A shocking allegation drives a parent-teacher conference into messy madness in Armand
Halfdan Ullmann Tøndel’s feature debut, which received the 2024 Caméra d'Or at Cannes, is a thrilling examination of parental folly that gradually loses focus.
Photo: IFC Films
A parent-teacher conference descends into a liminal hellscape in Armand, the feature debut of Norwegian writer-director Halfdan Ullmann Tøndel. Winner of the Caméra d’Or—which honors the work of a first-time feature filmmaker—at last year’s Cannes Film Festival, the film is replete with striking visual flourishes, yet its storyline suffers from the inclusion of an unnecessary air of surrealism.
Renate Reinsve (The Worst Person In The World) plays Elizabeth, a former actress and single mother who’s summoned to an emergency school meeting regarding her six-year-old son, Armand. She arrives well before the scheduled appointment, only to find junior teacher Sunna (Thea Lambrechts Vaulen) anxiously awaiting. While Elizabeth demands to know the urgent reason for her summoning, Sunna insists that nothing can be shared until everyone has arrived. To Elizabeth’s surprise, her sister-in-law Sarah (Ellen Dorrit Petersen) and her husband Anders (Endre Hellestveit) appear shortly after. They’ve come to discuss a disturbing altercation between Armand and their son, Jon, and wish to see some semblance of atonement on behalf of the school and, perhaps more importantly, Elizabeth.
As the allegations are shockingly sexual in nature, Elizabeth is incredulous from the offset. When purported quotes from Armand are shared—which involve decidedly adult words like “anal” and “fuck”—she cements her position as a mother unilaterally defending her son. In truth, components of Sarah and Anders’ testimony by way of Jon don’t quite add up. If, for example, Jon had truly begun to feel outwardly uncomfortable in Elizabeth and Armand’s company, then why would his parents continue to regularly leave him in their home? Elizabeth convincingly pokes holes in their argument, but suspicions about her own thespian background begin pointing to her own capacity for a performative display of innocence.
Armand is most successful when it maintains focus on the tense congregation of parents and officials, the latter being put in the awkward position of holding all perspectives equal while also enforcing a punishment for the party eventually found at fault. For some reason, though, Tøndel punctuates the lengthy assembly—held over the course of one afternoon just before the summer holiday—with unnecessary breaks for individuals to wander the cavernous school halls and whisper disparaging anecdotes about each other.