Los Angeles Times

A doc about unlikely friends

Benjamin Ree’s ‘The Painter and the Thief ’ takes a look at a surprising friendship.

- JUSTIN CHANG

Benjamin Ree’s “The Painter and the Thief” is a moving film about crime followed by redemption.

Early on in “The Painter and the Thief,” a sweepingly emotional new documentar­y from Norway, the title characters meet for a momentous unveiling. The painter is Barbora Kysilkova. The thief — and the subject of the artwork in question — is Karl-Bertil Nordland, who takes one look at his likeness and descends into loud, convulsive sobs. It’s a stunning moment and also a shrewdly calculated one, and it means to reduce you to a puddle as well: A criminal has received an extraordin­ary measure of grace from his victim, who extends to him the consolatio­ns of forgivenes­s, friendship and art.

Fortunatel­y, there is more to this picture than a tidy redemption narrative, although how much more remains a tantalizin­gly open question. The crime is presented at the outset: In 2015, Nordland and another man broke into an Oslo art gallery and stole two of Kysilkova’s large oil paintings, “Chloe & Emma” and “Swan Song.” Authoritie­s never recovered the missing canvases, which were valued at about 20,000 euros, but the culprits were identified in surveillan­ce footage and Nordland was arrested. Sensing a compelling tale in the works, director Benjamin Ree began filming around the time Kysilkova took the remarkable step of going to the courthouse, introducin­g herself to Nordland and asking if she could paint him.

And so she did, envisionin­g him first as an elegant gentleman holding a glass of red wine. It’s this painting that makes Nordland weep when he sees it, perhaps because it suggests a version of himself he once yearned to be. Soon, that idealized veneer will be stripped away; a later painting reveals Nordland’s tougher but more vulnerable self, his muscular chest covered with tattoos (including one that reads, “Snitchers Are a Dying Breed”). The paintings are remarkable. Even more remarkable is the speed and intensity of the friendship that Kysilkova strikes up with Nordland, whose past struggles with drug addiction and gang activity belie his sensitive soul. Asked why he stole her paintings, he replies simply: “They were beautiful.”

Apart from one scene in which Kysilkova urgently presses Nordland about what might have happened to her paintings (he claims not to remember, having stolen them in a heroin-induced haze), we never see her lash out or fully express her anguish at what she’s lost. Her anger, if any, seems to have been eclipsed by her compassion — and not just her compassion but also her fascinatio­n, the sense that she may have discovered a promising new muse. You could describe “The Painter and the Thief,” quite accurately, as a portrait of an uncommonly beautiful friendship. You could also describe it as the story of a debt being repaid.

Either way, like any good artist, Ree means to complicate our immediate perception­s and assumption­s of both his subjects. Nordland’s history of crime and substance abuse turns out to be rooted in childhood neglect, but his various passions and achievemen­ts — among them an excellent education, a talent for mentorship and a love for traditiona­l carpentry — don’t always fit an obvious profile. Kysilkova, for her part, draws on reserves of love and empathy that she has sometimes been denied herself: Although now happily married, she still bears the wounds of an abusive earlier relationsh­ip.

Nordland has a girlfriend himself, though the possibilit­y of any romantic feeling between him and Kysilkova is one of many things left either coyly or tactfully unaddresse­d. Ree toggles between their perspectiv­es, sometimes using their voiceover narration to sketch in quick, impression­ist details. The course of their relationsh­ip does not always run smooth, which works to the movie’s dramatic benefit at times and proves narrativel­y inconvenie­nt at others. When Nordland vanishes from Kysilkova’s life for a lengthy stretch, this roughedged love story morphs into a bruising tale of regret and recovery, with a dash of heist thriller for good measure.

Through it all, Ree undermines our understand­ing of the emotional and artistic transactio­n that his subjects are conducting. Is Kysilkova herself a kind of thief, exploiting and aesthetici­zing another person’s suffering? If so, surely Nordland is too intelligen­t not to be aware of it — and does it even matter, given the obvious depth of their mutual affection? Ree seems to invite questions about his own motivation­s as he plays with the film’s perspectiv­e and chronology, springing surprises at key moments and continuall­y reframing his subjects in ways that will hold them up to the most surprising and unpredicta­ble light.

“The Painter and the Thief,” in other words, keeps drawing attention to its own manipulati­ons. It has a strikingly beautiful surface; Ree and Kristoffer Kumar’s camerawork finds a rich digital luster in even the most workaday interiors, from the atelier where Kysilkova paints to the hospital room where Nordland ends up after a bad accident. The director appears to have secured extraordin­ary access to both subjects; there are moments so intimate and unguarded that you may briefly dissociate and question what you’re watching — a documentar­y, or its carefully scripted and acted narrative counterpar­t.

The result is a movie that feels both truthful and evasive, deeply moving and a little perplexing. Which may, of course, be entirely by design. Ree clearly means for us to think about what we’re watching and to remind us of the wonders and the limitation­s of any medium — a painting, a documentar­y film — that purports to represent some version of the truth. But his tricky methods don’t always serve his admirable purposes. As this movie’s cathartic final unveiling confirms, Kysilkova and Nordland’s bond is a thing of irreducibl­e and finally undeniable beauty. It might have been even plainer to see within a less fussy frame.

 ?? Neon ?? KARL-BERTIL NORDLAND is an art thief and Barbora Kysilkova a forgiving artist in the documentar­y “The Painter and the Thief.”
Neon KARL-BERTIL NORDLAND is an art thief and Barbora Kysilkova a forgiving artist in the documentar­y “The Painter and the Thief.”

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