Jomfru Trofast

Jomfru Trofast
Directed by Rasmus Breistein
Produced by Edgar Bekkevold
Written by Vilhelm Krag
Rasmus Breistein
Based on Jomfru Trofast: folkekomedie i 4 akter, by Vilhelm Krag
Starring Edvard Drabløs
Aasta Nielsen
Henrik Børseth
Henny Skjønberg
Lars Tvinde
Eugen Skjønberg
Music by Adolf Kristoffer Nielsen
Cinematography Gunnar Nilsen-Vig
Edited by Gunnar Nilsen-Vig
Distributed by Kommunenes Filmcentral
Release dates
  • 1921 (1921)
Running time
87 minutes
Country Norway
Language Norwegian

Jomfru Trofast (Miss Faithful) is a Norwegian film from 1921[1][2] based on a folk play with a script by Vilhelm Krag.[3][4] The film is a story from Southern Norway and was directed by Rasmus Breistein.[1][4] The sets were designed by Egil Sætren. The film is fully preserved, and it has been restored and digitized.[2]

Plot

Tone, who lives with her uncle Albertus, is in love with the Tellef, a poor sailor. Albertus sends Tellef to sea to prevent the relationship from developing. Tone becomes upset and promises eternal faithfulness to Tellef, and she rejects every suitor that comes to her. Albertus sends a letter to Tellef, who is in Pensacola, Florida, and says that Tone is planning to marry the bailiff. Tellef leaves the ship he is working on and then the ship is wrecked, and so everyone assumes that he has died. Tone holds herself to her promise of fidelity and moves in with Tellef's mother. A few years later, Tellef meets a friend from home in Pensacola, and he tells Tellef that the ship sank, Tone is still unmarried, and Albertus lied to him. Tellef travels home immediately, arriving just in time to prevent a foreclosure on his mother's house, and he and Tone are reunited.

Cast

References

  1. 1 2 IMDb: Jomfru Trofast
  2. 1 2 Hansen, Svend Einar. 2010. Munken-premiere i reprise 89 år etter. Ostlands-Posten (October 18).
  3. Krag, Vilhelm. 1906. Jomfru Trofast: folkekomedie i 4 akter. Oslo: H. Aschehoug & Company.
  4. 1 2 Waldekranz, Rune. 1985. Filmens historia: de första hundra åren från zoopraxiscope till video, vol. 1: Pionjäråren 1880–1920. Stockholm: Norstedt, p. 551.

External links

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