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torsdag den 17. februar 2022

Danish film tackles the gang war

The award-winning, new danish film revolving around gang war, “Melody of the Street”, was made street kid-style with favours from friends and
spontaneous calls, says the film instructor Omid Romal.


“Let us put it like this, almost all my actors are friends of mine. Who did it free of charge. When we needed requisites and cars, we had help.
We just called people and asked, “ says the 28-year old film instructor Omid Romal, when we met him at the recording studio Baby Factory to talk about his new film.


 

Melody of the Streets, which premieres in the danish theatres this spring, has its
roots in the same state of mind as the one you only learn in the streets.


The instructor does not hide the fact, that this film is done by calling in favours and
spontaneous calls to businesses or cafes to ask permission to use locations or prop
weapons.


The actors were cast amongst friends and family. The lead for example, was given to
his little brother, Ryan Romal.


“Former police officers, played the roles of police, and real ambulance drivers and
emergency workers”, he says, and they all took part voluntarily.


Omid Romal apperance is calm and kind with a big smile, that might get people to
make an extra effort. All in all the film took two months to film, and they worked 15
hours a day. It took place deliberately in Kastrup and not for example at Nørrebro, to
not cause confusion as to who we were and why we were there.


“I am an old troublemaker myself, and I told my friends, “you have to be the old you,
not the new you.” He says with reminiscence to his tainted past, from where he
knows the street environment.



Downwards spiral
Melody of the Street is about a young man, who gets manipulated by the older
leaders with a pouch of money, that can save his mother from illness with surgery.
Meanwhile he gets shot at, and the course of retalliation begins. which turns into an
evil spiral of murder attempts between rivalling gangs.


“The film shows that, you can not hide from that environment.” Says the film
instructor.


“I wanted to use this film to show people what happens, when you are in a gang war,
and how the youngsters gets manipulated into that environment by the older
generation who pulls the strings. The youngsters fight the elders fights, and for the
elders problems”.


“The film is not about why gang wars are what they are, or how they end, “cause it
never does”, but what happens during a gang war. From the moment they are shot

at, till they gear up with weapons and prepare. And what happens, after they shoot”



The film zooms in on all the details, rough, realistic and almost documentary-like, like
when the lead roles steals a moped, commits murder and torches the evidence.
Melody of the Street has prior to the danish theatre premier won an award at the
Cannes World Film Festival for Best Indie Feature

torsdag den 3. februar 2022

New Country-Rock came to life after tragedy

Text: Anders Højbjerg Kamp

Foto: Maria Dybdal

Marc Olivers new Country songs came to life after the mother to his daughter took her away from him.

 

“I have made some heart-felt songs about what happened with my daughter” says Marc Oliver, the 31-year old artist who is ready with new songs like How Much Longer, Heartache and the title-song Help Me Believe.

 

“My daughter told me she missed me, and thats when I wrote How Much Longer. It is about how long this has to go on, and that Daddy is working hard to see you again Marc says.

 

“It is said that Country music is four chords and the truth, and I went with that. Regardless of age or background, everyone can relate to missing, loving or loosing somebody.”

 

“Regardless of age or background everyone can recognise the feeling of loving or missing somebody.”

 

Marcs musical rolemodels are Country artists like Luke Combs, Mitchell Tenpenny and Brad Paisley, who also sang about his daughter, and Paisley was a huge inspiration.

 

“It is not a widely popular genre in Denmark, but it is huge in Nashville and Texas. It is “Radio Rock”, and the stereotypical audience is definitely middle-aged women.” says Marc Oliver laughing.

 

Marc has a Bachelor's degree in Music Production from England, so his songs are mostly recorded in his own studio. “The guitars were recorded in my bathroom, because of the tiled walls the acoustic in that room was amazing.”

 

Marc wrote, recorded and mixed the majority of his songs, only the drums needed some assistance from his buddy at Heyman Studios, who is also a big fan of the Nashville Country Rock genre.

 

The mother ran off with their daughter

 

It took a year to record the album during the COVID lockdown, Corona and the trauma that has rooted itself in him, since his ex girlfriend took their daughter back to England two years ago, Marc tells me over a cup of coffee at the recording studio Baby Factory.

 

Whilst Marc Oliver sits with his visible tattoos and his sunglasses on, talks about his heartbreaking experience, it is clear to see his mouth shivering and his voice breaking, showing how deeply this has shaken his core.

In November 2019 his British girlfriend was taking their daughter to the UK on holiday, so she could get well and their daughter could see the british side of the family. But neither the the mother or the daughter returned.

 

“It was a lonely Christmas, you can imagine.”

 

The album “Help Me Believe” by Marc Oliver was released in January on M2 Records, and can be heard on all streaming services.