staying put
by Douglas Messerli
Lasse Nielsen (screenwriter and director) Dragen (The
Kite) / 2015 [14 minutes]
Ever since the 1975 film Leave Us Alone (La’
os være), Danish film director Lasse Nielsen—his first two works
done in collaboration with Ernst Johansen—has been exploring in various forms
young long-haired, mostly blond, boys in love in a manner that was not only
controversial in its day, but remains a territory which most US directors have
been charry of entering. Nielsen’s and Johansen’s 1978 work You Are Not
Alone (Du er ikke alene), reviewed in an earlier volume of My
Queer Cinema, has long become an LGBTQ cult favorite, shown at film
festivals around the world.
Fortunately, Nielsen never rested on his laurels and continued into the
21st century to shoot features and shorts that speak in various ways about not
only coming of age love, but love that has its roots in early youth. Perhaps if
the US had further considered these issues there would have been no necessity
for a brutally frightening work such as Farbod Khoshtinat’s 2020 short, Two
Little Boys, in which innocent boyhood love turns into teen angst and a
locker room murder/suicide—a film based on a childhood incident of the
Iranian-born director, but is particularly American, I would argue, in its
sensibility.
In
his 2015 14-minute film The Kite (Dragen) Nielsen takes us back
to those first moments of love that later help define one’s sexuality for life.
But before we can get there, the director presents us with a seemingly quite
lonely adult, Bo (Mark Viggo Krogsgaard) who lives in a small, but comfortable
house with walls lined with books and paintings, but a back yard of apparently
old and rusting yard and patio furniture—folding metal lawn chairs, tables,
etc.—and a swing set, as if
Meanwhile, in another beach or country house we see the adult Ole (Mads
Korsgaard) working in his garage, completing a home-made paper kite upon which
his has rather crudely drawn a smiley-face in blue and red crayons. He picks up
his cell phone and makes a call.
Back in Bo’s house, we observe him in his greenhouse, clipping tomatoes.
We hear his phone ring, and he picks it up to see a text message: “Kom til
stranden ved Stængehus in morgen kl14. Se efter
dragen!” (“Come to Stængehus beach tomorrow at 2:00.
Look for the kite.”)
As he comes closer to the shore, he observes a kite (much like the one
we have seen the adult Ole recreate) high in the air, which finally falls to
the beach just above where he stands. The boy Ole (Jonathan Lindinger) signals
Bo to join him on the small cliff where he waits. Bo takes off his shoes, pours
out the sand from them, and joins Ole to fly the kite.
And the camera moves back to another day in Bo and Ole’s halcyon youth.
Together they do what boys do, fly the kite, run after it and one another, and
leap into the air with the joy of simply being able to.
Obviously, a great deal of affection has risen between these two
friends, and slowly, almost as a game of bluff, the two now play at undressing,
one first unbuttoning his shorts and the other following, alternately unzipping
their shorts and then pulling them down and gradually off to reveal their
swimsuits. They do a short striptease with each other eventually, we
presume—since Nielsen’s camera has discretely pulled away to watch the high
whip of the kite across the sky—until they are both nude.
But the kite in this instance also becomes a sign of their location, and
we soon see Ole’s father (Kenneth Christensen) coming down the path ostensibly
to bring his son home. When he spots the naked boys he angrily pulls Ole off,
the boy having to grab Bo’s swimsuit to quickly hide his nakedness. Bo, wrapped
in a blanket, looks down to see Ole’s white swimsuit in front of him. It is
almost as if in the remnants of their clothing they have exchanged something
close to a vow.
Throughout Bo’s recollections we have heard the lovely strains of a song
by Nielsen’s frequent musical collaborator Sebastian, and now that
songwriter/composer’s lyrics for “Når lyset bryder frem” (“When the Light
Breaks Out”), posted in English at the very beginning of this film, make sense:
You little
child, on your way to dreamland
Suddenly you
meet a strange man.
He takes you
across the deep water
To a strange
beach
Where everything
you see
Is like a fairy
tale.
And when the
light breaks through,
Yeah...time to
go home.
But this time the “light breaks through” in a different manner, as the
adults, Bo and Ole, return to the same beach, Bo, with Ole’s long-lost swimming
trunks hanging from his pocket, as
Not only do we have no idea what has happened to the two in the years
since their childhood encounters, but we do know why they have remained apart
for what some sources (IMDb for example) describe as a 20-year separation; all
we know is that this time they will not have to “go home” alone.
Los Angeles, January 28, 2021
Reprinted from My Queer Cinema blog and
World Cinema Review (January 2021).





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