95 out of 135 people found the following comment useful :- Come on! 7.7?, 5 January 2005
Author:
chreb (chr.eins@online.no) from Norway
I just saw "Ondskan" and I have to admit: It's one of the best films
I've ever seen. I own approx. 200 DVDs and this is among the 5 best,
without doubt. I also gave it a ten at the vote. What I don't
understand is why the majority of voters have given this movie a 7.
With an average of 7.7 that almost the same as "Secondhand Lions" on
7.4 - and that sucked(at least compared to this Oscar-nominated film).
Maybe the reason it's so low is because the movie is made in a foreign
language, so the American or non-Scandinavian speaking people won't
understand all the points. This could very well be it. I just want
future viewers of this IMDb-profile to know that there are others who
also disagree on the grade given. And please reply to my comment if you
agree.
54 out of 59 people found the following comment useful :- Cinematic and psychological study of adolescent cruelty, 16 December 2003
Author:
(tjackson@rcn.com) from Boston. MA
I wonder, as I write this, why a film like Ondskan hasn't received
commercial distribution in the States. Perhaps distributors assume
Americans
are too removed from the world of mid-century upper class boy's boarding
schools in Sweden to relate to the film, which is our loss.
Ondskan presents a microcosm of cruelty, status, and one-upsmanship - one
might say evil - that exists in such an institution. Every year we read
another horror story of a hazing gone too far. Children trounce their
playmates. There's plenty of physical aggression among boys. The latest
discussion concerns what among girls is called relational aggression, in
which an individual is harmed through the hurtful manipulation of peer
relationships and/or their friendships. .Neal LaBute has taken the idea of
sadistic relationships to the American workplace in 'In the Company of
Men'
and to the suburbs in 'Your Friends and Neighbors'. There have certainly
been other films tackling this particularly subject of sadism in boarding
schools, Young Torless (Der Junge Törless) in 1966, comes especially to
mind.
What is captivating about Ondskan ('Evil') is both cinematic and
psychological. The world of this o-so reputable boys school is painted in
earth tones and fine wood with muted light rendering its cold emotions.
The
set design by Anna Asp (who's has done some other great looking films)
lets
us feel as though we have lived in this space. The lead character, Erik
Ponti, at first we think will be the embodiment of the 'evil' of the
title.
He is regularly and systematically strapped by his stepfather. He
transfers
that frustration to his own classmates, which is what gets him sent to the
boarding school in question. There he is ritually brutalized by the
upperclassmen, which is, we are led to understand, the expected behavior
in
this hierarchy. To the administration and faculty this is apparently part
of
school tradition.
Eric's initial unwillingness to fight back, despite a similar
unwillingness
to bend to arbitrary, sadistic, and unwritten rules, is relentlessly
frustrating. As an audience we really want him to act. But his honor, his
fortitude, and the fact his mother has hocked some heirlooms to pay
tuition,
keep him from lashing back. We are thus submitted to the same unremitting
abuses with no real payoff. I will refrain from revealing the end, but it
is
not when or what you might expect. The result is a great ride and an
elating
experience. The audiences at Harvard, where I saw the film, applauded
afterward.
It's not a perfect film. There are clichés and expected set-ups. Still the
mushy adolescence of the actors cast in these parts is consistently smart.
The music is tasteful and well used. The direction is subtle and the
violence is felt more than seen, but when it happens it is as ugly as it
deserves to be.
37 out of 45 people found the following comment useful :- Beyond the Limits of Cruelty, 18 February 2005
Author:
Claudio Carvalho from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
In Sweden, Erik Ponti (Andreas Wilson) is the son of a remiss mother,
and his stepfather gives sadistic beatings on him, using the most
futile pretexts, without any interference of his mother. His
dysfunctional family makes him a very violent teenager, culminating
with his expulsion from the public school system in Sweden, due to a
fight and aggression against another pupil. His mother sells some
belongings of her and sends him to the elitist private school of
Stjärnberg, as his last chance to complete his basic education.
However, behind the name of the expensive and conservative school,
there is a code of (dis)honor among the students, where the younger and
those who belong to the lower social classes are humiliated by the
veterans and those who belong to the high social classes without any
questioning of the director. Erik feels like in hell while studying in
Stjärnberg.
"Evil" is a stunning movie, which shows the danger of the power in
wrong hands. Indeed, it is a psychological study of violence, which
leads to cruelty. It explains the social behavior of, for example,
street children in Brazil, who are sent very young to state
reformatories and become cruel criminals when adults. The story is very
engaging and the performance of the cast is outstanding, highlighting
Andreas Wilson and his greatest opponent, the sadistic Otto Silverhielm
(Gustaf Skarsgard). This movie shakes the viewers and in the end, we
are cheering to Erik's revenge, wishing him to kill his aggressors, in
a total inversion of the moral values. The DVD released by the
Brazilian distributor VF Vídeo Filmes shows also a total lack of
respect with the Brazilian consumers: in the Extras, there is an
interview in Swedish with the director Mikael Häfström and the
making-of, both without sub-titles, as if Brazilian people could
understand this language. My vote is nine.
Title (Brazil): "Evil Raízes do Mal" ("Evil Roots of Evil")
30 out of 38 people found the following comment useful :- The "enduring" hero, 31 January 2005
Author:
Harry T. Yung (harry_tk_yung@yahoo.com) from Hong Kong
Swedish "Ondskan" competed against a strong field in the Foreign
Language Film category in last year's Oscar which was won deservedly by
Canada's "Les Invasions Barbares". While my personal favorite is
"Tasogare Seibei", Ondskan is a worthwhile contender.
The scene is familiar, boarding school bullying, upper class domination
and violence. The message however is broader and more general. Ghandi
has been mentioned a couple of times in the movie, which reminds me as
well of the "enduring" heroes in the westerns in the fifties who adhere
steadfastly to their principle, refusing to be provoked into violence
(the best example is The Big Country). The motivation of the "hero" in
Ondskan is however a little less lofty, as I'm going to explain.
Thanks to his dominating and sadistic step-father, Erik (Andreas
Wilson) is well-equipped to endure violence and abuse when he is sent
to a prestigious boarding school after causing a lot of problems at his
local high school. While a veteran perpetrator of violence himself,
Erik is effectively constrained as if by a spell cast by the boarding
school: anyone fighting with a member of the student council will be
expelled.
Most of the movie surrounds the senior students' tyrannizing over the
juniors, and it gets a bit too long. There's no point in elaborating
other than saying that the violence is not particularly graphic
(accepting that some may disagree) and if you're going to throw up in
the cinema, it's most likely due to some other revolting scenes, the
details of which I'll spare. Although Erik's motivation in enduring the
abuses and violence is essentially self-preservation (from expulsion),
he does earn the audience admiration, which makes the poetic justice at
the end rather sweet.
A great part of the movie's success owes to Wilson's excellent
performance. Although most of the audience start with thinking that
Erik is the "evil" character, they would soon turn completely around
and empathize with him, and eventually love him. Also excellent is
Henrik Lundstrom, playing Erik's meek, plump roommate who is victimizes
as he becomes the villains' tool to break tough Erik. In addition to
this affecting friendship, there are two other sub-plots which enrich
the movie without detracting from the main theme. One is Erik's romance
with a maid at the school. The other is his success with the school's
swimming team.
Finally, one interesting point is that Erik's way out, his "court of
final appeal", turns out to be indeed the legal route. While this makes
it a little bit of a fairy tale ending, there is something to ponder
over. There may really be numerous pockets of quasi jurisdictions such
as the boarding school that really need to be straighten out by the
real legal system. That point I'll leave to the legal experts.
24 out of 34 people found the following comment useful :- Gripping and Compelling, 27 September 2003
Author:
TheFuneralParty from vancouver
Erik Ponti(Andreas Wilson) is a young trouble maker who is constantly abused
by his stepfather and often ignored by his mother.
After a fight in his school, Eric gets enrolled in a boarding school by his
mother. At the new school, Erik only makes one good friend Pierre(Henrik
Lundström) but their lives slowly start falling apart when the older boys
from the school make a pact to make Erik's life a living hell. This was a
very gripping and disturbing movie. I saw this at the Vancouver Film
Festival and enjoyed it quite a lot. Andreas Wilson is a gorgeous and
talented young man and I hope he becomes big someday.
I would give Ondskan or also known as "Evil" 8/10.
15 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :- Totally gripping, 17 August 2006
Author:
marc from Denver
I was amazed at how excellent this film was. I just did not expect much
and I was blown away. My first Mikael Hafstrom film was Derailed which
also surprised me. It was not a great film but it was very good and
much better than the general reviews that it garnered. It made me
curious about Evil and I just cannot recommend this film enough.
Andreas Wilson is terrific as the "title" character and the way his
character develops is quite different from the way one might expect.
You will be rooting for him to overcome the cruelty and evil that
surrounds him throughout the film. If you enjoy coming of age tales do
not miss this masterpiece. I look forward to Mr. Hafstroms future
films. "1408" is up next and it sounds terrific.
One more thing, I just finished watching Saint Ralph and would highly
recommend watching it as a double feature with "Evil". They really play
well together.
23 out of 34 people found the following comment useful :- Fantastic!, 30 September 2003
Author:
Marina (themarina@shaw.ca) from Vancouver, BC
This is a great film. Truly outstanding. The characters are real and the
story, however farfetched, rings true to life. Particularly enjoyable is
the
internal fight that transforms Erik from an angry youth to a man. And who
could forget Andears' handsome good looks?!? Watch out Hollywood! Better
prepare for the Swedish invasion! If you have the opportunity to see this
film, do. It's well worth your time and money.
13 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :- Evil is good, 16 December 2005
Author:
FilmFlaneur from London
Imagine the schoolboy sadism of Der Junge Törless (1966), the anarchism
of If... (1968), with just a dash of the old school bullying of Tom
Brown's School Days, and you get something of the flavour of Evil,
which sets its student angst in 1950s' Scandinavia. Ironically for a
film that will end up on a relatively pacifist message, it starts with
a punch up as the rowdy hero Erik (Andreas Wilson), thrashed by his
unpleasant step father at home, duly takes it out on another student at
his current school - only to be summarily expelled on the basis of his
continuing bad behaviour. Dubbed 'evil' by the headmaster at his
disciplinary hearing Erik appears, at least at first sight, to be
irredeemably bad. Surly and uncommunicative, a trait he only gradually
overcomes, he's a disruptive influence. One measure of the film's
success is how it will show a growing moral dimension to this truculent
and uncooperative personality, the once-bad boy quickly maturing before
our eyes. It will also show how being a 'disruptive' influence can
ultimately be a positive, just as much as a negative, force in a closed
society. But meanwhile Erik's long suffering mother packs him off at
short notice to Stjansberg, an exclusive boarding school where, we are
told, are moulded generations of Swedish 'supermen'.
Adapted from a bestselling novel based on painful reminiscence, Evil is
praised in interview on the disc by the author for its 'journalistic
accuracy' in recreating events. It's a fact that makes the environment
in which a more subdued Erik finds himself all the more chilling and
depressing. For Stjansberg is a school where the teachers believe in
leaving students to their own devices outside of classes, a place where
enthused with an ethos of alleged 'team spirit' the system of
discipline and punishment is arbitrary, prejudiced against the weak or
different, and where elements of fascism still lurk within the teaching
profession. Despite its regimentation and strict codes, Erik soon
discovers that "there's no honour in (the) school - only ways of making
it hell," while eventually realising that "what separates men from
animals is not only intelligence, it's morality." Set on a painfully
steep learning curve, he makes friends with the best student in the
school (his roommate), and while remembering his promise to his mother,
struggles to stay out of trouble. Erik's painful introspection at this
point recalls that of Jim Stark in Rebel Without A Cause (1955) another
film in which a troubled male youngster forms an alliance with a weaker
soul (Sal Mineo's 'Plato') while in moral agony over conflicting
impulses.
Erik may suddenly be concerned to stay out of conflict, but his refusal
to compromise a newfound dignity and moral superiority quickly brings
him up against Silverstein, the Flashman figure of the piece who, as a
the most visible representation of the fascist strain that permeates
the school has "to be fought, now and forever." What infuriates the
bullies at the school no end is Erik's unexpected - and, in the light
of what we have seen of him previously, uncharacteristic - refusal to
fight. Instead he maintains a quiet mocking stoicism, bearing glumly,
at least to a point, the institutionalised humiliation heaped upon him.
Like Gandhi, a name associated with a philosophy of peaceful protest
and civil disobedience (and who is specifically invoked at one point in
the film) Erik's mature response to provocation is hard earned, but
grows increasingly effective.
Wilson is excellent as the put upon student, although from such a
physical person one might have wished more passion in his liaison with
Marja, the young woman from the kitchen(Linda Zilliacus), who tacitly
supports his tactics. In fact, this affair proves to be Erik's
Achilles' heel, and the events leading on from it form the real climax
of the picture. So much of Evil has been outstanding and intriguing to
this point that it's a shame that the conclusion of the piece,
springing so readily from a plot 'plant' earlier in the story, is a
little too pat. From the interviews on the R2 DVD the viewer learns
that, in real life, the school in question was brought to book by
eventual and unwelcome media exposure prompted by the author. Whether
or not it was achieved so easily as is suggested by the movie is a moot
point, but the convenient threat of sensational journalism, easily
obtainable and brought down upon the head of a palpable corrupt and
unfair system is too much of let off, at least to this viewer, as well
a cliché of a sort, not to pass un-remarked. One imagines that the
scene of an arrogant headmaster made to eat humble pie dramatically was
too irresistible to exclude, but I sensed here that such a moment was
an easy way out.
With this hesitation, one can recommend the film thoroughly, being both
excellently shot and acted as well as making an important statement of
its own. Rather amusingly in the accompanying DVD material is a comment
from one of the principals, that they didn't want it to be "a Dogme
film, a small film that no one cares about, we want(ed) it to be a
stylish, big, expensive, heavy, good film." It's an ironic remark as,
arguably, a stricter and more rigorous approach to the story, familiar
from Van Trier and colleagues, would have led to some fascinating
dividends especially in the presentation of such stark material.
Fortunately filmic conservatism also pays off when the results are so
sincere and full of verisimilitude as here, and with a cast who fit
their roles like a glove and, as a film with an 'old fashioned'
humanistic message about standing out against the evils of
totalitarianism in a closed society, the message is as relevant as
ever. In short I doubt whether another 'school film' as fine as this
will come along for some time, and so seek it out.
7 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- A Very Decent Film, 4 August 2006
Author:
julioecolon from United States
I would recommend Ondskan to anyone who is interested in coming-of-age
films. American cinema has always been expert at such portrayals, and
it is good to see so accomplished an example out of Sweden. I liked
especially the fact that the director never wavers as he unmasks the
unwholesome face of an angst-ridden, violence-prone, socially
intransigent Swedish society of the not so long ago . Set in the
fifties, mostly at a posh boarding school for the upper-class, where
the sixth-form boys, led by an effete Swedish aristocrat, go about
enforcing their arbitrary and violent rules while the faculty turn a
blind eye, this film cleverly avoids the hooks, punches and triumphs of
the underdog come to grips with the jack-booted status quo via his
fists alone by allowing him to prevail to justice through the
implementation of Swedish law. There are enough fisticuffs along the
way, however, to satisfy the blood-thirsty among you. Well-acted, good
script, beautiful cinematographic moments.
14 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :- Nice film, 13 July 2004
Author:
Scorching from Muntinlupa, Philippines
Ondskan is a Swedish movie about a young man who despite being a smart
student often gets in trouble with his bad conduct and reputation. So much
so that he is soon expelled from school and is given little chance to have a
good future. With the help of his mother he is given a last chance at
graduating at an exclusive all male school. There he finds contrasting
fortunes as he struggles against the cruel upperclassmen and finds
friendship and love as he struggles to finish school. This movie was
nominated for a Oscar for best Foreign Language film.
I thought the actors did a great job in portraying their characters. Andreas
Wilson did a great job as Erik as he went from a furious student being
bullied to a softer Erik when it came to scenes with Marja. I thought he did
a great job in the transformation fro his many personalities. Even more
surprising is the fact that this film is actually his first movie. Also a
menacing Gustaf Skarsgard did a great job in playing the big bully in the
film.
You could also in this film some very basic themes such as love, friendship
and the constant battle of good versus evil. They were well crafted into the
film and some of the scenes I thought were good enough to display these
themes.
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Ondskan (2003)
95 out of 135 people found the following comment useful :-

Come on! 7.7?, 5 January 2005
Author: chreb (chr.eins@online.no) from Norway
I just saw "Ondskan" and I have to admit: It's one of the best films I've ever seen. I own approx. 200 DVDs and this is among the 5 best, without doubt. I also gave it a ten at the vote. What I don't understand is why the majority of voters have given this movie a 7. With an average of 7.7 that almost the same as "Secondhand Lions" on 7.4 - and that sucked(at least compared to this Oscar-nominated film). Maybe the reason it's so low is because the movie is made in a foreign language, so the American or non-Scandinavian speaking people won't understand all the points. This could very well be it. I just want future viewers of this IMDb-profile to know that there are others who also disagree on the grade given. And please reply to my comment if you agree.
54 out of 59 people found the following comment useful :-
Cinematic and psychological study of adolescent cruelty, 16 December 2003
Author: (tjackson@rcn.com) from Boston. MA
I wonder, as I write this, why a film like Ondskan hasn't received commercial distribution in the States. Perhaps distributors assume Americans are too removed from the world of mid-century upper class boy's boarding schools in Sweden to relate to the film, which is our loss. Ondskan presents a microcosm of cruelty, status, and one-upsmanship - one might say evil - that exists in such an institution. Every year we read another horror story of a hazing gone too far. Children trounce their playmates. There's plenty of physical aggression among boys. The latest discussion concerns what among girls is called relational aggression, in which an individual is harmed through the hurtful manipulation of peer relationships and/or their friendships. .Neal LaBute has taken the idea of sadistic relationships to the American workplace in 'In the Company of Men' and to the suburbs in 'Your Friends and Neighbors'. There have certainly been other films tackling this particularly subject of sadism in boarding schools, Young Torless (Der Junge Törless) in 1966, comes especially to mind. What is captivating about Ondskan ('Evil') is both cinematic and psychological. The world of this o-so reputable boys school is painted in earth tones and fine wood with muted light rendering its cold emotions. The set design by Anna Asp (who's has done some other great looking films) lets us feel as though we have lived in this space. The lead character, Erik Ponti, at first we think will be the embodiment of the 'evil' of the title. He is regularly and systematically strapped by his stepfather. He transfers that frustration to his own classmates, which is what gets him sent to the boarding school in question. There he is ritually brutalized by the upperclassmen, which is, we are led to understand, the expected behavior in this hierarchy. To the administration and faculty this is apparently part of school tradition. Eric's initial unwillingness to fight back, despite a similar unwillingness to bend to arbitrary, sadistic, and unwritten rules, is relentlessly frustrating. As an audience we really want him to act. But his honor, his fortitude, and the fact his mother has hocked some heirlooms to pay tuition, keep him from lashing back. We are thus submitted to the same unremitting abuses with no real payoff. I will refrain from revealing the end, but it is not when or what you might expect. The result is a great ride and an elating experience. The audiences at Harvard, where I saw the film, applauded afterward. It's not a perfect film. There are clichés and expected set-ups. Still the mushy adolescence of the actors cast in these parts is consistently smart. The music is tasteful and well used. The direction is subtle and the violence is felt more than seen, but when it happens it is as ugly as it deserves to be.
37 out of 45 people found the following comment useful :-

Beyond the Limits of Cruelty, 18 February 2005
Author: Claudio Carvalho from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
In Sweden, Erik Ponti (Andreas Wilson) is the son of a remiss mother, and his stepfather gives sadistic beatings on him, using the most futile pretexts, without any interference of his mother. His dysfunctional family makes him a very violent teenager, culminating with his expulsion from the public school system in Sweden, due to a fight and aggression against another pupil. His mother sells some belongings of her and sends him to the elitist private school of Stjärnberg, as his last chance to complete his basic education. However, behind the name of the expensive and conservative school, there is a code of (dis)honor among the students, where the younger and those who belong to the lower social classes are humiliated by the veterans and those who belong to the high social classes without any questioning of the director. Erik feels like in hell while studying in Stjärnberg.
"Evil" is a stunning movie, which shows the danger of the power in wrong hands. Indeed, it is a psychological study of violence, which leads to cruelty. It explains the social behavior of, for example, street children in Brazil, who are sent very young to state reformatories and become cruel criminals when adults. The story is very engaging and the performance of the cast is outstanding, highlighting Andreas Wilson and his greatest opponent, the sadistic Otto Silverhielm (Gustaf Skarsgard). This movie shakes the viewers and in the end, we are cheering to Erik's revenge, wishing him to kill his aggressors, in a total inversion of the moral values. The DVD released by the Brazilian distributor VF Vídeo Filmes shows also a total lack of respect with the Brazilian consumers: in the Extras, there is an interview in Swedish with the director Mikael Häfström and the making-of, both without sub-titles, as if Brazilian people could understand this language. My vote is nine.
Title (Brazil): "Evil Raízes do Mal" ("Evil Roots of Evil")
30 out of 38 people found the following comment useful :-
The "enduring" hero, 31 January 2005
Author: Harry T. Yung (harry_tk_yung@yahoo.com) from Hong Kong
Swedish "Ondskan" competed against a strong field in the Foreign Language Film category in last year's Oscar which was won deservedly by Canada's "Les Invasions Barbares". While my personal favorite is "Tasogare Seibei", Ondskan is a worthwhile contender.
The scene is familiar, boarding school bullying, upper class domination and violence. The message however is broader and more general. Ghandi has been mentioned a couple of times in the movie, which reminds me as well of the "enduring" heroes in the westerns in the fifties who adhere steadfastly to their principle, refusing to be provoked into violence (the best example is The Big Country). The motivation of the "hero" in Ondskan is however a little less lofty, as I'm going to explain.
Thanks to his dominating and sadistic step-father, Erik (Andreas Wilson) is well-equipped to endure violence and abuse when he is sent to a prestigious boarding school after causing a lot of problems at his local high school. While a veteran perpetrator of violence himself, Erik is effectively constrained as if by a spell cast by the boarding school: anyone fighting with a member of the student council will be expelled.
Most of the movie surrounds the senior students' tyrannizing over the juniors, and it gets a bit too long. There's no point in elaborating other than saying that the violence is not particularly graphic (accepting that some may disagree) and if you're going to throw up in the cinema, it's most likely due to some other revolting scenes, the details of which I'll spare. Although Erik's motivation in enduring the abuses and violence is essentially self-preservation (from expulsion), he does earn the audience admiration, which makes the poetic justice at the end rather sweet.
A great part of the movie's success owes to Wilson's excellent performance. Although most of the audience start with thinking that Erik is the "evil" character, they would soon turn completely around and empathize with him, and eventually love him. Also excellent is Henrik Lundstrom, playing Erik's meek, plump roommate who is victimizes as he becomes the villains' tool to break tough Erik. In addition to this affecting friendship, there are two other sub-plots which enrich the movie without detracting from the main theme. One is Erik's romance with a maid at the school. The other is his success with the school's swimming team.
Finally, one interesting point is that Erik's way out, his "court of final appeal", turns out to be indeed the legal route. While this makes it a little bit of a fairy tale ending, there is something to ponder over. There may really be numerous pockets of quasi jurisdictions such as the boarding school that really need to be straighten out by the real legal system. That point I'll leave to the legal experts.
24 out of 34 people found the following comment useful :-

Gripping and Compelling, 27 September 2003
Author: TheFuneralParty from vancouver
Erik Ponti(Andreas Wilson) is a young trouble maker who is constantly abused by his stepfather and often ignored by his mother. After a fight in his school, Eric gets enrolled in a boarding school by his mother. At the new school, Erik only makes one good friend Pierre(Henrik Lundström) but their lives slowly start falling apart when the older boys from the school make a pact to make Erik's life a living hell. This was a very gripping and disturbing movie. I saw this at the Vancouver Film Festival and enjoyed it quite a lot. Andreas Wilson is a gorgeous and talented young man and I hope he becomes big someday. I would give Ondskan or also known as "Evil" 8/10.
15 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :-

Totally gripping, 17 August 2006
Author: marc from Denver
I was amazed at how excellent this film was. I just did not expect much and I was blown away. My first Mikael Hafstrom film was Derailed which also surprised me. It was not a great film but it was very good and much better than the general reviews that it garnered. It made me curious about Evil and I just cannot recommend this film enough. Andreas Wilson is terrific as the "title" character and the way his character develops is quite different from the way one might expect. You will be rooting for him to overcome the cruelty and evil that surrounds him throughout the film. If you enjoy coming of age tales do not miss this masterpiece. I look forward to Mr. Hafstroms future films. "1408" is up next and it sounds terrific.
One more thing, I just finished watching Saint Ralph and would highly recommend watching it as a double feature with "Evil". They really play well together.
23 out of 34 people found the following comment useful :-

Fantastic!, 30 September 2003
Author: Marina (themarina@shaw.ca) from Vancouver, BC
This is a great film. Truly outstanding. The characters are real and the story, however farfetched, rings true to life. Particularly enjoyable is the internal fight that transforms Erik from an angry youth to a man. And who could forget Andears' handsome good looks?!? Watch out Hollywood! Better prepare for the Swedish invasion! If you have the opportunity to see this film, do. It's well worth your time and money.
13 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :-
Evil is good, 16 December 2005
Author: FilmFlaneur from London
Imagine the schoolboy sadism of Der Junge Törless (1966), the anarchism of If... (1968), with just a dash of the old school bullying of Tom Brown's School Days, and you get something of the flavour of Evil, which sets its student angst in 1950s' Scandinavia. Ironically for a film that will end up on a relatively pacifist message, it starts with a punch up as the rowdy hero Erik (Andreas Wilson), thrashed by his unpleasant step father at home, duly takes it out on another student at his current school - only to be summarily expelled on the basis of his continuing bad behaviour. Dubbed 'evil' by the headmaster at his disciplinary hearing Erik appears, at least at first sight, to be irredeemably bad. Surly and uncommunicative, a trait he only gradually overcomes, he's a disruptive influence. One measure of the film's success is how it will show a growing moral dimension to this truculent and uncooperative personality, the once-bad boy quickly maturing before our eyes. It will also show how being a 'disruptive' influence can ultimately be a positive, just as much as a negative, force in a closed society. But meanwhile Erik's long suffering mother packs him off at short notice to Stjansberg, an exclusive boarding school where, we are told, are moulded generations of Swedish 'supermen'.
Adapted from a bestselling novel based on painful reminiscence, Evil is praised in interview on the disc by the author for its 'journalistic accuracy' in recreating events. It's a fact that makes the environment in which a more subdued Erik finds himself all the more chilling and depressing. For Stjansberg is a school where the teachers believe in leaving students to their own devices outside of classes, a place where enthused with an ethos of alleged 'team spirit' the system of discipline and punishment is arbitrary, prejudiced against the weak or different, and where elements of fascism still lurk within the teaching profession. Despite its regimentation and strict codes, Erik soon discovers that "there's no honour in (the) school - only ways of making it hell," while eventually realising that "what separates men from animals is not only intelligence, it's morality." Set on a painfully steep learning curve, he makes friends with the best student in the school (his roommate), and while remembering his promise to his mother, struggles to stay out of trouble. Erik's painful introspection at this point recalls that of Jim Stark in Rebel Without A Cause (1955) another film in which a troubled male youngster forms an alliance with a weaker soul (Sal Mineo's 'Plato') while in moral agony over conflicting impulses.
Erik may suddenly be concerned to stay out of conflict, but his refusal to compromise a newfound dignity and moral superiority quickly brings him up against Silverstein, the Flashman figure of the piece who, as a the most visible representation of the fascist strain that permeates the school has "to be fought, now and forever." What infuriates the bullies at the school no end is Erik's unexpected - and, in the light of what we have seen of him previously, uncharacteristic - refusal to fight. Instead he maintains a quiet mocking stoicism, bearing glumly, at least to a point, the institutionalised humiliation heaped upon him. Like Gandhi, a name associated with a philosophy of peaceful protest and civil disobedience (and who is specifically invoked at one point in the film) Erik's mature response to provocation is hard earned, but grows increasingly effective.
Wilson is excellent as the put upon student, although from such a physical person one might have wished more passion in his liaison with Marja, the young woman from the kitchen(Linda Zilliacus), who tacitly supports his tactics. In fact, this affair proves to be Erik's Achilles' heel, and the events leading on from it form the real climax of the picture. So much of Evil has been outstanding and intriguing to this point that it's a shame that the conclusion of the piece, springing so readily from a plot 'plant' earlier in the story, is a little too pat. From the interviews on the R2 DVD the viewer learns that, in real life, the school in question was brought to book by eventual and unwelcome media exposure prompted by the author. Whether or not it was achieved so easily as is suggested by the movie is a moot point, but the convenient threat of sensational journalism, easily obtainable and brought down upon the head of a palpable corrupt and unfair system is too much of let off, at least to this viewer, as well a cliché of a sort, not to pass un-remarked. One imagines that the scene of an arrogant headmaster made to eat humble pie dramatically was too irresistible to exclude, but I sensed here that such a moment was an easy way out.
With this hesitation, one can recommend the film thoroughly, being both excellently shot and acted as well as making an important statement of its own. Rather amusingly in the accompanying DVD material is a comment from one of the principals, that they didn't want it to be "a Dogme film, a small film that no one cares about, we want(ed) it to be a stylish, big, expensive, heavy, good film." It's an ironic remark as, arguably, a stricter and more rigorous approach to the story, familiar from Van Trier and colleagues, would have led to some fascinating dividends especially in the presentation of such stark material. Fortunately filmic conservatism also pays off when the results are so sincere and full of verisimilitude as here, and with a cast who fit their roles like a glove and, as a film with an 'old fashioned' humanistic message about standing out against the evils of totalitarianism in a closed society, the message is as relevant as ever. In short I doubt whether another 'school film' as fine as this will come along for some time, and so seek it out.
7 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

A Very Decent Film, 4 August 2006
Author: julioecolon from United States
I would recommend Ondskan to anyone who is interested in coming-of-age films. American cinema has always been expert at such portrayals, and it is good to see so accomplished an example out of Sweden. I liked especially the fact that the director never wavers as he unmasks the unwholesome face of an angst-ridden, violence-prone, socially intransigent Swedish society of the not so long ago . Set in the fifties, mostly at a posh boarding school for the upper-class, where the sixth-form boys, led by an effete Swedish aristocrat, go about enforcing their arbitrary and violent rules while the faculty turn a blind eye, this film cleverly avoids the hooks, punches and triumphs of the underdog come to grips with the jack-booted status quo via his fists alone by allowing him to prevail to justice through the implementation of Swedish law. There are enough fisticuffs along the way, however, to satisfy the blood-thirsty among you. Well-acted, good script, beautiful cinematographic moments.
14 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :-

Nice film, 13 July 2004
Author: Scorching from Muntinlupa, Philippines
Ondskan is a Swedish movie about a young man who despite being a smart student often gets in trouble with his bad conduct and reputation. So much so that he is soon expelled from school and is given little chance to have a good future. With the help of his mother he is given a last chance at graduating at an exclusive all male school. There he finds contrasting fortunes as he struggles against the cruel upperclassmen and finds friendship and love as he struggles to finish school. This movie was nominated for a Oscar for best Foreign Language film.
I thought the actors did a great job in portraying their characters. Andreas Wilson did a great job as Erik as he went from a furious student being bullied to a softer Erik when it came to scenes with Marja. I thought he did a great job in the transformation fro his many personalities. Even more surprising is the fact that this film is actually his first movie. Also a menacing Gustaf Skarsgard did a great job in playing the big bully in the film.
You could also in this film some very basic themes such as love, friendship and the constant battle of good versus evil. They were well crafted into the film and some of the scenes I thought were good enough to display these themes.
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