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Toronto International Film Festival
For the Love of Film
Films & Schedules
  • My Queen Karo

  • Dorothée van den Berghe

Country: Belgium
Year:
2009
Language:
Dutch, French
Runtime:
102 minutes
Format:
Colour/35mm

PUBLIC SCREENINGS
Saturday September 1205:45PM AMC 3 Add Film to MyTIFF Filmlist Buy Now
Monday September 1408:30PM VARSITY 4 Add Film to MyTIFF Filmlist Buy Now
Friday September 1811:15AM CUMBERLAND 1 Add Film to MyTIFF Filmlist Buy Now

Description

Amsterdam's squatter culture is as famous a utopian experiment as American communes, but seen far less often in films. Dorothée van den Berghe draws from her own experiences growing up in Amsterdam's bohemian environment in My Queen Karo, her spirited second feature. If property is evil, what can be said about the possessiveness that comes with love and family?

It begins as the most incredible adventure. In 1974, Karo (Anna Franziska Jäger) sets out from Belgium with her dad, Raven (Matthias Schoenaerts), and her mom, Dalia (Déborah François), to start a new life in Amsterdam. They join a group that is taking over a vacant building and setting up a new society based around the vast common room they all share. No walls, no rules – only love.

Raven builds huge, fantastical see-saw constructions on which Karo and her friends can play. Karo even gets a swing in the common room, which gives her a delirious view of the adults below: eating, bathing and debating together, forging an alternative to conventional morality both in their own bodies and in their daily lives.

But when Raven begins a flirtation with a new Dutch woman, he puts his ideals in defence of his desire. How can his wife put an exclusive claim on him? How can Karo insist on loyalty to her mother? “We came here to be free, and already you're laying down rules?” he asks. And so the tight unit of mother, father and daughter that left Belgium begins to fray as the forces of free love and jealousy threaten to pull it apart in Amsterdam.

The easy path from this premise would be a morality tale about how conventional ethics are conventional for good reason. But van den Berghe, perhaps because she once lived in this world, sees far more nuance. She allows any moral judgments – from scenes of children witnessing their parents' physical affection, for example – to rest with the viewer. In fact, My Queen Karo holds on to only one conclusion: that for new social alternatives to take root, they must first contend with old human emotions.

Cameron Bailey


Dorothée van den BergheDorothée van den Berghe was born in Ghent, Belgium, and studied at the Hogeschool Sint-Lukas in Brussels. She has directed the short films Bekentenissen (93), Rue Verte (94), Brussels Midnight (98) and Kroeskop (06). Her feature films are Girl (02) and My Queen Karo (09).

Cadillac People's Choice Award