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O’Horten Review, Telluride 2008

Paul Moore
By Paul Moore posted 1 year ago
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There just aren’t enough movies about old people. O’Horten is a Norwegian film about the title character coming of age, but this coming of age story takes place when he’s 67 years old, on the eve of retiring. Directed by Bent Hamer (Factotum), it’s a revealing movie about the quietly tumultuous transition in life with a soft name: Retirement.

The movie opens with Odd Horten (Bard Owe), a 40 year veteran train engineer, waking up to his morning routine, which is just as mechanical as the train station he reports to each day. Helming the engine, he drives his train in and out of dark mountain passages opening to the stark landscape of Norway in winter.

The night before his final voyage, the locomotive engineers association has a small banquet honoring his years of service where he’s given a dwarfed trophy called The Silver Locomotive. Already, Horten feels set apart from his colleagues who still have the enthusiasm of being full-tilt into their careers. Through a complex series of circumstances, Horten accidentally falls asleep in a stranger’s apartment and misses his final voyage. It’s the premature arrival of this next chapter in life, a symptom of which is chronically falling asleep, usually at the wrong times.

The ceremony of his final voyage blundered, Horten trips into a retirement he’s not prepared for. His friends aren’t where they’re supposed to be because they’re also retired or passed away. He eats less, but sits longer in his regular pub. He’s an operator no longer operating. With no wife or children, he visits his mom whos is only a quiet shadow of her younger self. Finally, into the drudgery of establishing his new life while looking back at the old one, Horten meets a man laying in the sidewalk calling himself Dr. Sissener (Espen Skjønberg). Whether Dr. Sissener slipped on the ice, passed out or laid down for a nap is of no consequence. At a certain age, falling down or falling asleep comes to be an expected intrusion. Horten and Sissener spend a much needed evening together and give each other the nudge they’re looking for to make the next transition.

Although the end of O’Horten is pretty dense with metaphor, it’s the hour and a half preceding it that’s hypnotic. Usually, when an old person is cast in a movie, they fit a young person’s view of them. They’re curmudgeonly and funny, often full of wisdom when it’s needed. The proverbial firecracker, which is really a young person with old skin on. Horten is cast not as young people see him, but how he sees himself: Confused, dissatisfied and burdened by how helpless this next chapter of life promises to be. The charm of the movie isn’t in the funny parts–and there are several–but in the quiet, alone moments with Horten. These are moments we rarely see, particularly with old charcters in movies. But they are the real connecting point between for an audience that spans generations. Generations preoccupied with a mythical sweet-spot in life that doesn’t come soon enough and passes too quickly.

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  • Telluride ‘08: “Prodigal Sons,” “O’Horten,” “Tulpan” « Fataculture said

    [...] Paul Moore, “Although the end of O’Horten is pretty dense with metaphor, it’s the hour and a half preceding it that’s hypnotic. The charm of the movie isn’t in the funny parts–and there are several–but in the quiet, alone moments with Horten. These are moments we rarely see, particularly with old charcters in movies. But they are the real connecting point between for an audience that spans generations. Generations preoccupied with a mythical sweet-spot in life that doesn’t come soon enough and passes too quickly.” [...]

  • Telluride 2008: Complete Coverage (Flix99.com) said

    [...] O’Horten review [...]

  • mike k said

    My wife and I just saw O’Horten at the Santa Barbara CA film festival. Having lived in Norway for 4 years, I must say that the characters in this movie are right-on, filled with the quiet resignation and stoic approach to life that is deeply engrained in the Norwegian phsyche and culture. The film is beautifully crafted and begs to be veiwed more than once, if only for the beautiful capture of the Norewegian light (and sometimes lack thereof) , the graceful and strong lines of the characters faces and fingers, and the urban color palettes that Hamer paints across the screen.
    To see the often banal existence of life in urban Oslo portrayed with such sensitivity and beauty will be emotional to anyone who has spent any time in Scandinavian life and culture. Ultimately, the respect and honor Hamer shows to the issue of old-age that looms before all of us gives hope and strength to continue on whatever personal journey lies before us, even when society tells us that our usefulness is at an end. Horten is truly a hero and conquers the spectre retirement through his honest pursuit of what is right and by finding the strength to become the person who had been there all along. O’Horten is wonderful.