Director: | Ole Endresen |
Producer: | Håkon Øverås |
Starring: | Atle Antonsen, Jon Øigarden, Linn Skåber,, Steinar Sagen |
Cinematography: | Askild Edvardsen |
Editing: | Per-Erik Eriksen |
Music: | , Eyvind Andreas Skeie |
Studio: | 4 1/2 Film |
Country: | Norway |
Language: | Norwegian |
Italic Title: | force |
King Curling |
King Curling (also King of Curling, Curling King; Norwegian: Kong Curling) is a 2011 Norwegian sports comedy film directed by Ole Endresen. Atle Antonsen stars as skip Truls Paulsen, a former curling champion now medicated for his dangerously obsessive behavior, who has to reunite his team 10 years after they disbanded in order to help his mentor Gordon get lifesaving medical treatment.
The name Truls Paulsen is a pun on Pål Trulsen, Olympic champion in curling. The curling scenes were shot in Håkons Hall, Lillehammer.[1]
In Norway, several reviews were mediocre. VG and Dagbladet both gave a dice throw of 4 (out of 6),[2] [3] whereas NRK P3's Filmpolitiet gave a 3 score.[4]
Critic Brent McKnight compared the film to The Big Lebowski and "Wes Anderson's aesthetic," saying King Curling "has a lot of fun twisting and tinkering with every sports cliché in the book."[5] British critic Mike McCahill also compared the film's sensibilities to Wes Anderson, as well as to the American offbeat sports comedy Dodgeball, citing "the bouffanted rival, the flowery commentary team (seen putting on their coats and locking up the studio before Truls attempts his final, seemingly impossible shot) and a mildly smirky attitude to its chosen minority pursuit: the film's best joke involves a curling administrator who refuses to answer any question from reporters that includes the diminutive term 'niche'."[6]
It won the audience award for best feature film at the 2012 Cinequest Film Festival in the USA.[7]