Kapringen:
****/*****, or 7/10
Harrowing
tale of a hijacked ship's crew on one side and the ship's company
negotiators on the other. A Danish cargo ship is commandeered by
Somali pirates who demand 15 million euros ransom. The company's CEO
(Søren Malling), against sound advice from a hired expert in
hijacking, decides to engage in negotiations with the pirates himself
and soon finds himself in too deep where his personal emotions are
concerned, which increasingly causes escalations in this dire
situation. Meanwhile, the crew of the ship, including the cook Mikkel
(Pilou Asbæk), must cope with psychological and violent abuse by the
Somalis, while also suffering months of boredom and unhygienic living
conditions, including a severe lack of food. However, they form an
unlikely bond with their captors, who don't prove to be so inhuman at
all (and rather hungry too), just poor, uneducated people driven to
extreme action for the most part. Tense scenes of Mikkel being forced
to cook for the pirates at gunpoint are interspersed with
surprisingly uplifting scenes of the hostages and the Somalis
engaging in boisterous song and dance to celebrate the capture and
cooking of a fish. However, director Tobias Lindholm makes it
perfectly clear that every act of sympathy and generosity the
captives receive can be taken from them just as swiftly by their
captors due to the ever prolonged negotiation procedures the CEO
makes them live through, as he is stalling for time in an effort to
bring down the amount of money demanded by the pirates to a more
affordable level. Of course the uncertainty suffered by the hostages'
families and his decreasing levels of success soon make even him
hesitant about a happy outcome, as negotiations seem to rapidly
spiral towards a boiling point. Kapringen is a terrific and
terrifying movie, executed very realistically. Despite the solid
performances this distills from the lead actors, at times realism
does hinder the movie's pace since little happens, as it would over
the course of four months sitting on a ship that goes nowhere while
negotiations have turned so sour that both parties hardly communicate
anymore. Nevertheless, the ever more critical situation onboard ship,
where the crew has to deal with bored and impatient pirates, does
result in many a suspenseful scene, made all the more disturbing by
Asbæk's compelling acting. This film is made by the creators of the
Danish hit series Borgen and, apart from the good writing of
course, it shows: half the cast was featured on that TV-series, so
occasionally you start asking yourself, why isn't Danish prime
minister Birgitte Nyborg getting herself involved in this affair to
save the day?
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