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  1. Nordisk Tonefilm (Danish for 'Nordic sound film') was a Swedish film production company founded in 1930 as a subsidiary of the Danish film production company Nordisk Film Kompagni. The company's most famous film was One Summer of Happiness (1951).

  2. It was co-produced by Nordisk Tonefilm International AB and Gorky Film Studio with assistance from the Swedish Film Institute, Norway Film Development, and Sovinfilm. Its budget was about fifty million Swedish kronor, making it the most expensive film adaptation of an Astrid Lindgren book during her lifetime.

  3. www.astridlindgren.com › gb › mio-min-mio-swedish-910027Mio, min Mio - Astrid Lindgren

    According to Nordisk Tonefilm, the costs were due to the expensive special effects (approx. SEK 15 million), but the filming's move between Stockholm, Moscow, Crimea, London and Scotland probably also pushed the budget up considerably.Right from the beginning, it was decided that the director would be from the Soviet Union, and at the end of ...

  4. View full company info for Nordisk Tonefilm International. 1. Mio in the Land of Faraway (1987) PG | 99 min | Adventure, Family, Fantasy. 6.3. Rate this. A lonely boy who is transferred from his dull life with his adoptive parents to the land where his real father is the King.

  5. Nov 8, 2022 · Cultpix already has 20 films from Nordisk Tonefilm on the site and available for streaming. We just had the chance to digitize 35 more films, which will be coming up in different theme weeks. Most of these films do not have English subtitles, but we are working on fixing that too.

  6. According to Nordisk Tonefilm the costs were due to the expensive special effects (15 million SEK), but moving locations between Stockholm, Moscow, Crimea, London and Scotland probably also contributed to the budget increasing drastically.From the start it was already decided that the director would come from the Soviet Union, and at the end of ...

  7. One Summer of Happiness ( Swedish: Hon dansade en sommar – She danced for a summer) is a 1951 Swedish film by director Arne Mattsson, based on the 1949 novel Sommardansen ( The Summer Dance) by Per Olof Ekström. It was the first Swedish film to win the Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival.