The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
It is provocative simply in showing how trust is gained and kept, even after the swindled kids have understood their robbers’ motives.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Sweden, France · 2011
1h 58m
Director Ruben Östlund
Starring Yannick Diakité, Sebastian Blyckert, Kevin Vaz, John Ortiz
Genre Drama, Crime
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Inspired by real events, a group of 12-14 year old boys in central Gothenburg, Sweden, rob other children through a psychological game. The thieves use an elaborate scheme called the 'little brother number' or 'brother trick', involving advanced role-play and gang rhetoric rather than physical violence.
The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
It is provocative simply in showing how trust is gained and kept, even after the swindled kids have understood their robbers’ motives.
The message is laid on slow and thick, but it's no less powerful for it.
Pic is a little too pleased with its own evenhanded presentation of liberal moral conundrums, but there’s no gainsaying Ostlund’s remarkable achievement in coaxing entirely naturalistic perfs from his young core cast
Village Voice by Michael Atkinson
It's the rare contemporary film that's as majestically and gruelingly rigorous in its form as in its thematic interrogations.
May be contrived and overlong, but it is also technically distinctive and utterly compelling in its analysis of Swedish attitudes towards race.
Little about [Östlund’s] work is simple-minded or cut-and-dried. His films marinate in viewer discomfort.
It tests our presumptions, makes us squirm.
The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy
The ultimate effect of [Östlund's] studied techniques is more restricting than beneficial, which, combined with a protracted running time, faintly self-righteous air and a perplexing, misguided coda, produces a sense of letdown at the end despite the strength of much that has come before.
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