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The Sea on DVD (2003)

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Average rating: 57%
151017207
3.0
from 75 members
 
Starring: Gunnar Eyjofsson, Hilmir Snaer Gudnason, Nina Dogg Filippusdottir, Gudrun S. Gisladottir, Sigurdur Skulason
Director: Baltasar Kormaku
Studio: PALM PICTURES
Run time: 105 mins
Certificate: 18
Genres: Comedy
Languages: Icelandic
Subtitles: English
Released: 20/02/2006

Brief synopsis of The Sea

Why this sudden love of truth? This is the question that launches the complicated dialogue of Baltasar Kormakur's beautifully complex, moody film about a dysfunctional family in Iceland. The utterly chilling opener in which a dilapidated fishery bursts into violent flames and burns, against the backdrop of a snow and rain storm, sets the tone for the volatile story that is to follow. Thordur Haraldsson (Gunnar Eyjofsson) is the head of a diverse and distant family, all of who are returning the small village where Thordur still runs the family fishery. The youngest son, Agust (Hilmir Snaer Gudnason), and his pregnant girlfriend are travelling from Paris, and Agust's cousin Maria (Nina Dogg Filippusdottir) nervously awaits his arrival. Ragnheidur (Gudrun S. Gisladottir), the embittered daughter, shows up in a new car with her spoiled son and snobby husband. Meanwhile Haraldur (Sigurdur Skulason) is the one son who has stayed by his father's side, advising him in business matters and encouraging him to sell the defunct fishery and retire to Reykjavik. When the family comes together to discuss the future of the business, difficult memories intermingle with too many drinks and things get ugly, fast.

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Critics Reviews

Entertainment Weekly

The loveliest moments put both politics and theatrics aside, conveying the strange beauty of a hard life involving little else than fish, water, and gray sky

Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 4 starsThe sea

A customer from London, England , 14/03/2006

An Icelandic tragedy about a fish factory, EU quotas, greedy relatives and family secrets. It doesn't sound like a bundle of laughs but it's involving, well acted, full of strong characters (the grandmother steals the show) and has a surprising number of gags. And lots of very photogenic high Icelandic cheekbones! For me, the commentary track was a highlight - a fascinating insight into modern Icelandic culture & society. With foreign films, the commentary is an opportunity to explain to non-native audiences the little cultural references that would have gone over their heads in the cinema, and it was a real treat here.

  7 out of 7 people found this review helpful
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