Something Happened | |
---|---|
Directed by | Roy Andersson |
Written by | Roy Andersson |
Starring | Klas Gösta Olsson Anne Tubin Lennart Björklund |
Cinematography | István Borbás |
Edited by | Roy Andersson |
Production company | |
Running time | 24 minutes |
Country | Sweden |
Language | Swedish |
Something Happened (Swedish: Någonting har hänt) is a Swedish film directed by Roy Andersson. The film was conceived as an educational film about AIDS, but raised controversy and was withdrawn. The film claims that HIV was developed in American military laboratories, and that its well-established African origin is a cover-up conspiracy by the Americans. Today the film is regarded as a significant step in the development of the style seen in the director's later and more acclaimed films.
Production
In 1986, the Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare contracted Roy Andersson to write and direct an information film about AIDS to be shown in Swedish schools and to military conscripts. At the time, Andersson had not made a film since the financially unsuccessful Giliap from 1975, and had since then mainly worked with television commercials. Before the film was finished, however, the Board asked Andersson to abandon the project. The board had seen the finished parts and questioned Andersson's sources, and were also sceptical about the overall approach and tone of the film. Andersson continued to work on the project on his own and eventually finished it.[1]
The film introduces what would become the director's signature style, with static camera and long takes featuring hand-picked amateur actors in grim make-up. The style had been hinted at in Giliap and was developed further in Andersson's commercials, later to be even more refined in the feature films Songs from the Second Floor and You, the Living.
HIV origin theory
In the film, Andersson strongly criticises the widespread theory of HIV's origin in Africa. Included are scenes featuring scientists promoting this theory in ways which make them appear as incompetent and racist, and the theory highly unlikely. Andersson instead suggests that the virus had its origin in American military laboratories, and that the African origin is a part of a conspiracy by the Americans. The theory the film supports was later revealed to be an invention by the East German security service Stasi, with the intention to discredit the western world.[1][2]
Release
Following the positive reception of Andersson's 1991 short film World of Glory, Something Happened was in 1993 screened at a number of international film festivals, where it received several awards.[3]
See also
References
- 1 2 Bergdahl, Gunnar (2004-01-09). "Roy Andersson, Stasi och sanningen". Helsingborgs Dagblad (in Swedish). Retrieved 2011-06-08.
- ↑ Kello, Lucas (2017). The Virtual Weapon and International Order. Yale University Press. p. 215. ISBN 9780300226294.
- ↑ "Någonting har hänt (1993): Awards". Swedish Film Database. Swedish Film Institute. Retrieved 2011-06-08.
External links
- Official website (in Swedish)
- Something Happened at IMDb