No Such Thing (film)

No Such Thing (previously titled Monster, Icelandic: Skrímsli) is a 2001 United States-Icelandic monster film directed by Hal Hartley. It tells the story of Beatrice (Sarah Polley), a journalist whose fiancé is killed by a monster in Iceland. The story is based very loosely on the Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf.[1] It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the May 2001 Cannes Film Festival.[2]

No Such Thing
Skrímsli
Film poster
Directed byHal Hartley
Produced byHal Hartley
Fridrik Thor Fridriksson
Cecilia Kate Roque
Written byHal Hartley
StarringSarah Polley
Robert John Burke
Helen Mirren
Julie Christie
Music byHal Hartley
CinematographyMichael Spiller
Edited bySteve Hamilton
Production
company
American Zoetrope
Icelandic Film Corporation
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
  • 2002 (2002)
Running time
102 minutes
CountryUnited States
Iceland
LanguageEnglish
Icelandic
Budget$5 million
Box office$62,703

Plot

Beatrice (Sarah Polley) is a young woman working in a television network under a woman known only as The Boss (Helen Mirren). She receives a recording from her fiancé Jim, who has been sent as part of a small production crew to Iceland to investigate a Monster that lives there. Determined to find her fiancé, Beatrice convinces her boss to send her to Iceland, but her plane crashes. She is the only survivor and, in order to walk again, undergoes an extremely painful, radical surgery. As she recovers, she befriends Dr. Anna (Julie Christie), who helps her travel to the remote village where the monster lives.

After cajoling Beatrice into drinking herself into unconsciousness, the villagers strip her and leave her as an offering to the Monster himself (Robert John Burke), a foul-mouthed, alcoholic beast old enough to remember human ancestors crawling from the seas. Beatrice shows him no real fear, although the Monster tells her he has killed her friends and might kill her, too. He tells her that he wants to die, but is indestructible. In an effort to force Beatrice to try to kill him, he proves that he killed Jim and his crew. She shoots him twice and he reacts in obvious pain, but heals almost instantly. He tells her of a mad scientist, Dr. Artaud (Baltasar Kormákur, presumably named for Antonin Artaud[3]), who had discovered a way to kill him, but Dr. Artaud had been "taken away in a strait jacket." Beatrice offers to help him find Dr. Artaud if the Monster comes with her to New York and promises not to kill anyone while he is there.

In New York the Monster becomes a celebrity, with the Boss staging a media frenzy as they search for Dr. Artaud. They find that he is working for the government. While Beatrice revels in the attention, the Monster remains miserable and drunk. The Boss makes a deal with a government scientist to study the Monster and he's rushed away by army guards who mislead him into believing he is going to see Dr. Artaud. Instead, he is subjected to torturous experiments as the scientists try to discover the key to his indestructibility, one of them noting that he can't seem to tolerate new information. One of those experiments involves the Monster being ridiculed and beaten on the street to study his behavior. The Monster holds true to his promise to Beatrice and does not kill anyone.

Meanwhile, Beatrice meets Dr. Artaud by chance. With Margaret (Annika Peterson), a remorseful former coworker of Beatrice's, they hatch a plan to escape back to Iceland with the Monster. They make their escape, but are pursued by the government, who fears the Monster and Artaud might fall into the wrong hands. Artaud builds a machine that will kill the Monster. Beatrice bids the Monster a tearful farewell, and kisses him goodbye. As the machine starts, the army storms their hideout. As the lights flicker on and off and the machine moves the Monster into place (in a process mirroring Beatrice's surgery), the Monster and Beatrice face each other one last time. Her face flickers in his vision for several minutes before the screen blackens.

Cast

Production

For Hartley, writing and directing No Such Thing was like coming "full circle for a filmmaker": early in his career he had written a script for a horror film, later revised to be a vampire film; that movie was never made, but No Such Thing mirrors its ideas.[4] It was shot in Iceland and New York City during September and October 2000. It was the first Hartley production for a major company, MGM/United Artists, and Francis Ford Coppola was one of the executive producers. The film was ill-received at the Cannes Film Festival, after which the studio demanded the movie be recut. Hartley refused, and Coppola supported him. These events, and the September 11 attacks, complicated the relation with the studio.[5] The release, in early 2002, was a low-key affair; after two weeks, only three screens showed the film. It went to home video within months.[6]

In 2012, the film's screenplay was made available on Hal Hartley's website in a book that also included the screenplays for The Book of Life and The Girl From Monday.[7]

Critical reception

Film critic Roger Ebert gave the film one star, saying "No Such Thing is inexplicable, shapeless, dull. It doesn't even rise to entertaining badness."[8]

In the assessment of E. L. Risden, No Such Thing is 'a marvelous and under-appreciated cinematic revision of the Anglo-Saxon epic'; 'the satire of No Such Thing focuses not on our remnant fear of traditional monsters, but on our numb-headed failure to fear the functional monsters our large and exploitative corporations can become—and on those of us who allow them (by watching them or paying them or simply not resisting them) to do so.'[9]

gollark: Just don't use lifetimes and always `clone` everything.
gollark: I quite like the `#[]` thing, it seems neat.
gollark: Solution: remove libraries.
gollark: > and rust's syntax is a horrible tradeoff :PWhy? It seems pretty C-ish. I quite like it.
gollark: > there are tools that prevent you from doing unsafe thingsThey don't seem to be hugely *good* at it, or at least aren't deployed enough, given the massive frequency of memory-related bugs in C projects.

References

Notes

  1. Hartley p. 126.
  2. "Festival de Cannes: No Such Thing". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-10-22.
  3. "The Really Abominable Snowman". Washington Post. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  4. Paszylkn pp. 204-205.
  5. "Monsters, Media and Meaning: Hal Hartley On "No Such Thing"". IndieWire. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  6. Rawle, p. 84.
  7. "The Book of Life, No Such Thing & The Girl From Monday". Possible Films. Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 10 September 2013.
  8. Roger Ebert, 'No Such Thing', in Your Movie Sucks, pp. 211--213.
  9. E. L. Risden, 'A Corporate Neo-Beowulf: Ready or Not, Here we Come', in Corporate Medievalism, Studies in Medievalism, 21 (Cambridge: Brewer, 2012), pp. 49--56 (pp. 49 and 50).

Bibliography

  • Risden, E. L. (2013). "Introduction: A Freud Complex and Beowulf in Film". In Haydock, Nickolas; Risden, E. L. (eds.). 'Beowulf' on Film: Adaptations and Variations. Jefferson: McFarland. pp. 1–26. ISBN 9780786463381.
  • Paszylk, Bartolomiej (2009). "No Such Thing (2001)". The Pleasure and Pain of Cult Horror Films: An Historical Survey. McFarland. ISBN 9780786453276.
  • Rawle, Steven (2011). Performance in the Cinema of Hal Hartley. Cambria. ISBN 9781621968535.
  • Hartley, Hal (2008). True fiction pictures & possible films : Hal Hartley in conversation with Kenneth Kaleta'. Soft Skull Press. ISBN 9781593762162.
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