The Here After backdrop
The Here After

The Here After

6.3 / 1020151h 42m

Synopsis

When John returns home to his father after serving time in prison, he is looking forward to starting his life afresh. However, in the local community his crime is neither forgotten nor forgiven.

Genre: Crime, Drama, Thriller, History

Status: Released

Director: Magnus von Horn

Website: http://neweuropefilmsales.com/movies/the-here-after

Main Cast

Ulrik Munther

Ulrik Munther

John

Mats Blomgren

Mats Blomgren

Martin

Alexander Norgren

Filip

Wiesław Komasa

Wiesław Komasa

Grandfather

Loa Ek

Loa Ek

Malin

Ellen Jelinek

Ellen Jelinek

Bea

Oliver Heilmann

Kim

Felix Göransson

Hampus

Inger Nilsson

Inger Nilsson

Principal

Sven Ahlström

Sven Ahlström

Kim's Dad

Trailer

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

Auteur Magnus von Horn has created something that is quite deeply troubling to watch here as we follow the struggles of the young “John” (Ulrik Munther) as he returns home after a period of incarceration. Whilst we are uncertain as to quite what he did, we do know that he was locked up for two years and that his return home and to school is being treated with pretty universal disdain by his small, tightly-knit, community. What now ensues is a delicately presented evaluation of mob rule. Initially using more psychological tools like shunning before that particular pot over-boils and heads inevitably towards more extreme and dangerous behaviour. Munther delivers a really quite poignant performance here as does Mats Blomgren as his distraught and increasingly conflicted father “Martin” and the assembled supporting cast who offer up an effective degree of animus and toxicity that resonates more as the story asks questions that we know cannot be answered straightforwardly by anyone. I did wonder, on the plausibility front, if the absence of the police or other authorities to keep an eye on this young man either for the protection of himself or his community didn’t quite ring true, but perhaps their omission from the thrust of the story managed to further illustrate just how brutal even the most ostensibly civilised can be when their wagons get circled. Not an easy watch, nor a conclusive one, but worth an hour and an half.