#Nicolas bro
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
glennk56 · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Danish chub actor Nicolas Bro in 2020s Danish Film Riders of Justice, available on Hulu right now with subtitles
113 notes · View notes
fourorfivemovements · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Films Watched in 2023:
26.  Mænd & høns/Men and Chicken (2015) - Dir. Anders Thomas Jensen
21 notes · View notes
ad-j · 1 year ago
Text
WATCHLIST 2023: Riders of Justice
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
6 notes · View notes
letterboxd-loggd · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Riders of Justice (Retfærdighedens ryttere) (2020) Anders Thomas Jensen
February 6th 2023
2 notes · View notes
movienized-com · 7 months ago
Text
Mr. Freeman
Mr. Freeman (2023) #MadsMatthiesen #LinaLundJørgensen #DaoudaKeita #MiaLyhne #NicolasBro #KianLawsonKhalili Mehr auf:
Jahr: 2023 Genre: Drama Regie: Mads Matthiesen Hauptrollen: Lina Lund Jørgensen, Daouda Keita, Mia Lyhne, Nicolas Bro, Kian Lawson-Khalili, Caspar Phillipson, Liva Vesterlund, Justin Geertsen, Sylvester Byder, Thalita Beltrão Sørensen, Lasse Øhrstrøm, Emma Steenbjerg-Helmark, Alice Finn Caspersen, Line Frank Karlson … Filmbeschreibung: Die Teenagerin Simon tut alles, um den jungen Mann…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
cinemacentral666 · 1 year ago
Text
The Kingdom (1994, 1997) & The Kingdom: Exodus (2022)
Tumblr media
"Movie" #1,133 • Ranking Lars Von Trier #5
There are so many inexplicable twists and turns and forced cliffhangers in the last fifteen minutes of what remains the series finale, the eighth and final episode of The Kingdom, that you might forget how smooth and cohesive the otherwise bonkers story came together in totality. Clocking in at nearly ten hours, Lars von Trier's "Twin Peaks in a hospital," shot and released on Danish TV in the mid 90s in two 4-episode seasons (1994 & 1997), is a hard-to-find gem that deserves far more attention if not recognition for being just about the weirdest fucking thing I've ever seen released on a mainstream platform (if we can call Danish TV a "mainstream platform").
I was perhaps most impressed by LVT's ability to juggle upwards of a dozen different storylines which seamlessly crossed and merged when they needed to. I feel some unease with how it ended given this segment of an interview I recently watched on YouTube with a slightly demented-seeming if not sickly Trier. Is he really going on about how not having an ending is a problem? Did he ever even watch this? Does he have any recollection making it? But for the love of god, this man can't help but being an insane and inscrutable maniac for one minute; so, he can get away with it. Few can.
Saying one thing when you mean another is a trick, which is not unlike the whole of LVT's filmography. On one hand, this is among his most accessible works: a procedural genre drama. And on the other, it's a thing where Udo Kier plays the double role of Demon from Hell and a baby born with a normal adult-sized head whose body grows exponentially gigantic by the day until he's like seventeen-feet long screaming for his mother to kill him, which–SPOILERS!–she does.
I will hold off from saying more at this juncture as, apparently, there might be a third and final season on the way, à la another famously long-dormant television franchise from a luminary auteur. But this being Lars von Trier, who the hell knows.
THREE YEARS LATER…
"With this being Lars von Trier, who the hell knows" was an appropriate way to end my initial review of The Kingdom for the S.O.B. went ahead and did it: he finished his small screen masterpiece and gave it an ending for the ages. Having just completed the long-awaited Season 3 here in 2023, with future von Trier projects somewhat up in the air after his recent Parkinson's diagnosis (he says he will continue making movies for as long as he can, and I hope he does, but who knows), I can say that if that is indeed his final project, it's certainly a worthy one to go out on.
To get this out of the way (as anyone writing about The Kingdom: Exodus is legally required to mention within the first two paragraphs): the comparisons to Twin Peaks: The Return are as unavoidable as they are perfectly and eerily apt. LVT was getting compared to Lynch well before he decided to complete his own visionary TV show 25 years later as well. But, while the initial inspiration for The Kingdom had to have been spurred by the groundbreaking Twin Peaks, his conclusion and how he went about it is vastly different. Both are phenomenal, in my opinion, but where Lynch departed from the original framework and story to the nth degree, von Trier's return is firmly grounded in the tone and aesthetic of the original run. Outside of a very meta beginning and ending, Exodus feels like a natural continuation of the story, in the same location with the same sepia-drenched sheen. There's no excursions to the purple ocean world or Buckhorn, South Dakota here.
Not to say he doesn't get weird or try different things within this original landscape, because he does so IN SPADES. It's a thrilling, hilarious and endlessly wild ride in five one-hour installments. The biggest hurdle (and main reason the final season was shelved for so long) were the deaths of several notable actors in prominent roles. He handles this with nuance and boundless creativity. It never feels like an homage because it's so rich, fresh and new. Ernst-Hugo Järegård's Dane-hating Helmer is replaced by his son (as Helmer Jr., comically nicknamed "Halfmer" by the Swede-roasting staff); Jens Okking as Bulder is simply exchanged for a look-alike (Nicolas Bro); and Sigrid Drusse (Kirsten Rolffes), the truth-seeking heart of the show is swapped out for a new lead, a similarly aged Karen (Bodil Jørgensen), who begins the action in the non-sepia "real world" watching the original two-season run of The Kingdom on DVD; and Udo Kier… well, please just watch it to see what they do with Udo Kier.
The meta narrative is fascinating, as everyone in Copenhagen's Rigshospitalet is well aware of the madman Lars von Trier and his awful, fucked up TV series. LVT's own credit-roll commentary also returns (although he speaks behind a red curtain now out of vanity; only his jittering shoes are visible), as does a new Greek chorus of male and female dishwashers: gone are the actors with Down syndrome, replaced by a robot (who's constantly breaking dishes) and a man with a different, and a more severe genetic disorder. As is often the case, many of these choices range from squeamish to deliriously comedic, often simultaneously, but when — MAJOR SPOILER — von Trier himself arrives in a helicopter in the role of none other than Satan, how can you not smile?
If I had known going in that some of the threads in Exodus were going to touch on culture wars stuff, I would have said, "Oh no." But everything is handled with such ease — from #MeToo to Nazism! — and, more importantly, humor. This shouldn't work on paper, but it does.
I watched this on the heels of the Nymphomaniac Director's Cut and came away with a similar take: that LVT is really great at longer form storytelling. Some of his very best work is also the longest, and I don't think that's an accident. He's always tried to distill BIG IDEAS into thoughtful if not nihilistic and absurdist scenarios (Willem Dafoe plays one of the devil's minions who's also an owl), but even when the action makes you want to scream or walk into traffic, there's a cleverness at play which brings it full circle. The shift from the neurological to the cardiological departments (via Birgitte Raaberg's character) is such a lovely and simple notion. The head vs. the heart. You can make a big complicated thing with boundless metaphors, but what does it matter if you don't feel anything? The idea that this is all just a mad artist's foolish creation seems to be the ultimate point and that is a fitting send-off for von Trier in a way, I think. It's cheap on the one hand (it's supposed to be), but also a perfect example/explanation of art as entertainment and/or vice versa. Exodus — yes, like The Return — is as standalone fascinating as it is successful; honoring, but more importantly elevating the original series in the most magical ways.
SCORE: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
0 notes
sunrisemill · 21 days ago
Text
The voice cracks are crazyy 😭
395 notes · View notes
fromthestacks · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
Riders of Justice
1 note · View note
blackvoidspace · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Lord and Lady Whistledown
474 notes · View notes
fratbrochrisgf · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
BAE LOOKIN MAD FINE HE NEEDS TO COME HOME RN
186 notes · View notes
glennk56 · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Nicolas Bro in the 2010s. He is a chub Danish actor known for playing the Flea, nemesis of Antboy, in the Danish films Antboy, Antboy 2 & Antboy 3 (available on Freevee). He also appeared in Men & Chicken (available on Freevee) and Small Town Killers. (available on AMC+).
53 notes · View notes
slutformatthewsturniolo · 26 days ago
Text
Oh i REALLY want it Matt😊😊😊
118 notes · View notes
unknvhx · 12 days ago
Text
rapper!chris?????!!!!!
i cant stop watching clips of them rapping
106 notes · View notes
redz0nez9 · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
His frat boy era.
282 notes · View notes
howbrightthemoon · 6 months ago
Text
corporate needs you to find the difference between
This scene
Tumblr media
And this scene
Tumblr media
.
.
.
.
seriously what in the avengers assemble was this moment LOL
.
.
*extra*
Tumblr media
Penelope....girl, me too
128 notes · View notes
ayamos · 8 months ago
Text
Pics from today's rewatch
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
116 notes · View notes