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« Showbiz History: Oscar's fav movie producer, MASH finale, and Fury Road's Oscar night. | Main | One Actor, One Character, Many Globes »
Saturday
Feb272021

FYC: " Húsavík" for Best Original Song

by Cláudio Alves

2020 was a horrible year in many regards. Too many to count if we're being honest. Still, I'd like to highlight that, as a Eurovision Song Contest fan, it was especially disheartening to see the show be canceled due to the COVID-19 crisis. It's obvious why it couldn't happen, but, if there ever was a year that needed the cheering effect of that joyful camp explosion, 2020 was that year. Thankfully, both for me and my Eurovision-loving family, Netflix had an Easter Egg-filled delight to assuage the pain…

Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga is far from a perfect movie. It's unbearably long, full of jokes that don't work, needless side-plots, and much more. Worse of all, Will Ferrell's comic persona is unfathomably wrong for the sort of earnestness the rest of the picture's exulting. That being said, I can't help but be charmed by the Netflix original. When hearing about the project, one expects a scornful upending of the kind of ridiculousness that has made Eurovision famous all over the world, a mocking jeer matched by some American befuddlement.

The final product isn't especially great, but it doesn't match that nightmarish expectation. Instead of laughing at Eurovision and all its absurd idiosyncrasies, the movie laughs along with the titular tradition. One feels the love its creators have for the Song Contest in every frame, in the dysfunctional structure that mimics the event's repetitive phases, in the goofy camerawork, outlandish theatrics, linguistic conundrums, internal politics. Furthermore, the cast is full of Eurovision stars making inane cameos that still warm the heart of a fan like me. It was especially nice to see Salvador Sobral, the artist who brought Portugal its only victory, singing his winning tune.

Speaking of my country's surprising success in 2017, I still remember that night vividly. There's a feeling in Portugal that we never win anything, that to be Portuguese is to be an underdog and it's better to settle in for a disappointment in every sort of international panorama. Rarely have we gotten to the final night of Eurovision and our insistence to sing in Portuguese instead of capitulating to English, like most other countries, only makes the odds feel more against us. And then we won.

Even as the night unfolded and many were predicting Portugal to do much better than we usually do, the final result was a suspenseful shock. We screamed in my home, we cried, we felt beside ourselves even while acknowledging the silliness of the whole thing. To hear Portuguese words being sung at the end of the night felt like an impossibility suddenly becoming real, an absurd little miracle. Many people dislike the victory and question the underdog narrative I've just presented but, on that night, those were the (irrational?) thoughts going through my head.

I was not expecting to experience some of those crazy emotions again in 2020, not with Eurovision canceled. However, this movie made it happen. In some ways, it's an absurd miracle as well, a piece of musical wizardry courtesy of Savan Kotecha, Rickard Göransson, and Fat Max Gsus. Their original songs capture the bizarre kitsch that is the essence of Eurovision while never succumbing to merciless parody. The soundtrack has a collection of killer bops, from the surprisingly catchy "Ja Ja Ding Dong" to the Russian gay fantasia that is "Lion for Love". The best of all, however, has to be the climactic song, "Húsavík".

Like all the best movie songs, the number functions both as a musical delight and as a storytelling device. The protagonists, Ferrell's Lars and Rachel McAdams' Sigrit, have defined their lives around the dream of winning Eurovision. For him, it's a Quixotic mission, a purpose that's perhaps closer to an obsession. For her, it's more of an excuse to be around Lars, her best friend since childhood and her life-long crush. At the moment this song is performed, they've managed to get to the Eurovision finale through a series of unlikely events, but their union has suffered. Because of it, Sigrit is preparing to sing their submitted song, the glitzy but impersonal "Double Trouble", alone.

However, right as the music swells, Lars appears, ready to redeem himself after much selfishness and heartless disrespect. Instead of singing the selected song, he encourages Sigrit to perform the number she wrote for him, a heartfelt song that expresses the woman's love for her hometown, Húsavík. While Lars has always resented his place in the world, she has embraced it. By performing together, he learns to follow her example. It's also a personal abnegation, Lars sacrificing potential victory for something more important.

And so, he lets Sigrid shine, becoming more of a background musician, a satellite stepping away from the star he had been eclipsing. McAdams may not be singing but she lip-syncs the hell out of the song, painting a patina of goofy elation over Molly Sandén's gorgeous vocals. When she belts out her homage to Húsávik, the lyrics keep changing between English and Icelandic which brings their neighbors and family, watching from home, to rapturous euphoria. For an instant, all snark dissipates and a wave of earnest jubilation crashes over the characters, the movie, and its audience.

Yes, it's cheesy, it's ludicrous, silly too and not particularly sophisticated. But so is Eurovision as a whole. The unity, the national pride holding hands with international affection, the camp appreciation, and the shamelessness of the whole endeavor are a distillation of what makes the Song Contest such an important touchstone to so many. "Húsavík" is Eurovision synthesized in one song. I adore it with whole my heart and am thankful for all the joy it brought me in one of the darkest years I've ever lived through.

While an Oscar nomination is likely and the song was shortlisted, it's still uncertain, and a win feels far-fetched. Because of that, I'm leaving this appeal to any awards voter and cinephile out there: Give "Húsavík" a chance.

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Reader Comments (23)

Eurovision is not a good movie, but there are things that work, like the performances of McAdams and Stevens (which both mostly overcome the often ruinous Netflix-mandated frenetic editing), and, especially, "Husavik." I'm hoping the Music branch can overcome their recent fixation on boring credit ballads and push this one into the nominations.

February 27, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterJJ

I’ve been annoyed for years by awards tradition (Oscars specifically) to honor the most boring songs from movies, like Tarzan’s “You’ll be in my heart” over “Strangers Like Me”, or Lion King’s “Can you feel...” over “Circle of Life”. Seems like only ballads had a real chance, but I felt it is changing this year: Oscars passed “Square Root of Possible” in favor of the far better “Make it Work” from Jingle Jangle, and ignored “Rocket to the Moon”, the sole and failed strategy from Over the Moon when they had the better and funny “Ultraluminary” to choose. Eurovision, on the other hand, is a case in which the ballad IS my favorite particular song. Yes, I love “Jaja Ding Dong” and “Volcano Man”, but “Husavik” is beautiful and powerful and works so well into the narrative. I hope it gets a nomination and I co-sign your FYC.

February 27, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterAntônio

you know how on nomination morning there's always one miss that makes your heart sink?

i hope it isn't this

February 27, 2021 | Unregistered Commenterpar

Wow, I don't even think of this song as a ballad, but I guess it technically is, heh. It's so much more interesting than typical ballads, lyrically, melodically, and sonically. It will definitely be a gut-punch if it misses -- holding out hope.

February 27, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterJJ

I'm more into Laura Pausini and as an European you should TOO but this song is very nice.

Dan Stevens for Best Supporting Actor!

February 27, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterPeggy Sue

Eurovision made me laugh enough and cry a lot. Therefore, considering the genre, I'd call that a "good movie"

February 27, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterTony Ruggio

I know I have insisted on the comments, but "Nobody Knows I'm Here" is a lovely film, the song/movie moment is beautiful and fits perfectly with the story .

February 27, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterCésar Gaytán

I guarantee that Dan Stevens would be more deserving of a best supporting actor nomination than at least one of the nominees. That category usually has at least one clunker.

February 27, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterCash

For her, it's more of an excuse to be around Lars, her best friend since childhood and her life-long crush.

Is that played for laughs? Because Ferrell looks more like McAdams'...uncle (to be kind about it).

February 27, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterWorking stiff

Personally, I would've gone for "Ya-ya Ding-Dong" for Best Song but "Husavik" is the right choice and... why the hell is Rachel McAdams not being considered for a Best Actress nomination? She was great in that movie.

February 27, 2021 | Unregistered Commenterthevoid99

I am so rooting for this song for the Oscars. It is exactly IMO what the best song nominee should be 1. Actually used in the movie 2. Unique to the film but accessible 3. Not generic and having personality.

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterMarshako

Co-sign everything you’re saying. There’s so much this film gets wrong, but the songs really are perfect and great examples of what might *actually* be submitted whilst also serving a genuine narrative purpose in the case of Husavik.

And speaking of great recent wins at Eurovision, Jamala’s political ballad unexpectedly beating the favourite, Australia that year, was one of the best nail-biters in recent history.

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered Commenterben1283

@Peggy Sue-Everything, but not LA PAUSINI XD

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterPP

"Husavik" would be one of the most deserved winners in Oscar History on any cathegory. There, I said it.

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterJesus Alonso

Eurovision movie is fantastic. A delightful silly comedy, serves its promise pretty well. And Husavik not just deserves a nomination but the oscar. No other song in the list much beatiful than this and a most important part of the story.

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterGenco Birlik

Qué hiperbólico, Jesús. Cálmate un poquito

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterManuela Malasaña

Manuela (obvious fake profile):

As the article summarizes, this song is not only great on its own, but it is the plot device and climax that has been building all throughout the film, it's delivered at the key moment and closes several character archs at the same time. How many times has Oscar rewarded a song like this? I have trouble thinking of just ONE example... and the rules of AMPAS clearly stablish that the Song Oscar is thought to be exactly going for a song like this: crucial to the film, not a background or title music...

Also, the songwritting effort for this film is one for the ages... it's not just this song, but they wrote a whole bunch of songs that would be totally believable as Eurovision contestants.

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterJesus Alonso

"Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga is far from a perfect movie. It's unbearably long, full of jokes that don't work, needless side-plots, and much more."

Writing about this film, you brilliantly summed up the quality of all Will Ferrell's films.

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterSusanita

Rachel McAdams is a beautiful charming talented actress and I find myself imagining that if she is in this kind of movie, so what they must be offering her must be very bad. Like Amanda Seyfried she seems to prefer to have a quiet life than to be a star, she doesn't live chasing the big roles that will change her life and career like other actresses we know.

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterGiovanni

I feel like I'm the only Eurovision (the contest) fan in America. I've seen all the past contests on Youtube and usually try and stream the live event in some fashion. I've seen it broadcasted in Swedish and also Icelandic depending on what I could come up with. I wish it wasn't geoblocked in America.

Eurovision (the movie) is mostly a missed opportunity and kind of bad in a lot of ways, but I'll be darned if the music isn't excellent and catchy and entirely plausible as songs that would be entered into the contest. A couple of songs, the costumes, and Dan Stevens are all nomination worthy.

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterDave in Hollywood

Totally agree with Peggy Sue; 1) I've loved Laura Pausini for years and 2) why isn't Dan Stevens in the Oscar mix?!

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterGian

@ Dave in Hollywood

I wouldn't say I was a fan, but I have watched way too many ESC broadcasts—approaching 20. That's what happens when you spend a lot of time in Europe. To me, it's mostly like watching a long, international, musical trainwreck.

February 28, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterWorking stiff

"you know how on nomination morning there's always one miss that makes your heart sink?

i hope it isn't this"

Totally agree. "Glasgow (No Place Like Home)" from Wild Rose was that last year for me.

March 13, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterKirby
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