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In Order of Disappearance

Original title: Kraftidioten
  • 2014
  • R
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
30K
YOUR RATING
Stellan Skarsgård in In Order of Disappearance (2014)
Introverted and hard-working snow plow driver Nils (Stellan Skarsgard) has just been named citizen of the year, when he receives news that his son has died of a heroin overdose. Disbelieving the official report, Nils soon uncovers evidence of the young man’s murder—a victim in a turf war between the local crime boss, known as “The Count,” and his Serbian rivals. Armed with heavy machinery and beginner’s luck, Nils embarks upon a quest for revenge that soon escalates into a full-blown underworld gang war.
Play trailer2:00
3 Videos
37 Photos
Dark ComedyGangsterActionComedyCrimeDramaThriller

After his son is murdered by drug dealers, a snowplow driver starts seeking revenge.After his son is murdered by drug dealers, a snowplow driver starts seeking revenge.After his son is murdered by drug dealers, a snowplow driver starts seeking revenge.

  • Director
    • Hans Petter Moland
  • Writers
    • Kim Fupz Aakeson
    • Finn Gjerdrum
  • Stars
    • Stellan Skarsgård
    • Bruno Ganz
    • Pål Sverre Hagen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    30K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hans Petter Moland
    • Writers
      • Kim Fupz Aakeson
      • Finn Gjerdrum
    • Stars
      • Stellan Skarsgård
      • Bruno Ganz
      • Pål Sverre Hagen
    • 95User reviews
    • 151Critic reviews
    • 74Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos3

    International Trailer
    Trailer 2:00
    International Trailer
    In Order of Disappearance Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:20
    In Order of Disappearance Official Trailer
    In Order of Disappearance Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:20
    In Order of Disappearance Official Trailer
    'In Order of Disappearance': Organic Produce
    Clip 1:05
    'In Order of Disappearance': Organic Produce

    Photos37

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    Top cast42

    Edit
    Stellan Skarsgård
    Stellan Skarsgård
    • Nils Dickman
    Bruno Ganz
    Bruno Ganz
    • 'Papa' Popovic
    Pål Sverre Hagen
    Pål Sverre Hagen
    • Ole 'Greven' Forsby
    Jakob Oftebro
    Jakob Oftebro
    • Aron 'Junior' Horowitz
    Jack Sødahl Moland
    • Rune Forsby
    Arthur Berning
    Arthur Berning
    • Police 1
    Stig Henrik Hoff
    Stig Henrik Hoff
    • Police 2
    Sergej Trifunovic
    Sergej Trifunovic
    • Nebosja Mihajlovic
    Miodrag 'Miki' Krstovic
    • Dragomir Bogdanovic
    • (as Miodrag Krstovic)
    Goran Navojec
    Goran Navojec
    • Stojan Micic
    Jon Øigarden
    Jon Øigarden
    • Karsten Petterson
    Bjørn Moan
    Bjørn Moan
    • Fred Remi Ås
    Damir Babovic
    • Vuk Jovanovic
    Anders Baasmo
    Anders Baasmo
    • Geir
    • (as Anders Baasmo Christiansen)
    Atle Antonsen
    Atle Antonsen
    • Reddersen
    Leo Ajkic
    • Radovan Zupan
    Birgitte Hjort Sørensen
    Birgitte Hjort Sørensen
    • Marit
    Julia Bache-Wiig
    Julia Bache-Wiig
    • Receptionist Silje
    • (as Julia Bache Wiig)
    • Director
      • Hans Petter Moland
    • Writers
      • Kim Fupz Aakeson
      • Finn Gjerdrum
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews95

    7.130.3K
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    Featured reviews

    8redrobin62-321-207311

    Master Class In Film Making.

    Sigh. Why couldn't I have been the writer or director of this film? Hell, I would even settle to be best boy, gaffer, caterer, shoe shine specialist or whatever. It's finally refreshing to see a movie that has all the T's crossed and the I's dotted. It stars Stellan Skarsgard and Bruno Ganz, for Heaven's sake. How bad could it be?

    I didn't come into the film expecting much other than it was yet another entry in Norwegian cold landscape crime noir category. The scenery alone was worth the price of admission since it's quite the chore to film snowy landscapes. Here, the snow-capped mountains looked a postcard come to life. The direction was taut and there were no wasted scenes. I couldn't help but noticing there was a bit of a Tarantino-esque touch to a few parts of the movie, but I'm not complaining. This film has a lot of layers to it and it is easy to follow. The producers should be proud of themselves.
    10OJT

    Badass plowman dealing with mobsters in Fargo-style northern

    As the critics said some days ago, when Kraftidioten (International titled "In order of disappearance") premiered in the main program of the Berlin Film Festival, this is both hilarious, rough and beautiful. While giving loads of fun and entertainment, you'll soon discover that the film has a complex underlying theme which makes this interesting on a much wider scale.

    But still, this is not a film for the faint hearted. That said as a warning, because the body-count is bigger than in any Norwegian film I've seen before. There's no sex, but all violence in this, still testosterone filled, movie with a hero called "Dickman". You can't say it more obvious than that.

    Or what about a plot with a Swedish plowman working in the remote Norwegian high mountains dealing with Norwegian and Serbian gangsters in a vigilante film, crossed with beautiful Norwegian landscape and droll humor!?! Well, it's completely up my alley.

    Hans Petter Moland always delivers. He has made the great films "A somewhat gentle man", "The last lieutenant", "Zero Kelvin", "Aberdeen" and "Comrade Pedersen" amongst others. All of them recommended! It's "A somewhat gentle man" which is most like this last one.

    If you loved "Fargo", "Burn after reading", "The big white" or "In Bruges" this is the film for you. It's almost a mix, though it's a bit more dark and bloody, and has a more serious underlying theme. This is balanced beautifully with giving death announcements in a way I've never seen before after the body count rises.

    It's seems like a film that doesn't take itself too seriously, though it still has some hilarious Tarantino-like discussions, mainly from minor roles, which adds a lot to the film. They are discussing the great food in the Norwegian prison system, how Norwegians are so environmental that they pick up dog litter in little bags, and the Scandinavian welfare system is discussed as a need because of the snow and lack of sun. A country where even the gangsters drink tomato juice and drive hybrid electric Fisker Karma cars.

    But what makes "In order of disappearance" stand out as much more than a hilarious masculine violent "Fargo" is that it actually is a deeper comment about how men act. Our anti superhero is called Dickman, because he really acts like one, though still being a nice and likable man. Not able to express feelings to his wife, which leaves him, avenging that his bloodline via his lost son is all that matters. Of course we know that our society is patriarchal. In this film it's over-exaggerated, but giving a good comment on today's society. The men are the one's both criminal and the users of violence. Dickman didn't even know his son, and though being a "nice" kidnapper, he doesn't even know how to read a bed time story. The film has almost no affection, except between men, and film maker Moland knows to punish those kinds of forbidden feelings. He also, in more way than one, express that men are stupid, doing stupid things, which almost always has a severe consequence.

    This is the kind of film I wish would never end. I enjoyed it immensely right from the start, and it even grew from there. The film doesn't give all answers, but our vigilante hero at least gets to do some "good" deeds along the way. And if you hate drug dealers, then this is the film for you.

    Stellan Skarsgård is perfect as the understated Swedish immigrant, just voted the inhabitant of the year in his little mountain town, which is a place we really don't get to know where is. The signs says "Welcome to Tyos..." and then the snow constantly covers the rest of the name. Even Oslo is made as a Alaskan-like ice city, where mountains are put where they usually not are. Our hero takes the matters in his own hands when he understands that the police are considering not to investigate the case of his son found dead by drug overdose in the city. He knows of course this is murder. And he is going to revenge his son's death.

    The film has so many great supporting roles, which all make up this story, and I'm sure this film will do great world wide. Great scripting again from Danish Kim Fupz Aakeson and great filming by Philip Øgaard. The scenery is awesome, an adds to the film's sentimentality as well as beauty, which makes the whole environment even more exotic.

    It's the fourth time Stellan Skarsgård is featured in a Moland-film, and it's not difficult to understand why. But Bruno Ganz is perfect as the Serbian gangster Papa and I also loved Pål Sverre Hagen as the neurotic vegan gangster "Greven" (The Count). But so many from the supporting cast should be praised as well.

    Be sure to pick up this treat of a dark gangster comedy! As bloody as they come, but still with a great heart! You won't regret!
    8paul-allaer

    Crime drama with undertones of a dark, if not black, comedy

    "In Order of Disappearance" (2014 release from Norway; 115 min.) brings the story of Nils, a Swedish guy longtime resident of northern Norway. As the movie opens, Nils and his wife are getting ready to accept the "Citizen of the Year" award of the local chamber of commerce. Nils, who runs a snow removal equipment business, accepts the award with humility and dignity. In a parallel story line, we see a couple of young men getting kidnapped and one of them eventually dies. It turns out to be Nils' son, who was in the wrong place at the wrong time, getting mixed up in a local drug gang. Nils knows his son was not an addict and decides to look into the circumstances of the death of his son... At this point we are 15 min. into the movie, but to tell you more would spoil your viewing experience, you'll just have to see for yourself how it all plays out.

    Couple of comments: this is the latest movie from Norwegian director Hans Petter Moland in which he collaborates with Swedish actor Stellan Skarsgård, who plays Nils. The movie was billed on Google Movie Times as a "comedy" and in a sense it might be one, but a very dark one, if that. I found the movie to be a so(m)ber crime drama, in which Skarsgård plays "Joe Sixpack" who is out for revenge of his son's death. Sure there are chuckles here and there, but to me the film resonates a lot more on the level of how an average guy turns out to be a systematic and determined revenge-seeker. The setting of the film, somewhere in northern Norway, is gorgeous, and the use of the snow blowers and snow removal equipment is almost balletic.

    This movie is two years old now, and for some reason just popped up in the theater. I saw it this past weekend at the E Street Landmark Theater in Washington, DC. The matinée screening where I saw this at was attended very nicely. No idea why it has taken this long to get into US theaters, but better late than never I suppose. In the meantime I read somewhere that this movie is going to be remade by Hollywood, but without Skarsgård. Say it ain't so! If you are in the mood for a foreign language crime drama with undertones of a dark, if not black, comedy, you cannot go wrong with this. "In Order of Disappearance" is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
    8movies-by-db

    Beautiful yet ugly.. Hilarious yet touching..

    First Headhunters, now this.. The films that keep coming out of Scandinavia, and in particular Norway, are hard to beat. Headhunters was most definitely one of my favourites of last years and this is also very high on the list.

    For me it's the (fairly) unknown actors, the absolutely shameless and inventive humor and I guess that beautiful landscape. And of course the great, very well known, Stellan Skarsgard for whom this seems like it's especially made for. He is perfect and such a great character that you will be rooting for him long after the film is finished. He makes the film, but it probably would have worked with another actor as well, as the story is so original and highly entertaining.

    Absolutely loved it and can't wait to see it again. Hollywood: HANDS OFF 8/10
    7Seth_Rogue_One

    Stellar Norwegian movie in the veins of 'TAKEN' and 'JOHN WICK' with a dash of 'FARGO'

    Well-made action-thriller with Stellan Skarsgård as a decent Swedish snowplowerer in the Norwegian mountains becomes an avenger for his dead son.

    Reminds me more of American revenge flicks like 'TAKEN (2008)', 'JOHN WICK (2014)' and 'THE EQUALIZER (2014)' than anything typically Scandinavian... Without ever getting too cheesy or 'poserish' which tend to happen at times when the Scandis attempt at this (for instance 'EXIT (2006)', 'GANGSTER (2007)' or '9 MILLIMETER (1997)' are examples of this when done poorly).

    But yeah here they get it right, with a solid and incredibly intense crime boss played by Pål Sverre Hagen and overall pretty stellar acting.

    A bit of dark comedy in the mix as well reminiscent of 'FARGO (1996)' and 'THE BIG WHITE (2005)'.

    Liam Neeson is in the talks of being the lead in an American remake and that seems like it would be the go to guy with the task, however not sure if it will get any better as it's just fine the way it is.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The Battle of Kosovo (1389) was a battle between the combined army of Serbians and Bosnians against invading Turks of the Ottoman Empire. Both armies suffered heavy casualties, both being basically annihilated. The eventual outcome was the annexation of the Serbian provinces by the Ottomans. The Battle of Kosovo is significant in Serbian history and integral to Serbian national identity.
    • Goofs
      The Fisker Karma, being an electric vehicle, should have a license plate starting with 'EL', not 'DN'.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Greven: Tell my wife Marit that she's a cunt... she's a cunt

    • Crazy credits
      In the end credits the names of all actors appear at the same time, in grey letters on black background, scattered across the entire screen. In order of their disappearance (their last appearance in the film) the names are highlighted in white, then fade away entirely.
    • Connections
      Featured in Cold Pursuit (2019)
    • Soundtracks
      Floden
      Written by Bjørn Eidsvåg

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    FAQ18

    • How long is In Order of Disappearance?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 21, 2014 (Norway)
    • Countries of origin
      • Norway
      • Denmark
      • Sweden
    • Official sites
      • Official Site
      • Official site [Norway]
    • Languages
      • Norwegian
      • Swedish
      • Danish
      • English
      • Serbian
      • German
    • Also known as
      • The Prize Idiot
    • Filming locations
      • Beitostølen, Norway(location)
    • Production companies
      • Paradox
      • Zentropa Entertainments 5
      • Zentropa International Sweden
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €4,576,591 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $50,251
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,208
      • Aug 28, 2016
    • Gross worldwide
      • $904,446
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 56m(116 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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