Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-19 of 19
- Reportage from the rock festival in Holmenkollen, Oslo, Norway, on June 16, 1974, featuring Procol Harum and The Sensational Alex Harvey Band. "Ragnarock" was the name of a series of rock festivals that were held in Oslo in the early 1970s. The first two were held in Holmenkollen on 17 June 1973 and 15 June - 16 June 1974, while the third took place at Ullevaal Stadion on 29 June 1975. The idea of the Ragnarock festival originated by Centralfilm AS in Oslo, which at the beginning of 1973 wanted to celebrate its 20th anniversary. When the concert film of Woodstock turned out to be a box office success, it led to the idea of creating a rock festival to produce a corresponding concert film.
- In a traveling specially built video booth, ordinary Ukrainians get to tell in their own words how their lives changed when Russia attacked Ukraine. The box travels around during a year of war. Anyone who wants to can go in and speak freely, without questions being asked. The many testimonies collected from mothers, women, children and the elderly provide a unique insight into everyday life with the war.
- After a short story by Roald Dahl (Original title: Mrs. Bixby and the Colonel's Coat) A high comedy about a dental family with an office on the best western edge, where the lady of the house is mixed up in a delicate intrigue in her efforts to get a new fur. This is the eternal bourgeoisie the author wants for life in the story of Mrs. Biksby, here Norwegianized to the location behind Slottsparken in Oslo.
- The first weekend of Advent, NRK (Norwegian government-owned radio and television public broadcasting company) airs an exceptional choir marathon in Norway. All 899 hymns in the new hymnal are to be sung from cover to cover, minute by minute. Choirs from all over the country are invited to join. We can expect 60 hours of live TV from Vår Frue Kirke (church) in Trondheim and other places across the country.
- This installment in Norway's "Slow TV" phenomenon features footage of salmon fishing on the Gaula River on the opening day of the season.
- At the age of 17 Jeanne d'Arc stood at the head of France's army in the battle against the English in Orléans during the Hundred Years' War. Despite her great courage and efforts, which for a period made the French army invincible, she was constantly distrusted, both by her own countrymen and the English - and most of all by the church.
- A portrait of the doll maker Sissel Bjørstad Skille in Trondheim. With her own hands - and scissors, knitting needles and buttons as tools - she makes dolls, which have become famous far beyond Norway's borders. In 1993 she began a collaboration with an American doll manufacturer, Georgetown Collection Inc. She designed, modeled and dressed up dolls, which the company then reproduced in porcelain for the American collector market.
- "All of Norway's Sissel" - At the age of 16, Sissel Kyrkjebø was invited to perform as the interval act at the 1986 Eurovision Song Contest in her hometown of Bergen, Norway. The first album, "Sissel", was released the same year, and made her a national star overnight, winning her "Artist of the Year" at the Norwegian Grammy Awards, Spellemannprisen.
- The Nahua Tribe in Peru lived completely isolated from the outside world in the shelter of rainforest. In 1984 they were forced into contact with loggers, which caused half of the tribe to die due to diseases the invaders brought with them.
- A special ordered performance act by the Norwegian Television Theatre about longing and love with two singers and ten dancers.
- About 50 of the leading scientists in Norway lectured for 24 hours straight from Rikssalen in Eidsvollbygningen (the hall where the Norwegian Constitution was created). The marathon transmission (divided in 16 parts) started at NRK2 at 6 p.m. on Friday, May 9, and ended Saturday, May 10, at 6 p.m. 699 000 Norwegian viewers stopped by the program.
- The story of a young law student, Emil Paulsen, who meets an unknown person who intervenes in his life in a somewhat special way. It turns out that he also means something to his mother, his girlfriend - and his wife. In the most bizarre ways, we humans can mean something in each other's lives.
- Moving from a house brings about an emergence of memories. Throughout his life, father has collected things that all have a story. His new apartment only has room for a fraction of his things. What will he take with him into the last chapter of his life? How will he find his way to the last stop?
- Depicts a group of peace activists who map out secret military installations in Norway. At the base at Andøya, they discover an underwater submarine listening facility for submarines, a so-called SOSUS station, camouflaged and kept secret by the Norwegian Armed Forces. The persons were tried and convicted of espionage. They were later acquitted by the Supreme Court.
- It is based upon a trilogy of books that are seen as one of the greatest women portraits in world litterature. Alberte Selmer is in Paris. She dreams of becoming an artist, but currently works as a model. Together with her friend Liesel, she meets artist friends in Paris' cafes.
- About transvestites in Norway. Some men occasionally have to be women. What does one think man who is willing to spend time and effort on make-up, wigs and expensive clothes and live with the fear of being "exposed"? And what is it like to be married with a transvestite?
- Håkon Haga from Hamar ended up early in drug addiction and crime. Now, at the age of 55, he is starting to get his life in order and puts a lot of energy into his music. And since he has been diagnosed with ADHD, he has also received a possible explanation for why things went the way they did for him.
- Ruphus was a progressive rock band from Oslo, formed in 1970 and disbanded in 1981. Ruphus was one of the flagships of Norwegian rock in the 70s. The band achieved great recognition in several European countries, and were more popular in West Germany than they ever were at home in Norway. Over the course of his career, Ruphus evolved from playing hard, progressive rock to becoming a leader in jazz rock.
- 1970–TV EpisodeAbout conditions for young people and students in Oslo, Harlem in New York, and in Copenhagen. We meet the Voices of East Harlem in the streets and on stage. In Copenhagen squatters are creating new ways of collective living to make ends meet.