Aage Rais-Nordentoft

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Kick'n Rush | 2003 |  ★★★
Rais-Nordentoft’s diverting small town, coming-of-age drama depicts a few weeks in the life of an ordinary teenaged boy (Jacob Krarup) as he divides his time between playing football, going to school, masturbating, getting drunk, breaking and entering, and trying to get in to the knickers of a pretty classmate (Marie Bach Hansen), whilst not quite fending off the attentions of a friend’s Lolita-like little sister (Lea Baastrup Rønne). Filled with hormonal teens, prone to grand emotions and erratic behaviour, Kick'n Rush often feels painfully authentic. However, its adult characters are considerably less well drawn, and as such fail to give the film a mature core upon which to hang its adolescent goings-on. Never the less, despite ample scope to do so, the fact that no one grows, no one changes, and no one learns any lessons proves rather refreshing.


MollyCam | 2008 |  ★★★½
Despite a distinct lack of evidence and a number of inconsistencies to her account of events, a middle-aged police detective (Kristian Halken) decides to investigate a camcorder-loving 18-year-old girl’s (Lea Baastrup Rønne) claims to have been gang-raped by her boyfriend (Olaf Højgaard) and his friends, and quickly, for one reason or another, begins to become obsessed with the case and/or her much-filmed sexual veracity, in Rais-Nordentoft’s vaguely salacious yet thoughtful and potent Danish drama. Rønne’s brave central performance proves spellbinding.