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Mifune (film)
Mifune (, "Mifune's Last Song") is a 1999 romantic comedy film, starring Iben Hjejle and Anders W. Berthelsen. Directed by Søren Kragh-Jacobsen, it was the third film made according to the Dogme 95 group rules. The film was a great success in Denmark and an international blockbuster, ranked among the ten best-selling Danish films worldwide. It was produced by Nimbus Film. At the 49th Berlin International Film Festival, the film won the Silver Bear – Special Jury Prize and Iben Hjejle won an Honourable Mention. It was the Danish submission for Best Foreign Language Film for the Academy Awards, but was not nominated among the finalists.
Plot
Kresten had moved from his parents' farm on Lolland, an out-of-the-way small Danish island, to Copenhagen to pursue his working career. When his father dies, he has to move back to the farm, where nothing much has happened since he left. He places an ad in the local newspaper to get help run the farm. He has to support his brother Rud who needs special care. Kresten has entertained Rud by imitating the noted late Japanese actor, Toshiro Mifune, featured as a samurai. The prostitute Liva, who is running away from harassing telephone calls, takes the job. But running away from one's past isn't easy.
Cast
Title
The title of the film is a reference to the late Toshiro Mifune (1920–1997), a prolific Japanese film actor whose roles included that of Kikuchiyo, one of Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai. It also refers to Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson's poem Sidste Sang (1870, Last Song).
Reception and awards
The romantic comedy was immensely popular, ranked as the seventh-highest grossing film of the year in Denmark, with admissions of 351,000. It was screened at the 49th Berlin International Film Festival, where the film won the Silver Bear – Special Jury Prize and Iben Hjejle won an Honourable Mention. Denmark selected this film as its submission for Best Foreign Language Film for the Academy Awards, but it did not make the final list of nominees.
Confession
The Dogme 95 group established rigid rules to govern their 'chastity' in filmmaking. Thomas Vinterberg, in the first Dogme 95 film, went further: Make a confession if elements of the film do not comply with the Dogme-rules. The confession is written from the director's point of view. Kragh-Jacobsen published his confession about Mifune: As one of the DOGME 95 brethren and co-signatory of the Vow of Chastity I feel moved to confess to the following transgressions of the aforesaid Vow during the production of Dogme 3 – Mifune. Please note that the film has been approved as a Dogme work, as only one genuine breach of the rules has actually taken place. The rest may be regarded as moral breaches.
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