The title alone—Insomnia—is probably enough to indicate that the film is noir. Anyone who has suffered from insomnia—and that probably includes most of us living through the pandemic—can identify with the disruption and disorientation that sleeplessness introduces into one’s life. The first time that I saw the film, which is years ago now, I didn’t have as much experience with insomnia. I wish I didn’t have that experience now, but it did give me a new appreciation for its effects on the character in this film.
The main character in Insomnia, the Swedish detective Jonas Engström, has a difficult time getting any sleep in the Land of the Midnight Sun. He has traveled to Norway, north of the Arctic Circle, to assist in the investigation of a young girl’s murder. The details of the case are unsettling enough to cause sleeplessness, but Engström is also affected by the elements above the Arctic Circle: the fog, the sunlight. It affects his ability both to sleep and to make decisions. Everyone else around him is already accustomed to the elements or has no trouble adapting, which makes his insomnia stand out more. The story is told from his perspective, so viewers see its effect on him more so than the other characters do.
Before Engström’s investigation starts in Norway, the film opens with grainy images of the young woman, Tanja, being beaten and killed. Her face is shown clearly, but the murderer’s is not. Her smile in the first shot implies that she knew her killer. There’s no sign of a struggle until the killer grabs her by the throat. After she dies, her body is wrapped in black plastic and carried off. The killer was likely prepared and/or practiced at this sort of thing. The percussion on the soundtrack sounds like a heart beating, a musical theme that is carried through the film.
After the opening credits and the grainy shots of the crime, the film cuts to a sky filled with light and the sound of a plane flying through the clouds. The scene appears to be shot from a seat on the plane. Then viewers see two men on the plane, Engström and his partner Erik Vik. Erick Vik has just awakened, with the plane’s captain announcing that they have crossed the Arctic Circle and are now in the Land of the Midnight Sun. Engström allows his partner to use his shoulder as a pillow. Engström’s insomnia apparently started before his arrival in Norway and gets worse afterward. In this same sequence, Engström blacks in the face of the murder victim in a xerox copy of a photo: He may also have a case of misogyny.
When the pair land in Norway and drive the rest of the way to their destination, it is revealed that Erik Vik suffers from memory loss. It’s a condition that should force his retirement, but Engström covers for him. The first time that I saw the film, I thought it showed one bit of humanity about Engström, but on subsequent viewings, it seems to be just one more instance of Engström’s ease at deception. He is so used to lying, and protecting his partner is the easier version of covering up crimes and errors of judgment.
(This article about Insomnia [1997] contains all the spoilers.)
As the detectives begin the investigation, they create a plan to bring the murderer out of hiding. They almost trap him, but someone accidentally alerts him to the police presence, and a chaotic pursuit commences. In the confusion and in the fog that creeps in around the area, Engström shoots his partner, who dies on the scene. Was it an accident? Did Engström really think that it was the murderer shooting at him when he returned fire? Or was he anxious to get rid of Erik Vik because both were the subject of a police internal investigation in Sweden? These questions seem easy to answer given Engström’s propensity for skirting the law. Here are two lists of his transgressions in the two related investigations, the killing of Erik Vik and the murder of Tanja:
Shooting on the Job of Engström’s Partner Erik Vik
◊ Engström takes the gun from the scene and hides it in his pocket.
◊ He shoots a dog with the same gun, then pulls the bullet out of the dog’s body and cleans it.
◊ He replaces the crime scene evidence, specifically the bullet that killed Vik, with the bullet from the dog.
◊ He frames a high school teenager for the killing of his partner by planting the gun that killed Vik in the teenager’s bedroom.
Murder of Tanja
◊ Engström molests one of Tanja’s friends to get information from her about Tanja’s boyfriend and the older man that Tanja was seeing.
◊ He breaks into Jon Holt’s apartment without a warrant and takes the man’s appointment book. Jon Holt is a writer of crime novels and a suspect in Tanja’s death.
◊ He makes a deal with Jon Holt to cover up Tanja’s murder because Holt knows that Engström shot his partner and is willing to tell the police that it was not an accident.
◊ When Engström is pursuing Holt through some wooden buildings lining the waterfront, Holt falls through rotting planks, hits his head, and falls into the ocean. Holt drowns while Engström watches, then turns away and does nothing.
It’s not just the murder investigation and the round-the-clock daylight that are taking their toll on the protagonist. Engström does more than cut corners here and there; he lies and deceives in almost every aspect of his life and work. Viewers are not given any backstory on Engström. He doesn’t express much emotion, and there are only a few hints that he suffers from any guilt at all, for example, when his deceased partner appears in his hotel room with a mouthful of blood, or when he sees someone in the search party who looks almost exactly like Vik and he does a double take to see the person clearly. But these are few and fleeting moments in the overall picture given of Engström.
The effect of the endless hours of light on Engström isn’t the only reason that the light is such an important part of the film’s plot. A comparison can be made between the relentless light and the relentless pursuit of the truth by Hilde Hagen, one of the Norwegian detectives who is also investigating the young girl’s murder and who is quite at home with the midnight sun and the search for truth. Hilde Hagen is assigned as the principal detective investigating the shooting of Engström’s partner, Erik Vik. She finds a lot of holes in Engström’s version of events. He claims to have seen Vik’s body lying face down in the water, for instance, but from the position he claims to have been in when he fired his gun, she knows that it would have been impossible to see that far in the fog.
Engström may be compromising his morals and his profession, but he does find out the truth about Tanja’s death, and the officers in Norway—all male except Hilde Hagen—celebrate his success and his reputation as an officer who always solves his cases. The investigation into his role in the accidental shooting isn’t fully resolved, but not because the film doesn’t resolve doubt on this point. Hilde Hagen finds the evidence she needs to prove that Engström is lying about the circumstances of his partner’s death, but she leaves the evidence with Engström himself. She leaves the Norma bullet (Norma bullets are used in a make of gun only Swedish officers use) found at the scene of Vik’s shooting on Engström’s nightstand just before he leaves Norway. It appears that he will be let off the hook for one death because he solved the murder of Tanja Lorentzen—perhaps because Hilde Hagen doesn’t want to fight the established vanguard arrayed against her when she will find it hard to prove that Vik’s death was not simply an unfortunate accident.
I was looking forward to seeing the U.S. remake with the same title that was released in 2002. I don’t usually enjoy U.S. remakes of foreign films, but this one is directed by Christopher Nolan and stars Al Pacino, Hilary Swank, and Robin Williams, four great reasons to recommend it. But even Al Pacino can’t compete with Stellan Skarsgård. Skarsgård inhabits the character completely, which is amazing considering how far Engström will go to solve his cases and protect his reputation. Maybe if I had seen the 2002 film first, I would feel differently because the U.S. film is a good one. It makes some changes that suit the different characters and the new setting in northern Alaska, but Stellan Skarsgård makes Engström so believable as a corrupt officer who is difficult to bring to justice.
In some ways, Insomnia is the opposite of noir. It takes place above the Arctic Circle, in the Land of the Midnight Sun, which is not the typical urban setting of many noirs. Glaring sunlight is used to accentuate Engström’s insomnia and its effects. Engström will betray anything, including his profession, to get what he wants. No one is asking him to compromise himself; he does it willingly, seemingly for the sport of it. It’s a dark and noir performance that is hard to beat. Engström will do anything to prove his murder case and to obscure his responsibility in the shooting of his partner. The film is told from Engström’s point of view, so viewers are with him during every step—and misstep—of the investigation.
One of the most poignant examples of Engström’s complete lack of moral compass comes during the scene where a suspect, a high school student, is being interrogated and that suspect breaks down in anguish because he has done nothing wrong. Engström watches impassively, knowing full well that the only reason the student was brought in was because of the evidence that he—Engström—planted. It’s a chilling scene, one among many.
March 14, 1997, release date • Directed by Erik Skholdbjærg • Screenplay by Erik Skholdbjærg, Nikolaj Frobenius • Music by Geir Jenssen • Edited by Hakon Overas • Cinematography by Eerling Thurmann-Andersen
Stellan Skarsgård as Jonas Engström • Sverre Anker Ousdal as Erik Vik • Gisken Armand as Hilde Hagen • Maria Bonnevie as Ane • Bjørn Moan as Eilert • Maria Mathiesen as Tanja Lorentzen • Bjørn Floberg as Jon Holt • Marianne O. Ulrichsen as Frøya Selmer • Kristian Figenschow as Arne Zakariassen • Thor Michael Aamodt as Tom Engen • Frode Rasmussen as the chief of police
Distributed by Norsk Filminstitutt • Produced by Norsk Film AS, Nordic Screen Production AS
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