22 July

22 July

  • Director: Paul Greengrass
  • Writer: Paul Greengrass,Åsne Seierstad
  • Countries of origin: Norway, Iceland, United States
  • Language: English, Norwegian
  • Release date: October 10, 2018
  • Sound mix: Dolby Digital
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85 : 1
  • Also known as: Norway
  • "22 July" is a feature film directed by Paul Greengrass , starring Anders Danielsen Lie, Jonas Strand Gurley, Jon Oyden and others, at the Venice Film Festival on September 5, 2018 show   .
    Based on Osna Siesta's novel "One of Us", the film tells the story of how criminals are tried and how survivors and victims' families try to rebuild their lives after the tragic terrorist attack in Norway on 22 July 2011. story.

    Details

    • Release date October 10, 2018
    • Filming locations Siglufjörður, Iceland
    • Production companies Scott Rudin Productions

    Box office

    Budget

    $20,000,000 (estimated)

    Movie reviews

     ( 44 ) Add reviews

    • By Marcellus 2022-03-31 09:01:09

      Watching the "7.22 bombing in Norway": Thankfully we banned guns, thankfully we still have the death penalty

      The film objectively shows how the gunman calmly made bombs, transported bombs, detonated bombs, and shot students. This series of processes. In this series of processes, the time allocated by the director is only a short ten minutes.

      In these ten minutes, the bomb shattered all the glass outside the government office building in Oslo and caused a fire. Eight people were killed and more than 200 injured in the bomb case. After the gunman detonated the bomb, he calmly got into a car...

    • By Aracely 2022-03-30 09:01:11

      The Crimea bombing is on the back! This movie is more like a late

      At noon on the 17th local time, an explosion and shooting occurred at the Kerch Institute of Technology in eastern Crimea, killing 19 people and injuring 50. The murderer is a student of the school. He always carries a knife with him when he travels, but he has won a scholarship.

      Some survivors are right, seeing with their own eyes a friend was shot by him in front of...

    • By Garry 2022-03-30 09:01:11

      Pain may be the best catalyst for growth

      "July 22" Pain is perhaps the best catalyst for growth. Uter Island massacre, July 22, 2011 A terrorist attack in Oslo, Norway took a full 77 lives, the worst violent attack in Norway since the end of World War II . The whole film is concise, neat, calm, restrained, without too much elaboration. It only takes 30 minutes to present the entire attack process to the audience head-on. In the second half, it mainly expresses the physical and mental healing process of the victims and their...

    • By Maxine 2022-03-30 09:01:11

      A painful process of healing after the terror attack in a Nordic democracy

      British director Paul Greengrass still loves political expression, and of course, in this information-heavy work, he also infuses moral ethics, human nature and law, as well as insights on the current situation in Europe, especially the refugee issue. Before watching it, I thought that there would be a lot of bloody and cruel killing scenes on the screen, but the scene of the massacre only took up less than half an hour at the beginning of the film, and the expression was relatively...

    • By Abigayle 2022-03-30 09:01:11

      Pain may be the best catalyst for growth

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      "July 22" Pain is perhaps the best catalyst for growth. Uter Island massacre, July 22, 2011, a terrorist attack in Oslo, Norway took a full 77 lives, the worst violent attack in Norway since the end of World War II. The whole film is concise, neat, calm, restrained, without too much elaboration. It only takes 30 minutes to present the entire attack process to the audience head-on. In the second half, it...

    User comments

      ( 81 ) Add comments

    • By Johnny 2022-03-31 09:01:09

      The fragility of daily life, different forms of trauma, how to rebuild, how to deal with painful memories or instincts, vulnerability does not mean not brave, choose to...

    • By Noah 2022-03-31 09:01:09

      It really takes more than two hours of capacity. After drawing this circle, the ending is the prison cell facing the heaven and the earth. In fact, each has its own...

    • By Letha 2022-03-31 09:01:09

      Civilization only does not want to evaluate the contract of civilized...

    • By Janis 2022-03-31 09:01:09

      The scene of the shooting on the island was too heart-wrenching... The most terrifying thing is that the prisoner's face was calm and unwavering, and the director was very restrained, giving a sense of documentary as much as possible. This time the hand didn't shake to make people dizzy. Samsung and a...

    • By Keshaun 2022-03-31 09:01:09

      The victims are all descendants of high-level parliamentarians from the left and right, and they are of two species. The protagonist of the victim in the movie must have gone into politics. This movie is completely paving the...

    Evaluation action

    Working closely with editor William Goldenberg, Paul Greengrass gave 22 July a ruthless and ruthless quality; his insistence on seeking truth from facts also made reality invisible   . ("New York Times" review)
    The film is a sharp and transparent film about serious morality   . ("Daily Telegraph" review)
    The film is a movie about terrorist attacks, but it is not only responsible for describing a tragic disaster and the mutual support...
    more about 22 July Evaluation action

    Movie quotes

    • Lara: How are you feeling?

      Viljar: I'm okay. And you?

      Lara: Yeah. I'm fine. I was in the shower block when it started, so I managed to run and hide. But I got separated from my sister Bano. I'm sorry about Simon and Anders, too.

      Viljar: It's shit.

      Lara: How is the food here? Is it okay?

      Viljar: It's pretty shit, too. Actually, it's *really* shit.

      Lara: If you want, I can bring you something. Food, or anything.

      Viljar: No. No, I'm fine. I don't have much appetite.

      Lara: Do you want anything else? Cigarettes or...

      Viljar: That would have been nice.

      Lara: Okay.

      Viljar: ...Except I don't smoke.

      [they share a relieving laugh]

    • Judge Wenche Arntzen: Can you tell us what happened to you on Utøya, Viljar?

      Viljar: Yes.

      [has a flashback in his head]

      Viljar: He tried to... he tried to kill me. I remember... seeing him... and then running away... trying to find somewhere to hide, and protecting my little brother. I remember being shot. Five times. When I was lying on the beach, I was... all alone. In a kind of pain I couldn't imagine.

      Judge Wenche Arntzen: But now you are here.

      Viljar: But everything's different. I've had to relearn how to use my body. Learn how to walk again. How to feed myself again. I have little use of my left arm, and I'm... I'm blind on one eye. But that's, uh... that's a relief.

      Judge Wenche Arntzen: A relief. How do you mean?

      Viljar: [laughs shakily] A relief, in a way that at least now I don't have to look at him.

      [some of the people in the audience laugh briefly]

      Viljar: But of course it's not that simple. I... I have a fragment of his bullet lodged in my brain that could kill me at any time. And I don't look like the person I used to anymore, I... My body, it's... it's broken. And the worst is that he... he killed Anders and Simon, my best friends. Stopping them from making their mark on the world, and... and they would have made it a better place. And I... I miss them every day. I'm sorry, I... I didn't... I didn't want to cry. I so much didn't want to cry in front of him. I... I wanted to stay strong. Because I do this for them. So they will not be forgotten. And when you shot them and left me alone on the beach, I didn't know if I was living or dying. And I've been stuck there ever since. But now... I realize that I got a choice. Because I still have a family... and friends... and memories. Dreams. Hope. And love. And he doesn't. He's... completely alone. And he's going to rot there in prison, whereas I... I survived. And I choose to live.

    • Geir Lippestad: You can't call the Prime Minister. And Norway isn't on trial. You are.

      Anders Behring Breivik: Are you sure about that?