A slow-burning ghost story from Iceland. Effective bleak visuals and an icy touch are the order of the day here, along with a glacial pace and half of a storyline which likens this to a murder/missing child mystery. Quite a lot of disparate plot ingredients including a dual narrative that only makes sense at the very end. I wasn't a huge fan of the twist, finding it a cheat of sorts, although it's one I'm familiar with having seen it since the old giallo days. Generally the acting is better than the character writing but there's plenty to tune in for if you like the genre.
Plot summary
After an older lady hangs herself in a church, a new psychiatrist discovers she was obsessed with the disappearance of his eight-year-old son, who vanished three years earlier. Meanwhile, three city dwellers are restoring a house when they realize it is haunted.
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Slow-burning ghost story
I Remember You
This Icelandic chiller is effectively two stories in one. In the one a psychiatrist, Freyr, is brought in when a woman is found hanged in a church. It looks like an obvious case of suicide but she has numerous crosses carved in her back suggesting abuse. As the case is investigated links are found to other deaths and the disappearance of a bullied child fifty years previously... she was also taking an interest in his son who vanished three years previously. In the other story a couple, Katrin and Garðar, and a friend. Lif, head to a remote abandoned village, where they hope to convert one of the houses into a guest house; they soon start to feel that they aren't alone.
This is a solid chiller doesn't really fit into one genre. There are elements of a mystery as we are invited to wonder who caused the dead woman's scars and what happened to the two children. There is also the question of whether the people in the remote house are seeing things that are really there are just imagining it due to the somewhat creepy nature of the location... there is something intrinsically atmospheric about 'ghost towns'. The bleak majesty of the local Icelandic countryside only adds to the atmosphere. The two stories aren't categorically linked till the finale; although it is the nature of such films that people will assume a link... even so I didn't guess the major twist until it was revealed. There is little in the way of real horror, and few jump-scares, but it is still effective thanks to the way things are depicted and a minimal but skilled use of music. The cast is solid, making the characters feel like ordinary people. Overall I'd recommend this for those looking for something a little different... a good mystery with spooky elements.
These comments are based on watching the film in Icelandic with English subtitles.
Interesting light horror.
Essentially two parallel stories that gradually morph into one, this is quite a decent drama set in rural Iceland. A couple and her best pal decide to set up a B&B (not quite sure who for in this rather moonscape-like environment, but anyway...) only to discover that they think the site might be haunted. Simultaneously, the local doctor is trying to assist the police with a mysterious death. Might the two be connected in some fashion? Both the threesome starting their business and the doctor have their demons, personal and professional and Óskar Thór Axelsson gently teases these out and interweaves them, quite intricately, into the gently spooky plot. The cinematography helps enormously, the bleak scenario adds loads to the mystery. Sadly, I thought the acting was a bit too over-reliant on the ambience. They are adequate, but don't really convey much of a sense of menace; indeed their incubi cease to be curious and intriguing and start being just a bit soap-ish; their undercooked characterisations start to rob the film of any potency. I did quite like the ending, though - just not as much as I had hoped - or expected.