The Polar Bear King
The Polar Bear King | |
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Directed by | Ola Solum |
Screenplay by | Erik Borge |
Based on | White-Bear-King-Valemon by Peter Christen Asbjørnsen and Jørgen Moe |
Produced by | Hilde Berg Erik Borge |
Starring | Jack Fjeldstad Maria Bonnevie Tobias Hoesl Monica Nordquist Anna-Lotta Larsson |
Cinematography | Philip Øgaard |
Edited by | Yngve Refseth |
Music by | Geir Bøhren Bent Åserud |
Distributed by | United International Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 87 minutes |
Country | Scandinavia |
Language | Norwegian |
The Polar Bear King is a 1991 Norwegian fantasy adventure film directed by Ola Solum and starring Jack Fjeldstad, Maria Bonnevie, Tobias Hoesl, Monica Nordquist, and Anna-Lotta Larsson.[1] The film is based on the Norwegian fairy tale The White Bear, King Valemon.[2]
Plot[]
The land of the far north is ruled by a wise king who has three daughters, one of whom shall one day rule over his kingdom of Winterland. The two older daughters lack depth and understanding, but the youngest is good hearted and kind. She is also uncommonly brave. Unfortunately for the king, she has always desired to live in a land with flowers.
Far to the south young prince Valemon becomes king, however an evil witch has designs on becoming the most powerful person in the world. She believes she can do so by producing a child with the prince. The new king does not wish great power over others, and has no intention of marrying the witch. Angry, the witch curses the young king by turning him into a bear by day, and marks that he has seven years to find someone to fall in love him, and marry him. If anyone should look upon his face before the seven years are over, he will have lost and will have to marry the witch.
The miserable bear travels north, and enters Winterland. There the growling beast meets the young princess, who has her father's gift of being able to speak with animals. She asks the bear why he is so angry, and learns that he is not a bear, but is really the king of Summerland, cursed to look as he does. When she learns his secret and sees the flowers of Summerland reflected in his eyes, she is filled with compassion for the young king and agrees to go to Summerland with him as his wife.
After their arrival the witch sets about trying to harm the young couple, but is thwarted by the King's mother, who has some mastery of magic as well. With each new child the couple is blessed with the witch arrives to harm them, but the child disappears into safety before the witch can strike. Though their children are safe, the young princess does not know what has become of them. Heartbroken over losing her children, she falls into a deep despair. Hearing of this, her father sends her a special gift, and asks her to visit him. Through the love of her father she is greatly restored, however her older sisters plant the idea in her mind that she should light a candle while her husband sleeps to see what he looks like. As soon as she does the witch appears with a laugh and takes Valemon. Overcome with guilt and grief, she sets out to free him. The effort to rescue Valemon will require all her bravery and guile.
Cast[]
- Jack Fjeldstad as the King of the Winterland
- Maria Bonnevie as Princess
- Tobias Hoesl as King Valemon
- Steve Kratz as Valemon's voice (Swedish)
- David Forman as King Valemon's Polar Bear form (puppeteer)
- Monica Nordquist as King Valemon's Mother
- Anna-Lotta Larsson as Witch
- Helge Jordal as the Devil
- Marika Enstad as the Oldest Princess
- Kristin Mack as the Middle Princess
- Espen Skjønberg as the narrator
Production and release[]
The story was adapted from the Norwegian folktales East of the Sun and West of the Moon and the fairy tale The White Bear, King Valemon, both from the collection of tales gathered by Peter Christen Asbjørnsen and Jørgen Engebretsen Moe. Erik Borge wrote the screenplay.[2] The musical score for the film was composed by Geir Bøhren and Bent Åserud.[3] Filming was completed in Norway and Sweden. The bear in the movie was animated by Jim Henson's Creature Shop.[4][5] The film was produced in Norway, Sweden and Germany.[6] Originally recorded in Norwegian, the film was dubbed in German and English. It was first released on 28 November 1991 in Germany. It premiered in Oslo, Norway two weeks later, on 12 December 1991.
References[]
- ^ Haase, Donald (2008). The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Folktales and Fairy Tales: A-F. ISBN 9780313334429.
- ^ a b "KVITEBJORN KONG VALEMON (1991)". BFI.
- ^ "Kvitebjørn Kong Valemon". Norsk filmografi. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
- ^ Guest Writer (9 December 2019). "An Underrated Holiday Retrospective: The Polar Bear King". KLM. Retrieved 12 December 2021.
- ^ "The Polar Bear King". MSN. Retrieved 12 December 2021.
- ^ "Der Eisbärkönig". Film Dienst. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
External links[]
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Polar Bear King |
- The Polar Bear King at IMDb
- The Polar Bear King (1991), Vimeo
- Der Eisbärkönig (1991) trailer in German
- East of the Sun and West of the Moon (Norwegian folktale version)
- 1991 films
- Norwegian-language films
- 1990s fantasy adventure films
- 1990s children's films
- Films about shapeshifting
- Films about polar bears
- Norwegian children's films
- Norwegian fantasy adventure films
- Norwegian films