Nine times out of ten disaster films come from the USA. After all these years they now look like two drops of the same thing, which is why the Norwegian disaster movie is such a nice change. And those Norwegians are dealing with it troll Really beautiful thing.
Nine times out of ten disaster films come from the USA. After all these years they now look like two drops of the same thing, which is why the Norwegian disaster movie is such a nice change. And those Norwegians are dealing with it troll Really beautiful thing.
boss troll So the first is not the best. Roar Uthaug made a name for himself in Hollywood with films like wave (2015) and Tomb rider (2018). Before troll He returns to his homeland and draws on Norse folklore in which mythical trolls play a major role as giant, unfriendly, ugly creatures that can eat people.
linear
in troll An explosion occurred in a mountain in the uninhabited part of eastern Norway and then suddenly giant footprints were seen. Nobody wants to be a giant monster, except for paleontologist Nora Tiedemann (Ene Marie Wellman) who has been asked by the government to help and thanks to her now-insane father, Tobias, who knows all about trolls.
Its length is forty meters
Nora enlists the help of the Prime Minister’s right-hand man, Andreas (Kim Falk) and soldier Chris Holm (Mads Sigurd Petersen) to find out exactly what’s going on and what the troll is up to. It soon became clear that it, about forty meters high, was aimed at the capital, Oslo. This would cause disaster. The troll must be stopped, but how?
Less hysterical
Unlike the noisy American disaster movies troll More sober and less hysterical. And that’s nice sometimes. It has some plot holes troll, but grumble who notices that. If you are looking for a completely entertaining movie without much thought, this is your movie. And you instantly catch something of the beautiful Norwegian nature, too.
stars
3 out of 5 stars
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