Los Angeles Times

Beards, sheep and brotherly hate

Sigurour Sigurjónss­on, Theodór Júlíusson are earning kudos aplenty as hirsute siblings in the quirky film ‘ Rams.’

- By Susan King susan. king@ latimes. com

At the Palm Springs Internatio­nal Film Festival last month, the top actor prize went jointly to Sigurour Sigurjónss­on and Theodór Júlíusson for their performanc­es as estranged brothers in the quirky Icelandic comedy- drama “Rams.”

These two veteran Icelandic performers won the award for “the darkly comic urgency and sense of shared past with which they imbued their performanc­es and for the graceful way in which they guided their characters from animosity to interdepen­dence.”

Gummi ( Sigurjónss­on) and Kiddi ( Júlíusson) are the ultimate grumpy old siblings with long, scraggly beards that would make the “Duck Dynasty” cast jealous. Gummi is sober, businessli­ke and has a social life. Kiddi is angry and frequently drunk.

They live side by side in Búdardalur, a remote valley village in northweste­rn Iceland where they tend to their beloved sheep and share a border collie and equipment. They also haven’t talked in 40 years. But when a deadly disease arrives in the valley, the farmers are ordered to kill their sheep. The two brothers are not about to give up their herds without a f ight and reunite to save the animals.

The two actors are not only good friends but have also worked together for years in f ilm and theater. And “Rams” writer- director Grímur Hákonarson felt strongly that they could embody his characters.

“I chose them because they are very different, like the characters in the f ilm,” he said. “They are different types mentally and physically.”

Neither actor had worked with Hákonarson before “Rams.”

“He sent me the script and said to me, ‘ Siggi, my friend, read the script and stop shaving,” ’ said Sigurjónss­on. “I read the script and gave him a call after three hours. I said, ‘ I’ve stopped shaving now.’ ”

In an email interview, Júlíusson noted that he was “happily working in the theater when the script arrived. I instantly fell in love with the story. I made myself free of other work to take part in ‘ Rams.’ Icelandic films have not been so focused on this part of the Icelandic nation, the farmers and their difficult life. Strange, because it is such an important part of the nation’s industry.”

When Hákonarson began writing the script, he thought the brothers’ story was “typical for Icelandic people, because we are a bit stubborn, independen­t. We are an island. I thought the story represente­d some kind of national character.”

But the film has been embraced internatio­nally — it was Iceland’s entry in the foreign language f ilm Oscar derby and won the Un Certain Regard prize at Cannes last year.

During the production, the two actors shared a small cottage. “It was nice for us to talk to each other in the evening and then go to work in the morning and stop talking to each other,” noted Sigurjónss­on.” It helped to stay together. “

Hákonarson also wanted his actors to room together so they could relax after a grueling day’s shoot — in one scene, the actors are naked in minus- 15 degree weather during a blinding blizzard.

“The f ilm doesn’t have many characters,” said Hákonarson “It’s mainly these brothers. It was quite a big and challengin­g risk to play these brothers. They were dedicated. They were ready to do anything for me.”

Because the actors both live in the capital of Reykjavik, Hákonarson had them spend a lot of time with farmers and “let them learn how to get used to this agricultur­al life. I spent more time on this kind of practical rehearsal with sheep and animals than rehearsing the dialogue scenes.”

“Rams” was a rousing success when it premiered in Búdardalur.

“It was not really a cinema, but a small country theater, very primitive,” said Sigurjónss­on. “It was touching. It was the right move to premiere the movie there.”

‘ It was nice for us to talk to each other in the evening and then go to work in the morning and stop talking to each other. It helped to stay together.’ — Sigurour Sigurjónss­on, On sharing a cottage with Theodór Júlíusson during filming

 ?? Cohen Media Group ?? THE FILM
stars Theodór Júlíusson, left, as Kiddi and Sigurour Sigurjónss­on as Gummi. Off- screen, the veteran Icelandic performers are friends and colleagues.
Cohen Media Group THE FILM stars Theodór Júlíusson, left, as Kiddi and Sigurour Sigurjónss­on as Gummi. Off- screen, the veteran Icelandic performers are friends and colleagues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States