Tveir á báti

Tveir á báti (English: lit. Two on a Boat, play of words lost in translation) is an Icelandic television series that first aired on Icelandic public television channel Sjónvarpið in December 1992. The series is a part of Jóladagatal Sjónvarpsins, an ongoing series of televised Advent calendars. It was written by Kristín Atladóttir, an assistant producer at Sjónvarpið at the time.[1]

Tveir á báti
Séra Jón and the Polar Bear in a promotional photo for the series
GenreLive-action children's miniseries
Advent calendar
Created byKristín Atladóttir
Directed byÁgúst Guðmundsson
StarringGísli Halldórsson
Kjartan Bjargmundsson
Country of originIceland
Original language(s)Icelandic
No. of episodes24
Release
Original networkSjónvarpið
Original release1 December 
24 December 1992 (1992-12-24)
Chronology
Preceded byStjörnustrákur (1991)
Followed byJól á leið til jarðar (1994) (next original production)

The show follows Séra Jón, played by Gísli Halldórsson, who gets stranded in the middle of the ocean in early December after his boat runs out of fuel, and his encounters with an anthropomorphic polar bear, played by Kjartan Bjargmundsson. Among other players is Steinn Ármann Magnússon.

Tveir á báti was rerun on Sjónvarpið in December 2000.

A physical advent calendar containing leads to each episode's plot was published in conjunction with the initial airing of the series.[2]

Premise

Séra Jón is a composer, bell-ringer and seaman from the small village of Stóra-litlu-Bugðuvík. Every Sunday and every major holiday, Séra Jón rings the church bell to call the villagers to church. He also goes to sea every morning on his small fishing boat. One day in early December, Séra Jón is very sleep-deprived from composing a new Christmas carol which he plans to play on the church bells on Christmas Eve. Séra Jón takes a nap as the boat sails out to sea, but oversleeps. When he wakes up, the boat is out of fuel in the middle of the ocean, with no land in sight. Séra Jón needs to find a way to get back home before Christmas so that he can ring the bell on Christmas.[3]

gollark: And it's always easy to hear ringing phones when you're falling from a building rapidly.
gollark: It's not like automated telephone systems exist or anything.
gollark: Of course.
gollark: Which is probably the case, because the world is complicated and these are underdetermined.
gollark: I assume you're going to say that actually no, it's something else.

References

  1. "Ekki upphafið að rithöfundaferli [sic]". Morgunblaðið. 10 December 1992. Retrieved 18 Feb 2011.
  2. "Jóladagatalið". Dagblaðið Vísir - DV. 26 November 1992. Retrieved 18 Feb 2011.
  3. "Tveir á báti". Dagur. 1 December 1992. Retrieved 18 Feb 2011.
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