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Winter Brothers
Winter Brothers
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Winter Brothers
Theatrical release poster
DanishVinterbrødre
IcelandicVetrarbræður
Directed byHlynur Pálmason
Written byHlynur Pálmason
Produced byPer Damgaard Hansen
Julie Waltersdorph Hansen
Starring
CinematographyMaria von Hausswolff
Edited byJulius Krebs Damsbo
Music byToke Brorson Odin
Distributed byØst for Paradis
Release dates
  • 3 August 2017 (2017-08-03) (Locarno)[1]
  • 30 September 2017 (2017-09-30) (Iceland)
  • 7 December 2017 (2017-12-07) (Denmark)
Running time
94 minutes[2]
CountriesDenmark
Iceland
LanguagesDanish
English

Winter Brothers (Danish: Vinterbrødre) is a 2017 Danish-Icelandic drama film written and directed by Hlynur Pálmason, in his feature-length film debut. It stars Elliott Crosset Hove and Simon Sears as a pair of limestone worker brothers, whose disparate traits collide as issues of masculinity, isolation, and brotherly love are broached.[3] The film won numerous awards, including two Bodil Awards and nine Robert Awards—each of which resulted in victories from their respective ceremonies' highest honor, Best Danish Film.[4][5]

Plot

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Brothers Emil and Johan live together and work together at a quarry mining limestone. Emil is eccentric and misanthropic and is socially outcasted, but discreetly sells workers illicit home-brewed alcohol, for which he and Johan steal unlabeled liquid chemicals from the quarry's processing plant.

Emil visits a local hermit (credited as "the long-haired man") to collect repayment for an undisclosed debt (presumably alcohol sold to him on credit) and the hermit cannot repay, but Emil accepts a semi-automatic M1 rifle as settlement.

At the quarry, Emil is caught during a shift sneaking a drink of his brew by a supervisor, and the following morning, Johan and Emil are denied transport to the quarry by the driver and are forced to walk. Johan tells Emil a rumor has circulated that Emil's brew has made one of their coworkers gravely ill. Johan calls Emil "dark and aggressive," and Emil says, "Everyone has a little darkness in them," with which Johan disagrees. On a wall at the quarry plant, there's a crudely spray-painted scene of the coworker drinking poison and falling dead. In the mine, Emil asks his coworkers if they want to buy alcohol, and they all decline, citing various excuses. He accosts a coworker, who throws a limestone brick at him, which hits him in the temple. That night, Emil watches an army-issued rifle training video.

The following day, Emil's boss, Carl, summons him under the pretext of a review, during which he mocks Emil and confronts him about stealing from the plant and selling "toxic" homebrew. Two supervisors force-feed Emil an entire bottle of his brew and then throw him out of the plant onto a quarry slope. Emil has a shock-induced hallucination that Johan's girlfriend Anna is lying next to Emil and professes her love to him, and he later hallucinates that Carl is the rifle instructor in the training video and Emil and his coworkers are the trainees.

At home, Emil interrupts Johan and Anna having sex, attacking Johan. During their tussle, Anna sneaks out a window and Johan chokes Emil out, resuscitating him with CPR.

The ill coworker dies, and another worker threatens Emil at the quarry and tells him to leave and stay away, relating a story of a man and his loyal dog in which the man tells the dog to wait at the entrance to the mine while the man works, and the mine collapses, killing everyone inside, and the dog waits until it starves to death.

The next day, Johan leaves for the quarry, and Anna, who stayed the night with him, wakes Emil, who's sleeping on the couch. Emil shows Anna a card trick, and then a chemistry trick. In the mine, Johan's coworkers ostracize him and begin barking at him.

Cast

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Release

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Winter Brothers debuted in the Concorso Internazionale section at the 2017 Locarno Film Festival on 3 August 2017.[1][6][7] It was screened in the Discovery section at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival.[8] It later premiered in the USA at the 47th annual New Directors/New Films Festival at Lincoln Center in Manhattan, NYC.[3]

Reception

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Critical response

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On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 91% of 11 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.7/10.[9] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 63 out of 100, based on 8 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[10]

Jessica Kiang of Variety called the film "an impressively original, auspiciously idiosyncratic debut, one that scratches away at truths about masculinity, lovelessness, and isolation, that are no less true for being all but inexpressible".[7] Film critic Neil Young of The Hollywood Reporter called it "a confidently handled, promisingly edgy feature debut from Copenhagen-based, Icelandic writer-director Hlynur Pálmason".[6]

Accolades

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Winter Brothers won the 2018 Bodil Award for Best Danish Film and Best Cinematography (Maria von Hausswolff). Both Elliott Crosset Hove and Simon Sears received nominations for Best Lead Actor and Best Supporting Actor, respectively, for portraying the titular brothers.[11][12]

At the 2018 Robert Awards, the film won the Robert Award for Best Danish Film, as well as eight other merit awards: Pàlmason for Best Director, Crosset Hove for Best Lead Actor, Vic Carmen Sonne for Best Supporting Actress, as well as the Roberts for Best Cinematography, Best Production Design, Best Sound Design, Best Costume Design, and the Robert Award for Best Makeup. In addition, both Sears and Lars Mikkelsen earned Best Supporting Actor nominations. The film earned three further nominations in the categories of Best Screenplay, Best Editing, and Best Score.[13][14]

Year Award Category Recipient Result Refs
2018 Robert Awards Best Danish Film Hlynur Pálmason (filmmaker)
Per Damgaard Hansen (producer)
Julie Waltersdorph Hansen (producer)
Won [5]
Best Director Hlynur Pálmason Won
Best Screenplay Nominated
Best Lead Actor Elliott Crosset Hove Won
Best Supporting Actor Lars Mikkelsen Nominated
Simon Sears Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Vic Carmen Sonne Won
Best Cinematography Maria von Hausswolff Won
Best Costume Design Nina Grønlund Won
Best Editing Julius Krebs Damsbo Nominated
Best Makeup Katrine Tersgov Won
Best Production Design Gustav Pontoppidan Won
Best Score Toke Brorson Odin Nominated
Best Sound Design Lars Halvorsen Won
Bodil Awards Best Danish Film Hlynur Pálmason Won [4]
Best Lead Actor Elliott Crosset Hove Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Simon Sears Nominated
Best Cinematographer Maria von Hausswolff Won

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Winter Brothers is a 2017 Danish-Icelandic film written and directed by Hlynur Pálmason in his feature-length directorial debut. The film centers on two brothers, the reclusive and eccentric Emil (played by Elliott Crosset ) and his more conventional older brother Johan (Simon Sears), who work together in a remote during a brutal winter. It explores their strained relationship, marked by isolation, routine, and escalating tension after Emil begins distilling using stolen chemicals from the mine, leading to a violent . The story unfolds in a stark, rural Icelandic landscape that doubles for , emphasizing themes of , familial bonds, and the psychological toll of harsh labor. Pálmason employs a slow-cinematic style with long takes and minimal dialogue to capture the brothers' daily rituals and the claustrophobic atmosphere of their environment. Supporting cast includes Vic Carmen Sonne, , and Peter Plaugborg, with the film's black-and-white cinematography by Maria von Hausswolff highlighting the cold, unforgiving setting. Winter Brothers premiered at the 2017 , where it received acclaim for its atmospheric tension and visual poetry, earning a 91% approval rating on based on 11 reviews. Critics praised its blend of bleak realism and absurdist humor, with Roger Ebert's review noting its portrayal of "brutally harsh conditions" in the . The film was selected as Iceland's entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the but was not nominated, and it later won several awards at Nordic film festivals for its innovative storytelling.

Synopsis

Plot

Winter Brothers is set in a remote mining community in rural during a harsh winter, where the bleak, repetitive daily life of the workers underscores the film's atmosphere of isolation. The story centers on two brothers, Emil and Johan, who share a modest home and labor together at the mine, their contrasting personalities shaping their interactions. Emil, the younger brother, is an eccentric loner who distills potent using stolen chemicals from the factory, often sharing it with his coworkers despite its questionable safety. Johan, the older and more responsible sibling, is a family man who maintains a steady routine, providing a grounding influence amid the monotonous grind of quarry work. As the narrative unfolds, a coworker falls gravely ill after consuming Emil's , prompting the community to ostracize him and heightening workplace hostilities. Concurrently, Emil develops an intense infatuation with Anna, the wife of a fellow , leading him to engage in secretive and obsessive behaviors that deepen his alienation. This fixation compounds the central conflicts when Johan unexpectedly begins a relationship with Anna, igniting and betrayal between the brothers. Their dynamic, once defined by shared rituals like preparing meals and tending to chores, deteriorates into escalating tensions. The brothers' feud intensifies through personal confrontations and a violent clash, exploring the raw edges of and in their confined, unforgiving environment. The film's plot traces the brothers' routines— from dawn shifts in the chalk pits under freezing conditions to evenings marked by Emil's solitary habits, such as practicing with his —culminating in a profound confrontation that tests their bond. Harsh winter elements, including snow-swept landscapes and the oppressive whiteness of the mine, amplify the sense of entrapment and emotional desolation, framing the narrative as a study in fraternal rivalry amid existential solitude.

Themes

The film Winter Brothers explores core themes of and through the contrasting personalities of the brothers Emil and Johan, with Emil embodying chaotic whimsy and Johan representing stoic restraint, highlighting tensions in their relationship amid shared hardships. This rivalry underscores a deeper brotherly love strained by conflict, as their interactions reveal underlying affection despite escalating disputes in their isolated environment. Isolation emerges as a pervasive motif in the rural, industrial limestone quarry setting, reflecting the characters' emotional and social detachment in a harsh, unforgiving that amplifies their alienation. Symbolic elements further convey these ideas, with serving as a for from the drudgery of labor and the dangers of unchecked , as Emil's illicit both connects him to others and precipitates crisis. The winter landscape, with its perpetual and barren mines, symbolizes emotional barrenness and the desolation of working-class existence, mirroring the brothers' internal struggles. Rituals and routines in daily life, such as work and domestic habits, emphasize the monotony and of their confined world, underscoring themes of stagnation and futile resistance. Stylistically, the film employs sound design featuring concussive industrial noises and synthesized drones to evoke the sensory bleakness and mounting tension of the environment, immersing viewers in the characters' alienation without relying on exposition. Long takes capture extended sequences of labor and introspection, heightening the feeling of entrapment and real-time tedium, while minimal dialogue shifts focus to visual and auditory cues for a raw portrayal of emotional restraint. These elements collectively interpret the cultural context of working-class life in rural Scandinavian areas, touching on post-industrial alienation through depictions of rigid labor communities and suppressed desires.

Production

Development

"Winter Brothers" marked the feature-length debut of Icelandic director Hlynur Pálmason, who was born in , , and relocated to around 2010 to attend the National Film School of , from which he graduated in 2013. The film's conception stemmed from Pálmason's interest in exploring themes of familial tension and isolation within a contained rural environment, drawing on observations of everyday life in remote Danish and Icelandic communities to depict the dynamics between two brothers working in a . This debut project built on his prior short films, such as "A Painter" and "Seven Boats," which similarly emphasized visual and sonic exploration over traditional narrative arcs. Pálmason served as the sole , developing through an organic, location-driven that prioritized a non-linear, ritualistic structure to convey the and underlying tensions of mundane routines. He scouted the rural area in , allowing the environment to shape the story's emergence, focusing on repetitive habits and interpersonal conflicts rather than a conventional plot. This approach aimed to capture the film's core as a "lack-of-love story," highlighting emotional voids within family bonds through understated, authentic portrayals. The production was a Danish-Icelandic co-production led by Masterplan Pictures, founded by producers Per Damgaard Hansen and Julie Waltersdorph Hansen, with additional involvement from Join Motion Pictures and Pálmason himself as a . Initial funding was secured from Nordic sources, including the Danish Film Institute’s New Danish Screen scheme, the Icelandic Film Centre, and the Nordisk Film & TV Fond, following Pálmason's successful pitch at the Nordic Talents forum in , where it received a Special Mention Prize. Pre-production spanned approximately 2015 to 2016, during which emphasized performers capable of delivering subtle, naturalistic performances aligned with the film's themes of rural isolation and sibling contrast; for instance, the lead brothers were selected for their physical differences to their divergent personalities. This phase solidified the project's focus on authentic depictions of working-class life before commenced.

Filming

Principal photography for Winter Brothers took place over six weeks in 2016 at a and in , , a approximately two hours from , capturing the film's isolated winter setting within a confined two-kilometer radius. The choice of this authentic industrial site allowed for 24/7 access, enabling the crew to integrate real factory operations, including explosions, into the production. Cinematographer Maria von Hausswolff shot the film on 16mm stock, producing a gritty, textured aesthetic with desaturated gray and shale-blue tones that emphasized the quarry's pale, yellowish and the harsh, alien environment. The visual style featured long static shots and an observational approach, heightening the sense of ritualistic routines and desolation amid the natural light variations. Filming proved challenging due to weather-dependent conditions, which affected equipment functionality and actor endurance in the cold, remote setting. On-set, director Hlynur Pálmason maintained an organic process with a small crew to foster an intimate atmosphere, encouraging actors to infuse creativity into their performances while adhering to the script's core. This approach reflected the script's emphasis on daily rituals, influencing the unhurried, immersive shot choices.

Cast and crew

Cast

The principal roles in Winter Brothers are portrayed by Elliott Crosset as Emil, the depicted as an eccentric and isolated grappling with social awkwardness in a remote Danish community, and Simon Sears as Johan, his older sibling, who embodies stability as a reliable family man and coworker. 's portrayal highlights Emil's quirky intensity, drawing from the actor's early collaboration with director Hlynur Pálmason during , marking a breakout performance that earned him the Best Actor Award at the 2017 . In supporting capacities, Vic Carmen Sonne plays Anna, Johan's partner and a figure of romantic interest that heightens tensions between the brothers, while portrays Carl, the authoritative factory foreman whose oversight of the quarry workers underscores workplace conflicts. Additional roles include Peter Plaugborg as Daniel, a fellow quarry worker, and Michael Brostrup as Michael, alongside other minor characters representing family members and laborers in the isolated setting. Casting emphasized intuitive selections to capture physical and emotional contrasts, such as Hove's lean, piercing presence suiting Emil's impulsive eccentricity in contrast to ' more grounded demeanor for Johan's restraint, fostering the siblings' fraught chemistry without prior extensive rehearsals. These choices, prioritizing authentic humanity over conventional profiles, aligned with the film's arthouse debut context, where both leads delivered nuanced in non-professional-like environments. The roles embody central themes of fraternal through Emil's erratic, attention-seeking behaviors juxtaposed against Johan's measured responsibility, reflecting broader tensions in their shared workplace and home life.

Crew

Hlynur Pálmason served as both director and writer for Winter Brothers, marking his debut and establishing his overall vision through an intimate exploration of isolation and in a harsh industrial landscape. Cinematographer Maria von Hausswolff captured the film's distinctive visual style using 16mm , employing natural and to evoke a bleak, inhospitable aesthetic that underscores the characters' emotional and environmental confinement. Editor Julius Krebs Damsbo shaped the film's unconventional pacing, emphasizing rhythmic sequences and extended silences to heighten the experiential immersion over traditional narrative progression. Composer Toke Brorson Odin crafted a minimalist score featuring ambient electronic elements and subtle synth textures, which integrate with the environment to amplify themes of isolation and alienation. The production was led by s Julie Waltersdorph Hansen and Per Damgaard Hansen of Masterplan Pictures, with Hlynur Pálmason also serving as ; Icelandic co- Anton Máni Svansson contributed to the 's cross-border collaboration. Sound designer Lars Halvorsen developed an immersive audio layer, incorporating the resonant clangs and echoes of machinery alongside stark winter ambiences to envelop the audience in the protagonists' austere world. Production designer Gustav Pontoppidan recreated the industrial rural settings, transforming remote sites into a dust-choked, lime-bleached environment that mirrors the story's themes of and routine.

Release

Premieres

The world premiere of Winter Brothers occurred at the on August 3, 2017, in the Concorso Internazionale main competition section, marking a notable debut for director Hlynur Pálmason and generating early critical buzz for its unconventional style, where it won four awards, including the award for Elliott Crosset Hove. Following , the film screened at the (TIFF) in September 2017 as part of the , further building international interest among festival audiences. In late 2017, it appeared at Nordic festivals including CPH:PIX in , where it competed in the New Talent section and won the Grand PIX award. The film was nominated for and won several awards at the 2018 Bodil Awards and Robert Awards, including Best Danish Film at the Bodil and Best Picture and Best Director at the Robert. Industry and audience responses at these premieres emphasized the film's visual poetry and atmospheric immersion, with Locarno attendees praising its edgy, sensory depiction of isolation and the Hollywood Reporter noting its "confidently handled" debut promise amid strong festival buzz.

Distribution

Following its festival premieres, Winter Brothers entered commercial distribution beginning in the . The film received its national theatrical release in on September 30, 2017. It then opened in on December 7, 2017. International sales were managed by New Europe Film Sales, which prioritized Nordic markets before expanding to broader European territories and , resulting in distribution deals in over 20 countries. In the United States, KimStim handled a limited theatrical rollout starting June 29, 2018. Home media availability followed in , with DVD and Blu-ray editions released by KimStim in . Streaming options emerged concurrently, including on from late onward. The film's performance was modest, reflecting its arthouse and festival-driven profile rather than a wide commercial release, with a worldwide gross of approximately $12,685. U.S. earnings remained under $100,000, underscoring its niche appeal.

Reception

Critical response

Winter Brothers garnered generally positive reviews from critics, earning acclaim for its distinctive artistic style and execution. On , the film holds an approval rating of 91% based on 11 critic reviews, with an average rating of 7.7/10. On , it received a weighted average score of 63 out of 100 from 8 reviews, reflecting "generally favorable" reception. Critics frequently praised the film's atmospheric tension, innovative sound design, and strong performances. Peter Sobczynski of gave it 3 out of 4 stars, highlighting its evocative bleakness and ability to foster for the through deep character exploration. The review also commended the concussive soundscape created by composer Toke Brorson Odin and sound designer Lars Halvorsen, which mirrors the harsh setting. Variety lauded the surreal craftsmanship, describing the isolated limestone plant as a "surreally bleached-out backdrop" for an exceptionally crafted story. Similarly, Cineuropa's review emphasized the visual poetry in Maria von Hausswolff’s and Elliott Crosset Hove's exceptional as the sensitive outcast Emil. Some reviewers pointed to criticisms regarding slow pacing and narrative opacity, which made the film challenging for mainstream audiences. Sobczynski noted its occasionally obtuse and uneven nature, with minimal plot progression that could feel wildly uneven. Aggregate sentiments on Metacritic echoed this, with mixed reviews citing a slight storyline and awkward flights of fancy that prevent full cohesion. The overall consensus positioned Winter Brothers as a promising debut for director Hlynur Pálmason, blending naivety and sophistication in a delicate, edgy work that explores instinctive desires amid harsh isolation. This resonated more strongly with arthouse audiences, as evidenced by a 3.6 out of 5 rating on from over 2,750 users, compared to broader viewer scores. The acclaim also paved the way for nominations at the .

Accolades

Winter Brothers received widespread recognition in and across , particularly for its innovative debut direction and technical achievements. The film garnered significant accolades from major Danish awards bodies, highlighting its impact as a breakout work for director Hlynur Pálmason. At the 71st , organized by the Danish Film Critics Association, Winter Brothers won Best Danish Film, with Hlynur Pálmason accepting the honor for his directorial debut. The film also secured the Bodil for Best Cinematography, awarded to Maria von Hausswolff for her stark, immersive visuals of the rural Icelandic landscape. The 2018 Robert Awards, presented by the Danish Film Academy, marked the film's most dominant showing, with 9 wins out of 15 nominations. These included Best Danish Film, Best Director for Pálmason, for Elliott Crosset Hove's portrayal of Emil, Best Original Screenplay for Pálmason, and Best Cinematography for von Hausswolff, alongside victories in production design, , , and original score. On the Nordic stage, Winter Brothers was nominated for the 2018 Film Prize, representing among five contenders, though it did not win. The film also received the Carl Th. Dreyer Award from the Danish Film Critics Association, recognizing Pálmason's exceptional debut contribution to Danish cinema and its technical innovations. At international festivals, Winter Brothers premiered in competition at the 2017 , where it won four awards: for Crosset Hove, the Europa Cinemas Label Award for Best European Film, the Junior Jury Award – First Prize, and a Special Mention from the ÖKU Ecumenical Jury. These festival honors, combined with its Danish successes, elevated Pálmason's profile internationally and showcased the cast's performances, particularly Crosset Hove's, contributing to the film's distribution in over 20 territories.

References

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