Adam's Apples
Adam's Apples (Danish: Adams Æbler) is a 2005 Danish black comedy-drama film written and directed by Anders Thomas Jensen.[1] The story follows Adam, a neo-Nazi skinhead released from prison and assigned community service at a remote church led by Ivan, a pastor whose unshakeable optimism and selective perception of reality lead to escalating absurdities and confrontations with undeniable evil.[2][1] Starring Ulrich Thomsen as Adam and Mads Mikkelsen as Ivan, the film blends dark humor with theological allegory, questioning simplistic notions of redemption and the persistence of human depravity.[1] Released to critical and audience acclaim for its provocative themes and stylistic execution, it holds a 70% approval rating from critics and 90% from audiences on Rotten Tomatoes, with praise for its collision of good and evil in shocking, funny sequences.[2] The film garnered multiple Danish awards, including wins at the Robert Awards, Bodil nominations, and international audience prizes, while serving as Denmark's submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.[3][4]Production
Development and Writing
Adam's Apples was written and directed by Anders Thomas Jensen as the third entry in his informal trilogy of black comedies featuring dysfunctional ensembles of men, following Flickering Lights (2000) and The Green Butchers (2003).[5][4] The screenplay, credited solely to Jensen, builds on his established style of pairing misfits in absurd, high-stakes scenarios to probe human nature.[6] Jensen tailored the script for his frequent collaborators, scripting roles directly to leverage their chemistry and comedic timing, as seen in prior joint projects.[7] Development emphasized thematic depth amid escalating absurdity, with the narrative originating from Jensen's interest in irreconcilable worldviews—optimism versus cynicism—manifested through characters like the unflappably faithful pastor and the hardened neo-Nazi protagonist.[4] The writing process reflected Jensen's prolific output, having penned over 20 screenplays by 2006, often prioritizing narrative economy and visual storytelling over conventional plot progression.[4] Principal photography commenced in 2004, aligning the script's completion with production timelines for a 2005 release.[1]Casting and Filming
Ulrich Thomsen was cast in the lead role of Adam Pedersen, a neo-Nazi skinhead undergoing community service, while Mads Mikkelsen portrayed the delusional priest Ivan, marking another collaboration between Mikkelsen and director Anders Thomas Jensen following their work on The Green Butchers (2003).[8][9] Nicolas Bro played the dim-witted Gunnar, Paprika Steen portrayed the doctor's wife Sarah, and supporting roles included Ole Thestrup as Dr. Kolberg and Nikolaj Lie Kaas as Holger, with Jensen selecting actors known for their work in Danish cinema to embody the film's blend of dark humor and eccentricity.[10][11] Principal photography took place primarily in Fåborg on the island of Funen, Denmark, utilizing rural locations to evoke the isolated vicarage setting central to the narrative.[12] Specific sites included Horne Kirke in Faaborg and the church at Søren Lundsvej 40, contributing to the film's atmospheric depiction of a remote Danish countryside parish.[12][13] The production, handled by companies such as M&M Productions and Danmarks Radio, wrapped in time for the film's Danish premiere on April 15, 2005.[1][11]Synopsis
Plot Summary
Adam, a neo-Nazi skinhead portrayed by Ulrich Thomsen, is released from prison and mandated to perform community service at a remote rural church under the supervision of the persistently optimistic priest Ivan, played by Mads Mikkelsen. Ivan maintains an unwavering belief in human goodness, tracking positive global statistics on a bulletin board while dismissing evident evils, and shelters a collection of societal misfits: the hallucination-plagued alcoholic Gunnar (Nicolas Bro), the anti-Western Muslim immigrant Khalid (Ali Kazim), and the abused pregnant woman Sarah (Paprika Steen).[14][8] To fulfill his rehabilitation, Ivan instructs Adam to select a personal goal; aiming to ridicule the priest's naivety, Adam opts to bake an apple pie sourced exclusively from the church's ancient, crow-infested apple tree, historically yielding bitter and sparse fruit. Adam vigilantly guards the tree, resorting to shooting the birds, after which the apples inexplicably thrive into a perfect harvest despite prior adversities.[14][11][8] Complications escalate when Adam's neo-Nazi associates, including his comrade Holger (Nikolaj Lie Kaas), arrive and spark violent confrontations at the church. Concurrently, Sarah delivers a healthy baby boy against severe medical odds foretelling defects or death. Ivan reframes each calamity—ranging from the intrusions and brutality to broader misfortunes—as affirmations of inherent good prevailing, drawing parallels to biblical trials and challenging Adam's worldview through a cascade of improbable "miracles" and redemptions among the residents.[14][8]Cast and Characters
Principal Roles
Ulrich Thomsen stars as Adam Pedersen, the film's central protagonist, a neo-Nazi skinhead convicted of vandalism and sentenced to community service at an isolated rural church.[1] Mads Mikkelsen plays Ivan Fjeldsted, the relentlessly optimistic Lutheran pastor who leads the church's rehabilitation program for troubled individuals and insists on viewing Adam's presence as part of a divine plan.[10] Their dynamic forms the narrative core, with Ivan's unshakeable faith clashing against Adam's cynical worldview shaped by racial ideology and personal trauma.[2] Nicolas Bro portrays Gunnar, a fellow resident at the church known for his compulsive lying and theft, adding to the ensemble of psychologically damaged characters under Ivan's care.[10] Paprika Steen appears as Sarah Svendsen, Ivan's wife, who grapples with her own mental health issues including bulimia, highlighting the personal toll of the pastor's utopian outlook.[15] Ole Thestrup plays Dr. Kolberg, the local physician whose pragmatic interventions contrast with Ivan's theological determinism.[10] These roles collectively underscore the film's exploration of human frailty and ideological confrontation through the actors' performances.[9]Themes and Philosophy
Good Versus Evil and Human Nature
In Adam's Apples (2005), the central thematic conflict pits the neo-Nazi protagonist Adam, who embodies intentional malice and cynicism, against the vicar Ivan, whose pathological optimism reframes all human actions as inherently benevolent. Ivan's philosophy denies the objective existence of evil, interpreting destructive behaviors—such as Adam's criminal history or the farm's residents' pathologies—as misguided expressions of good intent or divine trials, drawing from a Job-like endurance of absurdity.[16] [17] This dynamic critiques naive views of human nature by illustrating how ignoring malevolence enables its unchecked proliferation, as seen in the film's escalating calamities, including infestations and violence that Ivan attributes to providence rather than inherent sin.[18] The recurring motif of the apple tree, symbolizing the biblical Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, underscores this tension: its fruits are repeatedly ravaged by crows, maggots, and storms, representing chaos and corruption that Ivan dismisses while Adam weaponizes as proof of intrinsic depravity.[19] Director Anders Thomas Jensen amplifies human extremes—portraying characters as "on the edge of reality" to exaggerate flaws like addiction, kleptomania, and ideological hatred—suggesting that human nature operates in amplified realism, where good and evil coexist without easy resolution.[16] Jensen, an atheist who draws selectively from biblical narratives for their dramatic potency, paraphrases the Book of Job to probe faith's limits against evident wrongdoing, rejecting simplistic moral binaries in favor of a worldview where adversity reveals both vulnerability and tenacity.[16] [20] The film's resolution affirms evil's palpability while affirming human capacity for redemption: Adam's confrontation with his own atrocities prompts a grudging acknowledgment of moral agency, transforming him from antagonist to participant in communal rituals, implying that recognizing depravity fosters resilience rather than despair.[4] This eschews deterministic pessimism, positing instead a causal realism where faith endures not by denying human darkness—evident in the characters' unvarnished pathologies—but by persisting amid it, as Ivan's unyielding belief withstands literal and figurative assaults.[2] Analyses note this as a dark allegory highlighting the gray interplay of virtues and vices within individuals, challenging viewers to reconcile empirical malevolence with potential for grace without recourse to denial.[21]Critique of Naive Optimism
In Adam's Apples, naive optimism is embodied by Pastor Ivan, who persistently reframes all adversities as manifestations of inherent goodness or divine purpose, maintaining a ledger that selectively records positive interpretations of events while disregarding empirical evidence of failure and malice. For instance, Ivan describes World War II not as a catastrophe but as a unifying force that "brought the whole world together," and he attributes the destructive raids of crows on the titular apple tree—intended to produce a "perfect pie" for communal redemption—to a test of faith rather than an insurmountable natural obstacle. This worldview is depicted as a form of cognitive dissonance, sustained by Ivan's untreated brain tumor, which manifests in hallucinations and denial of observable realities, such as the recidivism of violent parolees under his supervision.[22][16] The film's narrative arc critiques this optimism as not merely ineffective but actively counterproductive, as it precludes meaningful intervention against human flaws. Ivan's refusal to acknowledge the parolees' entrenched criminality—exemplified by the kleptomaniac's thefts, the rapist's impulses, and the neo-Nazi protagonist Adam's ideological hatred—results in repeated breakdowns of his rehabilitative efforts, culminating in physical confrontations and the tree's ultimate ruin by maggots and lightning. Adam's pragmatic cynicism, rooted in his acceptance of personal and societal evil, forces Ivan to briefly confront unvarnished facts, such as a litany of historical atrocities without redemptive spin, exposing the pastor's philosophy as a barrier to causal understanding of human behavior. Director Anders Thomas Jensen, an atheist, underscores this through black comedy, portraying Ivan's "dogged cheer" as bordering on idiocy, where blind positivity ignores the persistent agency of malice in shaping outcomes.[22][16][23] Philosophically, the film aligns with a realist assessment of human nature, suggesting that naive optimism fosters passivity toward evil rather than resilience, as evidenced by the village's descent into chaos under Ivan's guidance. While Ivan's death prompts a tentative shift toward accountability—Adam assumes responsibility for the pie, symbolizing acceptance of imperfection—the critique implies that genuine progress requires integrating optimism with empirical confrontation of flaws, rather than delusional reinterpretation. This tension echoes Job-like trials but rejects unqualified faith in progress, prioritizing causal mechanisms like individual agency and environmental pressures over wishful denial. Jensen's approach, informed by biblical motifs without endorsement, highlights how such optimism, when untethered from reality, mirrors institutional biases that prioritize narrative comfort over verifiable data on human depravity.[16][22]Biblical and Existential Influences
The title Adam's Apples evokes the biblical narrative of Adam and Eve's expulsion from the Garden of Eden after consuming forbidden fruit, symbolizing humanity's propensity for sin and moral downfall, a motif reinforced by the film's central apple tree that produces deformed fruit despite Ivan's optimistic cultivation efforts.[24] This tree serves as a recurring emblem of inherent corruption and futile attempts at redemption through human will alone, paralleling Genesis accounts of original sin's enduring legacy.[24] The narrative structure paraphrases elements from the Book of Job, portraying Pastor Ivan as a modern analogue to Job—a righteous figure subjected to escalating calamities, including personal losses, health deterioration, and communal disruptions, yet adhering to an unyielding belief in divine benevolence and human goodness.[16] Director Anders Thomas Jensen explicitly drew on Job's trials to frame Ivan's arc, adapting its themes of undeserved suffering and steadfast faith without direct retelling, as evidenced by symbolic props like a Bible that repeatedly opens to Job amid Ivan's ordeals.[16][25] This influence underscores the film's interrogation of whether faith can persist amid empirical evidence of chaos and evil, with Ivan's resilience contrasting Adam's rationalist denial of innate vice.[22] Existentially, the film grapples with the absurdity of suffering and the human confrontation with meaninglessness, as Ivan's pathological optimism clashes with Adam's deterministic cynicism, forcing characters to reckon with free will's role in moral agency amid uncontrollable adversity.[26] Jensen has acknowledged these religious-existential undercurrents, portraying faith not as logical deduction but as a defiant choice against observable malevolence, akin to responses in Danish philosophical traditions emphasizing subjective commitment over objective proof.[26] This tension manifests in Adam's failed attempt to dismantle Ivan's worldview through "proof" of universal evil, highlighting existential isolation and the limits of rational explanation for human brutality and redemption.[22]Release
Premiere and Distribution
The film premiered theatrically in Denmark on April 15, 2005, marking its world debut under the distribution of Nordisk Film.[27][11] It subsequently screened at international festivals, including the Toronto International Film Festival on September 10, 2005, and the Faroese Arts Festival on August 5, 2005.[27] Distribution expanded to other European markets, with a release in Germany on August 31, 2006, handled by Delphi Filmverleih.[27] In the United States, Outsider Pictures managed a limited theatrical rollout, which opened to $1,305 in box office earnings.[28] The film's international reach was supported by production ties to Zentropa Entertainments, facilitating festival circuit exposure and subsequent home video and streaming availability.[29]Awards and Nominations
Adam's Apples won four Robert Awards at the 2006 Danish Film Awards, including Best Danish Film (Årets danske spillefilm), awarded to producers Tivi Magnusson and Mie Andreasen, Best Screenplay for director Anders Thomas Jensen, and Best Visual Effects for Hummer Højmark.[30][31] The film was nominated for Best Danish Film at the 2006 Bodil Awards but lost to Manslaughter.[3] It also received two nominations at the European Film Awards: Best Screenwriter for Anders Thomas Jensen in 2005 and People's Choice Award for Best Film in 2006.[32][33] Denmark submitted the film for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 2006, though it did not receive a nomination.[34]| Award | Category | Result | Year | Recipient |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Robert Awards | Best Danish Film | Won | 2006 | Tivi Magnusson, Mie Andreasen |
| Robert Awards | Best Screenplay | Won | 2006 | Anders Thomas Jensen |
| Robert Awards | Best Visual Effects | Won | 2006 | Hummer Højmark |
| Bodil Awards | Best Danish Film | Nominated | 2006 | Anders Thomas Jensen |
| Bodil Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Nominated | 2006 | Nicolas Bro |
| Bodil Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Nominated | 2006 | Ali Kazim |
| European Film Awards | Best Screenwriter | Nominated | 2005 | Anders Thomas Jensen |
| European Film Awards | People's Choice Award for Best Film | Nominated | 2006 | - |
| Academy Awards | Best Foreign Language Film | Submitted, not nominated | 2006 | - |