Joy Ride (2000 film)


Joy Ride is a 2000 Swiss drama film written and directed by Martin Rengel that followed Lars von Trier's Dogme 95 manifesto. It is classified as the 14th dogme movie. Joy Ride employs a very realistic, near-documentary style, with a story based on the homicide of a 19-year-old girl in Zürich, Switzerland in 1992. The incident attracted a great deal of media coverage in Switzerland.

Background

The magazine Beobachter reported on the incident which gave rise to the "Joy Ride" story.
According to the report, the clique no longer tolerated the murdered girl and they had assaulted her by singeing her hair and bending her fingers back. On March 14, 1992, the male members of the clique, who had spent the afternoon smoking marijuana, decided "heute Abend passiert es. Andrea muss weg." Patrick and Thomas were allegedly the dominant force in the discussion; Roman, who drove the car for the commission of the crime, claims to have been unconvinced that her transgression warranted murder. Roman, a compulsive gambler and alcoholic at odds with his parents, was an old friend of Thomas but their association had recently terminated. Three weeks before the murder, Roman met Thomas again and the pressure to regain his approval clearly contributed to his decision to assist in the murder.
As the clique drove back from an evening at a local pub, Patrick took his belt off and tied it around Andrea's neck. She managed to shake him off, but Thomas ordered Roman to turn off the main road and they assaulted her again. Roman stopped the car and urged the other men to stop; they hesitated, but as another car full of potential witnesses passed them Thomas decided that they could not leave her alive. Roman stopped the car at the parking lot of restaurant Girenbad.
The police report stated that Roman now placed his hand on Andrea's belly and shouted "Die ist ja tot!". Roman wanted to drive the car over a slope to kill himself and the others, but Thomas succeeded in calming him a bit, and the three drove on to dispose of the corpse by a nearby creek. They removed some of her clothing in attempt to imply rape as the motive for the crime.
They then drove to Thomas' home, spent the night together and bragged about the incident to a friend. On Sunday they decided that the corpse should be moved to somewhere more secure. They returned to the creek to pick up Andrea's body and drove aimlessly towards Kyburg with the corpse in the car's trunk. Eventually they tossed her body into a hidden gully. However, on Monday, workers on the road stumbled across her body and the perpetrators of the murder were arrested. All eventually confessed to their part in the crime.
The 20-year-old Roman was sentenced to 30 months in an Arbeitserziehungsanstalt. Thomas, received a sentence of 14 years of jail, Patrick 16 years. The court also awarded the parents and brother of the victim 300,000 Swiss francs in compensation to be paid by the three perpetrators.

Style

Amateur actors play nearly all of the principal roles and a good majority of the filming locations are original sites, as the Dogme style demands. Joy Ride violates some of the rules of Dogme, but it is not unusual for productions employing its principles to fail to adhere strictly to one or two of the stringent rules. One clear transgression is the importing of a soundtrack onto the final cut, violating the rule whereby all sound must be naturally recorded.

Storyline

A clique of young people spend their time driving around the city, drinking in trendy nightspots and smoking joints. An outsider, Sandra, who takes up with the clique, falls in love with one of its members, Daniel. Their relationship remains diffuse and directionless, provoking tension and threatening to cause a schism within the group.

Partial cast