Critical response Ebbe Iversen rated
Submarino four out of six in
Berlingske Tidende. Iversen wrote that Vinterberg has "shaped his film as fierce
social realism almost totally exposed for the glimpses of humour that make a miserable life easier to bear in leading social realists like
Ken Loach and
Mike Leigh.
Submarino is harder and more brutal, but, behind its harsh facade, carried by sympathy for the characters, and it is first and foremost created with a completely fearsome consistency, which one hasn't seen the like of in Thomas Vinterberg since
The Celebration." Peter Nielsen of
Information was even more positive. He thought the story and subject by themselves were strong enough to make an excellent film, and continued: "but what elevates
Submarino into a great work of art, is the symbolic redemption of the serious material. You see it in the ritual opening scene, and you see it several times underway in a tight symbology, which escorts and underpins the story." The film failed to reach a large audience during the theatrical run and had only 46,000 admissions in Denmark.
Accolades Submarino was Denmark's candidate for the 2010
Nordic Council Film Prize, which it won. Jakob Cedergren was nominated for the
Best Actor prize at the
23rd European Film Awards. On the national level, the film was nominated for 15
Robert Awards, voted by members of the Film Academy of Denmark, and four
Bodil Awards, voted by domestic film critics. ==References==