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  • Scandinavian detective films is a sign of international quality, especially for those who think that stories can be catchy without constant chases-shootings and without a thin line between law machinery and criminals. Kvinden i buret is a nice and solid example such films, plus talented character actors in leading roles - a Dane Nikolaj Lie Kaas and an Assyrian from Sweden Fares Fares (by the way, speaking tolerable Danish). Multidimensional plot provides additional tensions and you start to ponder who and why, the outcome is logical, although the wrongdoer's person and motives were revealed a bit too early. The film includes several clichés as well (for example, injudicious boss vs. solitary pigheaded detective, bickers between partners), but they are not annoying, enabling to unfold the characters and justify certain deeds.

    All in all, a nice film, and first in the line of films (to be) made on the basis of Jussi Adler-Olsen's novels. I am looking forward to see them all.
  • Kvinden i buret has got the English, and much better title, The Keeper of Lost Causes, in stead of what should have been The caged woman. The Danish title is maybe the worst about this film, but still that's due to the Novel by Jussi Adler-Olsen, which have had a good portion of success with the crime novels about detective Carl. The international title I find as very suitable, and promises more to come!

    Carl (played by Nikolaj Lie Kaas) is a cop which after a mistake thrown off his normal job as detective, after nearly being shot. His wife has dumped him, his best friend and fellow detective is dead and his ex-partner crippled, both in the same case which nearly cost him life. He is put at a desk to close open old cases. But he has other plans. I'll leave the case here, but the film is so well made, and the actors play so well in a well crafted script by Nicolaj Arcel, which really is an amazing writer, that this is well worth a watch.

    The film manages to be interesting all the way through, and even gives us as viewers some really hard scenes to watch, as well as giving some kins of flashbacks which is really fresh. The casting is also very good when it comes to these time flashbacks, which show real quality.

    This is the start of a franchise of Adler-Olsen filmed novels, and I hope the next will be just as good. Nicolaj Lie-Kaas has said yes to three more. Surprisingly also well known Swedish comedy film maker Fares Fares function as his sidekick, though his Danish is quite bad. But it works, due to his credibility, and that he is a foreign breaking on Danish.

    Check it out.
  • Caught the Danish premiere yesterday with a friend - going in without much in the way of expectations.

    I'm still in the process of reading the book, which I think is a fine crime/thriller/drama - but not much more than that. Not sure what all the fuss is about - but maybe the latter half of the book will make that clear.

    Inevitably, there are significant changes from the source - most notably the protagonist Carl Mørck being significantly younger in the film. But Nikolaj Lie Kaas does a fine job portraying the jaded and highly sarcastic cop despite his age, and he's a reasonable fit for the part.

    Fares Fares plays Assad, the upbeat immigrant counterpart to Mørck - and he's the standout in the film, if you ask me. He's a pitch-perfect match for the character in the book, and he manages to give the part warmth, machismo and endearing humor all in one package. Pretty much exactly as I imagined him - and that includes his physical appearance.

    The character of Merete Lynggaard is played by Sonja Richter - and I'm not sure what to think of her portrayal. It's for certain that she's done a great job with her physical appearance - which changes during the film, to a degree not unlike the well-known extremes like DeNiro in Raging Bull or Christian Bale in The Machinist. Not quite that extreme, but probably the most significant physical change I've seen in Danish acting. That's commendable, of course, but I honestly don't think she's a good fit for Merete as described in the book. It's mentioned several times that she's almost divine and irresistible in her beauty and charm.

    I imagined her as having much more presence than Sonja, I have to say. Overall, I'll give her a pass because of the work she put into her body for the film - but I would have chosen someone else for the part.

    As for the film itself - it obviously skips a lot of detail, but that's to be expected. I did miss some of the interplay between Mørck and his boss (played by Søren Pilmark) and they didn't do justice to his relationship with Hardy, his crippled-by-gunshot best friend (Troels Lyby).

    But beyond those omissions, I found the experience very engaging and quite faithful to the book. The atmosphere is very strong - with great photography and lighting. It has a very suitable Noir feel throughout - and I particularly liked the music, which did a great job of setting the dark tone.

    The locations are strong - and I must admit that the police station and its "Afdeling Q" basement looked more or less just like they did in my mind when reading.

    The buddy cop partnership of Mørck and Assad is spot on - and has a great combination of humor and subtle mutual respect. The banter between these two guys is definitely the high-point of the film.

    I'm not going to spoil anything - so it will suffice to say that the ending is good and extremely tense.

    Essentially, it's a great adaption - and I don't think they could have done much better, given the nature of film and the limited run-time.

    It probably bears repeating that I'm not a major fan of the book (based on the first half) - and as such, I might not be invested enough to notice all the flaws. So, take that into account when reading this review.

    I hope I've been helpful ;)
  • The latest in a long (endless?) line of fine Scandinavian police thrillers, The Keeper of Lost Causes (Kvinden I buret to give it its Danish title) is a taut, thrilling cop drama that compels and seizes the interest for the duration of its 97 minute running time.

    In the aftermath of an ill-fated mission that leaves one colleague dead and another seriously injured, police inspector Carl Mørck (Nikolaj Lie Kaas) is bumped from his department and tasked with setting up Department Q, a dead-end desk job that requires him to spend the next few years ensconced in a dusty basement with a new partner, Assad (Fares Fares), tying up the loose ends on old cases. Instructed to close three cases per week, Mørck and Assad begin with the investigation of a politician, Merete Lynggaard (Sonja Richter) who disappeared five years previously. Written off as a suicide, Mørck is determined to prove there is more to the case and delves into a murky case of abuse, murder and kidnapping.

    With both Kaas and Richter alumni of the original series of The Killing, and Fares a star of both Easy Money and Zero Dark Thirty, the central trio makes for a very solid human triptych, even if displayed as separate components (he wrote carefully, determined not to lead or hint or give anything away). The relationship between Mørck and Assad, particularly, is a sufficient variation of the 'cop buddies' partnership to make it feel new. Both policemen have their foibles, their differences and their similarities; Mørck is out of favour, Assad has been trusted with something vaguely resembling a promotion, Mørck is silent and brooding, Assad celebrates his new found 'freedom' with ear-bleeding music, Mørck is a battering ram, Assad invests time to achieve his results…

    As an aside, The Keeper of Lost Causes succeeds magnificently in portraying a Muslim character in a positive light in a film that isn't about that issue. Assad could be anyone; he just happens to be a Muslim.

    Though The Keeper of Lost Causes will invariably be compared to The Killing, it is closer in tone to the thoughtfulness of Wallander and the cynicism of French series Spiral and is spiced with the dark violence of Larsson's Millennium trilogy. There is humour within the gloomy folds of this thriller but it is cold and cynical as befits a yarn of kidnap and murder.

    I saw much of the outcome in the first fifteen minutes of The Keeper of Lost Causes but it was a still an electrifying journey that has a great deal to celebrate, not least of all a sublime accident sequence. Think 'ballet with cars' and you're getting close.

    Like all good thrillers, The Keeper of Lost Causes works on the terror factor that it could happen. We don't tend to believe in zombies and vampires, although I'm up for a short-term zombocalypse armed with a crossbow and a katana, but humans with a vindictive streak and a penchant for malevolent revenge? Yep, they're far too real to ignore.

    The Keeper of Lost Causes is a rare treat for another reason: it clearly sets itself up for a sequel and director Mikkel Nørgaard has duly obliged with the second adaptation of author Juss Adler-Olsen's novels, The Absent One (Fasandræberne), released in Denmark this autumn.

    Roll on the end of the summer!

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  • I saw this on a rented DVD in 2014. Felt like writing a review before i watch two of its sequels. The plot - After a raid gone wrong that resulted in the death of one of his team and the paralysis of another, a homicide cop Nikolaj Lie Kaas has been kicked to the basement aka Department Q to tie off five years of unresolved cases along with an inexperienced assistant called Faras Faras. They wind up pursuing the case of a high-ranking female politician, a supposed suicide whose body was never found. In short this is Scandinavian Noir. The acting of the two leading detectives is assured and the cinematography is compelling. It is a perfectly adequate crime thriller that will appeal to fans of this genre. The Keeper of Lost Causes is genuinely gripping, even though the direction is fairly standard and the main plot elements are predictable. Fans of The Treatment, Marshland, Memories of murder, Headhunters, Insomnia, True Detectives - S1 will definitely enjoy this.
  • Leofwine_draca22 October 2016
    I think it's fair to say that THE KEEPER OF LOST CAUSES is Denmark's answer to THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO; it has much in common with the look, style, and feel of the Steig Larsson adaptation, although the narrative is more simplistic and straightforward as befits a shorter film. Once again the story is a mix of crime grittiness, nasty unpleasantness, historical events impacting on the present, and some dogged detectives refusing to give up on a cold case.

    The methods of the killer in this film are quite terrifying from a psychological perspective, adding a sheen of unique horror to the movie which comes as an unexpected surprise. Although the subject matter is depressing the film is never so, because the production values are excellent and the cinematography particularly strong. The main characters aren't particularly likable, they're too gruff for that, but they are realistic, which is what counts. Although I'm not a huge fan of Scandinavian crime stories, even I enjoyed this well-paced and engrossing tale.
  • kosmasp26 January 2015
    If you like a cop thriller as much as I do, you are in the right place. I haven't read the book this is based on, but obviously and judging from what I saw in the movie, it must be good. There are more books (and it is obvious from the movie/story), so you might be getting even more from this (at least one other output is coming).

    The acting is really good (even if it feels a bit moody and broody at times) and the story is even better. There are more things here to judge than just some bad guys, with even the cop having his flaws (transparent from the beginning). We also get nice touches (the coffee thing) to elevate the watching experience. An all around good take on a criminal story
  • If your a fan of Nordic noir like me then there is enough here in Department Q to keep you entertained for 90 minutes. Whilst I did find the plot far fetched and totally implausible. The fast paced script quality acting, and the usual dark moody cinematography the Danes do so well, made this an enjoyable watch and look forward to further installments.
  • Slow moving detective movie but I like it like that.No excessive reading of words in another language because the film speaks for itself. The director has created a very entertaining atmosphere. You develop a feel for the investigation. The editing is tight. Nothing is wasted. The homicide detective gets demoted to cold case files. He picks up one that speaks to him. A suicide that after digging does not come close to a suicide and no body. Going deeper in, nothing is easy or as it seems. As you move along the story unfolds in tidbits and gets darker and darker. Man sinks about as low as a human twisted can go. I don't want to give away any of the ending but with lackluster uncommon in Hollywood style movie making it's riveting. I enjoyed this gem immensely.
  • There really isn't a lot for me to add to what others have commented so far, at least the ones who DID like the movie...

    As others have mentioned, the plot and overall story are fairly simple, but at the same time the way it is put together and the way the 2 policemen proceed through the case do indeed draw you into the film and skilfully ratchet up the suspense and tension as the story unfolds. The movie itself is well made and the acting by the two principles works well along with the tone of the film. There ARE other movies like this that I happen to like better, primarily because they were perhaps a bit more stylish and the stories were more complex and intriguing. The movies similar to this that I liked better happened to be foreign films (to me) Both are French. One is the very intriguing 'CRIMSON RIVERS' which has two cops investigating some unusual circumstances involving strange happenings and deaths surrounding a prestigious school. The other is the VERY stylish and slightly Science Fiction flavoured 'CHRYSALIS' which is a very sharp looking film that has some nice twists and turns involving memory and identity. This movie here isn't as stylish and is pretty straight-forward in the sense that they are trying to figure out what really happened to a woman in a five year old suicide case. BUT... the story IS very good and well done though...

    Since this is clearly the first in what likely will be a series of films featuring these two policemen working old cases (cold cases?) it sets the stage well in letting us get to know more about them and particularly why the more unfriendly cop is the way he is. What I appreciated about this movie was that they didn't overdo the characterizations like they easily could have done. They gave the main cop just the right tone of disaffection and dourness, but they didn't try to slam you over the head with it. What I also liked about this movie was that although it did present some uncomfortable situations (well, ONE, primarily), it wisely kept those elements restrained and didn't push it like so many do nowadays so freely and quite gleefully. For THAT I am thankful because I personally do NOT at all enjoy elements in films that glorify or greatly emphasize people's sadistic cruelty to others. Just not my thing... Make no mistake though, there IS a bit of that here, but being that I don't usually care for things like that, I felt that they kept an effective balance in depicting it.

    I'm thinking that future films with these two characters will likely be even better because now the stage is set and they will probably be able to do a lot more with the stories and the characters as time goes on.

    I would recommend this film IF you like slow burners that are not particularly flashy, but if you like ones that DO have a pretty good palpable sense of tension and suspense as the story unfolds. If you don't expect it to be TOO detailed or complex and you can just sit back and enjoy a good Police Procedural, you should find this one pretty entertaining.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    In Denmark, in an unsuccessful raid against a criminal, the impulsive and stubborn Homicide Detective Carl Mørck (Nikolaj Lie Kaas) is seriously wounded by a shot; his best friend and partner dies and the other detective becomes crippled with the bullet. When Carl is recovered, he is set aside by his chief in the Department Q, where old cases are closed and filed, to work with the responsible for the department Assad (Fares Fares).

    Carl stumbles upon a five year-old case of a missing person, Merete Lynggaard (Sonja Richter), who committed suicide in accordance with the investigation of an incompetent detective. Carl finds strange that someone with the intention of taking her own life brings the mentally retarded brother Uffe (Mikkel Boe Følsgaard) with her and he decides to investigate. Carl learns that Merete had given a lecture before her disappearance and he requests photos from the event. Then Assad shows the photos to Uffe that reacts to one with a man called Daniel Hale. They discover that the man lives in Sweden and when they arrive, the local police informs that Daniel died while fishing. But when they see his photo, they realize that Daniel is not the man that they are looking for but another one called Lasse (Peter Plaugborg). But their chief wants to abort the whole operation and close the case. Will Carl and Assad find Merete still alive?

    "Kvinden i buret" is a great European thriller with a good story and excellent screenplay that uses flashbacks to disclose characters and situations. The story recalls police stories from the 80's but using few clichés and without car chases. The plot can be an excellent pilot for a TV series or for a franchise since Detective Carl Mørck is an interesting character, dumped by his wife and losing his two partners. His association with Assad is promising. I look forward to see a sequel of this movie. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Departamento Q: Guardiões das Causas Perdidas" ("Department Q: Guardians of the Lost Causes")
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I have very mixed feelings about this movie. There are a lot of pros: 1) Great cast. Assad's optimistic character was a great contrast to Carl's brooding and tormented one. The two leads were perfectly cast for their roles and had good chemistry. The brain-damaged brother was great, as well.

    2) Fast moving: Overall, the movie moves fairly quickly - although, I don't mind a slow-moving drama.

    3) Raw and emotional: These characters have been through so much, you really feel for them. The brother, Carl, Merete, Carl's partner, even Assad (we know something happened for him to end up working with Carl, we just don't know what).

    4) Well written: We learn why the psycho targeted her and why he went after others. The storyline comes together well and everything eventually makes sense.

    Cons: 1) Some scenes were just too sadistic for my taste, but I can't dock points from a movie just because my personal taste does not run to sadistic scenes. The plyer scene? What's up with that? Was it really necessary? 2) They choose Merite out of all the cold cases to start with because apparently, she was "so pretty". This is mentioned several times in the movie where reference is made to her beauty. I hope if I ever go missing, my picture looks good.

    I guess that is all - so overall, more pros than cons. If you can deal with the sadistic aspects of it (after all, it does deal with a psychopath), it is a good movie. Some of the scenes with poor Merite were near impossible for me to watch. But I knew it was a dark movie going into it.
  • Suspenseful thriller that will keep you on the edge of your seat throughout the movie. I read the book a couple of years ago and as far as I can recall it, this movie does a good job in retelling the story.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I rented this movie because I like the actors who play the protagonists. However, the film is boring simply because it is edited in such a way that very early on the film shows you what happened to the missing woman. Why bother watching the rest?

    ***spoilers below*** So, the filmmakers genuinely expect us to watch how two policemen find a woman, who was presumed dead a few years back, but we know she is hidden in a tank by a psychopath. Great. The movie trots on, and when the policemen are about to find her, we see a "management summary" of how evil the guy is, who is keeping her in a tank (as if that were not enough). We see how he killed an old pal and abused someone in his orphanage, etc. But there is no clue as to why this guy is so crazy, why he hurt so many people, why he chose her for this form of torture. So in the end, I don't even freaking care about the whole plot. Yes, the policemen found a woman who was suffering and no one else would have found her, had they not been so stubborn... But, really? That is ALL the film has to offer? This has been done a hundred times with much more suspense and allure, why bother with this old bore? I wouldn't watch it again if I got paid for it! Note for parents: At the video store where I got the film, it was rated for children 6 years and up. I disagree entirely, this movie is not a children's movie.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Danish crime thrillers have a reputation for being well made, featuring interesting characters and offering lots of suspense. This reputation is mainly built on television series such as The Bridge and The Killing, but 'The Keeper of Lost Causes' is also a case in point.

    It has all the characteristics of a typical Scandinavian thriller: a gruff police detective, some psychological elements, and offbeat features like a character with brain damage, a Muslim policeman and a gay couple. The story is constructed as a classic thriller setup: a police detective tries to unravel a five year old cold case. At the time, it was dismissed as a suicide, but the detective uncovers some improbable elements and slowly finds the pieces of the puzzle.

    Some elements can be considered worn-out clichés: the detective is a bitter man without a family life, who has nothing else but his work to live for. His superior doesn't appreciate what he is doing, but he presses on regardlessly. When he is on the verge of solving the case, he almost gets killed by the criminal, but his assistant comes to the rescue.

    Yes, this sounds like you've seen it all before. Still, the film is quite enjoyable because of the skillful way everything is put together. The script, with several flash-backs, is well written, the cinematography is original (with a very good car crash scene), the acting is effective and the minimalistic sound track is impressive. The plot is perhaps a little bit bizarre, but that's not entirely unusual in a thriller of this kind.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The Keeper of Lost Causes (Kvinden i buret) is a Danish movie with subtitles, which might immediately put some movie-goers off – – but you should definitely give this one a go.

    Nikolaj Lie Kaas (who some may know from TV serial "The Killing") plays the gloomy and arrogant homicide detective Carl Mørck. His headstrong attitude lands one of his colleagues in the morgue and another permanently paralysed.

    This does not improve his gloomy mood.

    His boss also takes a dim view of his performance, and assigns Mørck to a less than promising new department – Department Q. Housed in a dingy basement, he has the mirth-crippling job of wading through 20,000 cold cases with the aim of doing a 'root cause analysis' on why they were inconclusive.

    His mood declines further.

    Just to complete his bed of roses, Mørck is recently divorced and gets no peace at home due to his stepson treating it as a love-nest in which to seduce his latest conquest, all while playing ear-splitting house music. It's all enough to turn a man to drink.

    Whilst Mørck despises the new job, this is in stark contrast to his new assistant Assad (Fares Fares) who sees the job as a step up in the world from the tedious depot job he came from. (It just proves that everything in life if relative).

    Whilst the job is meant to be one of sorting and filing, Mørck quickly gets obsessed with a five year old cold case – that of Merete Lynggaard (Sonja Richter) who apparently abandoned her mentally disabled brother Uffe (Mikkel Boe Følsgaard) on a ferry and committed suicide. What was the back story? Why did she do it? Mørck never got the chance to work on the case, as it was handled by a slapdash cop called Bak (Michael Brostrup) who now greatly resents that his work is being questioned.

    During the film we flashback to the time of the apparent suicide to see the pressures placed on the lovely Merete (there is a joke in there which you'll only get if you see the film) and focus on the unlikely, but extremely likable, pairing of Mørck and Assad as they close in on the real truth. To reveal more would provide spoilers to what is a well-crafted crime investigation story written by Jussi Adler-Olsen (who wrote the novel) and Nikolaj Arcel.

    Given the generally gloomy mood of the piece, this is not a barrel of laughs (although a barrel of sorts is involved!). Think "Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" crossed with the TV show "Cold Case" and a smidgen of Lethal Weapon and you would be about there. However, all the acting is uniformly excellent and the three leads – Kaas, Fares and Richter – are all highly believable. Richter in particular is magnetically good in a challenging role, featuring some of the best dental work since Tom Hanks in "Castaway".

    Direction by Mikkel Nørgaard is brisk and editing tight, with moody music, lighting and photography working well together. Some of the scenes are memorably staged, with some outstanding performances from child stars Olivia Holden and Lucas Lynggaard Tønnesen.

    Criticisms? Whilst the film is highly engaging and watchable, this is a genre that has been worked to death, and there is a sense in many of the scenes – one in particular for me involving Uffe and a photo id session – where you are sure you have seen the scene somewhere before but can't quite place it. And in a number of the set pieces you know exactly where the action is going to go long before it goes there.

    But a good film, and one I would encourage you to go see if you can find it anywhere (I saw it at a UK Picturehouse cinema, with Picturehouse being involved in the UK distribution).

    By the way, a Department Q sequel – "Fasandræberne" (or "Pheasant Killers" in English) – is already in post-production featuring Mørck and Assad again. I for one will be watching out for this.
  • Lost Causes are cold cases this detective is supposed to wrap up and close out...but the first one he looks at shows promise. The back story and the pace really work at building suspense.
  • I'll start at the top admitting I like my detective dramas to be dark, gripping, intelligent and firmly grounded in reality, however bizarre the crime story being told. I don't want superheroes in suits, impervious to beatings and bullets; I don't want ridiculously convoluted mysteries solved by unbelievable coincidence or unearned insights; I don't want villains who are Evil with a capital E, devoid of believable psychology, or even humanity - however twisted their actions might prove. So I am happy to have found the Department Q series! Much better than the majority of Hollywood detective dramas, these are somber, dark, gritty affairs, which are entirely believable without sacrificing suspense or bizarre, original crimes. Particularly in this first entry, they even go out of their way to portray a heinous, sadistic individual (imagine planning to slowly torture a victim for years!) who we are then made to understand, and even sympathize with, in a key sequence that is heartbreaking. You then watch this person for the remainder of the film without the comfortable distancing of a cartoon "Monster". Here the common, almost clichéd, character of the hard drinking "rogue cop" who is so obsessed and dedicated - however brilliant - no one wants to partner with him is treated realistically; those conditions are a result of a flawed personality, not some conceits assigned to an otherwise "likable" character who is usually also charming and funny and simply misunderstood by the two dimensional people around him. But the best characters can be interesting and involving while at the same time being frustrating and easy to dislike if the filmmakers have the courage to present a dimensional human being. And the characters here are three-dimensional. I highly recommend this film unless you're uncomfortable thinking that bad guys are humans too, that delving into the dark exacts a toll and all damaged cops don't smirk and crack one-liners like Bruce Willis selling out.
  • I was waiting for longtime to watch this movie after i saw review from Jackie cinemas and filmi craft...finally this movie not disappointed me but it wont be like 'the girl with the dragon tattoo' because simple plot with no twists..the story is, a girl was kidnapped by a guy and keep her in chamber for 5 years and atlast tries to kill her...
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The Keeper of Lost Causes launches a new franchise of lurid, realistic police thrillers from Denmark (by novelist Jussi Adler-Olsen), broiling in the wake of The Dragoon Tattoo gal.

    The hero, Carl (Nikolaj Lie Kaas), is your standard issue world-weary cop, who has nothing left in his life but his bleak job. His wife dumped him (for a gallerist!!), his best friend is dead and his ex-partner crippled, both the latter from his last botched homicide case. As usual, his brilliance lies in his disdain for convention, which means he's hindered rather than helped by his superiors, here not just the police hierarchy but the Swedish and Danish governments.

    To mark time till he retires he's banished to the basement to go through the motions of reviewing cold cases. To none of our surprise he clutches the case of a woman scholar presumed to have drowned herself. By film's end he frees her from five years of murderous captivity. Offered his homicide post back, Carl declines, preferring to remain in the basement as… The Solver of Lost Cases. The film's title might equally refer to the villain, who sadistically imprisons the woman who as a child unwittingly caused both her and his parents' death in a car crash.

    The twist is that our hero's partner is a practicing Moslem, Assad (Fares Fares). The competent, smart, amiable fellow proves more civilized than his embittered Danish partner. He's clearly written in to counter the fear of the burgeoning — and perhaps threatening — Moslem community in the Scandinavian countries. In contrast to the virtuous Moslem detective, the killer is a pure Scandinavian behemoth, in the Dolph Lundgren mold.

    The woman's plight and the villain's formidable physical and technological prowess make for a compelling drama. Ultimately, though, this is just a familiar tale powerfully told. It's rather a polished exercise of the genre than a classic that deploys the generic conventions for wider relevance. For more see www.yacowar.blogspot.com.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Scandinavian TV, film and literature has been a remarkable phenomenon over the past decade, with the wordwide success of 'The Killing', 'Let The Right One In' and 'The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo'. 'The Keeper of Lost Causes', based on an international bestseller written by Jussi Adler-Olsen, is a new Danish film in the same gritty noir crime thriller mould that many viewers have become accustomed to.

    Nikolaj Lie Kaas plays Carl Mørck, an arrogant and cantankerous homocide detective who nobody wants to work with even though he's good at his job. After a botched raid puts himself and his partner in hospital, Carl is demoted to a desk job handling old cases which were never resolved. Carl's job was to check each file and report on each case, but to never go beyond this remit. His life might be a mess, but Carl never played by the rules so why should he start now? He chooses a curious missing persons case which was tagged as a suicide. He's ably assisted by the far more optimistic Assad (Fares Fares), and thus begins a peculiarly Nordic bromance dead set on fighting crime.

    Director Mikkel Nørgaard spares no expense in showing us every crime thriller cliché available, saved not only by the two leads but the inventive means used by the captor for his victim. Far too many leaps of faith have to be taken to understand Carl's process of elimination, in what is a very straightforward thriller that lacks any real tension or plot twists. 'The Keeper of Lost Causes' often feels like a TV pilot, and the ending of the film surely means there is more to come. For anyone familiar with the Nordic Noir Wave with classic TV series such as 'The Killing', 'Wallander' and 'The Bridge', 'The Keeper of Lost Causes' will probably be a disappointment. For the rest, this film is a good introduction to a particular genre that the Scandinavians do so well.
  • The point that I should start is the official title, "The girl in the cage", I prefer by far the worldwide title since it focus more on the protagonist (has an off-topic: the Italian title makes it sound like a documentary). If you like the old drama/mystery/crime movies like I do, you will love this one, doesn't add really nothing to the gender, but it's so well produced and the acting was on point, got to love when you see an actor, Nikolaj L. Kaas in this case, waking up in a realistic way, the mood of the whole movie brings you to that slow passing detective drama, rare in our days, with all the CSI around, and ends up with a very thrilling ending.

    TL;dr - Noir nordish mood crime/drama
  • Somethings are just rewriting. Irritating to watch
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Most of the thrillers have some holes in the story. However, this movie has so many holes in the script that it makes it unbearable to watch. It's so predictable and boring that I almost fell asleep after watching it for a while. The script is absolutely unbelievable, and one can only wonder about what audience can buy such a rubbish. I don't like the Scandinavian movie filming with dark rooms, unshaven and sombre actors and absence of pretty women. This movie has it all. I almost fell from my seat when the heroine of this movie was called beautiful. Maybe the American sense of beauty is different from that of Scandinavia, but guys, you had Ingrid Bergman and Liv Ullmann. What happened to you now? To me the only enjoying thing in the movie was Assad. He's funny and he demonstrates decent sense of humor. Why did the creators of this film feel a need to show Assad performing a Namaz, a Muslim prayer? That scene has absolutely no connection to the story. Maybe it is the movie makers way to express their political correctness. Cheap trick! In two words: bad movie. Avoid it, you'll miss nothing.
  • dsantisp18 September 2015
    I've watched this movie now because I'm scheduling a thematic channel.

    It is a phenomenon. The detective literature and films from the Nordic countries boom. Not only from Larsson but since the Henning Mankell's inimitable Inspector Walander. And always with its trademark: an undercurrent of social criticism.

    The Q department is a very good idea that will gives us good detective stories to fans of the genre. Some clichés tarnish the story: the strongly different pair of cops, the detective alone and tormented, the chiefs are always fools ... But the plot is smoother, enough to enjoy.

    I look forward to the next chapter: Fasandraeberne.
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