Nordisk Panorama 2022

Nordisk Panorama Forum set to roll

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With over 100 submissions received, the 29th edition of the Nordisk Panorama Forum for the co-financing of new documentaries (running 25-27 September) is looking as robust as in pre-pandemic years. 24 projects have been chosen for public pitching alongside a further 22 'Observer +' projects which will be presented in individual meetings to decision makers.

Nordisk Panorama interview: Anita Mathal Hopland 

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The Danish director is at Nordisk Panorama 2022 in a dual capacity. She is participating in the Forum with her new project Breaker, about three young professional break-dancers training for the 2024 Olympics, co-directed with Jens Lengerke. Meanwhile, Hopland’s autobiographical Moosa Lane is screening in the Festival’s New Nordic Voices strand.

Nordisk Panorama Forum: Finnish Bears by Otso Alanko

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Ice hockey, perhaps. Ski jumping, yes. Middle and long distance running, certainly (who can forget Paavo Nurmi?). And football had the great Jari Litmanen. But cricket? No. This is not a sport in which the Finns have hitherto displayed any signs of excellence. Nonetheless, Otso Alanko’s new doc promises to do for Finnish batting, bowling and fielding what Cool Runnings once did for tobogganing in Jamaica.

Nordisk Panorama: Budding Humans by Gunhild Westhagen Magnor

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Despite being charming, playful and funny, Gunhild Westhagen Magnor’s film, screening in Best Nordic Documentary Competition, was in a roundabout way inspired by the questions she had as she watched TV footage of Norwegian mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik. “How can a person who once was an innocent little child…end up doing something horrible like that?” the director asks.

Nordisk Panorama opener review: Golden Land by Inka Achté

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Stories about a return to the homeland to seek fortune and happiness are familiar, but Golden Land manages to offer something generous and gently compassionate to the canon. While drama and darkness lurk in the background (and certainly have an influence on proceedings) the film is permeated with reflections on family and support as it tells the story of a Finnish family who return to Somaliland to follow their dreams.

Nordisk Panorama looks to the future

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There were doubts that the 33rd Nordisk Panorama Film Festival would happen at all. Last year, when the Nordic Council of Ministers decided to cut all its funding, the event was left suddenly in very real jeopardy. However, speaking to BDE on the opening day of this year’s festival (22-27 September), Exec Director Anita Reher hailed the efforts of film institutes across the region to keep the Panorama going.

Nordisk Panorama: See Me As I Am by Louise Leth

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Rima, the protagonist of Louise Leth’s See Me As I Am, is funny, kind-hearted and relentlessly optimistic. She is also autistic. Leth’s film, screening in The New Nordic Voice competition at the Nordisk Panorama, will therefore surprise anyone expecting a downbeat documentary about isolation and suffering. The filmmaker discusses the work with BDE.

Nordisk Panorama interview: The Silence in Sapmi by Liselotte Wajstedt

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Take two women. Marion’s mother committed suicide after suffering sexual abuse as a child. Ida was raped as a teenager. What they have in common is that they are both part of close-knit Sapmi communities where discussing such horrific experiences is considered taboo. Filmmaker Liselotte Wajstedt talks to Business Doc Europe.

Nordisk Panorama FF: Rock in Reykjavik by Fridrik Thor Fridriksson

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40 years on and Rock in Reykjavik is back, lauded at this year’s Malmö-based celebration of Nordic docs and shorts. “It was very important for all of us because we made it without any subsidy from the government,” Icelandic maverick Fridrik Thor Fridriksson tells Business Doc Europe. “We were very brave.” He also remains optimistic that his beloved Manchester United will rise phoenix-like from the footballing ashes…

Competition titles announced for 33rd Nordisk Panorama 2022

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Of the 433 submitted films, 64 have this year been selected to compete for the awards in the festival’s five competition categories, including Best Nordic Documentary with an award valued at €11,000. The festival runs 22–27 September Malmö, Sweden. “This year’s documentary programme tackles some of the most urgent topics of our time – climate crisis, corruption, war, violation of human rights and women’s rights,” say programmers.