The Movie Waffler New to VOD - TOUCH | The Movie Waffler

New to VOD - TOUCH

New to VOD - TOUCH
dying man embarks on a search for his first love, who mysteriously vanished a half century earlier.

Review by Eric Hillis

Directed by: Baltasar Kormákur

Starring: Egill Ólafsson, Kōki, Pálmi Kormákur, Masahiro Motoki, Yoko Narahashi, Meg Kubota, Tatsuya Tagawa, Charles Nishikawa, Sigurður Ingvarsson

Touch poster

Icelandic filmmaker Baltasar Kormákur is known for helming action movies (Contraband; 2 Guns) and survival thrillers (Everest; Adrift; Beast) that are as rugged as his country's landscape. Touch, adapted from the novel of the same name by Ólafur Jóhann Ólafsson, is a surprising departure for Kormákur. It's an achingly romantic tale of lost love, a cross-cultural COVID-era epic that reminds us of the losses we suffered in that period, and of how so much death made us appreciate the simple pleasures of being alive all the more. At time of writing it has an almost unheard of Rotten Tomatoes score of 92% from both critics and audiences, which suggests nobody is above a good romantic yarn.

Touch review

Kormákur's films often feature protagonists who will do anything to stay alive. Touch is centred on a man who doesn't have the option of battling to stick around. In March of 2020, as the world begins to shut down amid uncertainty around a strange new virus, Kristofer (Egill Ólafsson) is told by a doctor that it's time to get his affairs in order. Kristofer takes this as a prompt to leave Iceland and head to London in search of a long lost love.


Through flashbacks we see how in 1969 a young and idealistic Kristofer (the director's son Palmi Kormakur) drops out of the London School of Economics and takes a job as a dishwasher in a Japanese restaurant in the centre of the city. He immediately bonds with the restaurant's owner Takahashi-san (Masahiro Motoki) over their shared past as fishermen. But it's his boss's daughter, Miko (Kōki), who catches his eye. Despite having a Japanese boyfriend, Miko flirts with Kristofer and in a way she's more English than Japanese, dressing in the mini-skirts of the era. Despite his attraction to Miko, Kristofer keeps to himself, not wanting to upset Takahashi, who seems to have an argumentative relationship with his daughter. But eventually he succumbs to her charms, and the two embark on a secret relationship.

Touch review

Touch is the sort of movie you could warm your feet to on a cold winter night. For an Icelandic film it sure is filled with warmth, from the heat of the passion between Kristofer and Miko to the many moments of human connection, like how the elderly Kristofer bonds with a Japanese man over a drunken night when his quest leads him to Tokyo. Kormákur has cast his film with actors who sport the sort of faces that make you instantly warm to them, which makes the various heartaches they conceal all the more affecting. As the young lovers, Palmi and Kōki are revelatory, leaving nobody in doubt that these two gentle souls in beautiful skins would fall head over heels for each other. As the older Kristofer, the veteran Ólafsson carries himself in a confident yet humble way that suggest he's a man who has learned a lot in life but has yet to receive answers to its most important questions.

Touch review

On its surface, Touch might seem like the sort of boring melodrama that could have garnered an Oscar nomination 20 years ago. But this is no cynical piece of awards bait. It's a genuinely heartfelt piece of romantic filmmaking that skilfully balances the epic with the intimate. It traverses the world but is centred on mapping the heart. We learn details that its protagonist isn't initially privy to, and each time a curtain is pulled back the movie exposes a new complicated layer. Life and love are never simple, and we don't how this journey will end for Kristofer. We imagine several ways the film might climax, and they all feel like they might work. What makes Kristofer such a compelling protagonist is his curiosity, how he always wants to learn and always asks questions. This sees him embrace Japanese culture in a way that might see him scolded today by the most boring people on Earth for his crime of "cultural appropriation" (look at today's headlines and you'll see it's not the culturally curious who are setting the world on fire). We don't know what answer Kristofer will receive at the end of his journey, but Touch reminds us that it's the questions we ask along the way that will ultimately determine how ready we are to leave this world when our number is called.

Touch is on UK/ROI VOD now.



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