Interview! We talk to King of Devil’s Island director Marius Holst

Set in the cold, desolate Norwegian winter, King of Devil’s Island depicts the terrible conditions that the boys at the Bastøy Reform School for “maladjusted youths” (read: prison) had to endure, before a newcomer becomes the catalyst that eventually leads them to rise up and overthrow their abusers, taking control of the island in a violent rebellion. It’s a devastating tale – all the more so for being based on a true story.

According to Holst, however, the story isn’t well known in Norway. “I had a chance to meet a guy who was there in the mid-30s. He told me his story. That made me think there was a film there. I started to research it, found out about the riots and military involvement – which isn’t widely known in Norway. I didn’t know anything about it – and I grew up an hour and a half from the island!” Given that the Bastøy rebellion was one of only two instances when the Norwegian military had to take action against its own people, it’s incredible to think that the story isn’t well known.

Holst’s film has changed all that, however. “It got a lot of attention in the media. Everyone started writing about Bastøy as an institution. That hasn’t really been talked about for decades. There was criticism at the time of the events in the film. It did have a bad reputation. But the way they saw it then was, thank god the military came in and restored order! They weren’t thinking about why the kids reacted like they did. They thought “here we put these boys on an island, we spend money to help them, and they attack state officials and destroy property”. That’s how it was seen. The soldiers were the saviours of the people who ran the island; the boys were looked upon as the dregs of humanity.

Astonishingly, the Bastøy facility remained open for some years after the riot was quelled, and though it eventually did close, it exists again today, as a distinctly modern adult prison. “We discussed shooting it on the island, but it was too difficult to bring the young boys out there. There are murderers there. It’s been quite modernised. Things have been changed a bit, so the benefit of filming there wasn’t so great. And this is the prison system, Bastøy was the school system. That was the state, running a school.” Having seen the film, it’s hard to tell the difference.

While the film certainly paints the children as the heroes, Holst’s film is intelligent enough to paint with shades of grey. While some of the children are sent to this frozen hell for virtually nothing – stealing a little money from a church charity box should not condemn a child to this – but others are hinted to have far darker pasts. Even the school staff – most notably Stellan Skarsgård’s formidable governor – seem to have contradictory intentions.
I don’t think the governor is necessarily bad. He’s in a system that is soul destroying, that corrupts people. He’s given complete power within a system that is closed off from the world and things happen. People can’t handle being given that much power, so they corrupt and they make judgments that are wrong, but I don’t think he’s necessarily a bad person. He does bad things, but I think his intentions – and the intentions of the island – were quite modern and well intended at the time. For me they have faults, but that makes them human.

Throughout the film, there is a recurring story told by the main protagonist about a group of whalers and a stubborn whale, that’s stuck with multiple harpoons, but that just refuses to die. It’s a vivid image, and one the film uses expertly to refer to… well, it could be a metaphor for any number of things. Where did the idea come from? “These kids were very much from working classes. Getting on a whale boat was sort of like the dream of stepping up, and making big money. Going out to sea… the whalers would return like a rock-star, coming back with a tattoo and money in their pocket. It was an image of freedom. I wanted that for this character, to return after having seen something of the world. I wanted someone who had seen the world to come in and rock the boat.

King of Devil’s Island is visually stark, all snowy wastelands and bleak, grey interiors, devoid of colour and life. The soundtrack, however, is a more lively affair, perfectly encapsulating the hopelessness of the island, but also the spirit of the children. It even features Icelandic post-rock heroes Sigur Rós. “Actually, in the very beginning, I thought of having them compose the whole score. The problem is they’re like seven or eight people, and half of them are travelling around the world. They’re like a democracy, they all have to sit down and agree. They were a fan of a previous film I’d made, but we could never get everyone around the table. In the end I couldn’t wait any longer. They let us use part of a song that represented some of the atmosphere I really wanted. It’s uplifting, but melancholy as well. We melded that into Johan’s music”.

That’ll be Johan Söderqvist, the man who composed the rest of the score. And, for a film that’s so concerned with atmosphere, music is crucially important. Luckily, Söderqvist’s score here is pitch-perfect, with no little help from Holst himself. “Johan composed everything once, and then we threw it away, and we made cues for everything twice. The first thing was either too big, or too minimalist, so we had to find the right balance. I was always very much in love with film, but music always came first for me, so I’m very involved in the creation of the music”.

At times when watching the film, it’s difficult to imagine you’re not watching a documentary, so well drawn is the world of Bastøy. Where did the young cast come from? “Mostly through open casting calls. Mostly the people were chosen from smaller towns. There’s different dialects, many of them are from the west, the south-east, the very north. You can’t have any one actor who sticks out and brings a false note to the ensemble, because it would ruin the illusion straight away. Thats the difficult thing. When you find really good people, who you think can be authentic, you can’t afford any inauthenticity, because one guy who looks out of place, one bad line, and the illusion is gone.

You’ll not see many films that make you feel as cold as King of Devil’s Island. We didn’t envy the poor young actors having to endure the shoot, but Holst never let conditions reach the levels of the actual Bastøy. “They had a good experience, I think. It was hard work for them, but I like to have a happy set. They had to be woken up early in the morning, it was cold and unpleasant… you can see in their breath. That gives something to the performance, so I wanted that”.

As great an experience as it doubtless was for the kids, cold is still cold. And, while it was filmed in Estonia and not on the actual island of Bastøy, the cold you see on screen is not set dressing. It was an icy shoot. “Cold slows you down, which is the danger. People move slower, equipment takes more time to move… We didn’t have a lot of shooting light at that time. It was a very tight timeframe on the shoot.

The film is almost relentlessly bleak and hopeless, and you can’t help but side with the boys when they come to stand up for themselves, so to hear that even after they made their stand that things still didn’t get better for them is truly heartbreaking. “Some of the kids who were involved in the riot were trialled and sent to an adult prison for two or three years. The court-papers listed the damage to property, and the boys were charged for that. They were the ungrateful little bastards”.

Holst, even decades removed, clearly feels strongly for these children and what happened to them. There’s even perhaps an element of shame about such a dark story from his nation’s past. It may have been brushed under the carpet at the time, but his film casts light on an important and forgotten part of Norwegian history. That it also happens to be a visually arresting, beautifully scored, masterfully performed prison movie about the unbreakable spirit of human nature and the way that power corrupts even the best of intentions, makes King of Devil’s Island one of the films of the year.

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