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IMDbPro

Noi l'albinos

Original title: Nói albinói
  • 2003
  • PG-13
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
9.8K
YOUR RATING
Noi l'albinos (2003)
ComedyDrama

Tragicomedy that describes the monotonous daily life of Noí, a 17-year-old young man who lives in an isolated village in Iceland.Tragicomedy that describes the monotonous daily life of Noí, a 17-year-old young man who lives in an isolated village in Iceland.Tragicomedy that describes the monotonous daily life of Noí, a 17-year-old young man who lives in an isolated village in Iceland.

  • Director
    • Dagur Kári
  • Writer
    • Dagur Kári
  • Stars
    • Tómas Lemarquis
    • Þröstur Leó Gunnarsson
    • Elín Hansdóttir
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    9.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dagur Kári
    • Writer
      • Dagur Kári
    • Stars
      • Tómas Lemarquis
      • Þröstur Leó Gunnarsson
      • Elín Hansdóttir
    • 56User reviews
    • 62Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 20 wins & 15 nominations total

    Photos30

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Tómas Lemarquis
    Tómas Lemarquis
    • Nói
    Þröstur Leó Gunnarsson
    • Kiddi Beikon
    Elín Hansdóttir
    • Íris
    Anna Friðriksdóttir
    • Lína
    Hjalti Rögnvaldsson
    • Óskar
    Pétur Einarsson
    • Prestur
    Kjartan Bjargmundsson
    • Gylfi
    Þorsteinn Gunnarsson
    Þorsteinn Gunnarsson
    • Þórarinn Skólastjóri
    Guðmundur Ólafsson
    • Alfreð Kennari
    Haraldur Jónsson
    • Teitur Sálfræðingur
    Gérard Lemarquis
    • Frönskukennari
    Greipur Gíslason
    • Dabbi
    Páll Loftsson
    • Pabbi Dabba…
    Ásdís Thoroddsen
    • Bankastarfsmaður
    Ásmundur Ásmudsson
    • Barþjónn
    Óttarr Proppé
    • Starfsmaður í Herrafataverslun
    Gunnhildur Björk Elíasdóttir
    • Afgreiðsludama í sjoppu
    Unnar Reynisson
    Unnar Reynisson
    • Dyravörður
    • Director
      • Dagur Kári
    • Writer
      • Dagur Kári
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews56

    7.39.7K
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    Featured reviews

    9alanjj

    Comedy, beauty, tragedy

    Noi is a tragicomic tale of a young man who is too bright to be stuck in the dismal life he was given, but not creative enough or tenacious enough to find a way out. He refuses to play by the rules, but has not figured out anything else that he can do or be. He has minor escapes, via a ViewMaster, books, a girlfriend from the city, a gun to shoot icicles with, but they are not ultimately enough to keep him from going berserk. But the tiny Icelandic village where he lives understands him, and refuses to do something so simple as to have him locked up or sent away. Rather, they just understand, and Noi cannot get out of his dreary cold existence.

    The role of Noi is played by a skinny young man who looks like he's had chemo, but he's got a beautiful expressive face, which is on-screen almost all the time. I'd love to see the guy with a head of hair. His grandmother provides great comic relief as she does her aerobics, and his dad is a vivid character down on his luck in a way that only Scandinavians can portray. He's drunk on Elvis, and that makes his life bearable.

    Hope this movies gets releases--it's beautiful to look at, funny, sad, touching.
    9tresdodge

    Well paced, an engrossing picture

    A rebellious 17 year old student (Tomas Lemarquis) is dissatisfied with his life in a remote Icelandic town. He meets a girl (Kristmunder Kristmundersson) who works at a petrol station and together they dream of a world away from the monotony of their small town existence.

    This is only the second Icelandic film I have seen and I was extremely impressed by it. The acting was very professional, the cinematography worked well in creating atmosphere and the music, which I believe was by the director's band, was very apt for the story.

    The story was very simple but I feel that simple stories can often work much better than a highly complex and over indulgent pieces.

    The main characters restlessness probably strikes a chord with many people who as teenagers living in a small town yearned for somewhere and something different.

    A Very well made and interesting piece which I would highly recommend.
    8Buddy-51

    haunting tale of a bored adolescent

    In the spare and poetic "Noi the Albino," the title character is a seventeen-year-old gifted underachiever who lives with his grandmother in a dreary little village on the coast of northern Iceland. This would be a harsh, isolated environment for anyone to grow up in, but it is particularly trying for a misfit adolescent with few social skills and no real hope for the future. Noi, whose generally aloof, alcoholic father lives on his own in a different part of town, spends most of his time trudging purposelessly through the snowy streets of the village or holing up in the basement room he's carved out for himself as a kind of sanctuary from a world too utterly depressing to contemplate. Bored by school and bereft of friends, this young man drifts through life, dreaming of the day when he will be able to live on a very different kind of island in the South Seas, a location light years removed from this place where the interiors are every bit as stark and forbidding as the white-on-white world outside.

    "Noi the Albino" is one of those films in which the very lack of anything significant happening becomes the central theme and message of the work. Noi lives a life that is so uneventful and boring that it would drive virtually any one of us to the brink of madness. We hardly blame him when we see him dozing through his classes at school or pilfering change from a mock slot machine set up in the local restaurant. Yet, despite the fact that virtually nothing of consequence happens, the film itself is a fascinating mood piece that seeps into our bones and makes us sympathize with the plight of the strange young man who occupies center stage in the drama. Most of the adults in Noi's life seem to sense his potential, but, for some reason, he is totally unwilling to tap into it. What's impressive about the film is that it doesn't try to explain why that is, though we sense it has something to do with the stifling environment in which he lives. Noi becomes emblematic of all people who lead lives of quiet desperation, tucked away in remote, virtually uninhabitable corners of the globe, far removed from the bustle and excitement that can be found only in places with large and diverse populations.

    As Noi, Tomas Lemarquis gives a beautiful, subtle performance, creating a compelling and complex character using little more than body language and facial expressions. The final moments of the film are truly heartbreaking as Noi learns the value of what he has - even though, at that point, the realization comes too late.

    Written and directed by Dagur Kari with an artist's eye for lyricism and austerity, this is a bleak but intriguing little film that will stay in your mind long past the closing credits.
    9opossumd

    A fascinating, deeply touching story

    Although distant in time and space, this work is reminiscent of post-WW2 Italian neorealism, with a sprinkle of dry Nordic humour. The grandiose setting of Iceland's north-western fjord region is the real protagonist: that huge white cone-shaped mountain looms in the background, very similar to Dante's Purgatory mount, meting out penance and confining the souls living within its shadow. The actors - like in neorealistic movies - seem (but aren't) taken from the street, they look completely natural, they have jobs and behave like real people. The title character is amazingly expressive, despite his shaved head and eyebrows. With a fractional movement of the eyes and mouth he moves us to tears or laughter. The dialogues are scanty, but the continuity makes it all very clear: Noi is a child prodigy, who is tied to an inescapable, remote environment. He is at variance with his teachers, but loves - and is loved by - his disjoint family. He dreams of escaping to an entirely different world, a world of sunny beaches and palm trees, taking along the girl he is infatuated with. But deep down he knows his dream is doomed: there is no escape from his icy ghetto - almost.
    9howard.schumann

    An excellent first effort

    If you want to learn how to make mayonnaise while learning French, how to smoke, how to destroy a piano with an axe, how not to rob a bank, and how to survive in an environment of mind-numbing boredom, Dagur Kari's first feature Noi Albinoi may be the key. Noi is a coming-of-age comedy/drama with a morbidly deadpan sense of humor, but it is also a film that tackles a very serious subject, the physical and emotional isolation of bright teenagers growing up in an environment that does not nurture them. Set in Bolungarvik (pop. 957) in Iceland's Western Fjords, the stark quality of the remote village sheltered between the seacoast and the frozen mountains has a bluish glow that makes the world seem ominous and the relentless quiet of the secret snow conveys a tone of oppressive solitude.

    This is the environment a gangling 17-year old named Noi must face each day. He is a notorious underachiever whose routine consists of avoiding school and trying please his alcoholic father Kiddi (Throstur Leo Gunnarsson). Convincingly portrayed by Icelandic actor Tomas Lemarquis, Noi is an enigma. With his shaved head, pallid complexion, and intense eyes, it is hard to know if he is an albino or a devotee of Hari Krishna. We first meet Noi in his bed as his grandmother (Anna Fridriksdóttir) tries to wake him up for school by firing a rifle over his head. Though he is considered by the school psychiatrist to be exceptionally intelligent, Noi is not fond of school and makes his teachers crazy with his lack of punctuality, sleeping in class, and general uncaring manner.

    When he goes too far by placing a tape recorder on his seat to record the lecture while he goes home, his expulsion from school is the predictable result. Feeling trapped, Noi retreats to the basement of his grandmother's house where he can think about an exotic destination to escape to, made more real when his grandmother gives him a stereopticon to view pictures of a land of beaches and palm trees. His interest in life picks up when Iris (Elín Hansdóttir), a young city girl, shows up in town from Reykjavik to take a job at the local gas station. Awkward and stumbling, Noi manages to get a date but her father, a local bookseller, warns him to stay away from his daughter. On their "romantic" first date, they break into a local museum, Iris taking it on herself to break the glass on the front door while Noi attempts to jimmy the lock. They come across an exhibit showing places on a map but, as they discover, there's no button for Iceland, a rather apt metaphor.

    Noi takes a job digging graves in the local cemetery where the priest hilariously attempts to use a remote control from his house to direct him where to dig a grave and the two haggle over the depth of the grave to be dug beneath tons of ice and snow. Noi's exasperation builds until he takes things into his own hand, which leads to a series of serio-comic adventures more emotionless than anything this side of Fargo. While the ending may ultimately be liberating, I was unprepared for the film's sudden dark turn. Kari, however, pulls it off and makes us care deeply about what happens to the icy town and its eccentric inhabitants. Noi Albinoi is an excellent first effort.

    Related interests

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    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Gérard Lemarquis, who plays the French schoolteacher, is the father of 'Tomas Lemarquis', who plays Noi. Gérard Lemarquis is a French schoolteacher in real life, and the director 'Dagur Kari' was one of his students.
    • Goofs
      In the scene where the psychiatrist examines Nói, the former behaves strangely negligent. No health care professional would administrate an intelligence test by giving the subject scarce instructions, since these are part of a standardized protocol. Instead, he would give detailed instructions asking the subject if he has understood them and should be present during, at least, a portion of the test.
    • Quotes

      Kristmundur 'Kiddi Beikon' B. Kristmundsson: There's no music in this fucking piano.

    • Connections
      Featured in Niceland (Population. 1.000.002) (2004)

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Noi the Albino?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 9, 2003 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Iceland
      • Germany
      • United Kingdom
      • Denmark
    • Languages
      • Icelandic
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Noi the Albino
    • Filming locations
      • Bolungarvík, Iceland
    • Production companies
      • Zik Zak Kvikmyndir
      • Essential Filmproduktion GmbH
      • The Bureau
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €1,100,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $60,555
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $4,808
      • Mar 21, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,342,010
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 22m(82 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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