This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2017) |
The Man Who Loved Yngve (Norwegian: Mannen som elsket Yngve) is a Norwegian film released on 15 February 2008. It is based on a book of the same name by Stavanger author Tore Renberg. It received critical acclaim as one of the best Norwegian movies of the year. A sequel named I Travel Alone was released in 2011[1] and a threequel, The Orheim Company, followed in 2012.
The Man Who Loved Yngve | |
---|---|
Directed by | Stian Kristiansen |
Written by | Tore Renberg |
Starring | Rolf Kristian Larsen Arthur Berning Ida Elise Broch Ole Christoffer Ertvåg |
Cinematography | Trond Høines |
Edited by | Vidar Flataukan |
Music by | John Erik Kaada |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | Norway |
Language | Norwegian |
Plot
editIn 1989, in the shadow of the collapse of Communism in Europe, a group of young rural Norwegians form a band. Preparations for their first gig are derailed when the lead singer, Jarle, is smitten by a new arrival, Yngve. Confused and not completely in touch with his own emotions, Jarle neglects his band, his mother and his girlfriend to spend more time with his new crush. At a party after the concert, he lashes out at Yngve but also admits he loves him. Yngve becomes depressed and flees to a bridge with the intention of committing suicide, but decides not to. He ends up in a mental hospital, and stays there until Jarle sees him again, a few weeks after the incident.
Production details
edit- Production Company: Motlys A/S
- Producer: Yngve Sæther
- Writer: Tore Renberg
- Distributor: Sandrew Metronome
- Filming start date: 12.02.07
- Filming end date 30.03.07
- Director: Stian Kristiansen
- Music: Kaada and Geir Zahl
- Budget: 15.5 million NKR
Cast
edit- Jarle - Rolf Kristian Larsen
- Helge - Arthur Berning
- Yngve - Ole Christoffer Ertvaag
- Katrine - Ida Elise Broch
- Oljeungen - Erlend Stene
- Jarle's father - Jørgen Langhelle
- Andreas - Knut Sverdrup Kleppestø
References
edit- ^ "Rotten Tomatoes Movie Info". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2012-01-01.
External links
edit