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DramaComedyCrime

Adam's Apples

- When it rains, it pours

A neo-nazi sentenced to community service at a church clashes with the blindly devotional priest.

Release Date : 2005-04-15

Language :Danish

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : M&M Productions

Production Country : DenmarkGermany

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Mads Mikkelsen

Character Name : Ivan

Original Name : Mads Mikkelsen

Gender : Male

Ulrich Thomsen

Character Name : Adam

Original Name : Ulrich Thomsen

Gender : Male

Paprika Steen

Character Name : Sarah

Original Name : Paprika Steen

Gender : Female

Ole Thestrup

Character Name : Dr. Kolberg

Original Name : Ole Thestrup

Gender : Male

Nikolaj Lie Kaas

Character Name : Holger

Original Name : Nikolaj Lie Kaas

Gender : Male

Nicolas Bro

Character Name : Gunnar

Original Name : Nicolas Bro

Gender : Male

Ali Kazim

Character Name : Khalid

Original Name : Ali Kazim

Gender : Male

Gyrd Løfquist

Character Name : Poul

Original Name : Gyrd Løfqvist

Gender : Male

Lars Ranthe

Character Name : Esben

Original Name : Lars Ranthe

Gender : Male

Peter Reichhardt

Character Name : Nalle

Original Name : Peter Reichhardt

Gender : Male

Tomas Villum Jensen

Character Name : Arne

Original Name : Tomas Villum Jensen

Gender : Male

Peter Lambert

Character Name : Jørgen

Original Name : Peter Lambert

Gender : Male

Emil Kevin Olsen

Character Name : Christoffer

Original Name : Emil Kevin Olsen

Gender : Male

Solvej Christensen

Character Name : Mädchen an der Tankstelle

Original Name : Solvej Christensen

Gender : Female

Rasmus Rise Michaelsen

Character Name : Junge Mann an der Tankstelle

Original Name : Rasmus Rise Michaelsen

Gender : Male

Jacob-Ole Remming

Character Name : Junge Mann an der Tankstelle

Original Name : Jacob-Ole Remming

Gender : Male

Reviews

A

Andres Gomez

@tanty

2021-06-23

Good Danish black humor.

T

tmdb28039023

@tmdb28039023

2022-09-03

Adam's Apples is simultaneously a deconstruction and a satire of the Book of Job; the former because it recognizes and highlights the underlying black humor in the biblical text, and the latter because it rightly points out that more than Job’s patience, we should talk about his madness. Danish priest Ivan (Mads Mikkelsen) is both jobian and quixotic (the costume department deserves a pat on the back for making him look, in his priestly garb, like the subject, thought to be Cervantes, of a portrait attributed to Juan de Jáuregui), his insanity the only thing that makes his crappy life bearable. In a stroke of genius, the film explains Ivan’s pollyannish disposition with the pythonesque “Ravashi Syndrome” (“Ravashi was an Indian footballer who lost both feet in a go-karting accident in 1957. In shock from the accident he ran home on the stumps of his legs. His brain blocked out the fact that he had no feet. For two months he went to practice. He kept his midfield position”; “With no feet?”; “It was a bad team. They were in the fifth division or something like that”). Mikkelsen is pitch-perfect as the clueless Ivan, deadpanning his way through outlandish dialogue and somehow making it sound earnest (in one the film’s funniest moments, he tells the titular Adam – a neo-nazi sent to Ivan’s rehabilitation program for parolees –, in reference to a picture of Hitler: “handsome man. Is he your father?”). Ulrich Thomsen is also very effective as the perplexed and ambivalent Adam, of whom Ivan brings out the best and the worst – for example, taking Ivan to the hospital every time Adam beats the crap out of him. In general, Ivan takes more physical punishment than any normal human being could survive, but then we’re not meant to take the movie literally (making it easier to laugh at the character’s sundry hardships and tribulations). Like the biblical book from which it draws inspiration, Adam’s Apples is a parable, though not of the ‘in God we trust’ variety. It'd be tempting to dismiss Ivan as a victim of fanaticism if the filmmakers didn't offset him with the equally fanatical Adam. It’s clear that Ivan's pathological faith is not the answer to life’s problems, but the solution does not lie in Adam’s misanthropic nihilism either. The ideal is to find common ground, which Ivan and Adam do when they visit and comfort a dying old man haunted by the memory of his days as a guard in a concentration camp.

R

r96sk

@r96sk

2023-08-06

What a strange film... a very good one, mind you. The cast do great work in this 2005 release. Mads Mikkelsen being the obvious standout - top performance! Ulrich Thomsen doesn't really do all that much necessarily, yet still manages to make a big impact with his showing - amusing, by the way, how much hair can change the way you see someone, that ending is quite the mild cranium contort*! I'm not really all that sold on what the film attempts to tell, but I can't deny that I had a pleasant time watching it all unfold. I wouldn't actually say it features that strong humour, perhaps some of it was lost in translation (Viaplay's subs were iffy in patches), but all that's there is enough. There is one joke at the death that is probably one of the most insulting, hitting both racist and ableist, that I've ever heard - black comedy, I know, I know. Aside from all that, final notes: sound and cinematography - super atmospheric in parts. Would I recommend 2005's 'Adam’s Apples'? Ja. *did i find that phrase on google for a more polite way of saying mindf#k - maybe