up, from there until the end of the movie. where, incidentally, and _only_ incidentally, is where we find the only vaguely intelligent primary plot device in the whole movie. i pray to the lords of all that is sane that it wasn't for the sake of this one device (which was barely even played) that the whole 136 minutes was put together.

i don't mean to sound too down - if you enjoy when somebody cooks for you even when the food's not that great, then rent this movie with a few friends, try and get scared, and get ready to laugh.
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