The Oklahoman

‘ The Northman’ an ambitious but lean revenge tale

- Jake Coyle

The first sign that not everyone in Robert Eggers’ 10th-century Viking revenge tale “The Northman” has their priorities entirely straight comes early in the film, when the Viking king Aurvandil (Ethan Hawke) returns home to the North Atlantic kingdom of Hrafnsey after a year of fighting overseas.

After trudging up on horseback to the snowy cliffside village, Aurvandil’s queen, Gudrún (Nicole Kidman), greets him warmly and, after a hug for their son, Amleth (Oscar Novak), urges him to bed with her. Aurvandil, though, says he has something more pressing to attend to. Rather than join his wife, he takes Amleth to scurry around a fiery cave on all fours, half-naked and barking, while chanting manly oaths of honor with the court fool (Willem Dafoe).

Something, you might say, is rotten in Hrafnsey – even if we have the sense that such rituals are the lifeblood of this culture.

It quickly turns for the worse. The brother of Aurvandil, Fjölnir (Claes Bang), cuts the throat of the king, assumes control and drags Gudrún off on his shoulders to take as his wife. Young Amleth – “just a puppy,” his mom had called him – flees in a rowboat on an empty sea, vowing his revenge.

Where are we, exactly? Smack in the middle of the Scandinavi­an legend that inspired Shakespear­e’s “Hamlet.” But in this Viking ur-”Hamlet” (Eggers penned the script with Icelandic poet Sjón) there’s no existentia­l handwringi­ng for Amleth over duty and fate. He lives for vengeance. When we next see him, he’s a ferocious and muscleboun­d marauder – “a beast, cloaked in man-flesh” – who would snap most stage-bound Hamlets like a twig. Amleth (a bulked up Alexander Skarsgård) is less likely to soliloquiz­e with a skull than sever one from someone’s body.

Once he’s had his fill doing mean Viking stuff (there’s a beautifull­y and brutally staged raid of a Slavic village), Amleth brands himself a slave and slips onto a boat headed for Iceland, where Fjölnir has moved his kingdom to a verdant grassy hillside. Among the workers there is Anya Taylor-Joy, a veteran of “The Witch.” With justice tantalizin­g close, Amleth takes up arms against a sea of troubles.

There’s great method but not enough madness in “The Northman,” Eggers’ third and easily most ambitious film. With historical rigor and aged atmosphere­s, Eggers has already establishe­d himself as one of his generation’s most distinctiv­e voices. His first film, 2015’s “The Witch,” was set among Puritan settlers in 1630s New England. His 2019 film “The Lighthouse” starred Dafoe and Robert Pattinson as mad lighthouse keepers off the Northeast coast in the 1890s. All three films not only take their history seriously, but burrow into bygone – or maybe not so bygone – nightmares. As is incanted in the opening of “The Northman,” they “summon the shadows of ages past.”

The recent trend toward folklore in film can, in lesser movies, seem like the cinema version of a paleo diet. But Eggers’ films have carried the potency of myths resurrecte­d and reanimated, and in doing so have unearthed rich new territory. “The Northman,” with a reported budget north of $70 million, is a bigger canvas and more archetypal. With sweeping Scandinavi­an vistas and a finale set among rivers of burning lava atop an ash-spewing volcano, “The Northman” is forged in a powerfully primal fire.

It is, though a lean story, with not as much meat on the bone as its ambition may call for. The mythic simplicity is part of the point of “The Northman,” but the movie’s single-minded protagonis­t and its elemental conflicts verge closer to “Conan the Barbarian” territory than perhaps is ideal.

Eggers’ film is only fitfully enchanting and squanders its mean momentum. Once Amleth returns home, he bides his time for the right moment, and the movie seems to be filling time with supernatur­al segues and comically grotesque killings. For the first time, it feels like Eggers is relying on pagan pageant more than psychology to drive the movie, and the result is a seance that doesn’t quite spellbind, despite a sincere effort to.

This could be chalked up to the dictates of a bigger budget production and the need to reach a wider audience, or an instinct of the movies that seems to count on howling, barking and shouting to grasp something primal that it can’t quite summon. The scenes with Amleth’s mother, with a fiery Kidman, perhaps comes too late in a film that, after a long journey, begins to more dramatical­ly tug at the masculine myth it’s predicated on. Amleth’s vows aren’t an oath but a curse, thus proving another age-old adage: Never trust Willem Dafoe.

 ?? FEATURES VIA AP FOCUS ?? Alexander Skarsgård, left, and Anya Taylor-Joy star in “The Northman.”
FEATURES VIA AP FOCUS Alexander Skarsgård, left, and Anya Taylor-Joy star in “The Northman.”

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