Asides

Something to watch tonight: Tuesday 19 September

By September 19, 2023No Comments

A Man Called Ove (Holm, 2015) is a 99c digital rental from Apple

Back on 4 September, I recom­men­ded the Tom Hanks vehicle A Man Called Otto which had just landed at Neon and Prime Video and, in the com­ments on that post, read­er JJW of Victoria, Australia (I think) “deman­ded” that I review the ori­gin­al Swedish film A Man Called Ove which came out in 2015.

Both films are based on the same best­selling nov­el (pub­lished by Fredrik Backman in 2012 and itself based on a series of blog posts) and the Hanks ver­sion is clearly indebted to the Swedish movie as much as the novel.

The premise: Ove is an incor­ri­gible grump, a wid­ower tak­ing out his frus­tra­tions on his long suf­fer­ing neigh­bours. Everyone is else is “an idi­ot” but for some reas­on he is tol­er­ated by the community.

A fam­ily with young chil­dren moves in across the road and des­pite his con­sid­er­able mis­an­thrope, Ove dis­cov­ers there might be a little bit more to life than rage and grief.

Ove is a dark­er and deep­er ver­sion of the story. Perhaps it is the Hanks factor at work – Rolf Lassgård as Ove is less famil­i­ar than the twinkly good guy per­sona Hanks has become known for. But the back story – revealed in exten­ded flash­backs – is much more tra­gic and the act­or play­ing the young Ove (Filip Berg) is stronger than inex­per­i­enced Truman Hanks1 in Otto.

I should point out that the warn­ings regard­ing sui­cide themes are even more per­tin­ent here as the attempts at self harm are treated more ser­i­ously than in the Hanks film.


Funerals & Snakes is a reader-supported pub­lic­a­tion. To receive new posts and sup­port my work, con­sider becom­ing a free or paid subscriber.


A Man Called Ove is avail­able – pre­sum­ably for a short time – as a 99c digit­al rent­al from Apple.

1

Truman’s only screen per­form­ance cred­its to date are in films that star his fath­er, Tom.