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Inni

Play trailer Poster for Inni 2011 1h 15m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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92% Tomatometer 12 Reviews 86% Popcornmeter 250+ Ratings
Filmmaker Vincent Morisset captures live performances by the Icelandic band Sigur Ros at London's Alexandra Palace.

Critics Reviews

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Kevin Warwick Chicago Reader 01/06/2012
Well crafted and flat-out cool. Go to Full Review
Walter V. Addiego San Francisco Chronicle 11/25/2011
3/4
Director Vincent Morisset captures the band in dreamy, grainy, black-and-white images that slide and blur in a way that suggests David Lynch. Go to Full Review
Jeannette Catsoulis New York Times 11/10/2011
4/5
The best concert films achieve a marriage of sound and image that feels effortlessly harmonious, and in that regard "Inni," a musical portrait of the Icelandic band Sigur Ros, leaves most of its genre in the dust. Go to Full Review
David Harris Spectrum Culture 11/07/2019
3.2/5
A timeless document from another world. Go to Full Review
Eric Monder Film Journal International 12/01/2011
Mesmerizing, atmospheric concert film reconfigures the genre. Go to Full Review
Mike Scott Times-Picayune 11/11/2011
3/4
Filled with soft-focus close-ups, dreamy fades and bizarre angles, (it) nicely matches the dreamy, otherworldly quality of the band's music. Go to Full Review
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Audience Reviews

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01/26/2013 Was at Alexandra Palace, London seeing this very recorded Sigur Ros gig. See more 06/19/2012 A beautiful video essay about Sigur Ros. If you love their music, you will love this visual redenring. See more 06/02/2012 Goosebumps the whole way through. See more 01/14/2012 Gorgeously shot B & W concert footage of Icelandic rockers, Sigur Ros. See more 01/07/2012 There's a scene where all 4 members of Sigur Ros are interviewed on NPR. The host asks a difficult question that most bands would take advantage of to explain their roots and aspiration of music, blah blah blah. Instead, all 4 of them with a slight smile don't say a word, and the bassist even chuckles at the question, then the scene ends and it's move on to the next song. Random scenes like that are added in between songs to depict the grandeur of their music, which arguably like no other band's. Filming in black and white with strange, interchangeable visuals, and off-centered and shaky camera work only enhances the effect. I'll admit it's a bit frustrating at times (like how you wish Greengrass would've backed up and replaced his camera with a more stable one while shooting the last 2 Bourne films). But, it reaches a level of mystique, like the beginning of shots of Inland Empire focused on the phonograph. All in all, fans of Sigur Ros should check it out. See more 01/03/2012 People who don't like Sigur Ros are fucking idiots. See more Read all reviews
Inni

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Movie Info

Synopsis Filmmaker Vincent Morisset captures live performances by the Icelandic band Sigur Ros at London's Alexandra Palace.
Director
Vincent Morisset
Producer
John Best, Dean O'Connor
Distributor
Cinema Purgatorio
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
Icelandic
Release Date (Theaters)
Oct 28, 2011, Limited
Box Office (Gross USA)
$106.9K
Runtime
1h 15m