Gullfjellet (Gold Mountain) is a Norwegian film from 1941 based on Guldfjeldet, a comedy by Ove Ansteinsson about farmers tempted to invest all their money in a gold bonanza. The film was directed by Rasmus Breistein and Titus Vibe-Müller.[1][2]

Gullfjellet
Directed byRasmus Breistein
Titus Vibe-Müller
Written byRasmus Breistein
Based onOve Ansteinsson's comedy Guldfjeldet
Produced byTitus Vibe-Müller
StarringKarl Holter
Tove Bryn
Eva Sletto
Ragnhild Hald
Jens Gunderssen
Martin Gisti
Toralf Sandø
Ottar Wicklund
Øistein Børke
Bjarne Bø
CinematographyKåre Bergstrøm
Ulf Greber
Per G. Jonson
Edited byTitus Vibe-Müller
Music byAdolf Kristoffer Nielsen
Distributed byNorsk Film A/S
Release date
  • April 14, 1941 (1941-04-14)
Running time
92 minutes
CountryNorway
LanguageNorwegian

Plot edit

The city boy Rolf Rønne arrives at Benningstad, a large farm in Hedemark, and gets to work. He meets Jørgen Krullerstugun and lies that he has found gold at Kråkberget, which is on Hans Benningstad's property. Jørgen makes his own investigations at Kråkberget and finds mica and mistakes it for gold. At night, he brings home large quantities of the stone and fills his living room and bedrooms. As rumors spread, purchasing bids start pouring in. The landowner does not want to sell, but he gives up when the gold find is announced in the newspapers. The bank manager and lawyer want to form a company with the village. Hans Benningstad becomes the director general and is now living the good life. Gold fever spreads, and several farmers sell their farms to buy gold mining shares. The village celebrates while the grain rots. Karl Kanten goes to Oslo to sell the gold to the bank, but he is told that it is only gray stone. The news shatters the celebratory mood at Benningstad when he returns the next day. The bank has to foreclose, and several farmers go bankrupt. Eventually, the farmers have to start farming again.

Reception edit

Aftenposten wrote that the film had many bright spots, but that the script was too weak. "There are many good things in Gullfjellet; the lines often contradict each other as they may in an active film, the camera moves too quickly, and in many places one has the feeling that the will to make a fresh film was present more than in others. But they were too indulgent toward the screenplay writer and did not cut enough ...."[3]

Cast edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lloyd, Ann; Robinson, David (1986). The Illustrated History of the Cinema. New York: Macmillan. p. 278.
  2. ^ "Gullfjellet". Norsk filmografi. National Library of Norway. Retrieved August 10, 2019.
  3. ^ Aftenposten, April 15, 1941, p. 10.

External links edit