Munch (2023)
Misunderstood by his peers, rejected by the art establishment, wracked with grief over the loss of his older sister and tortured by addiction, the film captures Munch's life, painting an intimate and nuanced picture of a unique and multifaceted person and artist. This modern adaptation takes the viewers to four important chapters of his life: The story of Munch's first love, and the controversy around one of his early exhibitions in Berlin. This is followed by Munch's admission to a psychiatric clinic, where he was forced to make the biggest decision of his life. Finally, the film shows the artist's battle at the end of his life to save his works from the Nazis during World War II. (The Norwegian Film Institute)
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Alfred Ekker Strande |
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Mattis Herman Nyquist |
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Ola G. Furuseth |
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Anne Krigsvoll |
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Anne Krigsvoll |
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Anne Krigsvoll and Hildegun Riise |
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Anne Krigsvoll |
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Anders Baasmo |
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Hildegun Riise |
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Anne Krigsvoll |
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Ola G. Furuseth |
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Ola G. Furuseth |
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Fanny Leander Bornedal |
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Alfred Ekker Strande
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Per Frisch |
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Alfred Ekker Strande, Per Frisch and Ylva Fuglerud |
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Thea Lambrechts Vaulen |
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Fredrik Stenberg Ditlev-Simonsen and Thea Lambrechts Vaulen |
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Ola G. Furuseth and Jesper Christensen |
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Jesper Christensen |
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Mattis Herman Nyquist |
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Mattis Herman Nyquist (Edvard Munch with Cell Phone) |
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Mattis Herman Nyquist (Edvard Munch with Cell Phone) |
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Lisa Carlehed as August Strindberg |
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Nader Khademi |
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Arthur Berning and Nader Khademi |
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Ida Elise Broch and Mattis Herman Nyquist |
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Nader Khademi, Arthur Berning, Lisa Carlehed, Ida Elise Broch and Mattis Herman Nyquist |
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Mattis Herman Nyquist and Ida Elise Broch |
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Ville Virtanen, Ida Elise Broch and Mattis Herman Nyquist |
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Oscar Wicken |
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Lisa Carlehed |
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Lisa Carlehed |
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Anne Krigsvoll |
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Mattis Herman Nyquist |
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Anne Krigsvoll |
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