Norwegian Dream
- 2023
- 1 h 37 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,4/10
1,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Um imigrante polonês de 19 anos que trabalha em uma fábrica de peixes na Noruega sente algo por seu colega. Uma greve começa entre os trabalhadores poloneses da fábrica, testando o relaciona... Ler tudoUm imigrante polonês de 19 anos que trabalha em uma fábrica de peixes na Noruega sente algo por seu colega. Uma greve começa entre os trabalhadores poloneses da fábrica, testando o relacionamento entre eles e com seus colegas de trabalho.Um imigrante polonês de 19 anos que trabalha em uma fábrica de peixes na Noruega sente algo por seu colega. Uma greve começa entre os trabalhadores poloneses da fábrica, testando o relacionamento entre eles e com seus colegas de trabalho.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 2 vitórias e 14 indicações no total
Hubert Milkowski
- Robert
- (as Hubert Miłkowski)
Piotr Czarniecki
- Grzegorz
- (as Piotr Czarnecki)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
This is a short review without any spoilers. Director Leiv Igor Devold's Norwegian Dream is a powerful feature film that challenges Norwegian audiences to see Norway from an outsider's perspective. The film revolves around young and queer individuals, vulnerability, and what it means to be an outsider. It balances these themes successfully and raises important questions while hinting at answers. The film also explores the tension between traditional masculinity and queerness, as well as the conflicts arising from national and social boundaries. Norwegian Dream is an impressive film with a strong message. Well done to everyone involved in the production! Definitely worth a watch!
Norwegian Dream
Once you got through the bleak and miserable setting this movie came together in a fairly decent way.
Some of the basic propositions stretched credulity, these workers have come from Poland to Norway to earn money that they cannot earn in Poland. This means you have to put up with a lot to establish a life and get on, and thus it was so. The whinging and moaning about everything is not consistent with getting on.
It is a bizarre story line that Ivar keeps pushing Robert to come out of the closet and/or acknowledge him in public when surely just to have met someone be having fun together is the main thing. To be revealed in this place and at that time would have been the end of everything.
We had some committed acting however subtitles always make things seem more profound than they are. Robert is 19 I can't see the need for the script to rush his story it didn't add anything.
I'm giving this a 6 outta 10 I was well worth watching.
Once you got through the bleak and miserable setting this movie came together in a fairly decent way.
Some of the basic propositions stretched credulity, these workers have come from Poland to Norway to earn money that they cannot earn in Poland. This means you have to put up with a lot to establish a life and get on, and thus it was so. The whinging and moaning about everything is not consistent with getting on.
It is a bizarre story line that Ivar keeps pushing Robert to come out of the closet and/or acknowledge him in public when surely just to have met someone be having fun together is the main thing. To be revealed in this place and at that time would have been the end of everything.
We had some committed acting however subtitles always make things seem more profound than they are. Robert is 19 I can't see the need for the script to rush his story it didn't add anything.
I'm giving this a 6 outta 10 I was well worth watching.
'Norwegian Dream' touches lots of topical issues that could have developed much further and potentially controversial - immigrant workers and exploitation of them, homophobia in Poland, an adopted black son who performs in drag, seemingly open but in fact rather hypocritical attitude of Norwegians in regard of the above issues... It could have been especially a great opportunity to tell the story from the Polish immigrant worker's point of view (as opposed to in British or German pop culture where Polish plumber/painter/farm hand/cleaner/etc are treated as a footnote or a background). When Poland is deemed soon surpass UK and Germany's economic indicators and yet its politics on its regressive path (of rising homophobia and xenophobia, for example), the film could have been a timely comment and a self-reflection...
But unfortunately none of it really develops beyond a mere predictable dramatic device, while the drama itself (namely Roberto's emotional struggle and romance) also fails to go truly deep and touching. There's nothing out of place or offensive. Actings are adequate, cinematography, editing, production value all delivers... It's all very watchable... but it lacks a punch, a surprise, a grip.
It's a pity that I would be remembering this film more as what it could have been than what it is.
It's a pity that I would be remembering this film more as what it could have been than what it is.
Somewhat running from gaybashing in his homophobic Poland, Robert goes to Norway, learning to work at a fish processing plant, sharing a room in a worker dormitory. He meets co-worker Ivar, who is also the adopted son of the owner, and an aspiring drag artist. Robert's upbringing and experience has him running hot and cold towards Ivar.
Things get complicated when Robert's mother arrives, fleeing debts left behind in Poland, and without immediate employment prospects. Given that the migrant workers have employment and rental contracts that they hardly understand, and are to their disadvantage, a union signs them up, to demand a better collective agreement. As they head towards a strike, the owner makes Robert an offer he can't refuse.
I saw this at the Inside Out film festival, with "Robert" in attendance, and he verified that the situation in Poland was not good for LGBT folks. The situation in the plant was interesting, as was the pressures of running a medium-sized business.
While the scenery was nice, I didn't find a lot of chemistry between the 2 principals, and in some ways the script had omissions, including the characters not communicating well. So this is OK but not great.
Things get complicated when Robert's mother arrives, fleeing debts left behind in Poland, and without immediate employment prospects. Given that the migrant workers have employment and rental contracts that they hardly understand, and are to their disadvantage, a union signs them up, to demand a better collective agreement. As they head towards a strike, the owner makes Robert an offer he can't refuse.
I saw this at the Inside Out film festival, with "Robert" in attendance, and he verified that the situation in Poland was not good for LGBT folks. The situation in the plant was interesting, as was the pressures of running a medium-sized business.
While the scenery was nice, I didn't find a lot of chemistry between the 2 principals, and in some ways the script had omissions, including the characters not communicating well. So this is OK but not great.
I could watch Hubert Milkowski in just about anything and he doesn't disappoint here! This story explores an immigrant's experiences in a bleak and dreary setting in Norway gutting and slicing fish all day long. He's the sole bread winner in his home, a troubled relationship with his mother, and his burgeoning sexual awakening for a black queer man. While both actors did a great job, Hubert's facial features and forlorn looks truly brought something "extra" to this film. I'm truly happy to see this new wave to gay storytelling across racial, ethnic, cultural and socio-economic lines. This film is worth a watch.
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 37 min(97 min)
- Cor
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