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- Lovers Marianne and Jean-Paul spend their vacation in a villa on the French Riviera near St-Tropez. Marianne invites her former lover, Harry, and his teenage daughter, Penelope, to stay. Tension rises between them, especially when Jean-Paul seduces Penelope.
- A devout Catholic man's rigid principles are challenged during a one-night stay with Maud, a divorced woman with an outsize personality.
- Thor's father drinks, and Thor escapes to the woods and refuses to come home before he quits drinking. Lucky for Thor he has a lot of friends who help him.
- On 26 November 1942, 529 Jewish people were sent by ship from Oslo. Now, 80 years later, some of the people who grew up during the war tells us about what really happened to the Jews in the streets.
- The Norwegian fans of Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings-trilogy have received much coverage in the international press. For the first film, more than 400 people spent a week outside the biggest theatre in Norway, in order to get tickets for the worldpremiere of the first film. A year later, the distributor in Scandinavia created a Middle-Earth inspired themepark in the capital of Oslo, and more than 800 fans came to live in this community prior to the ticketsales for the premiere. The documentary "Ringens Disipler" ("Diciples of the Ring")follows these fans, as they once again bring their tents to the pavements outside the theatre in the wintery cold of Norway. In costumes, tents and camps inspired by the trilogy, they start the three weeks wait for the tickets to the world premiere of "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King". As we follow their days and nights in the tents, we learn that there is much more to the fans' interest than the obvious fake ears.
- Hans Thomas Waaler has lost his big love: Liv Aud Waaler. He tells us about his life with Liv, from the time of youth when there was love at first sight, and over to the time when Liv suffered from Alzheimer. According to him, love has always a great price: Sorrow. This is his story.
- Oslo Municipality has many child welfare works, including orphanages, a tuberculosis home in Åkebergveien, Fagerholm, Breidablikk, and holiday colonies at Slagen by Åsgårdstrand.
- Here, on a continuous basis, the city's sculptures are displayed, while a narrator tells us everything we need to know about it.
- We are getting a glimpse of theater, opera, cinema, concerts and art collections, in a film that encouraged Oslo citizens to participate actively in the Culture Week of 1966 (16-23 September).
- In Norway, we have approximately 25,000 dogs. If the dog owner is to be offered satisfactory opportunities for his/her dog keeping, it is necessary that the individual with the dog settles in his/her environment and bears responsibility for his surroundings. The film focuses on the issue of the dog owners' responsibility.
- Santa Claus arrives in front of a small group of four children.
- The forest areas of Vestmarka and Krokskogen lie outside Oslo. In the 19th century, storyteller Peter Christen Asbjørnsen walked in the areas. The story of the area is being told, and the life in the "fairytale forest" of the 1950s, with forestry and outdoor life, is being shown.
- Bygdøy is the Peninsula in Oslo that has always been a place of residence for kings and clergy people. Now it has become a recreation area for Oslo's inhabitants, with museums, restaurants, beaches, and many other leisure and entertainment opportunities.
- Oslo was a small town idyll, until it became a modern and busy metropolitan city in early 1950s. Many pictures from the old and new Oslo Center are shown.
- Water is very important for Oslo, both for business and private individuals. Where the water comes from, and what happens to it, are shown in this film. Both the city's water supply and sewage system are presented as well.
- Jordal Amfi was an indoor ice hockey stadium that was built in Oslo, to host the 1952 Winter Olympics. This film shows how the arena was being prepared, to it was finished and opened in 1951 for said Olympics.
- The ancient suburbs around the city of Christian IV, which today are a part of the inner city core, are being reviewed in the film. Unique photos of urban environments and old buildings that are now demolished are being shown.
- Every day, fresh foods are transported to Oslo for nearly 500,000 hungry people. They are distributed in fish halls, slaughterhouses, dairies and squares, on their way to the consumers.
- Oslo' cemeteries are being presented, from the oldest that is kept in Ruinparken in the Old Town, to Our Savior's graveyard and many other burial mounds in the city center and outskirts of the city. Tombs of famous people from the history of the city and the nation are also shown.
- In Oslo, traffic accidents have increased sharply, and pedestrians' behavior are the cause of many of these accidents. Both the Traffic Police and Oslo Kinematografer have made this film to convince their audience to be more aware of the traffic, so the number of accidents could be reduced.
- A new hotel has been build in Oslo, and lies in the middle of the city like an adventure castle.
- The Oslo Municipality had many holiday colonies at Slagen, Hudøy and many other places, where children from the city could vacate in the summer. Tuberculosis-infested children did go to Dal that had an own holiday colony. Some children were also sent for holiday stays on farms. Every summer, over 5,000 children received a stay at municipal or private holiday colonies.
- Ekely was painter Edvard Munch's property in Oslo, where the Oslo municipality established a colony for artists. Norwegian artists, such as sculptor Hilt, are seen at work.
- Nordmarka is described in a poetic way.
- Youth opportunities in Oslo can be many, from dream to reality, from sports to outdoor activities. According to those in charge, Oslo is not a boring city.
- The University of Oslo celebrates its 150th anniversary. The film shows us archive materials from 1905, and during the wartime. The background history and the present time of the university, as well as its future plans, are revealed.
- How Oslo was from approximately 1840 when the city was called Christiania, to the present time, all told with pictures from the time.
- How do disabled people on wheelchairs arrive in places in Oslo? What obstacles do they encounter, and what can be done to correct some of these?
- The film lets us take a look at the flower exhibition in Frogner Park in the summer of 1965, and gives us good tips for gardeners and others who love flowers.
- Many businesses of Oslo's municipality have been rationalized and streamlined, including: Hospitals, renovation, water supply, office engineering, transport, forestry, harbor servicing, lighting and building control.
- An educational film that shows you how to, and how not to, behave in traffic. And a dramatic bypass that ends very badly.
- Gustav Vigeland was a sculptor, whose sculptures can be seen in the Vigeland Museum, in Frogner Park, and many other places in Oslo and Norway.
- Oslo has a lot of winter activities to offer, from skiing and cabins to the urban nightlife in the city.
- A look on many decorations in various public buildings in Oslo. These decorations have been made by famous artists in Norway, including Alf Rolfsen, Per Krohg, Edvard Munch, and many more.
- The traffic security is higher in the dark, with reflex.
- Education film on how to behave in pedestrian crossings.
- Many people in a large city like Oslo have their dreams of having their own cars realized, but for what, and for what price? But it can also be a social problem. It doesn't help since a large city like this requires more space for cars.
- Here's a reflection of the development of skiing through the last 100 years, illustrated through the history of Holmenkollbakken. Using old and modern materials, the film shows us historical moments in the Norwegian world of ski jumping, as well as modernization and renovation in the ground prior to the World Cup 1982.
- The Student Union's free education was linked to the University of Oslo, and was an important public education institution in the 1950s. In 1956, it had 17,000 students, and courses that tended from tin working to psychology.
- The traffic manager reminds you that illegal parking can cost you 300 NOK plus loss.
- An educational film that deals with how you should behave in the traffic with motorbikes, with appeal to the youth. In this film, some friends are picking up their girlfriends with their bikes, and drive in high speed. This doesn't end good.
- Debate on the regulation of the Karl Johan quarter. Produced in December 1969, this film was made in connection with the current debate about the Karl Johan quarter's future destiny. Interviews with interested parties, as well as discussion.
- King Olav unveils the King Haakon statue. The film follows how Nils Aas' elegant monument of King Haakon VII was created, from the studio at Ekely, to its place on the pedestal where it stands and shines.
- Kunstnernes Hus (The Art House) celebrates its 50th anniversary, and we are getting a quick story about the creation and the idea behind it, from the end of the last century until the opening of 1930.
- Oslo Sentrum as it looked like in the 1950s.