Åkerlund stages the film's violence with an unsettling, unflinching reality, to drive home the difference between entertainment and the real world. Euronymous is a cult leader inspiring his followers to cause havoc, but when they really do, he's caught between being proud and terrified of his own power of influence. And things go haywire from there.Ĭo-writer and director Jonas Åkerlund, known for his music videos for Madonna ("Ray of Light") and the Prodigy ("Smack My Bitch Up"), views these black-clad bad boys as victims of their own marketing. Euroynmous talks about burning down churches, Varg puts match to gasoline. It would have been Sonos first English-language film. Originally, Japanese director Sion Sono was set to direct a film based on the book, with Jackson Rathbone starring as Varg Vikernes. "Brooklyn's" Emory Cohen is frightening as Varg Vikernes, a bullied fan who works his way into Euronymous' inner circle and ups the ante on the scene's reality quotient. Lords of Chaos is based on the 1998 book of the same name.
Euronymous brags he was brought to this world to cause suffering, chaos and death, but the movie wisely paints him as a guy getting swallowed inside his own black cloud of hype. Rory Culkin is slyly charismatic as Øystein "Euronymous" Aarseth, the founder of the bludgeoning, evil music he proudly dubs True Norwegian Black Metal. The darkly comic and repulsively gruesome "Lords of Chaos" tells the caustic story of that genre, its myths, and the dangers of living your gimmick. True Norwegian Black Metal is a strand of metal so dark that when its creator was stabbed to death by one of his bandmates, it didn't fall far outside his band's philosophies.