The Wave
The Wave
R | 04 March 2016 (USA)
The Wave Trailers

Although theorised, no one is really ready when a mountain pass above the scenic and narrow Geiranger fjord in Norway collapses and creates a tsunami over 300 feet high. A geologist is one of those caught in the middle of it.

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Reviews
Contentar

Best movie of this year hands down!

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Tayloriona

Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.

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Mehdi Hoffman

There's a more than satisfactory amount of boom-boom in the movie's trim running time.

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Roxie

The thing I enjoyed most about the film is the fact that it doesn't shy away from being a super-sized-cliche;

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anthony-a-bernardi

I'd thoroughly recommend this movie. It was a classic disaster movie but without the Americanism

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Wizard-8

You might never think that Scandinavian filmmakers would ever tackle the disaster film genre, but if a ninja movie managed to come out of Sweden (the 1984 movie "The Ninja Mission", if you are curious), then anything is possible. It was certainly an ambitious effort, and while the end results are nothing spectacular, it is an okay 105 minute diversion... if you are in the right mood. If you are looking for a fast pace and constant action, you will most likely be very disappointed. The first half of the movie moves very slowly, with no real action of any kind. Once the disaster does hit, things do pick up a little, though even then there is a significant lack of real tension and action for the most part. But the movie has its strengths. It looks pretty slick and polished for the most part, able to stand its head proudly against big budget Hollywood movies. And it chooses an interesting angle, being that it's a much more realistic take on a disaster than you usually get in Hollywood disaster movies. The characters are more realistic, their actions are more believable, and the various plot turns feel plausible. This is certainly not a disaster movie for everybody - it may quickly tire and bore those looking for popcorn entertainment. But if you are curious to see a more believable cinematic portrayal of a disaster - and you are in a patient mood - you'll probably find it a decent watch.

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Per Johnsen

Already when I saw the trailer to The Wave I thought - Oh no, they have managed to go backwards to the Norwegian stone ages of film, when it comes to language, that is. There shouldn't be anything the matter with the actors, but except from that the main roles for this film, the most actors are delivering constructed lines. To a non Norwegian audience, it's probably harder to tell, but it occasionally sounds like the actors are reading from an underdeveloped script. This of course has much to do with the writing, but it's also characteristic for and being one of many examples that it is more important for many high scale makers of film and television drama in Norway to cast famous names, actors who normally are expected to do a quality job, than to look for the actual right ones, someone who could put higher level to it. The Wave was supposed to be a real blockbuster, and the makers believe the film won't sell otherwise. Most characters in this film are occupied by actors from a small environment, handpicked for mentioned reasons. Even some minor parts, two Danish hotel guests, are occupied by much used and well known actors who not necessarily are the best available. And the male Danish also character functions as a mandatory bad guy. One exception in the cast is the teenage son of the family, played by Jonas Hoff Oftebro, who also seems to be the only one managing to find his own way of speaking and acting, somehow apart from what's been written in the script, and he and his young sister appears to be quite relaxed and normal, not over acting like most of the adults. Still, most disappointing in this matter is the main actor, Kristoffer Joner, who together with Aksel Hennie, seemingly have been doing the lead in every second Norwegian movie the last years. It's like Matt Damon and Samuel L. Jackson were in all the movies, and even they are not. When Joner can't seem to find the right balance in his acting and make his character believable through much of the film, in particular the first half, it's a double shame, even though it's getting better through out the film. Maybe he had get warmed up, and perhaps the result is much the director's fault, but it'd be better if the role had been given to someone else. Another not quite so over used actress, Ane Dahl Torp, mostly does a better job as the wife. But there clearly are aspects to the film that are functioning very well. The scenographers have done a good job and the computer animated wave is very close to realistic. The animation team has got good credits for that. Sadly that does not take away the poor qualities in the dialogue, direction and acting. Widely thinking the plot is based on a phenomenon most serious, and the mountain part falling in to the Geiranger Fjord in the film, is going to do so sooner or later. Seeing the result this disaster movie as an in many ways mistaken and cliché project, has nothing to do with disrespecting the consequences that people actually will face. If only the creators could have chosen a more original language and avoided trying to make a Hollywood copy. It's obvious that this according to Norwegian standards has been quite an expensive film, and even if it it possibly is good advertising for tourism, as if the Norwegian fjords aren't world famous enough, The Wave is merely a Norwegian style Hollywood copy of a disaster film wanting hard to be a block buster. Compared to national standards it clearly got a very big audience, but it also ran of with a large pot from The Norwegian Film Institute and other Nordic support schemes, to cover the budget, money that may have been invested in many other projects, a better way to develop national film making. But at the end of the day, it's all about selling Norway, the nature and feed the national feeling of pride. In this fashion The Wave has put another stone to an already existing mountain. The story is actually fully original, not coming from a novel, but based on a kind of realistic scenario. Too bad then, that it ended up as a predictable cliché. And folks, you better do some research on first aid in drowning situations. The one responsible for research on this in The Wave obviously hasn't, perhaps neither too much when it comes to what it is to be a professional in geology.

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Aleksandar Sarkic

Norwegian cinema is definitely on the rise and is by every day more and more popular in other countries and parts of the world. These movie i have watched on Serbian national TV. To this movie i have watched few Norwegian movies and all were great so i expected something good and different from Hollywood, even if the main story of the movie is natural catastrophe. First half of the movie is very good, it has some plot, some atmosphere and the acting by main character Kristoffer Joner is superb, and when catastrophe begin, everything becomes full of American clichés, especially the ending. It was painful to watch really. I really don't understand why every corner of the globe wants to be similar to Americans, i really didn't expect that especially from Norwegians. I hope that their movies will not be Americanized fully in the process.The Wave gets 5/10 from me.

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