Felix (1921 film)

Felix is a Norwegian silent drama film from 1921.[1]

Felix
Directed byRasmus Breistein
Produced byEdgar Bekkevold
Written byGunnar Nilsen-Vig
Gustav Aagaard
Based onKeiser Felix, by Gustav Aagaard
StarringAagot Børseth
Julian Strøm
Edvard Drabløs
Lars Tvinde
Guri Stormoen
Aasta Nielsen
Nils Hald
Marie Flagstad
Eugen Skjønberg
Henny Skjønberg
Music byAdolf Kristoffer Nielsen
CinematographyGunnar Nilsen-Vig
Edited byGunnar Nilsen-Vig
Distributed byKommunenes Filmcentral
Release date
  • 1921 (1921)
Running time
62 minutes
CountryNorway
LanguageNorwegian

The film is based on the story Keiser Felix by Gustav Aagaard.[1] It was adapted into a screenplay by Gunnar Nilsen-Vig, who was also the film's cinematographer. Rasmus Breistein directed the film,[2] and it was distributed by Kommunenes Filmcentral.

Plot

As autumn storms are blowing in over the island of Fagerøy, the priest's wife Else Margrete and her child die in childbirth. During the storm, a ship is also wrecked off the island, and the only survivor is a three-month-old boy. The maritime pilot Abraham takes the child to the rectory, and the young priest accepts the boy as a gift from heaven for the child he has lost. The boy is baptized Felix and grows up with the priest's daughter Signe. Abraham's son Thorleif is the children's best friend and playmate.

The years go by, and the children are confirmed. Signe has become a beautiful woman and Thorleif is in love with her. Felix also has feelings for her, but he lives in a dream world where Signe is his princess. When Signe tells Thorleif that she also has affections for him, Felix goes to sea to forget her. In Antwerp, he becomes seriously ill and lies waiting for death. He asks the priest at the Norwegian Church Abroad to write a letter to Signe. However, Felix recovers and goes home.

In the waters outside Fagerøy, a steamboat is surprised by a storm. On board the boat is Thorleif. Felix and the pilot Abraham go out with the pilot boat to try to rescue the steamer, but it sinks. Felix plunges into the water to rescue Thorleif and keeps him afloat while Abraham takes them aboard the boat. However, Felix dies from the effort, and Thorleif is taken home and is united with Signe.

Cast

gollark: Meanwhile, my bunker- has a forcefield entirely protecting it- has no hidden cable ducts or places to hide- ... probably can be teleported into, I haven't made any defense against that- does not really have one ultra-vulnerable point- can craft many components of itself
gollark: - There are invulnerable forcefields on some bits, but you can just dig around them- There are endless hidden cable ducts and Contingency Theta tunnels in it, so people can sneak through- You can teleport in basically everywhere- If someone gets into the control room with its unlabelled button panel, they can deploy lava, disable the generators, enable forcefields and whatnot, and there's no password or anything- There's no equipment in it which lets it replace damaged bits
gollark: Er, still is.
gollark: Anyway, the long and short of it is that your bunker was really ineffective as a bunker.
gollark: Oh, and the PotatOS for OpenComputers installation on the main computer makes it more weird-mess-ish.

References

  1. "Rasmus Breistein - Felix (1921)". Stumfilm. Retrieved July 11, 2019.
  2. Steenstrup, Bjørn; et al. (1973). Hvem er hvem?. Oslo: H. Aschehoug & Company. p. 77.
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