In the landscape of modern comedy, sequels often struggle to recapture the magic of their predecessors, frequently trading originality for nostalgia. Felix Herngren’s Torkel i knipa (2016) – the follow-up to the international hit The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared – defies this trend. While the original film introduced audiences to the anarchic, unintentional hero Allan Karlsson, Torkel i knipa shifts focus to his longtime foil and eventual partner-in-crime, Torkel. Through a masterful blend of deadpan Swedish humor, historical satire, and a surprisingly poignant meditation on friendship and mortality, Herngren delivers a film that is both a worthy sequel and a standalone gem. The film argues that true resilience lies not in grand plans, but in the absurd, spontaneous embrace of life’s chaos—and in the quiet loyalty of those who clean up the mess.
Visually, Herngren contrasts the grey, practical interiors of the nursing home and Torkel’s modest apartment with the lurid, Technicolor chaos of the flashbacks. The present-day chase is a sun-drenched Swedish road movie, full of long takes and wide shots that emphasize the characters’ smallness against the landscape. The flashbacks, however, are claustrophobic, often shot in tight close-ups of Torkel’s bewildered face as history whirls around him. This visual language reinforces the film’s core irony: Torkel is perpetually out of place, yet he survives. Herngren’s pacing is unhurried, allowing jokes to land softly rather than with a bang. A scene of Torkel meticulously sharpening his butcher knives while a hostage crisis unfolds off-screen is a masterclass in comic timing, finding humor in the mismatch between task and context. felix herngren torkel i knipa
Structurally, Herngren employs a technique familiar from the first film: intercutting a present-day adventure with flashbacks to Swedish and world history. As Torkel and Allan chase a missing (and accidentally stolen) suitcase of cash, the film leaps back to Torkel’s past—a butcher’s apprentice in 1960s Sweden, a hapless participant in the Soviet-Afghan war, an unwilling guest of the North Korean regime. These detours are not mere padding; they are the film’s thesis. History, Herngren suggests, is not made by great men but by ordinary bumblees. Torkel’s “knipa” is not a personal failing but the universal condition of being a small cog in a vast, indifferent machine. The humor is darkest when it is most absurd: Torkel accidentally helping the Mujahideen because he mistook a rocket launcher for a meat tenderizer. Herngren’s direction remains deadpan throughout, never winking at the audience, trusting that the sheer ridiculousness of the situation is enough. In the landscape of modern comedy, sequels often
At its core, Torkel i knipa is a buddy comedy wrapped in a caper film. The title character, Torkel (brilliantly played by Johan Rheborg), is a rigid, rule-following straight man to Allan’s explosive carelessness. Where Allan floats through history, accidentally toppling dictators and befriending elephants, Torkel grinds through life as a butcher, a security guard, and a reluctant caretaker. Herngren cleverly inverts the hero dynamic: Torkel is the one who remembers to pay the bills, yet he is perpetually in “knipa” (trouble). The film’s central joke—and its dramatic engine—is that Torkel’s attempts at control are repeatedly shattered by Allan’s chaos, yet Torkel remains. This dynamic reaches its emotional peak when Torkel, after a lifetime of cleaning up after Allan, finally snaps. In a rare moment of vulnerability, he confesses his exhaustion not with anger, but with a weary love. Herngren understands that the most profound comedy often sits adjacent to tragedy; Torkel’s frustration is never mean-spirited because it is rooted in genuine care. Through a masterful blend of deadpan Swedish humor,
In conclusion, Torkel i knipa is far more than a cash-grab sequel. Felix Herngren has crafted a film that uses absurdist comedy to explore profoundly human questions: How do we find meaning in a life of accidents? What does loyalty look like when it is constantly tested? By elevating the sidekick to the spotlight, Herngren honors the quiet heroes who keep the world turning while the Allans of the world steal the show. The film’s final message is disarmingly simple: life will always put you in a fix (“i knipa”), but the answer is not to avoid trouble—it is to laugh, to adapt, and to keep moving. And if you have a friend to share the absurdity with, that is more than enough.