Gjest Baardsen | |
Director: | Tancred Ibsen |
Producer: | Tancred Ibsen |
Starring: | Alfred Maurstad Vibeke Falk Joachim Holst-Jensen Lauritz Falk Jens Holstad Karl Bergmann Sophus Dahl Lars Tvinde Martin Linge |
Cinematography: | Per G. Jonson Ulf Greber |
Music: | Adolf Kristoffer Nielsen |
Distributor: | Norsk Film A/S |
Runtime: | 99 minutes |
Country: | Norway |
Language: | Norwegian |
Gjest Baardsen is a Norwegian film from 1939 directed by Tancred Ibsen.[1] [2] Alfred Maurstad played the title role.[2] The film is based on the life of the outlaw Gjest Baardsen, but it is a blend of fact and fiction. The plot is taken from a chapbook published by Holger Sinding under the pseudonym Halle Sira.[3]
The film was shot at the Fuhr farm in Luster, at Turtagrø in the Sogn Mountains, and at Videseter in the Stryn Mountains.
The film was screened in the United States with English subtitles in the 1940s.[4] [5] [6]
The film is set in a time of famine. Norway has been at war with England and Sweden, and times are difficult. Gjest Baardsen has gotten into trouble with the law, apparently due to a trifle. But Gjest breaks free, and instead it is the sheriff that is handcuffed while Gjest escapes.
Newspapers have written the following about the film: "Meet the master thief and the folk hero Gjest Baardsen, who steals from the rich and gives to the poor. He tricks the constable and bailiff into a fight, and no prisons or chains can hold him."[7] "Maurstad plays the folk hero with an obsessive freshness, with daring moves and a Hardanger fiddle, and escapes over fjords and mountains."[8]
Alfred Maustad and an orchestra directed by Adolf Kristoffer Nielsen also recorded these two songs in Oslo on February 20, 1940. They were released on the Telefunken 78 rpm record T-8261,[9] and the first song also on the Sonora 78 rpm record 3748.[10]