
Få meg på, for faen
(Turn Me On, Goddammit / Turn Me On, Dammit!)
(Noruega, 2011) [Color, 76 m.].
Género: Comedia.
IMDb
Ficha técnica.
Dirección: Jannicke Systad Jacobsen.
Argumento: Olaug Nilssen (novela).
Guión: Jannicke Systad Jacobsen.
Fotografía: Marianne Bakke (Color).
Música: Ginge Anvik.
Producción: Brede Hovland.
Productora: Motlys.
Premios:
- 2011: Festival de Tribeca: Mejor guión
Sinopsis: Alma es una joven con imaginación activa y una líbido aún más desarrollada. Todo cambiará tras un encuentro con un joven, Arthur. (FILMAFFINITY)
Alma is a small-town teen with a big imagination. Horny and looking for love, she has only her lively imagination and a kindly phone sex operator to ameliorate her frustratingly lonely and chaste life. But Alma's active fantasy world and even more active libido only seem to get her into trouble. After a titillating yet awkward encounter with school heartthrob Artur promises to literally make Alma's dreams come true, she is instead shunned by her catty classmates and saddled with a particularly unkind nickname. Suddenly a social outcast, Alma is desperate to just move out of town and on with her life… if only growing up were ever that simple.
Turn me on, goddammit is an offbeat coming-of-age comedy with a deadpan sense of humor, enlivened by its rich sense of fantasy and frank but sweet approach to teen sexuality. With its complicated and perfectly executed tone balancing candid sexual content with a certain earnest awkwardness, Turn me on is an apt evocation of the particular complexities of teen girlhood. --Cara Cusumano (Tribeca Film Festival)
Norwegian writer-director Jannicke Systad Jacobsen makes a fine debut with this teen dramedy that also features a real find in newcomer Helene Bergsholm.
ROME — It’s no easy task to make a compelling movie about a small-town Norwegian girl and her chronic masturbation problems, but writer-director Jannicke Systad Jacobsen manages to do just that with her aptly titled debut feature, Turn Me On, Goddammit! (Fa Meg Pa, For Faen!). Winner of the screenplay award at the Tribeca Film Festival, this deadpan teen dramedy features a fine lead performance from newcomer Helene Bergsholm, and despite its low-budget production values, has its heart – and hand – in the right place.
Continuing its fest run in Rome after stops at Tribeca, Zurich and Stockholm, Goddammit! has already sold to several overseas territories, including to New Yorker Films in the U.S. It was released in Norway mid-August to critical and box-office acclaim, topping the local charts along with the homegrown thriller, Headhunters.
Based on a novel by Olaug Nilssen, the film is set in the remote mountain village of Skoddenheim, whose population (per on-screen appearances) seems to be about 12. The shy and gorgeous Alma (Bergsholm) is one of a few teen townies trying to get whatever kicks they can out of the place, which provides them with an adequate supply of beer and hash, but not much else.
In Alma’s case, such kicks consist of pleasuring herself while fantasizing about handsome young neighbor, Artur (Matias Myren), as well as about anyone else who crosses her path, including a phone sex operator and her boss at the nearby supermarket (where she makes special use of a roll of coins from the cash register). Yet when Alma has an extremely awkward sexual run-in with Artur during a party, the event winds up turning her into the town outcast, kicking off an adolescent rebellion that won’t stop until the truth comes out.
With a straight-faced comic sensibility that recalls the work of fellow Nordic filmmaker Aki Kaurismaki, Jacobsen manages to mine both humor and tenderness out of situations, which would be excruciating for any teenager, wherever they live. And while all of Skoddenheim seems worried that “there’s something abnormal about Alma,” it’s clear she’s experiencing the same growing pains as her peers but is just more honest about them, more in touch with them, than they are.
Although it’s well-observed and acted, Goddammit is not without the usual tics present in many an indie debut, including witty voiceovers, constant pop music, quirky photomontages and other such winks at the camera. These, along with shaky HD cinematography, take some of the pleasure away from what’s otherwise a heartwarming, occasionally hilarious portrayal of one girl’s quest for satisfaction -- Jordan Mintzer (Hollywood Reporter).
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Versión BDRip HD 720p VO+SI 3,37 Gb. mkv.
Publicada por bjorn j en sharethefiles.
Enlaces:Versión BDRip HD 720p VO+SI 3,37 Gb. mkv.
Publicada por bjorn j en sharethefiles.
Subtítulos (en contenedor matroska): inglés, noruego.
Subtítulos (descarga directa): inglés.
Subtítulos (descarga directa): castellano.
(1) Subs en castellano de patiodebutacas revisados y convertidos a castellano europeo por Teeninlove para la versión BDRip.
Datos técnicos: (nfo)
Código: Seleccionar todo
Res_______: 1280x688
Bitrate___: 2pass @ 4958kbps
Audio_____: Norwegian DTS
Subtitles_: English, Norwegian
Capturas:






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Otras versiones en DXC:Få meg på, for faen (Jannicke Systad Jacobsen, 2011) BDRip VOSI
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