VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,1/10
7869
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Nell'anno 1206 la Norvegia è infuriata dalla guerra civile. Il figlio neonato illegittimo del re, Håkon Håkonsson, che metà del regno vuole ucciso, è custodito in segreto da due uomini. Un f... Leggi tuttoNell'anno 1206 la Norvegia è infuriata dalla guerra civile. Il figlio neonato illegittimo del re, Håkon Håkonsson, che metà del regno vuole ucciso, è custodito in segreto da due uomini. Un fatto che ha cambiato la storia del Paese.Nell'anno 1206 la Norvegia è infuriata dalla guerra civile. Il figlio neonato illegittimo del re, Håkon Håkonsson, che metà del regno vuole ucciso, è custodito in segreto da due uomini. Un fatto che ha cambiato la storia del Paese.
- Premi
- 1 vittoria e 1 candidatura
Torkel Dommersnes Soldal
- Egil
- (as Torkel D. Soldal)
Åsmund Brede Eike
- Stale
- (as Åsmund-Brede Eike)
Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas
- Ylva
- (as Inga Lilleaas)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThree languages are spoken in the film. The Birkebeiner speak Norwegian, the Baglers speak Danish, and Queen Margrete speaks Swedish. This is actually an anachronism as the Nordic languages had not split into completely different languages at the time and the characters would have spoken more or less the same language, albeit with heavy accents.
- BlooperThe Norwegian coat of arms (a golden lion wearing a crown and holding an axe) appears throughout the movie, which takes place in and around 1204. However, the coat of arms did not exist in this form until approximately 1280.
- Curiosità sui creditiQuote at end of credits: "The difference between a novelist and a historian is this: that the former tells lies deliberately and for the fun of it; the historian tells lies and imagines he is telling the truth"
- Colonne sonoreBifröst
Vocals by Helene Bøksle
Written by Gaute Storaas, Cecilie Larsen and Helene Bøksle
Composed by Gaute Storaas and performed by Bratislava Symphony Orchestra
©(p) 2016 Lydmuren
Recensione in evidenza
This is a fun action movie (sword and romance) set in really beautiful winter scenery. If you like Game of Thrones, but want more snow with your ax wielding heroes, this is a great film for you.
I saw it in a theater, and the audience was completely in to it; it's been awhile since I've been a theater where audience members shout out encouragement to characters on screen, and it's so fun to have a movie where the audience cheers at key points.
I can't remember a film in which infants were used so effectively; you truly have a concern for the characters' safety.
The casting of our four heroes (Thor, Skeivie, Inga and Haakon) is perfect. Skeivie looks like they decided to cast Clay Matthews of the Green Bay packers as a heroic viking warrior.
I also found the particularly compelling the fight scenes. They obviously didn't have a budget that would enable them to have a cast of thousands for their battle scenes, and somehow that gives greater believe-ability to the fight scenes. Our main heroes don't (implausibly) kill hundreds of faceless stuntmen (as is so often the case in action movies and superhero movies these days). Instead, our heroes are faced with having to take on specific opponents who seem truly intent on our heroes' demise/destruction.
Slightly implausible is the topography displayed in the movie -- truly beautiful, but who knew that 99% of the topography in Norway is downhill? (I know, downhill chase scenes on skis are more compelling than uphill chase scenes on skis).
The only slight weak point I would identify is the sub-story line about the young princess. OK, we know that story line is useful to show our villain is a truly bad guy, but our princess looks like she was recruited from a local mall, and told "here, put on this dress and look scared"; they didn't give her much to work with, and it shows. But one could say the same about young female characters in some of the Star War movies.
Some may find annoying too that there are little story lines that appear, and then are left unresolved, like what happens to the evil queen after she exits? Because of this, on occasion, one feels like the producer is setting up plot lines for future sequels. Hopefully that's true, and a sequel is coming! I'd buy tickets immediately!
I saw it in a theater, and the audience was completely in to it; it's been awhile since I've been a theater where audience members shout out encouragement to characters on screen, and it's so fun to have a movie where the audience cheers at key points.
I can't remember a film in which infants were used so effectively; you truly have a concern for the characters' safety.
The casting of our four heroes (Thor, Skeivie, Inga and Haakon) is perfect. Skeivie looks like they decided to cast Clay Matthews of the Green Bay packers as a heroic viking warrior.
I also found the particularly compelling the fight scenes. They obviously didn't have a budget that would enable them to have a cast of thousands for their battle scenes, and somehow that gives greater believe-ability to the fight scenes. Our main heroes don't (implausibly) kill hundreds of faceless stuntmen (as is so often the case in action movies and superhero movies these days). Instead, our heroes are faced with having to take on specific opponents who seem truly intent on our heroes' demise/destruction.
Slightly implausible is the topography displayed in the movie -- truly beautiful, but who knew that 99% of the topography in Norway is downhill? (I know, downhill chase scenes on skis are more compelling than uphill chase scenes on skis).
The only slight weak point I would identify is the sub-story line about the young princess. OK, we know that story line is useful to show our villain is a truly bad guy, but our princess looks like she was recruited from a local mall, and told "here, put on this dress and look scared"; they didn't give her much to work with, and it shows. But one could say the same about young female characters in some of the Star War movies.
Some may find annoying too that there are little story lines that appear, and then are left unresolved, like what happens to the evil queen after she exits? Because of this, on occasion, one feels like the producer is setting up plot lines for future sequels. Hopefully that's true, and a sequel is coming! I'd buy tickets immediately!
- MeetJohnSmith
- 17 giu 2016
- Permalink
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- How long is The Last King?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Останній король
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Lillehammer, Norvegia(location)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 45.000.000 NOK (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 8.905 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 4.599 USD
- 19 giu 2016
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 3.705.618 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 39 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1
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