Adam's Apples

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Sentenced to community service at a small, countryside church, Adam, a middle-aged neo-Nazi, is warmly welcomed by the cheerful vicar, Ivan. Although Adam is crude, full of hostility, and clearly beyond redemption, Ivan encourages him to choose a goal that will occupy his time there. When Adam dismissively replies that he will bake an apple pie, Ivan assigns him the task of nurturing the church's lone apple tree. If by the time this unassuming tree has been attacked by crows, infested with maggots, and struck by lighting, you are not reasonably certain it has become the battleground for a fiercely irreverent struggle between good and evil, then you have not had the pleasure of meeting an Anders Thomas Jensen film. (AZ Films)

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Trailer 1

Reviews (7)

kaylin 

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English Every now and then you like to give something you know nothing about a chance and find out nothing beforehand. This Danish film is a great example of what a film has to offer. A script that will take your breath away with many scenes, furthermore enhanced by excellent acting performances led by Mads Mikkelsen, who is one of my very favorite actors. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

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English It stars Mads Mikkelsen, but the film was weird for my taste. I wasn't extremely interested in anything, it's not funny or entertaining, I didn't really like the characters, and a few minutes after it was over I had trouble telling in two sentences what it was about. Not much 50% ()

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J*A*S*M 

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English Proper insanity. Such an utterly unpredictable and absurd script is not something you see very often. Adam’s Apples can’t be classified into any genre, there are moments that are easygoing and funny, followed by sadness and rage. Regardless, it’s a brilliant film in every aspect. PS: It’s impossible not to be reminded of Trier’s The Kingdom. ()

Necrotongue 

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English You’d expect me to boo this film, as my opinion of all kinds of gods and blind faith is...well, let's just say it’s not good. I had a surprisingly good time with this film, though. Ivan was truly perfect in his consistent and almost unshakable denial of reality. The film was full of excellent, sophisticated humor. Plus, the combination of oil – eggplant – racket was simply hilarious. ()

gudaulin 

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English Current cinema has a lot of problems, but perhaps the most threatening of all is political correctness, which reeks of self-censorship and self-deception. In the end, it annoys the viewer by leading to predictable points and dulling the edge of satire, humor, and serious drama that aims to criticize social disorder. It is precisely the political incorrectness and absolute unpredictability of the behavior of the film characters that significantly elevates Adam's Apples above today's film productions. The psychological battle between a passionately believing priest, a cynical technocrat in the form of a local doctor, and, above all, a discharged convict active neo-fascist Adam is presented in an unusual form of tragicomedy, which often teeters on the furthest boundary of what we can label as socially acceptable. However, that is precisely what makes it valuable to me, and very few films in recent years have given me as much joy as this one. Overall impression: 95%. ()

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