Naboer

2005 Norwegian film directed by Pål Sletaune From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Naboer (English: Next Door) is a 2005 Norwegian psychological thriller film, directed by Pål Sletaune. In the movie, the protagonist John (Kristoffer Joner) is drawn into a violent, sexual game by his two beautiful female neighbours. Naboer received an over-18 rating in Norway, which had only happened to four Norwegian movies before. Upon release it was well received by critics. Sletaune stated "I worked hard with Kristoffer Joner to make the character into something which would interest the audience".[2]

Directed byPål Sletaune
Written byPål Sletaune
Produced byPål Sletaune
Turid Øversvee
Quick facts Naboer Next Door, Directed by ...
Naboer
Next Door
Directed byPål Sletaune
Written byPål Sletaune
Produced byPål Sletaune
Turid Øversvee
StarringKristoffer Joner
Cecilie Mosli
Julia Schacht
Anna Bache-Wiig
CinematographyJohn Andreas Andersen
Edited byJohn Andreas Andersen
Darek Hodor
Music bySimon Boswell
Distributed byColumbia TriStar
Release date
  • 10 March 2005 (2005-03-10)
Running time
75 minutes
CountryNorway
LanguageNorwegian
BudgetNOK 15,155,100 (estimated)
Box office$1,277,769[1]
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Plot

The main character, John (played by Kristoffer Joner), has just been dumped by his girlfriend Ingrid (Anna Bache-Wiig). He then becomes acquainted with his next-door neighbours, the beautiful sisters Anne (Cecilie Mosli) and Kim (Julia Schacht). The sisters know a strange amount of detail about him and it soon becomes clear that he is being entrapped in a twisted, psychological game.

Cast

More information Actor, Character ...
Actor Character
Kristoffer Joner John
Cecilie Mosli Anne
Julia Schacht Kim
Anna Bache-Wiig Ingrid
Michael Nyqvist Ake
Øystein Martinsen Peter
Odd Arno Midtsjø Gammel Mann
Magne Kipperrud Kollega
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Production

The movie was highly anticipated in Norway, particularly because of certain scenes with highly violent and sexual content.[3] For its cinematic review, Naboer received an over-18 rating, which had only happened to four Norwegian movies before, namely Pål Bang-Hansen's Douglas in 1970, Per Blom's Mother's house in 1974, Lasse Glomm's Stop it! in 1980 and Svend Wam's Hotel St. Pauli in 1987.[4]

Reception

At the time, Norwegian reviewers were highly positive to the movie. Jon Selås, writing for Verdens Gang, gave the movie six out of six points. Selås called Joner's performance the best of his career.[5] Dagbladet's Inger Bentzrud called the movie "intelligent", and gave it five out of six points.[6] The movie was seen by 108,096 people in Norway.[7]

Internationally, The Village Voice appreciated "the brilliant art direction and a gift for tension" but criticised the "classic misogynist panic" of the ending.[8] The Cineuropa review praised the "excellent cinematography, production design and a haunting score".[2] Adrian Wootton commented that Naboer was "very high quality film-making and a roller coaster ride that you are unlikely to forget".[9]

As of 2019, Naboer consistently features in top ten lists of Scandinavian horror films.[10][11]

Box office

The film took $1,277,769 worldwide after its release in 2005. When it was re-released in 2006, it took $19,677.[1]

Awards

References

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