O'HortenA taciturn railway engineer retires and must find a new life, while encountering many strange experiences along the way.Reviewed by Frederica Mathewes-Green | posted 5/15/2009 09:29AM

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O'Horten
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MPAA rating: PG-13 (for brief nudity)

Genre: Comedy, Drama
Theater release: May 15, 2009 Directed by: Bent Hamer
Runtime: 1 hour 30 minutes
Cast: Baard Owe (Odd Horten), Espen Skjonberg (Trygve Sissener), Ghita Norby (Fru Thorgersen), Henny Moan (Svea), Bjorn Floberg (Flo)
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How odd is Odd? When we meet Odd Horten, he is driving the Oslo-Bergen express train through a blue-white snowy landscape. (This opening-credits sequence is gorgeous: each dive into a tunnel, each returning plunge through a circle of searing white, is a cinematic marvel.) But a young railroad employee catching a ride up front with Odd finds that it's very hard to draw him into conversation. Questions and comments get monosyllabic replies, if any. Why is that?

Bard Owe as Odd Horten
When we get a good look at Odd's face, we don't gather many more clues. You wouldn't say that this looks like a man wrestling with inner demons. Odd is a healthy-looking 67-year-old, about to retire after spending nearly 40 years driving trains. He doesn't look depressed or angry, not struggling with some tormenting memory, nothing like that. He's just silent. What makes him like this?
Well, it's because he was written that way. In Odd Horten, Bent Hamer (both director and screenwriter) has given us a character who is taciturn and reserved, and thus an ideal foil for any number of zany incidents. One sequence unfolds this way: Odd falls asleep while taking a sauna, and wakes to discover he is alone inside the closed health club. He uses the opportunity to take a nude swim in the darkened pool. (Terrific photography here, as always: overhead shots of the dark shape of his body slicing through the water above the pool's turquoise floor.) But then Odd hears laughter, and pops up his head to see a young couple embracing and disrobing for their own midnight swim. He escapes without their notice, but while dressing discovers that his boots have been stolen.
In the next shot, Odd is walking down a snowy street in red pointy-toe high-heeled boots. He stops to speak to a drunk lying dangerously near the streetcar tracks, and it's off to the next adventure.
O'Horten is certainly as good as, or better than, any number of movies organized around quirky main characters. If anything, it rises above the rest, thanks to the excellence of its cinematography and lighting, sets and acting. (And how refreshing it is to watch a movie populated entirely by people who look like real people. Not a facelift in a carload.)

Odd and the other train engineers
And yet—is there a point? The point presented most explicitly is that people should not get stuck in their ways, but always be open to trying something new. You may have seen that theme in a movie before.
I'll lay out the way the way it developed here, though it gives away a plot point; it's given away in the trailer anyway. Odd's mother, Vera, is in a nursing home, and when he visits her we see a photo of her as a young girl holding her skis. We learn that she was a ski jumper in her youth, though the sport was then largely closed to girls. (Hamer's own mother was a ski jumper, and the movie is dedicated "In memory of my mother and all other female ski jumpers.") Odd later tells another character, Trygve, about his mother's involvement with the sport. Trygve then asks Odd whether he was a ski jumper, and he replies, "No. I didn't dare." After a pause, he continues, "That disappointed her."
Given that setup, how likely do you think it is that Odd will later make a midnight climb to the top of the Olympic ski jump and take off? How likely is it that, in reality, he would survive? But in the world of movies, a reserved person who does something daring is always rewarded, and in the closing scenes we see Odd's life taking a quietly brighter turn.

The view from Odd's seat
I'm torn about this movie, because it is artistically of such high quality. It's not a cold artistry; you can feel how much Hamer dotes on Odd's character, and savors his droll predicaments. (I was somewhat annoyed with the score, however, which uses a tinkly, tiptoeing celesta to direct our amusement.) This is a movie made with love, and I don't think it could have been done better. And yet—it's so inherently contrived. Set up a straw man, an unusually reserved older gentleman, and then throw a number of strange incidents across his path. That story is rigged at both ends. The resolution doesn't feel like it has organic weight; it doesn't feel inevitable, or even likely, because everything preceding it has been too blatantly imaginary.