Fatso | |
---|---|
Directed by | Arild Fröhlich |
Produced by | Jim Frazee, Mads Peter Ole Olsen |
Written by | Arild Fröhlich, Lars Gudmestad |
Based on | Fatso by Lars Ramslie |
Starring | |
Music by | Kåre Vestrheim |
Cinematography | Askild Edvardsen |
Edited by | Vidar Flataukan |
Running time
|
91 minutes |
Country | Norway |
Language | Norwegian, Swedish, Danish |
Fatso is a 2008 Norwegian film directed and co-written by Arild Fröhlich.
Luca Lucchesi is a single man who lives in his late grandmother's house. He keeps himself busy by translating instruction manuals from German into his native Norwegian. He occasionally phones his German clients to tell them "Ya gotta Eat", but apart from that his social contacts are reduced to a friendship with a show-off named Fillip who patronises him. Rino is very attracted to a till girl but each time he sees her in the supermarket he is dumbstruck and breaks into sweat. He expresses his fears by secretly drawing kafkaesque comix which are accessible for the film audience. One day after a night of watching porn and consuming plenty of convenience food he learns that his father has rented out a room to female foreigner. When the woman arrives,she explains to him she was from Sweden and intended to start over again in Norway. He doesn't ask why but he gets that information anyway when he eventually finds her helplessly drunk on the stairs to their flat. She tells him she had fallen in love with a family man who had returned to the mother of his children and she had hereby just repeated her big mistake. Next morning she sees him masturbating and later she even finds his comix. But when she leaves he has learnt enough from her to talk to his true love, the till girl, and ask her out successfully.
Fatso received mixed reviews. The film was described as "well done" It has been stated that Fatso was "still enjoyable in all its oddness" and that there were even "laughs to be had within all that hesitation" But while "played for laughs" there was also a "brutal honesty" that would never be shown in a Hollywood film. One critic called Fatso's friendship with Fillip "both hilarious and sad" and added there were "direct and truthful" metaphors". Arild Fröhlich found appreciation as a "cool realist" who provided a "nontraditional" ending. It has been said Fatso was "the most unromantic comedy of all times" On the other hand the film was blamed for certain scenes which were "unnecessary and over the line". Other critics found Fatso "too mean spirited to be truly funny" or even "disgusting".
The film won the Best Director award at the 2009 Amanda Awards.