In a Better World (Danish: Hævnen, meaning "Revenge") is a 2010 Danish dramafilm directed by Susanne Bier and written by Anders Thomas Jensen.[1][2]The narrative intertwines the lives of two Danish families—one grappling with grief and schoolyard bullying, the other centered on a doctor treating refugees in a violent Sudanese camp—exploring the moral tensions between vengeance and compassion amid personal and global brutality.[1][2]Starring Mikael Persbrandt as the conflicted physician Anton, alongside Trine Dyrholm, Ulrich Thomsen, and young actors William Jøhnk Nielsen and Markus Rygaard as boys entangled in escalating acts of retaliation, the film highlights the ripple effects of trauma across scales from intimate relationships to societal conflicts.[2][3]Premiering at the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival, In a Better World garnered critical praise for its emotional depth and Bier's direction, achieving a 77% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on professional reviews.[4][2]It won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 83rd ceremony, marking Denmark's first such victory since 1987, as well as the Golden Globe in the same category, affirming its status as a poignant examination of human frailty and ethical dilemmas.[5][3]
Development
Conception and Screenwriting
The screenplay for In a Better World (original Danish title Hævnen) was developed by Anders Thomas Jensen in close collaboration with director Susanne Bier, building on their prior successful partnerships on films such as Brothers (2004) and After the Wedding (2006).[6] The conception originated from an adult-centered perspective, focusing on the moral evolution of a doctor character who confronts violence both personally and professionally, but the narrative soon pivoted to center on two 12-year-old boys whose experiences parallel these ethical dilemmas, emphasizing the interplay between individual impulses and broader societal failures.[6]Jensen's script intertwines domestic Danish settings with the doctor's work in a Sudanese refugee camp, drawing causal connections between micro-level personal conflicts—such as schoolyard bullying rooted in observed Scandinavian social dynamics—and macro-level global atrocities, where unchecked aggression escalates into systemic brutality.[6] This structure highlights how private ethical lapses, like retaliatory instincts among youth, mirror the primal retributive cycles in war-torn regions, underscoring the futility of detached humanitarianism without confronting innate human drives toward vengeance.[6]The choice of the Danish title Hævnen, meaning "revenge" or "vengeance," was deliberate to foreground the instinctive allure of retribution as a response to injustice, contrasting sharply with the English title's aspirational idealism that suggests unattainable moral progress.[7][8] The screenwriting process demanded extended, focused sessions away from distractions to balance the adult protagonists' arcs with the children's pivotal role in driving the thematic exploration of violence's inescapability.[6]
Pre-production Challenges
The screenplay for In a Better World was developed through close collaboration between director Susanne Bier and writer Anders Thomas Jensen, their fourth joint project after Open Hearts (2002), Brothers (2004), and After the Wedding (2006).[9][6] Initial drafts focused on adult protagonists, including the central doctor figure played by Mikael Persbrandt, but the narrative shifted emphasis to two 12-year-old boys whose stories became dominant, necessitating script revisions to forge their interpersonal links and moral dilemmas.[6] This evolution required ongoing discussions between Bier and Jensen to integrate personal emotional arcs with broader ethical questions on revenge and forgiveness, avoiding reductive moral binaries in favor of nuanced ambiguity.[10]Funding logistics posed constraints typical of Danish cinema's reliance on public institutions, with the project receiving support from the Danish Film Institute to facilitate its dual Danish-African settings and ensemble cast.[6] The total budget amounted to approximately 4 million euros, compelling efficient pre-productionresource allocation, including location scouting for the refugee camp sequences ultimately filmed in Kenya to evoke Sudanese conditions without on-site risks.[11] These limitations influenced streamlined planning, prioritizing a "dream team" of returning crew from prior Bier-Jensen films, such as editor Pernille Bech Christensen, to minimize uncertainties ahead of principal photography.[6]Portraying the African warlord and refugee camp dynamics demanded sensitivity to avoid sensationalizing atrocities, with the screenplay grounding violence in specific interpersonal and cultural triggers rather than generalized humanitarian abstractions—a approach informed by Bier and Jensen's thematic consistency in examining reactive injustice over ideological simplifications.[9] This required vetting narrative elements to reflect realistic tribal and power-based conflicts, distinct from prevailing Western media tendencies toward detached moralizing, though direct research methodologies remain undocumented in primary accounts.[10]
Production
Filming Process
Principal photography for In a Better World occurred in 2009, primarily in Denmark and Kenya. Danish scenes were shot in locations including Fåborg on Fyn, Rudkøbing, and Langeland, capturing the subdued, everyday environments of small-town life.[12][13] The African refugee camp sequences, depicting a Sudanese setting amid conflict, were filmed in Kenya, including areas around Lake Elementeita, to replicate the arid, chaotic conditions of a war-torn camp without entering actual conflict zones.[14][15][13]Director Susanne Bier emphasized authenticity in the Kenyan shoots by employing a mix of local extras, professional actors, and individuals with prior experience in refugee camps, ensuring the portrayals reflected genuine humansuffering and environmental harshness rather than staged approximations.[16] This approach extended to logistical coordination under Robin Hollister, the Kenya location manager, who navigated challenges posed by remote terrains and variable weather to maintain unvarnished depictions of vulnerability and violence.[13] The production's focus on natural elements in these exteriors underscored the film's intent to confront viewers with the raw unpredictability of humanitarian crises, avoiding artificial enhancements that might dilute the emotional intensity.[16]Scenes involving child actors in both Denmark and Kenya required careful handling to balance intense emotional demands with participant welfare, though specific protocols were not publicly detailed beyond standard industry safeguards for minors in dramatic contexts. Bier's directorial choices prioritized capturing spontaneous responses to heighten realism, particularly in sequences blending personal trauma with broader conflict, while adhering to ethical filming practices in sensitive locales.[6]
Casting Decisions
Director Susanne Bier cast Swedish actor Mikael Persbrandt as Anton, the physician navigating personal and professional moral dilemmas, leveraging his established reputation in Scandinavian cinema for portraying complex, introspective male figures. Persbrandt's selection aligned with Bier's emphasis on authentic emotional depth, as evidenced by his ability to convey vulnerability amid tension in prior roles.[10]For the pivotal child roles of Christian and Elias, Bier opted for non-professional actors William Jøhnk Nielsen and Markus Rygaard, both with no prior experience in film or theater. A casting agent auditioned around 120 children, after which Bier personally evaluated candidates and chose these two for their innate chemistry as friends with contrasting traits—one more aggressive, the other reserved—enabling raw, believable depictions of impulsivity and peer dynamics without rehearsed polish. This decision prioritized natural, unidealized youth over trained performers to capture unfiltered emotional realism.[17]The overall casting favored regional Scandinavian talent, including Danish supporting actors like Trine Dyrholm and Ulrich Thomsen, to eschew international gloss and ensure performances grounded in cultural familiarity and psychological verisimilitude rather than commercial appeal. Bier's process involved extensive rehearsals to foster genuine interactions, underscoring a commitment to empirical suitability over star-driven choices.[18][17]
Narrative and Themes
Plot Summary
The film alternates between two parallel narratives. In a refugee camp in Sudan, Swedish doctor Anton treats victims of brutal machete attacks perpetrated by a local warlord known as "the Big Man," including a pregnant woman whose abdomen is slashed open, resulting in the death of her unborn child.[4][19] When the warlord is briefly captured after an assault on the camp, Anton spares his life despite pleas from locals and colleagues to execute him for justice.[20] The warlord is later released and leads another raid, killing aid workers and forcing Anton to flee.[21]In Denmark, Anton's 12-year-old son Elias endures relentless bullying at school due to his prominent teeth and recent relocation from Sweden.[22] A new classmate, Christian, whose father recently died of cancer, intervenes aggressively by assaulting the primary bully with a bike pump and holding a knife to his throat, forging a bond with Elias based on mutual protection.[23][24] Their alliance escalates when a man negligently strikes Anton's estranged wife Marianne with his car in a parking lot; the boys construct and detonate a homemade pipe bomb under the man's vehicle, severely injuring him and prompting Elias to confess to Anton upon his return from Sudan.[19]Anton grapples with the incident amid his own marital breakdown, as Marianne reveals an affair and contemplates divorce while caring for their younger son.[25] He confronts Christian's grandfather, who defends the boys' actions as righteous retribution, mirroring Anton's ethical dilemmas in Sudan.[26] The narratives converge without full resolution, as Anton returns to work, the family tensions persist, and Christian retreats to his grandfather's remote farm.[27]
Exploration of Revenge and Moral Ambiguity
The film's narrative juxtaposes personal retribution in a Danish schoolyard with geopolitical violence in a Sudanese refugee camp, probing the instinctive drive for revenge against ethical frameworks that prioritize restraint. In the storyline involving young protagonists Elias and Christian, the latter's savage assault on a persistent bully—entailing a knife attack at an abandoned construction site—emerges as a visceral counter to repeated victimization, portraying such retaliation not as unbridled pathology but as a primalmechanism to reassert boundaries when adult authority proves impotent.[28][29] This depiction challenges doctrines that universally condemn violence by illustrating how passivity perpetuates predation, aligning with causal realities where unchecked aggression invites escalation absent forceful deterrence.Parallel to this, protagonist Anton, a physician adhering to neutral aid principles, confronts moral ambiguity upon striking a warlord responsible for machete killings in the camp, an act that disrupts his pacifist ethos amid entrenched tribal vendettas.[30] Anton's subsequent internal conflict—balancing outrage at immediate atrocities with fears of retaliatory cycles targeting innocents—highlights the friction between human impulses toward reciprocal justice and abstracted ideals of non-intervention, questioning whether enforced neutrality sustains or merely prolongs predatory dynamics in anarchic settings.[31]From an empirical standpoint, the film's motifs resonate with evolutionary psychology research positing revenge as an adaptive trait honed for deterrence, wherein instinctive retaliation signals credibility of future reprisals, thereby curbing exploitation in low-trust environments without reliance on formal institutions.[32] Studies indicate this response yields reformed aggressor behavior through direct threat calibration, underscoring its functional role over simplistic moral condemnation.[33] Such mechanisms, universal across cultures, prioritize causal efficacy—averting harm via credible counter-threats—over deontological prohibitions that may falter against persistent threats.[34]
Depiction of Violence in Personal and Global Contexts
The film juxtaposes intimate acts of schoolyard bullying in a Danish suburb with large-scale atrocities perpetrated by a Sudanese warlord, illustrating parallels in the mechanisms of unchecked aggression. In the personal sphere, the bullying of Elias by a domineering peer escalates from verbal taunts to physical assaults because initial weaknesses in adult intervention—such as the school's reluctance to enforce consequences—allow the aggressor to perceive impunity, a dynamic Bier draws from observed real-world patterns where unaddressed dominance reinforces cycles of intimidation.[18] This mirrors the global context, where the warlord's machete-wielding raids on refugee camps, including the slaughter of civilians, persist due to localized power vacuums and absence of deterrents, underscoring how aggression amplifies when perpetrators face no immediate repercussions.[35]Bier deliberately eschews graphic depictions of gore, opting instead to emphasize the enduring psychological toll on victims and witnesses, as seen in Elias's growing anxiety and the doctor's internal conflict upon returning home. This approach aligns with empirical findings on trauma, where bullying victims exhibit heightened risks of depression, anxiety disorders, and impaired social adaptation persisting into adulthood, often mediated by altered stress responses rather than the visible wounds alone.[36] Similarly, exposure to genocidal violence correlates with long-term hypervigilance and relational distrust, effects Bier amplifies through character introspection over visceral imagery to highlight causation rooted in human vulnerability to dominance hierarchies.[37]Such portrayals challenge prevailing media narratives that frame violence in Western contexts—like adolescent bullying—as anomalous or structurally induced, while attributing non-Western equivalents to inescapable cultural pathologies, despite cross-cultural data revealing aggression's universality as an evolved trait responsive to opportunity and restraint. Prospective studies confirm that school bullying predicts later violent behavior regardless of locale, with odds ratios indicating bidirectional escalation between victimhood and perpetration when oversight lapses.[38] Anthropological and psychological research further substantiates that dominance-seeking behaviors emerge consistently across societies, from tribal warfare to urban hierarchies, undermining relativist claims by privileging causal factors like resource scarcity and status competition over exceptionalist attributions.[39] Bier's narrative thus privileges empirical realism, depicting violence as a scalable human propensity rather than a regionally aberrant deviation.
Skepticism Toward Universal Humanitarianism
In the film's depiction of a Sudanese refugee camp inspired by Darfur conditions, protagonist Anton, a Danish physician, grapples with the boundaries of impartial humanitarian aid when confronted by a local warlord known as "the Big Man," whose militias have massacred civilians including pregnant women by slashing their stomachs.[40] Anton initially adheres to medical neutrality by treating victims but ultimately refuses to aid the warlord after he arrives injured from a clan skirmish, declaring that such atrocities forfeit any claim to care.[41] This pivotal refusal underscores the narrative's challenge to universal humanitarianism, portraying it as untenable in anarchic settings where aggressors exploit aid without accountability, potentially emboldening further violence through perceived impunity.[42]The scene reflects broader causal critiques of aid in conflict zones like Darfur, where humanitarian interventions from 2003 onward, including medical camps run by organizations such as Médecins Sans Frontières, saved lives—treating over 1.5 million people for malnutrition and disease by 2006—but often failed to deter atrocities due to lack of enforcement mechanisms.[43] Empirical analyses indicate that such aid can inadvertently prolong conflicts by sustaining combatants; for instance, a study of aid flows in African civil wars found that resource inflows to unstable regions correlate with extended fighting durations, as funds are diverted to militias, fostering dependency rather than resolution.[44] In Darfur specifically, UN reports documented how aid convoys became targets for Janjaweed raiders, who taxed or looted supplies, effectively subsidizing aggressors and undermining neutral delivery.[45]Critics of idealized aid narratives, drawing on first-hand accounts from Sudan, argue that moral posturing—treating perpetrators impartially without reciprocal justice—signals weakness to warlords, as seen in the 1998 Bahr el Ghazal famine where aid exacerbated ethnic targeting by prolonging militia incentives.[46] While camp-based interventions achieved tangible successes, such as reducing mortality rates by 50% in some IDP sites through vaccination drives, the film's emphasis aligns with evidence prioritizing risks of naive universalism: unchecked aid can entrench power imbalances, with econometric models showing foreign assistance in low-governance zones increases corruption and violence by 20-30% via elite capture.[47][48] This portrayal thus highlights the causal pitfalls of detached humanitarianism, where abstract impartiality overlooks local power dynamics and unintended escalations.
Release and Commercial Performance
Premiere and Distribution
In a Better World had its world premiere at the 67th Venice International Film Festival in September 2010, where it competed in the main competition section.[27] The film was released theatrically in Denmark on August 26, 2010, following its festival debut.[27] In the United States, Sony Pictures Classics handled distribution with a limited release commencing April 1, 2011, strategically timed to capitalize on the film's selection as Denmark's entry for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, announced in September 2010.[49][50]The English title In a Better World diverges from the Danish original Hævnen, which translates literally as "The Revenge," highlighting the film's central motif of vengeance more directly than the comparatively optimistic international rendering.[51] This choice has prompted discussion among critics regarding its potential to temper perceptions of the narrative's moral ambiguities for broader audiences.[51]Sony Pictures Classics, experienced in promoting foreign-language contenders, leveraged early festival acclaim to position the film within Oscar qualifying windows.[49]
Box Office Results
In a Better World earned $1,008,098 in the United States and Canada during its limited release starting April 1, 2011.[52] This figure reflects modest uptake in art-house theaters following its Academy Award win for Best Foreign Language Film, constrained by its subtitled Danish dialogue and exploration of heavy themes like revenge and ethical violence.[4]In its home market of Denmark, where it premiered on August 26, 2010, the film achieved stronger results, grossing $4,988,786 across 81 theaters, representing a significant portion of its overall earnings for a mid-budget production estimated at $5.5 million.[52] Worldwide totals reached approximately $13 million, buoyed by European distribution but limited by the challenges typical of foreign dramas lacking broad commercial hooks.[25] Compared to contemporaries like other Oscar-winning foreign films, such as The Secret in Their Eyes (2009) with over $20 million globally, In a Better World aligned with expectations for introspective Scandinavian cinema rather than achieving breakout success.[25]
Reception and Analysis
Critical Evaluations
Critics widely praised the performances in In a Better World, particularly Mikael Persbrandt's portrayal of the conflicted doctor Anton, for conveying emotional depth and moral tension amid personal and global crises.[30] The Guardian highlighted the film's strong acting and craftsmanship, noting its ability to interweave intimate familydynamics with broader ethical dilemmas effectively.[53] These elements contributed to a critics' approval rating of 79% on Rotten Tomatoes, based on over 120 reviews, with commendations for building suspense around revenge and forgiveness.[4]However, some reviewers critiqued the film for veering into melodrama and sentimentality, arguing that its handling of violence and morality felt contrived or overly manipulative. NPR described it as a melodrama that poses ethical dilemmas but risks emotional excess in juxtaposing domestic bullying with African warlord atrocities.[54] Critics at Large labeled it trite and middlebrow, faulting its crowd-pleasing resolutions for simplifying complex human flaws into digestible lessons rather than probing deeper ambiguities.[55] Reverse Shot echoed this, contending that the narrative's ethical framework lacks insight into real-world violence, reducing global conflicts to parables that prioritize tidy provocation over nuance.[56]Divergent interpretations emerged regarding the film's treatment of violence, with some progressive-leaning critiques warning against potential glorification of retaliatory acts that could normalize aggression under moral pretexts, while others, including realist perspectives, endorsed its unflinching depiction of human imperfection and skepticism toward pure pacifism.[57] The narrative's tension between "eye for an eye" retribution and forgiveness has been seen by certain analysts as a realistic acknowledgment of innate drives over idealistic humanitarianism, avoiding facile condemnations of self-defense.[58] These views underscore unresolved ethical tensions, where personal vengeance mirrors broader geopolitical failures, prompting debate on whether the film critiques or implicitly justifies cycles of harm.[50]
Accolades and Awards
In a Better World won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 83rd Academy Awards on February 27, 2011, defeating nominees including Biutiful from Mexico, Incendies from Canada, Dogtooth from Greece, and Outside the Law from Algeria.[59][60] The film also secured the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 68th Golden Globe Awards.[10]At the 24th European Film Awards in 2011, director Susanne Bier received the award for Best Director, while the film earned nominations for Best Film and Best Actor for Mikael Persbrandt.[61]In Denmark, the film garnered wins at the Robert Awards, including Best Danish Film, Best Direction for Bier, and Best Screenplay for Anders Thomas Jensen.[62] At the Bodil Awards, Trine Dyrholm won Best Actress for her role.[62]Director Susanne Bier has noted a preference for the English title In a Better World over the Danish original Hævnen, which translates to "Revenge," highlighting the film's thematic exploration of vengeance amid its awards recognition.[63][64]
Audience Perspectives and Debates
Audience members have engaged extensively with the film's portrayal of revenge, particularly through online platforms like IMDb, where user reviews often debate the protagonists' moral dilemmas in responding to bullying and injustice. Many viewers interpret the boys' retaliatory act against a school bully as a realistic assertion of self-defense, contrasting it with the adult doctor's pacifist approach in a Sudanese refugee camp facing warlord violence, prompting discussions on whether personal retribution can ever be ethically defensible.[65] These reactions highlight a divide, with some praising the narrative's refusal to endorse unmitigated forgiveness, viewing it as a critique of naive humanitarianism that ignores human incentives for deterrence.[65]Empirical data from viewer ratings underscores broad appeal among those favoring pragmatic responses over idealism. On IMDb, the film holds a 7.6/10 rating from over 43,000 users as of recent tallies, reflecting sustained positive reception for its unflinching examination of violence's role in family dynamics and global conflicts.[66] Similarly, Rotten Tomatoes audience scores stand at 86% approval from more than 7,000 verified users, with comments frequently citing the story's resonance in teaching children about consequences rather than abstract ethics.[4]Debates in user forums occasionally touch on the accuracy of the bullying sequences, with a minority critiquing them as exaggerated for dramatic effect, while others argue the film underplays the need for stronger endorsement of retribution to mirror real-world deterrence.[65] This contrasts with broader audience appreciation for the film's causal linkages between personal vendettas and larger geopolitical failures, such as the inefficacy of non-violent aid in genocidal settings, appealing to viewers skeptical of universalist solutions that overlook self-preservation instincts.[67] Such perspectives emphasize the movie's value in prompting parental reflections on instilling resilience amid moralambiguity, rather than rote pacifism.[68]
Legacy
Cultural and Philosophical Impact
The film In a Better World has contributed to broader cinematic explorations of the ethics of violence and revenge, particularly within European drama, by juxtaposing personal vendettas with humanitarian crises and underscoring the tension between pacifism and retributive impulses.[69][31] Its narrative, centered on a doctor's moral dilemmas in a Sudanese refugee camp amid local brutality, illustrates the limitations of non-violent idealism when confronted with systemic aggression, prompting viewers to question whether restraint perpetuates injustice.[70] This approach aligns with a realist perspective on human behavior, portraying aggression as a persistent force rather than a mere product of environmental factors, as seen in the boys' escalating acts of bullying and vigilante justice that defy adult interventions.[71]Philosophically, the work reinforces skepticism toward abstract universal ethics, emphasizing causal consequences of individual choices in flawed human contexts over deontological imperatives. Anton, the protagonistphysician, embodies the pitfalls of detached altruism—treating warlords who commit atrocities while facing personal betrayal—highlighting how such stances can enable further harm without addressing underlying power dynamics.[30][72] Reviews and analyses have noted its challenge to viewers' assumptions about moral purity, arguing that the film's resolution favors pragmatic acknowledgment of vengeful instincts as innate drivers, rather than constructivist views attributing violence solely to societal conditioning.[20] This has informed ongoing debates in film criticism about masculinity, retribution, and the inescapability of conflict in human relations, influencing portrayals in subsequent dramas that blend emotional intimacy with unflinching realism.[73]In educational and analytical contexts post-release, In a Better World has been referenced in examinations of interventionism's ethical quandaries, particularly how Western humanitarian efforts intersect with local power structures and personal ethics.[70] The Danish original title Hævnen (Revenge), retained in discussions, underscores this focus, serving as a case study for dissecting the hypocrisy in forgiving systemic violence while demanding justice for private wrongs.[74] Its global resonance, amplified by the 2011 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, has sustained its role in prompting reflections on whether a "better world" requires confronting rather than transcending human propensities for dominance and retaliation.[75]
Retrospective Critiques
Later scholarly examinations of Susanne Bier's oeuvre, including works published in the 2020s, have highlighted the film's underappreciated depiction of causal chains perpetuating cycles of violence, linking the doctor's humanitarian pacifism in a Sudanese refugee camp to his son's vengeful impulses in Denmark. These analyses argue that the narrative rejects overly sentimental interpretations of forgiveness as a universal panacea, instead illustrating how non-retaliatory responses can invite exploitation and escalation, as seen when the doctor's mercy toward a warlord results in betrayal and harm to innocents.[70][76]The portrayal of retribution's pragmatic trade-offs receives particular attention in these retrospectives, with the boys' assault on a bully yielding immediate deterrence but underscoring the moral and relational costs, such as strained family bonds and the risk of reciprocal aggression—realism that counters idealized views of violence as either wholly redemptive or inevitably destructive. This cost-benefit lens aligns with broader critiques of "left-normalized" humanitarianism, where empirical outcomes in the film prioritize consequentialist evaluation over abstract ethical purity.[77][78]Complementing these insights, the film's achievements in rendering child psychology have endured praise, capturing the raw dynamics of bullying, peer loyalty, and paternal influence with psychological acuity derived from the young actors' naturalistic performances and the script's focus on trauma transmission across generations.[79][80]Yet balanced assessments also identify shortcomings in the depth of African representation, where the Sudanese camp serves primarily as an exoticized stage for Danish protagonists' ethical reckonings, flattening local agency and complexities into a foil for Western introspection, a pattern critiqued as perpetuating neo-colonial tropes in Bier's transnational narratives.[19][81]