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1-11 of 11
- Iben is a very talented artist, but she is bullied and finds no peace at school. But one night she meets Isak, another outsider - and together they create something that sends a clear message that they will not be held down.
- Mikael has always taken care of his little brother Joakim, who has Downs. They spend their days playing in the countryside where they live. Then one day a new boy shows up - and their relationship is put to the test.
- Stateless Arlen Khadaa lives at an airport in Kyrgyzstan. Without papers, he can neither enter nor leave the country. He lives on airport food, brushes his teeth and washes his clothes in the public toilet, and sleeps on the benches in the waiting hall. For almost two years this has been his life. His family lives in Norway; mother, siblings, wife and two children. It was a failed deportation from Norway that separated them. Arlen feels abandoned by the Norwegian authorities, but the family fights to get him home.
- Noah and Felix are like most boys. They play soccer, and hang out with friends. The boys also spend a lot of time with their grandpa who always has time to play. One day the boys get a sad message. Grandpa has got a fatal disease.
- One day, Iben gets an English assignment at school that proves difficult to solve. Iben and her classmates is encouraged by their English teacher to present a personal essay in front of the class with the headline "My favorite criminal".
- Crossing the North Sea in an open boat, without safety equipment, without knowing how long it will take, what will meet you on the other side, and with a constant fear of enemy vessels... This is what the around 100 young men who set out in small boats from the southern coast of Norway experienced during the first two years of the war. Some were on the run from the nazi's, others on the run from their own sense of powerlessness over the war and the situation at home. When English sailors Jarle and Tony set out from shore in April 2022, it will be from a very different starting point. This expedition has safety equipment on board and no enemy on their heels, but they have an equally small boat below them and the same endless starry sky above them. Will the journey across the North Sea and the preparations they make together give them greater insight and understanding of what drove so many young men during the war? And will the old wooden boat withstand one last crossing - to remind us all of the price of freedom?
- 400 ÅR VED FOSSEN is a historical documentary that tells the exciting industrial history linked to Vigelandsfossen in Vennesla. The story follows the development through periods of growth and decline for 400 years.
- "A couple of sentences in some old letters I found after my mother were the start of a journey of discovery into one of the most dramatic stories from the Second World War in Norway," says director Brita Sørli Jærnes. On 26 April 1942, two Gestapo men were shot by Norwegian Linge soldiers, sent from Scotland. On 30 April, the Germans burned Telavåg, in what has been considered the worst retaliatory action in Norway during the Second World War. All men between the ages of 16 and 60 were sent to concentration camps, where 31 of them died. Women and children were arrested as hostages and held captive for more than two years. 75 years have passed, but the memories still affect the Telavåg children. Within a few weeks, their free and carefree existence was replaced by insecurity and captivity. This is a story about revenge, about terrorism, about fear, separation, illness and death. But not least, the story of 40 children who lived two years in captivity. Side by side with them lived the director's then 16-year-old mother, who was a student at the school which was used as a prison camp. What did she and her fellow students really understand from the drama that unfolded? And what was really worse: two years in captivity or all the years afterwards, characterised by silence?