Australia Gets Its First Annual Scandinavian Film Festival

Experience the cool cinema of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden.
Tom Clift
May 23, 2014

Step into your local arthouse theatre these days and you'd be hard pressed not to find a regional film festival going on. From established cinematic powerhouses like France, Germany and Japan, to less spotlighted industries such as Poland, Indonesia and Serbia, the sheer amount of world cinema on the cultural calendar means there's almost always an alternative to the latest blockbuster out of Hollywood. As long as you don't mind reading subtitles, that is.

In 2014, the line-up is getting that little bit more crowded, with the inaugural edition of a brand new festival highlighting the films from Europe's frozen north. Covering Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden, the first annual Scandinavian Film Festival is set to put the kvikmynd in kvikmyndahátíð.

One area where contemporary Scandinavian cinema really seems to excel is the crime genre. Case in point, the Easy Money trilogy, starring Joel 'RoboCop' Kinnaman as a uni student turned drug runner. All three films will screen at the festival — see them before the scheduled US reboot featuring Zac Efron. From across the bridge in Denmark, meanwhile, comes police thriller The Keeper of Lost Causes, one the highest grossing films at the Danish box office last year.

Continuing the dramatic thread, Metalhead, out of Iceland, tells the story of a pre-teen girl who copes with her brother's accidental death by taking on his identity. Sounds a little strange, sure, but the film has drawn rave reviews on the international festival circuit and scored a record-breaking 16 nominations at Iceland's prestigious Edda Awards.

Thankfully, despite the region's chilly climate, not everything on the program is so severe. Finland's August Fools is a rom-com set against a Cold War era backdrop, while opening night features the informatively titled Swedish comedy The 100 Year Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared.

For more information about the Scandinavian Film Festival, visit their website. It's on at Palace Cinemas on the following dates:

Canberra Tues 8 July - Sun 20 July
Sydney Wed 9 July - Sun 27 July
Melbourne Thu 10 July - Sun 27 July
Brisbane Fri 11 July - Sun 20 July
Adelaide Wed 23 July - Thurs 31 July
Perth Thu 24 - Wed 30 July
Byron Bay Fri 25 - Wed 30 July

Published on May 23, 2014 by Tom Clift
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