Tomas Evjen

Tomas Evjen (10 October 1972 – 11 September 2012) was a Norwegian editor, media personality and film producer.[1]

Biography

He appeared in Radio Saltdal when he was 12 years old and later worked as a journalist in Nordlandsposten. In 1996, he became editor and general manager of Saltenposten until 2000. He also worked as a reporter for Se og Hør. In 2001, he founded his own media and film company "News On Request AS" in Saltdal which he later moved to Bodø. The company won the Sparebanken Nord-Norges industry award in 2005. He also became the general manager of Mediegården in Bodø.

He produced a number of films and shorts including Dead Snow in 2009 and the documentary Pappa kom hem in 2010. At the time of his death, he was producing a film with Norwegian director Nils Gaup about the miners' rebellion in Sulis.[2] Dead Snow was nominated for Amanda award becoming a best-selling Norwegian films abroad.

Death

He died on 11 September 2012 and his body was discovered in the Mediegården in Bodø.[2]

Filmography

Director

  • 2009: Near the Mountains

Producer

  • 2009: Dead Snow
  • 2010: Pappa kom hem (documentary)
Shorts
  • 2007: Burgled
  • 2007: Fluen
  • 2009: Near the Mountains (co-producer)
  • 2011: Skallamann (producer / executive producer)
  • 2011: I enden av tauet (executive producer)

Cinematographer

  • 2002: Montagna con forza
  • 2009: Near the Mountains (short)
  • 2010: Pappa kom hem (documentary)
  • 2011: I enden av tauet (short)
gollark: =tex \int_0^5 x^2 dx
gollark: We have MathBot.
gollark: Yes, inasmuch as far as I know you need various more advanced calculus things to do much of that, as well as large quantities of other maths you don't appear to know.
gollark: One basic use is that you can calculate the rate of change of things, because that's basically what the derivative is. For example, velocity is rate of change of displacement, so you can go from displacement to velocity (to acceleration, which is rate of change of velocity, and so on), or integrate to go the other way.
gollark: Having vaguely looked at how they work, I don't think you can do that unless you know the frequency of sound in question.

References

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