The King Is Alive | |
Director: | Kristian Levring |
Producer: | Vibeke Windeløv |
Starring: | Miles Anderson Romane Bohringer David Bradley David Calder Jennifer Jason Leigh Brion James |
Music: | Jan Juhler |
Cinematography: | Jens Schlosser |
Editing: | Nicholas Wayman Harris |
Distributor: | Nordisk Film Distribution A/S |
Runtime: | 109 minutes |
Country: | Denmark |
Language: | English |
The King Is Alive is a 2000 drama film directed by Kristian Levring. The fourth film to be done according to the Dogme 95 rules, it was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival.
A group of tourists are stranded in the Namibian desert when their bus loses its way and runs out of fuel. Canned carrots and dew keep the tourists alive, but they are helplessly entrapped, completely cut off from the rest of the world. As courage and moral fibre weaken and relationships grow shaky, Henry, a theatrical manager, persuades the group to put on Shakespeare's tragedy King Lear. As the tourists work their way through Henry's hand-written scripts for an audience of only the sand dunes and one distant, indigenous watcher, real life increasingly begins to resemble the play.
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, The King Is Alive holds an approval rating of 60%, based on 68 reviews, and an average rating of 6/10. Its consensus reads, "Though the plot feels rather contrived, the ensemble acting in this Dogme 95 film is good."[1] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 52 out of 100, based on 25 critics, indicating "Mixed or average reviews".[2]