Children of Nature
An elderly couple leave their retirement home to make one last journey back to their home in the Western Fjords.
Fridrik Thor Fridriksson
Casts & Crew
Gísli Halldórsson
Sigríður Hagalín
Baldvin Halldórsson
Björn Karlsson
Bruno Ganz
Bryndis Petra Bragadóttir
Egill Ólafsson
Eiríkur Guðmundsson
Guðbrandur Gíslason
Hafliði Magnússon
Hallmar Sigurðsson
Hallur Hallsson
Karl Jónatansson
Jóhann Sigurðsson
Jón Ólafsson
Jóhannes Arason
Jörundur Hilmarsson
Kristinn Ágúst Friðfinnsson
Magnús Ólafsson
Margrét Ólafsdóttir
Rúrik Haraldsson
Rögnvaldur Finnbogason
Sigríður Björnsdóttir
Valgerður Dan
Tinna Gunnlaugsdóttir
Völundur Óskarsson
Fridrik Thor Fridriksson
Wolfgang Pfeiffer
Skule Eriksen
Also Directed by Fridrik Thor Fridriksson
This film is about an elderly lady (Gogo) who is diagnosed with Alzheimer disease. It looks at her son and her family's reaction to her illness.
A woman falls overboard during a rafting trip in Skagafjörður, hits her head on a rock and later dies without having gained consciousness. Her mother contacts Einar and tells him she was murdered. Einar finds this hard to believe but starts investigating anyway, more as as sop to the old lady, whom he likes, than on suspicion of finding anything suspicious. Shortly afterwards a charismatic young man disappears and Einar gets orders to write up a story about the investigation, while also covering a problem with politics and hooliganism in a village a few hour’s drive from Akureyri. His investigation leads to interesting facts about the young man, who was not all he seemed to be, and also about the dead woman’s husband. At the same time Einar finds himself embroiled in two separate family dramas with quite different outcomes.
Rokk í Reykjavík (Rock in Reykjavik) gives a thorough overview of the powerful and expanding rock scene in Iceland. Most of the film consists of performances by a wide variety of rock-groups in various clubs in Reykjavik in 1981-82. There are also interviews with members of the groups representing different views on such features of the rock scene as sex, drugs and politics. 19 groups appear in the film.
Jet lives a joyful life working at a factory with his girlfriend who he's deeply in love with. Shortly after they decide to get married and live together happily ever after her cat, who she has a weird affection for, dies. The girlfriend falls into depression which could (strangely enough) lead to her death and the only way to give her a purpose to live and save her is to tell her the meaning of life.
On Top - Iceland, a lighthouse, a cold winter evening. Her thoughts drift back to that summer ... to bathing in the hot springs ... to when they first met ... and embraced. Down Under - Australia, the desert, a blistering heat wave. His pickup stops at an icehouse ... he lays the blocks neatly on the buckboard ... and drives off haunted by a aching memory. Without dialogue or comment, save for verses from a sonnet by John Keats, Fridrik Thor Fridriksson links the thoughts, the emotions, the sensual longing of young lovers at opposite ends of the world. A tone poem, a collage of sight and sound.
The film is a collection of one-minute short films created by 60 filmmakers from around the world on the theme of the death of cinema.
This Icelandic tale, loosely based on the real-life experiences of director Fridrik Fridriksson tells the saga of a boyhood spent in Iceland in the 1960s.
Two friends, who are experienced whale hunters, decide to settle down in Rekyavik at the end of the whaling season. During a night on the town, the duo lands in a heap of trouble after they are thrown out of one establishment after another. As events escalate the two men break into a weapons shop and arm themselves with rifles for a confrontation with the police.
A Japanese businessman travels to Iceland and has a series of misadventures while venturing to a remote area to perform a traditional burial ritual where his parents died several years back.
The story of families living in barracks, left by the US Army in Reykjavik at the conclusion of World War II.