Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The Snowman

- STEPHEN DALTON

The weather outside is frightful in The Snowman, the long-gestating movie adaptation of Norwegian crime writer Jo Nesbo’s 2007 literary smash hit, which has sold in the millions. Directed by Swedish left-field hit-maker Tomas Alfredson (Let the Right One In, Tinker Tailor Solider Spy), this is a classy, polished production with a starry internatio­nal cast led by Michael Fassbender. It was previously earmarked for Martin Scorsese, who now has an executive producer credit.

But if production partners Universal and Working Title are hoping for a “Scandi noir” blockbuste­r to rival David Fincher’s 2011 version of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, they are heading for disappoint­ment. For all its high-caliber talent mix, The Snowman is a largely pedestrian affair, turgid and humorless in tone. The cast share zero screen chemistry, much of the dialogue feels like a clunky first draft and the wearily familiar plot is clogged with clumsy loose ends. While Nesbo’s novel was a pulpy page-turner, formulaic but effective, Alfredson and his team have somehow managed to drain it of tension.

A killer is targeting the young mothers of Oslo, building a

sinister snowman as a calling card before he strikes. Maverick detective Harry Hole (Fassbender) is officially between cases, but he inveigles his way onto this one by shadowing a new arrival at the city’s police department, Katrine Bratt (Rebecca Ferguson). Following a long trail of clues, the pair expand the investigat­ion to include different cities and unsolved murders stretching back decades, soon realizing they have a serial killer on their hands. Their inquiries turn up murky connection­s between wealthy industrial­ist Arve Stop (J.K. Simmons), creepy doctor Idar Vetleson (David Dencik) and boozy detective Gert Rafto (Val Kilmer), who died years before in an apparent shotgun suicide.

In parallel with his police duties, Harry is also struggling to stay on good terms with his estranged ex-wife Rakel (Charlotte Gainsbourg), his sulky teenage stepson Oleg (Michael Yates) and Rakel’s new partner Mathias (Jonas Karlsson). But as the murder investigat­ion deepens, the killer gets Harry’s family in his sights, and their deadly cat-and-mouse game turns personal. Meanwhile, Katrine is revealed to have a secret history that throws her interest in the case into question.

Fassbender plays the kind of rule-breaking antihero who ticks every cliche on the flawed-genius screen cop checklist. Harry’s crime-fighting instincts are brilliant but unorthodox, which means his stuffy bosses indulge him while female co-workers find him dangerousl­y irresistib­le. He may be too much of a self-absorbed drunk to keep his promises to his ex-wife and stepson, but both still adore him anyway. He is a chain-smoking alcoholic who routinely passes out on park benches, yet strangely still possesses the athletic stamina to chase villains across vast frozen landscapes wearing nothing but tastefully understate­d Nordic knitwear.

In its favor, The Snowman looks magnificen­t. Norway is a gift to Alfredson, with his strong eye for snow-covered landscapes and stylishly bare modernist interiors. Cinematogr­apher Dion Beebe and production designer Maria Djurkovic transform the homely urban geography of Oslo into a Nordic Gotham City of deep shadows, towering churches and cavernous municipal halls, while the vast hinterland beyond the city becomes a majestic winter wonderland of frozen lakes and snowy peaks.

The Snowman also boasts a fine cast, though its leaden

script and perfunctor­y characteri­zation leave scant room for subtle performanc­es. Arriving on set direct from Assassin’s Creed, Fassbender coasts through the movie with his roguish charm on autopilot. Ferguson wrings a little more complexity from her traumatize­d avenging angel, but Gainsbourg wanders through her scenes in a daze, as if she has accidental­ly stumbled onto Alfredson’s shoot en route to her latest self-lacerating encounter with Lars von Trier. Simmons, Chloe Sevigny and Toby Jones are all underused in glorified cameos. And Kilmer’s minor role is just plain bizarre, with his haggard appearance and mannered dialogue that seems to be overdubbed in places.

Screenwrit­ers Hossein Amini, Peter Straughan and Soren Sveistrup stick fairly closely to Nesbo’s plot, with

a few minor changes and shifts of emphasis. Thus The Snowman has only one major secret to keep us in suspense: the identity of the killer. Even for viewers unfamiliar with the book, this not-so-shocking surprise becomes pretty easy to call about midway through the story, leaving Alfredson to fill another hour with increasing­ly silly red herrings and pointless blind alleys.

In a movie that had more layers, deeper questions and more fully evolved characters, such predictabl­e touches would not necessaril­y be fatal lapses. But The Snowman does not do subtext. Indeed, its by-the-numbers script barely qualifies as text. When the killer’s risible psychologi­cal motivation is finally revealed, it feels as if the screenwrit­ers began reading Freud for Dummies, but did not even get to the end.

 ??  ?? Harry Hole (Michael Fassbender) is an elite crime squad’s lead detective investigat­ing the disappeara­nce of a victim on the first snow of winter in The Snowman.
Harry Hole (Michael Fassbender) is an elite crime squad’s lead detective investigat­ing the disappeara­nce of a victim on the first snow of winter in The Snowman.
 ??  ?? Homicide squad recruit Katrine Bratt (Rebecca Ferguson) confers with Harry Hole (Michael Fassbender) in The Snowman.
Homicide squad recruit Katrine Bratt (Rebecca Ferguson) confers with Harry Hole (Michael Fassbender) in The Snowman.

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