Brotherhood aka Broderskab

 

Lars is a young Danish soldier who is resentful because he has been thrown out of the Army after being accused of making a pass at some of his men. Frustrated at being back home with his pushy interfering mother, and at a loose end and unsure of where his life is going, he becomes easy prey for a local gang of xenophobic neo-Nazi thugs looking for new recruits. Although somewhat reluctant at first, he naïvely allows himself to be drawn into the group and is soon recognized by the leaders as being a brighter than average convert who they want to install as a fully-fledged member.
 
Lars’ quick rise through the ranks doesn’t sit well with everyone, particularly as he is foisted onto the group’s hard-nutted lieutenant Jimmy who is bitterly resentful of Lars for usurping the position that he felt his psychotic brother should have got received.  The angry Jimmy is ordered to be his trainer but the hate he shows however soon turns into lust, which ultimately turns to love in this most unlikely setting.
 
This award winning movie shows the sheer brutality, and the  depth and bitterness of the Far Right’s racism and homophobia in a powerful and moving way.  It’s both explicit and shocking and its subject matter is unquestionably disturbing,  but the way that this drama unfolds, juxtaposing vitriolic violence and hatred with tenderness with its edge of tenderness in the love that comes through, makes this film totally unmissable.


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