Tilbury (TV Movie 1987) Poster

(1987 TV Movie)

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6/10
One of the weirdest films you'll ever see.
parry_na28 March 2022
This is a 1987 TV Movie from Iceland and tells the story of a country boy who comes to Rekyavik to find his childhood sweetheart. It's set in 1940, and he finds she is in a relationship with a British soldier. What transpires is as weird and unsettling as anything you could imagine.

'Tilbury' reminds me a little of those wonderful BBC Christmas Ghost Stories that often featured the work of MR James in its style, budget and presentation - but this features Icelandic folklore as its inspiration, and is filmed in a bitingly cold looking isolated environment.

An enjoyable eccentric slice of folk horror, this is definitely an acquired taste. It will either amuse you or unsettle you - possibly both. My score is 6 out of 10.
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2/10
Slow and boring
greenjelly0126 April 2022
This review does not have any spoilers, but will probably get flagged by one of the purists. So read on if you don't want to waste your time.

This is a very slow and boring movie, with bad make up and poor acting. There is no plot, no suspense, nothing interesting. There is one scene where the "bad guy" shows some nice dance moves. There is some skin shown in the first few minutes, but nothing else the rest of the movie. So don't bother watching through hoping to see more, if that's your thing. Pity, because it has two very pretty girls.
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8/10
Cadbury's Tilbury Milk Chocolate
morrison-dylan-fan14 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Taking a look at my viewings this month of films from Nordic countries for ICM's Nordic Cinema viewing challenge,I realised that I had not seen anything from Iceland! Remembering a Icelandic Horror I had download last Halloween,I got set to encounter the Tilbury .

View on the film:

Clearly not holding anything back for this TV Movie with a tasty eyeful of skin within the opening minutes, co-writer/(with Þorarinn Eldjarn) director Vioar Vikingsson & cinematographer Orn Sveinsson milk gloopy splatter horror of a spewing,wonderfully large clawed creature into a bucket of Folk Horror.

The second of two Horror films Vikingsson would make for TV channel RUV, (the other is Draugasaga (1985)) Vikingsson melts a eerie Horror atmosphere on army barricades, darting the camera on the dance floor where Audun finds women in a seizure state, and swinging the camera high to take Audun back to his dream childhood memories.

Churning the Icelandic folklore Tilbury onto TV, the screenplay by Vikingsson and Eldjarn cross-stitch the rustic Folk Horror details of the creature, with a enticing mystery of Audun slipping pass all those who want to keep the town secret safe, in order to drain the Tilbury.

Not listed with the role on this site,Kristjan Franklin Magnus (future star of the superb Nordic Noir TV series Trapped) gives a terrific turn as Audun, thanks to Magnus digging under Audun hard skin from the army, to unveil curiosity of the odd shape he sees moving at night.
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8/10
Fun and well made, but held back by tonal issues
I_Ailurophile26 October 2023
There is one thing above all that one must understand about this before watching, a truth that is not communicated anywhere one may read about the film: it's a horror-comedy. Leaning heavily on folk beliefs, it's noteworthy just as much that this carries itself with a predominantly light, wry, even downright jocular tone. No, it has nothing to do with the fact that the actor playing the protagonist looks a great deal like young Hugh Laurie. Yet there's a significant strain of humor about 'Tilbury,' as if it could have been found on British television somewhere between the last run of 'Monty Python's Flying Circus' and like fare of the late 80s, to say nothing of the almost farcical traits given to the soldiers we meet. Even as this is filmed and set in Iceland, and is an Icelandic production, the number of British characters on hand threatens to rob the title of its own identity, and the same is true of the levity and the more fantastical elements. By all means, this is enjoyable and well made; it's pretty terrific, in fact - but it's probably not the movie you think it is from the outside looking in.

In all earnestness, there's a major question here of balance, for the root premise seems to get sidelined for a majority of the runtime in favor of what comes across as sitcom-ready conflicts between characters, or perhaps a serial drama. Even as the softer hues may be twisted into darker ones, as seen during a lengthy dance hall sequence, the more sinister airs and strong violence to come deep in the back end butt up against cheeky, irreverent frivolity. A complete, cohesive, compelling story is told, but I think it could have done with a little more mindful care in how it was crafted, for there's a sense that it didn't entirely know what it wanted to be, or lacked unity of vision. The fact that it's nevertheless so well made and entertaining is a credit to all involved, even the writer and director who are also the ones to mishandle the treatment. The stunts, effects, and special makeup are all outstanding; the cast fully embrace the wild personalities of their characters, and each in turn is a joy to watch; the production design and art direction are splendid. Even the choreography we see in that dance sequence is a blast, and the scene writing is particularly robust.

I just wish 'Tilbury' didn't toe the line as much as it did, for tone is the one issue in my opinion to hold this back from coming off even better. Either the horror element should have been further reduced, and itself wrapped up more in the lightheartedness, or the comedy should have been diminished to give more breathing room for the more nefarious aspects of the narrative. I like this, and I'm glad I took the time to watch; I'm also glad for those who get more out of it than I do. For that matter, maybe I'm being too finicky. One way or another, at only one hour this minute feature is deserving on its own merits, and fun overall, but it would have been more so if - by one means or another - the two halves of the horror-comedy approach had been woven together more smoothly, in different proportions.
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