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Døden på
Oslo S
(1990)
Followed by:
Giftige
løgner (1992)
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Directed
by:
Eva Isaksen |
INTERNATIONAL TITLE
Death at Oslo Central |
COUNTRY
Norway |
GENRE
Crime/Drama/Youth |
RUNNING
TIME
99 minutes |
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Produced
by:
Harald Ohrvik |
Written by
(based on the novel by Ingvar Ambjørnsen):
Axel Hellstenius |
Review
The social drama follows in the
footsteps of
Lasse & Geir, only without the
1976 cult movie's idiosyncrasy and angle; the crime story draws inspiration from
Christiane F or even
Hard asfalt,
but lacks tension and has an aura of puerility about it. Time has
not been to kind to this Norwegian semi-classic, which was a
considerable box-office success back in 1990 and won the Amanda
Award for Best Children's or Youth Film in 1991. Seen today, it's
hard to find exactly what merited that, except perhaps the success
of the Ingvar Ambjørnsen novel it was adapted from, or the film's
undoubtedly good intentions. Young Håvard Bakke gives the best among
a host of otherwise rather affected performances. The actors get little
help form the relatively inexperienced director Eva Isaksen, who
seems to have been a little out of her depth with both the dramatic
material as well as the action sequences towards the end. Followed by two sequels: Giftige løgner
(1992), and De blå ulvene (1993), both helmed by different
directors.
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