• 171.394 movies
  • 11.359 shows
  • 32.311 seasons
  • 633.692 actors
  • 9.218.705 votes
Avatar
 
banner banner

Beyond Sleep (2016)

Drama | 106 minutes
2,85 206 votes

Genre: Drama

Duration: 106 minuten

Alternative title: Nooit Meer Slapen

Country: Netherlands / Norway

Directed by: Boudewijn Koole

Stars: Reinout Scholten van Aschat, Pål Sverre Hagen and Anders Baasmo Christiansen

IMDb score: 6,0 (964)

Releasedate: 27 January 2016

US
UK

This movie is not available on US streaming services.

JustWatch

Beyond Sleep plot

Beyond Sleep is about the survival journey of the young geologist Alfred Issendorf who searches for meteorites in the swampy north of Norway. The ambitious Alfred hopes that this journey will link his name to important scientific evidence. In this way he tries to continue the work of his father, who died during his own research project. Alfred searches, stumbles and suffers in the cruel tundra of Northern Europe. He only finds redemption on the verge of madness.

logo tmdbimagelogo tmdbimagelogo tmdbimagelogo tmdbimagelogo tmdbimagelogo tmdbimagelogo tmdbimage

Reviews & comments


Guest

  • messages
  • votes

Let op: In verband met copyright is het op MovieMeter.nl niet toegestaan om de inhoud van externe websites over te nemen, ook niet met bronvermelding. Je mag natuurlijk wel een link naar een externe pagina plaatsen, samen met je eigen beschrijving of eventueel de eerste alinea van de tekst. Je krijgt deze waarschuwing omdat het er op lijkt dat je een lange tekst hebt geplakt in je bericht.

* denotes required fields.

Pay attention! You cannot change your username afterwards.

* denotes required fields.
avatar van eRCee

eRCee

  • 13408 messages
  • 1953 votes

I only vaguely remember the atmosphere of the book, and that feeling corresponds wonderfully with what we see in Beyond Sleep. Alfred's irritation and alienation due to the physical exertion, poor sleep and the two excruciatingly haughty blond Norwegians comes across well. The camerawork is quite subdued and there is a kind of crane shot that I found really wooden (especially if you compare it with The Revenant, but hey, the atmosphere that film wants to convey is essentially different) . My biggest criticism, however, is the sound, because I thought there was too little background noise. Wind, for example, seemed to be completely missing and therefore the conversations sometimes seemed to come too much from a studio. Otherwise a great film, but the really special thing is missing (and I also had that feeling with the book).

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van mjk87

mjk87 (moderator films)

  • 13991 messages
  • 4252 votes

Never Sleep Again is my favorite Dutch book. Now a film adaptation seemed quite difficult to me in advance. The book mainly revolves around the psyche of Alfred Issendorf and writer Hermans spends more time in his head than outside of it. That is extremely difficult to film and Koole is unable to do so. But Koole also decides to make it a typical Dutch arthouse, with a camera close to the skin and many silent images that should have enormous expressiveness, but for me they never do. I find that rather annoying and interesting stuff. The structure in the book was also better, and not typical with such a scene at the beginning that the film returns to at the end. I'm starting to get itchy about that too.

The environments are beautiful. Hermans had to show the barren environments through words, Koole can do that by just setting up the camera, but it becomes an extremely boring whole, despite the beautiful pictures, especially around times when the sun is low. Koole does nothing else with it. We do get many images of Issendorf where many things fail, but as an outsider he becomes an annoying and stupid person, while Hermans portrayed him with a lot of compassion. The acting is correspondingly, one cannot make more of it. And the title? It was given a very nice place in the book. Not at all in this film. 1.0*.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van pocalan

pocalan

  • 125 messages
  • 1365 votes

The book was once recommended to me by a visitor to the library where I worked at the time. A few weeks later I told him that I loved it too. He couldn't remember recommending it to me (and perhaps even reading it). Well, I never forgot the book.

I also had to get my head around the book. But with the film they could have shortened the first hour considerably. There you have a different audience to reach. I also barely understand Alfred's mumbling. The book has a huge advantage because of the beautiful use of language and sentences and the metaphors. I think the film seems too simple. Both substantively and visually. The environment is beautiful (and) robust. But that's about it for me. It's also strangely filmed, so it doesn't seem as oppressive to me as the book. Rather distant. Not all books are suitable for film adaptation. In my opinion this is one of those.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original