The King Is Alive

2001 Drama

Shot against the barren sand dunes of Africa's Namib Desert, The King Is Alive is the fourth film to adhere to the stripped-down aesthetic of the Dogma 95 movement, and the first to bear the directorial stamp of the manifesto's co-author Kristian Levring. The improvised, shot-on-digital video production concerns the exploits of almost a dozen tourists who find themselves stranded when their bus breaks down miles from civilization. A thespian amongst the group, Henry (David Bradley), is the first to suggest that their situation may be more dire than it seems. His doubts send the rest of the folks -- including American travelers Ray (Bruce Davison), Liz (Janet McTeer), Ashley (Brion James), and Gina (Jennifer Jason Leigh), and a high-minded Parisian, Catherine (Romane Bohringer) -- into fits of fear and dread. To get their minds off the heat, hunger, and dehydration, the castaways stage an impromptu reading of Shakespeare's +King Lear, which they can only fitfully remember. As their situations worsen, the tourists begin to take out their personal aggressions on one another. The King Is Alive was shown as part of the 2000 Cannes and Toronto Film Festivals. more..

Director: Kristian Levring

Starring: Jennifer Jason Leigh, Janet McTeer, Bruce Davison, Miles Anderson, Romane Bohringer

Reviews

  • Janet McTeer displays Amazonian power while Jennifer Jason Leigh tears into her role as a high maintenance creature with a ferocity that leaves little room for her usual acting tics.

    Lisa Schwarzbaum - Entertainment Weekly

    20 January 2013

  • The cast, working in conditions that appear to have been only slightly less dire than those portrayed in the film, work together in a grim, convincing improvisatory rhythm.

    Dana Stevens - The New York Times

    20 January 2013

  • It doesn't make the slightest effort to cater to conventional appetites. But the more you appreciate what they're trying to do, the more you like it.

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    20 January 2013

  • Sinks under the weight of its ever more inescapably apparent contrivance, and its forced parallels to ''Lear.''

    Jay Carr - The Boston Globe

    20 January 2013

  • Stylish and gritty, The King Is Alive lacks the impact of revelation that might have made the journey worth taking.

    Kevin Thomas - Los Angeles Times

    20 January 2013

Awards

  • Jens Schlosser

    Brothers Manaki International Film Festival (2001)

  • Best Cinematography (Årets fotografering)

    Robert Festival (2002)

  • Jennifer Jason Leigh

    Tokyo International Film Festival (2000)