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Kitchen Stories
(Salmer
Fra Kjøkkenet)
(2003)
Starring:
Tomas
Norström, Joachim Calmeyer
Director:
Bent Hamer
Rating:
NR
Studio: IFC
Films
Release Date:
02.20.04
Review
Posted: 03.31.04
Spoilers:
None
By
Howard Schumann
As a result of a
study in the 1950s in which efficiency experts at the Home Research
Institute observed the kitchen habits of Swedish housewives to come up
with a better workspace design, 18 men are transported in caravans to
farms in Norway to observe the cooking habits of Norwegian single men.
Kitchen Stories, a quirky comedy co-written by Swedish director
Bent Hamer and Norway's Jorgen Bergmark, depicts the relationship
between two elderly single men, a relationship in which the observer
ends up being the observed. The film has the same deadpan humor and
offbeat characters as one directed by Aki Kaurismaki, but without the
Finnish director's overbearing self-consciousness.
As the caravans
approach, the scientists wear white lab coats and carry clipboards,
seemingly poised for an ET-like invasion. The observers, however, must
live outside the homes of their subjects in small trailers and are not
allowed to talk, drink, or otherwise interact with their subjects.
Some, however, are not willing subjects. One of the scientists, Folke,
a Swede (Tomas Norström), draws Isak (Joachim Calmeyer), an antisocial
Norwegian farmer used to living in solitude. Isak at first refuses to
let Folke into his house, resentful that the horse he was promised in
return for his participation turned out to be a figurine. Folke,
however, eventually gains access to the kitchen and sits every day
perched in his high observation chair, recording Isak's every movement
like the Lord High Executioner until Isak decides to take his hot
plate up to his bedroom to frustrate his unwelcome guest.
The sly Isak drills
a hole through the upstairs bedroom floor and now secretly watches
Folke in the kitchen. When they start conversing, each man insists on
speaking his own language (not shown by the subtitles) as if to
doggedly maintain their separate identities. Gradually they become
friends, breaking through the barriers in their life that have imposed
a limiting solitude. They begin first by drinking coffee in the
morning, sharing a bit of their background, and then celebrating
Isak's birthday with cake and bourbon whiskey. Their interaction, of
course, is against the rules of the workplace and there are
consequences for Folke. His life, however, acquires new meaning the
more willing he is to take risks and share himself openly. Kitchen
Stories is a small film but one that is warmhearted and thoroughly
enjoyable, a work that celebrates the small pleasures in just being
alive without trying to be profound or seduce us with blatant
emotional appeals.
Film
Grade: B+
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