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IMDbPro

Hold-Up

Original title: NOKAS
  • 2010
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
5K
YOUR RATING
Hold-Up (2010)
True CrimeActionBiographyCrimeDramaThriller

The movie portrays Norway's most spectacular robbery, where 11 men occupied central Stavanger for twenty minutes and escaped with 57 million kroner (appx $10 million). A police officer was s... Read allThe movie portrays Norway's most spectacular robbery, where 11 men occupied central Stavanger for twenty minutes and escaped with 57 million kroner (appx $10 million). A police officer was shot and killed.The movie portrays Norway's most spectacular robbery, where 11 men occupied central Stavanger for twenty minutes and escaped with 57 million kroner (appx $10 million). A police officer was shot and killed.

  • Director
    • Erik Skjoldbjærg
  • Writer
    • Christopher Grøndahl
  • Stars
    • Marit Synnøve Berg
    • Frode Winther
    • Morten Larsen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Erik Skjoldbjærg
    • Writer
      • Christopher Grøndahl
    • Stars
      • Marit Synnøve Berg
      • Frode Winther
      • Morten Larsen
    • 23User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 4 nominations total

    Photos8

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    Top cast15

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    Marit Synnøve Berg
    Marit Synnøve Berg
    • Beate
    Frode Winther
    • Kjell Alrich Schumann
    • (as Frode Winther Gunnes)
    Morten Larsen
    • Arne Sigve Klungland
    Francis Gamble
    • Axel
    Tov Sletta
    • David Toska
    Geir Høiseth
    • Erling Havnå
    Jeton Jajovski
    • Jusuf Hani
    Hege Kristin Kjærvoll Sunde
    • Elin Rodevelt
    Thomas Berhane
    • Metkel Betew
    André Eriksen
    André Eriksen
    • Thomas Thendrup
    Morten Håland
    • Erik Håland
    Pål Christian Madsen Kvam
    • Man in street
    • (unconfirmed)
    Lirik Sahiti
    • Ikmet Kodzadziku
    David Toska
    • Self - Based on
    Thomas Bechmann
    • Syklist
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Erik Skjoldbjærg
    • Writer
      • Christopher Grøndahl
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.45K
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    Featured reviews

    8filipe-arte

    Not a master-piece but it's a very good a movie

    I just finished seeing this one I found it very worthy to have a look at it.

    The story is told in a different way Hollywood uses to do and a different view of a action movie is kind of rare.

    OK, the camera is kind of shaky almost all the time but I've said it before: when there is a reason for it for me it's OK. Here the tension is printed by this moving camera and also by the fast editing - without this two elements is kind of difficult to make the film moving or interesting.

    The camera closure to the actors shows an intimacy to the characters, we see their expressions constantly and without this it would be difficult because there is no so many dialogues or "shot/reverse-shot" kind of scenes, the action took all the time needed.

    The point of views are interesting but sometimes confusing even with the subtitles indicating the time, not a big problem to me.

    Nokas has a nice and interesting kind of storytelling that is unusually welcome - at least for me.
    9Janne_Mellgren

    Really good camera work

    Like you are an invisible spectator in all the situations. I felt "involved" from the 1st to the last scene. Not over dramatized.
    10ChojinZ

    Extremely detailed reenactment

    This movie will not necessarily disappoint, but probably surprise those expecting a traditional movie with a plot and character progression etc. Nokas has none of that. Instead this is an extremely detailed reenactment of the robbery, based on witness statements, security camera footage and interviews with police officers and even some of the robbers.

    The movie begins with the gang getting dressed and ready to go, and ends with them taking off with the money. Everything in between is basically the big heist scene from the movie Heat, Norwegian style, for 80 minutes.

    To understand why anyone would make a movie like this, you'd probably have to be Norwegian. And what I mean by that is that Norway is a very small country where bank robberies of any kind are very uncommon. Needless to say a robbery of this magnitude resulted in an absurd media circus which literally lasted for years. All the robbers became household names and some even got their own "super villain" nicknames, such as "The Shadow" and "The Master Brain". The general fascination only grew as the leader of the gang, while hiding from the police, supposedly ordered the armed robbery of the Munch Museum in Oslo where two of the world's most famous paintings, Scream and Madonna where stolen in order to force the police to shift focus.

    Anyway, the movie is great. And what makes it so is the authenticity and the fact that this is what really happened. Normally when movies are based on real events, we get the directors own interpretation of what "might" have happened, often an interpretation full of nonsense and "liberties with the truth" in order to make it work as a movie. But no, this is it. This is as close to a real robbery you'll ever get on the screen. Even small details such as certain gestures, which can be seen in the real security footage, have been carefully duplicated. This makes for an extremely tense ride which will surely keep anyone interested in heist movies on the edge of their seat all the way through.

    It's also quite chocking to see exactly how the police engaged the heavily armed robbers in a fierce firefight, in the middle of a town with hundreds of civilians in the area. How they continued to provoke the robbers even after hostages was taken, and finally how it all resulted in the death of a police officer. After watching the movie it seems as an even greater miracle that no one else got killed. Hopefully the Norwegian police have learned exactly why robbers carry heavy firearms. "The Master Brain" even explains it in the beginning of the movie when he says something like: "If the police shows up, just pad your weapons and show them we're the strongest. They won't engage". Well, they did. And it didn't end well.
    5Goettschwan

    A good film but not without problems

    While coherently depicting the original story of the 2004 robbery of this bank in Stavanger, Norway, I have to advise people that I have been motion sick for almost all the film. The camera is mostly behind an actors shoulder, with focus on the shoulder but in many scenes not on what it actually looks at. This, combined with a lot of hand-held filming, made me feel very sick from watching it. The otherwise very fluently and grippingly told story is lacking some overview shots, and as with so many films these days the camera is very very close to the actors, which in combination with the fast editing can lead to a certain disorientation. The ending scenes do benefit from the absence of all this, and rest burned into memory long after the film ends.
    6Finfrosk86

    Pretty good. Mostly interesting for Norwegians

    The NOKAS robbery was a huge thing here in Norway. It was historical, stuff like this very rarely happens in our rather big, but people-empty little strip of land. It was a real talker, on the news and in the newspapers for a long time.

    Anyhow, after the world controversy had died down and most of the crooks were in prison, the movie about it all came out.

    Now, this is not a bad movie. Considering it's Norwegian it is rather good. But it never crosses the line into real good territory.

    Most of the actors aren't big names, or really famous at all, and that works pretty good in something like this, as you don't want to be too attached to the actors. They do a decent job, too.

    It has some intense action, some cool shots, and it being true of course leave a little bit of an impact. But I do think it could have been a little more edgy, for it to come across as more dramatical. I don't know.

    It's alright.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The robber's got away with 57 million NOK (ca 9,8 million USD). Out of this, 51 million NOK (8,8 million USD) is still lost.
    • Quotes

      Erik Håland: The bank's there, the robbers over there, start shooting!

    • Connections
      References Heat (1995)

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Nokas?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 15, 2012 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Norway
    • Language
      • Norwegian
    • Also known as
      • Hold Up
    • Filming locations
      • Stavanger, Norway
    • Production companies
      • Alligator Film AS
      • Film Fund FUZZ
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,768,106
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 27m(87 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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