The Kingdom: Exodus
Doppelgängers, owls that are not what they seem, significative white noise and a show-within-a-show… No, it’s not Twin Peaks but Lars von Trier’s final return to his 1994 hospital series The Kingdom.
Exodus’s protagonist is Karen (Bodil Jørgensen), who watches The Kingdom rigorously. One night, while sleepwalking, she drives to the hospital in search of Drusse and Lillebror. The receptionist denies the existence of these characters and curses the show for attracting visitors like her. Nevertheless, the lady persists and finally finds support from an orderly, who helps her investigate the myth-enshrouded location. Meanwhile, Helmer Jr (Mikael Persbrandt), a renowned Swedish doctor whose father has a history with the clinic, arrives in Denmark and is subjected to a patriotic tug-of-war by the hospital staff. His progressive initiative to eradicate assigned genders almost proves fatal as the wrong patient is operated upon.
The Kingdom: Exodus largely feels like a tribute to Lars von Trier’s career, a revisiting of his early work with a cast comprised of frequent collaborators and cameo appearances. The camera work is filled with the wobbly handheld shots that distinguished the Dogme 95 movement.
No stranger to provocation, von Trier ventures into some dangerous political terrain with his mockery of feminist efforts and gender equality, and proclaiming a hubris of science in the opening titles.
Nevertheless, the dark humour is The Kingdom: Exodus’s best quality as many of the fantastical elements feel like unimaginative and half-baked ideas and the resolution disappoints. “Everything is stolen,” the director’s note proclaims at the end, taking the easy way out.
Selina Sondermann
The Kingdom: Exodus is available on Mubi on 27th November 2022.
Watch a clip from The Kingdom: Exodus here:
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