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Dagur Kari's Noi the Albino

by Björn Norðfjörð

Type
Studies
Subject
One FilmNoi the Albino
Keywords
Dagur Kari, Iceland
Publishing date
2010
Publisher
University of Washington Press
Collection
Nordic Film Classics
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Paperback • 144 pages
5 ½ x 7 ½ inches (14 x 19 cm)
ISBN
978-0-295-99009-5
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Book Presentation:
Dagur Kari’s Noi the Albino (Noi albinoi, 2003) succeeded on the international festival circuit as a film that was both distinctively Icelandic and appealingly universal. Noi the Albino taps into perennial themes of escapism and existential angst, while its setting in the Westfjords of Iceland provided an almost surreal backdrop whose particularities of place are uniquely Icelandic. Bjorn Nordfjord’s examination of the film integrates the broad context and history of Icelandic cinema into a close reading of Noi the Albino’s themes, visual style, and key scenes. The book also includes an interview with director Dagur Kari.

Noi the Albino’s successful negotiation of the tensions between the local and the global contribute to the film’s status as a contemporary classic. Its place within the history of Icelandic cinema highlights the specific problems this small nation faces as it pursues its filmmaking ambitions, allowing us to appreciate the remarkable success of Kari’s film in relation to the challenges of transnational filmmaking.

About the Author:
Bjorn Nordfjord is assistant professor and director of the film studies program at the University of Iceland. His publications in both Icelandic and English focus on Icelandic national cinema and world cinema.

Press Reviews:
"[Nordford's] expert knowledge of Icelandic national cinema and world cinema is much in evidence here. . . . A detailed and wide-ranging study of Noi the Albino."―Christine Welsh, Scandinavian-Canadian Studies, Vol. 20 (2011)

"A helpful, lucid account of both text and context. . . . The study is most illuminating when dealing with the aesthetics and recurrent images of the film: its use of colour, its place in a cinema that is concerned with Islands, and with maps."―Edward Gallafent, Viewfinder, October 2011

See the publisher website: University of Washington Press

See Noi the Albino (2003) on IMDB ...

> From the same author:

Light in the Dark:A History of Filmmaking in Iceland

Light in the Dark (2025)

A History of Filmmaking in Iceland

by Björn Norðfjörð

Subject: Countries > Europe

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