Unlike many American films that sanitize Neo-Nazism (making them look like cool rebels), Karukoski shows these men as lonely, unemployed, and intellectually bankrupt. They listen to bad rock music, live in drab housing blocks, and their greatest act of "rebellion" is beating up a teenager.
To watch Leijonasydän (which translates literally to "Lionheart") is to watch a man tear down his own ideological walls, brick by brick, for the love of his son. The story follows Teppo (Peter Franzén), a middle-aged former boxer who has found a new kind of violent brotherhood. He is a respected elder in a Neo-Nazi skinhead gang. To Teppo, the movement is simple: order, discipline, and the "purity" of Finland. He lives in a cramped apartment, surrounded by like-minded men who trade Hitler salutes for pints of beer. leijonasydan koko elokuva
In the landscape of Finnish cinema, films about the working class often fall into two categories: the gritty crime thriller or the melancholic comedy. But in 2013, director Dome Karukoski delivered something rare with Leijonasydän —a film that is neither a romance nor a traditional action flick, but a brutal, tender, and politically charged family drama set against the white-supremacist skinhead movement of late 1990s Finland. Unlike many American films that sanitize Neo-Nazism (making
Everything changes when his estranged 12-year-old son, (Lauri Tilkanen), comes to live with him. Sulo is everything Teppo despises on paper. The boy is gentle, effeminate, artistic, and bullied at school. Worse—in the eyes of Teppo’s gang—Sulo is chubby, soft, and harbors a secret that will detonate Teppo’s entire worldview: Sulo is gay. The story follows Teppo (Peter Franzén), a middle-aged
It doesn't give a clean answer. Teppo’s journey is messy, violent, and incomplete. But by the final frame—a long, silent shot of a father watching his son walk away into a world that still hates him—the film argues that the attempt at change is the only thing that makes us human.