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IMDbPro

Ut og stjæle hester

  • 2019
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 3m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
3.5K
YOUR RATING
Stellan Skarsgård, Bjørn Floberg, Tobias Santelmann, and Danica Curcic in Ut og stjæle hester (2019)
November 1999: 67-year-old Trond (Stellan Skarsgård), lives in self-imposed isolation and looks forward to welcoming in the new millennium alone.  As winter arrives he meets one of his few neighbours, Lars (Bjørn Floberg), and realises he knew him back in the summer of 1948. 1948 – the year Trond turned 15. The summer Trond grew up.
Play trailer2:03
2 Videos
25 Photos
Coming-of-AgeDramaMystery

A grieving widower moves to the country where a chance encounter rekindles memories from his past.A grieving widower moves to the country where a chance encounter rekindles memories from his past.A grieving widower moves to the country where a chance encounter rekindles memories from his past.

  • Director
    • Hans Petter Moland
  • Writers
    • Hans Petter Moland
    • Per Petterson
  • Stars
    • Stellan Skarsgård
    • Bjørn Floberg
    • Jon Ranes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    3.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hans Petter Moland
    • Writers
      • Hans Petter Moland
      • Per Petterson
    • Stars
      • Stellan Skarsgård
      • Bjørn Floberg
      • Jon Ranes
    • 11User reviews
    • 55Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:03
    Official Trailer
    Out Stealing Horses
    Trailer 2:05
    Out Stealing Horses
    Out Stealing Horses
    Trailer 2:05
    Out Stealing Horses

    Photos25

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    Top cast37

    Edit
    Stellan Skarsgård
    Stellan Skarsgård
    • Trond
    Bjørn Floberg
    Bjørn Floberg
    • Lars Haug
    Jon Ranes
    • Trond 15 år
    Tobias Santelmann
    Tobias Santelmann
    • Tronds far
    Danica Curcic
    Danica Curcic
    • Jons mor
    Pål Sverre Hagen
    Pål Sverre Hagen
    • Jons far
    Gard B. Eidsvold
    Gard B. Eidsvold
    • Franz
    Sjur Vatne Brean
    Sjur Vatne Brean
    • Jon 17 år
    Tone Beate Mostraum
    • Tronds mor
    • (as Beate Mostraum)
    Maria Alm Norell
    Maria Alm Norell
    • Tronds datter
    Anders Baasmo
    Anders Baasmo
    • Olav
    • (as Anders Baasmo Christiansen)
    Marie Blokhus
    Marie Blokhus
    Ane Ulimoen Øverli
    Ane Ulimoen Øverli
    • Kasserer
    Thorbjørn Harr
    Thorbjørn Harr
    • Lean Man
    Jon Øigarden
    Jon Øigarden
    Sebastian Stigh
    Jan Gunnar Røise
    Jan Gunnar Røise
    • Prest
    Torjus Hopland Vollan
    • Lars 10 år
    • Director
      • Hans Petter Moland
    • Writers
      • Hans Petter Moland
      • Per Petterson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.53.4K
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    Featured reviews

    7fabiopontidoro

    a rough and refined film

    Every apparently unspectacular event, from the felling of a tree to the galloping of a restless horse, takes on a narrative value, a truly beautiful film
    6dromasca

    these horses don't gallop

    Watching movies at a festival has disadvantages. The second movie (or the next ones!) seen on the same day may catch you as a more tired spectator, or under the impression of the previous movie, or confused by the alternation of styles and genres. This is, perhaps, what happened to me watching the Norwegian director Hans Petter Moland's film 'Ut og stjæle hester' (or 'Out Stealing Horses'), a psychological drama with references to the relatively recent history, interestingly constructed, and benefiting from the participation of an excellent team of actors. And yet, although I really liked one of Moland's previous films ('In Order of Disappearance'), I was a little stuck watching this movie. The fault may be mine, but not only mine.

    The story takes place in 1999, on the threshold of the millennium, that period exactly 20 years ago, when the entire planet was preparing for parties and was obsessed with the millennium bug. The main hero (the excellent Stellan Skarsgård) seems to be trying to run away from the world after he his wife had died in a traffic accident, buying a house in a village far from the turmoil of the world. It is precisely here that the past reaches him through the accidental encounter of a forgotten friend from adolescence. The film reconstructs through interleaved flashbacks the decisive summer of his coming to age, in the years immediately following the war that had left traces in people's souls and in the relationships between them. We progress in the remembrance of the past together with the old man. But how much of memory can be trusted after a lifetime has passed? Was the reality then known, understood, and especially as does it matter today?

    The questions are interesting, but one of the problems of the film is that the scriptwriter (also Moland adapting a novel) and the director try to give them a little too explicit answer, along the lines of Buddhist philosophy. Another problem is the lack of dynamism in the evolution of the characters. The film is beautifully filmed and played brilliantly (by Skarsgård, but also by the young actor who plays him as a teenager, and by the whole team), and yet 'Out Stealing Horses' failed to captivate me, introduce me to the story, involve me. The distance between me and Scandinavia, its history, its people and problems, has not been completely eliminated in this film.
    3JvH48

    Visually attractive but I failed interest in what the main protagonists did

    Saw this at the Berlinale 2019, where it was part of the official Competition for the golden bear. While not winning the 1st Prize, the jury awarded a Silver Bear for Outstanding Artistic Contribution, for Rasmus Videbæk who was responsible for the cinematography. Be that as it may, however, the movie failed to interest me in the protagonists and their behavior. Shots of landscapes, rivers, nature and (of course, given the title) the horses were more interesting than what the actors said and did. So, it could have been a nice watch but that is never my prime reason to see a movie.

    In particular, the frequent switching between 1999 and 1948 annoyed me several times. It broke the logic flow in the story line. Luckily, it was clear with every flash back/forward in which time frame we were, due to other actors playing the younger variants. For me it remained unclear from start to finish what it was that the protagonists did tick, and why they did what they did. I cannot imagine that the fatal Cain/Abel scene, where a young boy inadvertently shot his brother, can have such a long term bearing on everyone actions, but what do I know??

    Maybe the underlying book is better in explaining the psychology driving these people's actions, but I missed it dearly here. It is even very well possible that the Cain/Abel scene was not so important after all, but that it was the woman he had eyes on but who was in fact courted by his father. I wonder, due to suggestions in that direction in the announcement on the Berlinale website, but I can recall only a single scene from memory to more or less confirm this plot element.

    All in all, despite the visual elements to make it a nice watch, I failed to get interested in the story or the psychology of the protagonists. I see hints in various reviews that there is more substance than I could derive from it. Such things can happen during a festival where one sees three of four movies per day.
    6ferguson-6

    Don't be bitter

    Greetings again from the darkness. Contrasts are plentiful in this film. The bleakness of winter versus the greenery of summer. The resignation of old age versus the naivety of youth. Pet Petterson's award-winning novel was released in Norway in 2003, and then in English version in 2005. Norwegian director Petter Moland tackles it with the best intentions, though the nuances prove too much for one movie. Mr. Moland is a fine director as evidenced by his excellent IN ORDER OF DISAPPEARANCE (2014) with Stellan Skarsgard and the English remake COLD PURSUIT (2019) with Liam Neeson.

    Morland and Skarsgard reunite as the actor takes on the role of the elder Trond, who we first see as he has relocated to Norway from Sweden. Through his narration, we learn Trond has lived in Sweden for 42 years, and it's a chance meeting with his new neighbor Lars (Bjorn Floberg) that triggers memories of one summer when he was 15 years old. It's now 1999, and the impending new millennium has Trond self-isolating on top of the grief and loneliness he has carried since his wife was killed in a car crash. Skarsgard is an actor who can be either sympathetic or powerful, and he brings gravitas to a character who is mostly lost at this late stage in life.

    Much of the film is spent in Trond's flashback to 1948, when he lived the summer with his father, a "practical" man, at his cabin in Norway. Young Trond is played very well by Jon Ranes in his first role. He clearly admires his father (Tobias Santelmann, KON-TIKI, 2012) and enjoys working beside him and taking rain showers alongside. Over the weeks, Trond and his father become entangled with a village family after a tragedy involving Lars (the future neighbor) when he was very young, and Lars' father and mother (Danica Curcic). What follows for Trond are the things in life that cause us to alter our view of people and the world. Lost innocence is rarely easy.

    Cinematographer Rasmus Videbaek (A ROYAL AFFAIR, 2012) captures the beauty of nature during the 1948 summer, as well as the stark white stillness of 1999 winter. Some of the look and feel and symbolism reminds of the work of Terrence Malick. The stunning Norwegian landscapes play a role for us as viewers and for Trond. There are also some quiet moments that carry weight between the elder Lars and Trond, as the missing pieces of life slowly fall into place.

    The elder Trond states his goal is "to sleep as heavily as possible without being dead", but we see part of him may have already died. Flashbacks to that summer, and even earlier during the war, combine with some awkward conversations with Lars to fill in gaps that had blurred over the years. Childhood memories from old age are often not to be trusted, but coming to grips with one's family and the past may bring peace - or it may not. Trond is an avid reader of Dickens' "David Copperfield" and there are many references throughout. He's even given life advice: "Don't be bitter", which is a worthy goal for all. It's an odd film with multiple timelines and damaged characters at different stages. It may not reach the level of Petterson's novel, but director Moland gives us plenty to mull.
    4Xstal

    Out Stealing Sheep...

    Full of fascinating...ographies and curious adolescent...chologies but as bland as wallpaper paste mixed with plain flour, only curiosity is why they've stolen your sleep sheep and replaced them with this - same effect - lights out!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Tobias Santelmann, Pål Sverre Hagen and Anders Baasmo previously worked together on Kon-Tiki (2012), as Knut Haugland, Thor Heyerdahl, and Herman Watzinger respectively.
    • Quotes

      Lars Haug: I know who you are.

    • Soundtracks
      Vindhester
      Composed by Kåre Vestrheim

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 1, 2022 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Norway
      • Sweden
      • Denmark
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • Norwegian
      • Swedish
    • Also known as
      • L'été où mon père disparut
    • Filming locations
      • Jordet i Trysil, Innlandet, Norway
    • Production companies
      • 4 1/2 Film
      • Zentropa Entertainments
      • Film i Väst
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €4,100,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,480,790
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 3m(123 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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