Thursday, March 11, 2010
Watch Online Submarino Superhit Danish Drama Movie 2010 Trailer Download Free Review Cast and Crew & Photos
Submarino Danish Drama Movie 2010
Cast And Crew
Cast :Jakob Cedergren,Dar Salim,Patricia Schumann,Gustav Fischer Kjærulff,Peter Plaugborg,Helene Reingaard Neumann,Finn Bergh,Kate Kjølbye,Morten Rose,Sebastian Bull Sarning
Director: Thomas Vinterberg
Writers: Jonas T. Bengtsson (novel),Tobias Lindholm
Producer : Morten Kaufmann, Birgitte Hald
Original Music :Kristian Eidnes Andersen
Film Editing :Valdís Óskarsdóttir,Andri Steinn
Release Date: 25 March 2010
Genre: Drama
Runtime: 105 min | Denmark:100 min
Country: Denmark | Sweden
Language: Danish
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Submarino Danish Denmark Film.The The Film Director by Thomas Vinterberg.
Plot Summary:
SUBMARINO is the story of two down-and-out brothers haunted by a tragic childhood. Troubled ex-con Nick fights painful memories and loneliness to try and reconnect with his brother, a struggling single father and heroin addict...
Submarino Danish Film Synopsis:
If Danish actor Jakob Cedergren continues on his current path it is only a matter of time before he breaks through and becomes a major international star.
From fairly humble beginnings on television and playing bit parts in festival films, Cedergren moved to lead roles with slacker comedy Dark Horse in 2005 and hasn't looked back since. He's gone from strength to strength, last year taking the lead in Danish Oscar submission Terribly Happy and now in the lead of Thomas Vinterberg's Berlin-selected drama Submarino.
Submarino Denmark Movie Review ::
I just had the honour to watch this Danish film at the Berlin Film Festival, and I have the feeling that this could be the winner. I don't want to give anything away, so I will be very general.
What we witness is the compelling story of two brothers divided by life, united by the same tragic event. Both adrift in their sorrow, they run down their self-destructive paths, with little to fight for.
It is no big drama, though. The narration is gentle and respectful, and leaves the audience in the position of not being able to judge the characters for their almost invariably wrong choices, but with a strong feeling of compassion for all of them.
The performances of the whole cast are extremely convincing (including the little boy playing Martin)and Vinterberg's direction - unlike his previous Dogma movies - is at the service of the disturbing realism of the story, working at the same time with a beautiful composition of the scenes (the cinematography, from the very first scenes, helps going straight to the soul). Chapeau.
A special praise has to go to the two actors playing the grown-up brothers. Jakob Cedergren (Nick) in particular makes us see the fragility of his character through his eyes, despite his apparent and imposing physical strength. But the whole cast is really credible all along, both with their physical appearance and their realistic acting.
This movie, with its realistic description of the consequences and the dynamics of substance addiction, destroyed families (what a critic to the Scandinavian society, where alcoholism is a devastating plague) should be screened in every high school.
And, let's say the truth: if you don't find yourself silently weeping in the last prison and church scenes, you most likely have no heart at all. I am fighting with my tears right now, just playing the movie in my mind again.
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