Nói albinói (2003)
Country: ICE/GER/GB/DK
Technical: col 93m
Director: Dagur Kári
Cast: Tómas Lemarquis, Elín Hansdóttir, Pröstur Leó Gunnarsson
Synopsis:
In a small Icelandic town a teenage Albino boy lives with his grandmother, mistrusts his errant father and plays truant from school. Despite expulsion, larceny and personal tragedy he seems unable to leave.
Review:
A bleak view of life inside the Arctic circle, with a gifted, intelligent young man unprepared to make anything of himself and a rhythm of life which borders on the moribund. The screenplay is a series of incidents rather than a coordinated drama, which suits the general feeling of aimlessness well enough, and it does not outstay its welcome.
Country: ICE/GER/GB/DK
Technical: col 93m
Director: Dagur Kári
Cast: Tómas Lemarquis, Elín Hansdóttir, Pröstur Leó Gunnarsson
Synopsis:
In a small Icelandic town a teenage Albino boy lives with his grandmother, mistrusts his errant father and plays truant from school. Despite expulsion, larceny and personal tragedy he seems unable to leave.
Review:
A bleak view of life inside the Arctic circle, with a gifted, intelligent young man unprepared to make anything of himself and a rhythm of life which borders on the moribund. The screenplay is a series of incidents rather than a coordinated drama, which suits the general feeling of aimlessness well enough, and it does not outstay its welcome.
Country: ICE/GER/GB/DK
Technical: col 93m
Director: Dagur Kári
Cast: Tómas Lemarquis, Elín Hansdóttir, Pröstur Leó Gunnarsson
Synopsis:
In a small Icelandic town a teenage Albino boy lives with his grandmother, mistrusts his errant father and plays truant from school. Despite expulsion, larceny and personal tragedy he seems unable to leave.
Review:
A bleak view of life inside the Arctic circle, with a gifted, intelligent young man unprepared to make anything of himself and a rhythm of life which borders on the moribund. The screenplay is a series of incidents rather than a coordinated drama, which suits the general feeling of aimlessness well enough, and it does not outstay its welcome.