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FINANCIACIÓN Países nórdicos

Nordisk Film & TV Fond financia nueve nuevos proyectos audiovisuales

por 

- La organización anuncia una nueva selección de producciones y un respaldo adicional a la distribución cinematográfica y otras iniciativas culturales

Nordisk Film & TV Fond financia nueve nuevos proyectos audiovisuales
El director Edward af Sillén, cuya A Piece of My Heart ha sido financiada (© Albin Olsson)

Este artículo está disponible en inglés.

The Nordisk Film & TV Fond, one of the main funding bodies in the Nordic region, has recently granted financial support to nine new audiovisual productions set to be released between 2018 and 2019. In total, four new TV series, three feature films and two documentaries will receive funding from the organisation.

The four TV series selected are Summer of '68The ConductorTsunami and Home Ground 2. Produced by Anagram Sweden for SVT, the story of Summer of '68 revolves around three young women who manage to stir things up in a community where people are unaware of the 1968 protests. The series, directed by Kristina Humle (Real Humans, Love and Happiness), was granted 2.1 million Norwegian kroner (€221,000). The Conductor, a Swedish drama-thriller produced by Black Spark Film & TV and based on Camilla Grebe and Paul Leander Engström’s first book in the Moscow Noir trilogy, was granted 2.95 million Norwegian kroner (€311,000).

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Henrik Georgsson's 3x60-minute series Tsunami, produced by Filmlance International for SVT, was granted 1.95 million Norwegian kroner (€205,000). The script, penned by Sara Kadefors, sees a group of people forced to make crucial decisions during the 2004 titular Southeast Asian catastrophe. Meanwhile, Yngvild Sve Flikke and Stian Kristiansen's Norwegian TV series Home Ground 2 was granted 2 million Norwegian kroner (€210,000). The story follows the struggles of Helena Mikkelsen (Ane Dahl Torp), Norway's first female coach of a male premier-league team, who finds it hard to succeed in a traditionally male-dominated sports environment.

As for feature-length films, three productions were granted financial support – namely, Edward af Sillén's Swedish musical A Piece of My Heart [+lee también:
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, Mika Kaurismäki's upcoming Finnish feature Master Cheng and Fenar Ahmad's Danish fantasy film Valhalla [+lee también:
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. The first of the three, a romantic comedy being produced by Unlimited Stories, was granted 2.35 million Norwegian kroner (€247,000). Master Cheng focuses on the titular character, a Chinese chef who travels halfway around the world with his son to a remote Finnish village; the organisation will contribute 1.8 million Norwegian kroner (€189,000). Valhalla, produced by Profile Pictures and based on Peter Madsen's comic books, was granted 2.7 million Norwegian kroner (€284,000). 

This new slate of productions also includes two Danish documentaries – namely, Eva Mulvad and Morten Ranmar's Family on the Run, and Karen Stokkendal Poulsen's Confessions from a Military Dictatorship. Family on the Run tells the six-year story of a family torn between countries and fighting to find a base. The second project explores the controversial dynamics behind the recent transition of power in Myanmar. Both documentaries were granted a lump sum of 600,000 Norwegian kroner (€63,000). 

Furthermore, the fund has earmarked financing to support the distribution of three Scandinavian productions – namely, the Danish animated film The Incredible Story of the Giant Pear [+lee también:
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, the Norwegian drama U – July 22 [+lee también:
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 and the Norwegian-German-Swedish co-production What Will People Say [+lee también:
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. The overall distribution endowment accounted for 690,000 Norwegian kroner (€73,000). 

Finally, support for film-related initiatives accounted for 395,000 Norwegian kroner (€42,000). Said funds were granted to Scandinavian Locations in order to attract foreign film investments, Mikrofilm Norway, in charge of branding Nordic animation at the Annecy Film Festival, and European Film Promotion for the Film Sales Support scheme.

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(Traducción del inglés)

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