Review of Arctic

Arctic (2018)
7/10
Arctic - Offers Some Challenges
21 September 2023
Writer/Director Joe Penna's quite powerful debut feature is helped immensely by Tomas Örn Tómasson's stylish location cinematography, and Mads Mikkelsen is perfect in the lead. It's a classic slow-burn survival story played out within inhospitable and constantly threatening landscapes. It also offers some helpful survivor tips (but avoids some also) - the sense of hopelessness is exacerbated by the irony of also having to care for a possible 'rescuer'. As could be predicted, the pace is dictated by the attempts to exist in an ice-covered terrain.

Some reviewers have said it lacks spirituality, and this could be true as no one can survive in a no man's land, with so little hope of survival, without delving into that place in the mind that analyses the unknown. This is when we most feel the need to wonder about all those unanswered questions, the ones we can easily push out of our everyday thoughts, that is, when we don't need to think about them.

Some say outright they don't believe in God, but when all we have to prove this is that powerful, but miniscule organ known as the human brain -actually makes this assumption rather humorous. Why? Some ask. What are we mere mortals when measured against that endlessness of an infinite Universe? As molecules of this awesome vastness, how very little we can conclusively prove makes us almost ridiculously presumptuous, laying bare our own immense limitations.

While we have both feet firmly planted in the safety of our modern world, we can seem invincible, but take us out of our comfort zones, and this is when we really get to know ourselves - and how little we actually comprehend the mystery of our origins. Yes, the picture needed a stronger spiritual side to remind us that these survivors are mere humans, and their struggle is momentous.
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