Hotel St. Pauli
(1988) – Svend Wam.

After
an expressly bleak title sequence, portents of existential doom
heightened by a morose theme, we see the isolated, melancholic
existence of young farmer Morgens (Oyvin Bang Berven) rural
travails, contrasted by some voyeuristically metropolitan nookie,
energetically performed by the equally handsome, actively bohemian
participants of this ill-fated ménage
à trois.
Curiously, once the nervy country lad arrived at the train station,
he hurriedly avails himself of the W.C, and proceeds to craftily
knock one out? Is he an extrovert? Or does he simply have a perverse
yen for the inglorious pen and ink of a public loo? His motivations
remain unclear, as I don't Parlez vous a word of Swedish? The no
longer amorous couple appear to have a fractious relationship, as
Gerda (Amanda Ooms) didn't appear keen on her mullet-ed lover's (John
Ege) persistent bedside scribbling? The Elvis-loving bumpkin Morgens
then picks Gerda up, thinking she was a prostitute, and they return
to the couple's studio apartment for a bit of the old in-out, but the
naïve lad gets far more than he bargained for. I can't imagine the
text being especially nuanced, since I question the rapidity of
Morgens almost complete mental collapse, following a little rough
sex, and one and a half spliffs? Perhaps Scandinavian home-grown has
a prodigiously high THC content?

Singularly
traumatized by the evenings events, a wan-looking Gerda has absconded
to a dingy locale in Germany, presumably to wallow in nihilistic,
opiated despair, rather than enjoying the country's renowned beer,
and delicately spiced, pork-based delicacies. Even without he benefit
of subbies, Hotel St. Pauli is sleazy, and pessimistic, being a
somewhat shrill, melodramatic downward spiral, concluding brusquely
in a pointedly hopeless fashion. I have always been a tad cynical
about overly angsty yarns that include the ubiquitous
anguished-in-a-church trope, I myself have been battered quite
severely by life, and, as yet, I have never once been compelled to
seek momentary succour in a draughty old church; I must still have too much
heathen in me for that! I don't wish to disparage the actor playing
Morgens performance, but there were one or two moments when he
appeared to be over-egging it somewhat!?! With one part Fassbinder
Sturm und Drang, a minim of Bergman, plus a major of Joe D'Amato, the
intermittently erotic drama Hotel St. Pauli remains a hysteric, yet
absolutely watchable example of noisome Scandi-gloom.
