Armand | Telescope Film
Armand

Armand

Critic Rating

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In an elementary school in Oslo, 6-year-old Armand is accused of crossing the boundaries with a friend. Different people have different account of what happened, and no one is sure of the truth. Parents and teachers try to unravel what happened, while attempting to hide the dilemma from the public eye.

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What are critics saying?

90

Screen Daily by Jonathan Romney

The film starts by promising a bourgeois social drama about secrets and lies, suspicions and rivalries, and the troubled waters of juvenile and adult sexuality. What it ultimately becomes is much harder to define, but the result is resonant and haunting – and should spark plenty of post-screening discussions.

83

IndieWire by Ryan Lattanzio

Even as Ullmann Tøndel’s two-hour movie grows a bit too winding and weird for its short film-scale conceit, Reinsve grounds the film’s more experimental, almost stagelike leanings in a constant state of heightened emotion that will make you love her even more than in “Worst Person” — and, even better, will make you scared of her.

80

The Irish Times by Tara Brady

The film, set within the bland, institutional corridors of a Norwegian primary school, chronicles a single afternoon that stretches into a surreal purgatory of suspicion, guilt and (finally) something like the compellingly demented choreography of Climax, Gaspar Noé’s dance horror.

80

Screen Rant by Rachel LaBonte

The whole Armand cast is stellar, perfectly conveying the characters' shifting allegiances and uncertain moral stances.

80

Collider by Aidan Kelley

The easy winner out of Armand is Renate Reinsve. . . The runner-up is Halfdan Ullmann Tøndel. While his methods for bringing this story to life are a bit overly perplexing and too head-scratching, there is a clear talent for filmmaking on display here that makes his career one to watch with great and serious interest.

76

Paste Magazine by Jim Vorel

At times, Armand threatens to lose itself entirely in the fever dream it conjures, like the film itself is going to reach its combustion point and ignite, but it gets just enough of its disquieting atmosphere across to lodge in the memory all the same.

75

The Playlist by Gregory Ellwood

Considering the entire film takes place in the confines of the school building, it’s a testament to Tøndel’s direction and Reinsve’s enthralling performance that the film avoids feeling claustrophobic.

75

The Film Verdict by Max Borg

Ullmann Tøndel deftly uses the claustrophobic setting to gradually unveil the layers of psychological chaos lurking beneath many respectable façades, particularly in the tightly constructed first half of the film, where the verbal and the visual coexist in a riveting harmony.

70

The Daily Beast by Nick Schager

Reinsve reconfirms that she’s one of international cinema’s most electric presences, and her formidable performance is the axis around which this taut drama revolves.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Leslie Felperin

Norwegian writer-director Halfdan Ullmann Tondel takes some big swings with his first feature Armand, not all of which connect, but the ambition and risk-taking are largely impressive.