
Watch an audio slideshow of how traditional Icelandic rhubarb stew is made. Rhubarb is one of the few vegetables that grows effortlessly in Iceland and for that reason it used to be a highly-valued addition to the traditional diet of fish and lamb.
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New York’s Lincoln Center Film Society will showcase Icelandic films in the series “Images from the Edge: Classic and Contemporary Icelandic Cinema”, a nine-day festival running from April 18-26.
Films will include some Icelandic classics as well as recent films, which in many cases have been based on the work of Icelandic writers.
The country’s first two sound films, Between Mountain and Shore (Loftur Guðmundsson; 1949) and The Last Farm in the Valley (Ævar Kvaran; 1950), will be screened, as well as Friðrik Þór Friðriksson’s 1987 debut feature film, White Whales.
Also included in the festival are two films based on novels by Indriði G. Þorsteinsson (father of the popular thriller writer, Arnaldur Indriðason): The Girl Gogo (Erik Balling; 1962), an early feature film that was hugely popular and controversial, and Land and Sons (Ágúst Guðmundsson; 1980), a film that was promoted on the international film festival circuit by the Icelandic Film Fund, and is said to have put Iceland on the cinematic map.
Some of the most well-known recent Icelandic films and directors will be screened, such as Friðrik’s Angels of the Universe (2000), Baltasar Kormákur’s Jar City (original title Mýrin (see poster); 2006), and Óskar Jónasson’s Reykjavík-Rotterdam (2008), which was recently remade as Contraband by Baltasar and Mark Wahlberg (2012).
Many of the filmmakers will be present for Q&A sessions at certain screenings.
In addition, an exhibition entitled “Fabulous Iceland: From Sagas to Novels”, will accompany the film series, featuring interviews with twenty-five contemporary Icelandic writers.
They discuss the sources of their literary inspiration, which may go back to the Icelandic sagas, to the twentieth-century work of Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Halldór Laxness, or to recent thrillers and literary novels.
Photographs of the writers by Kristinn Ingvarsson will accompany the interviews, according to the Wall Street Journal.
AS
Icelandic mountaineer Ingólfur Geir Gissurarson made it up the summit of the world’s highest mountain, Everest at 8,848 meters, by the South East Ridge at 1 am Icelandic time last night. At 50, he is the fifth and oldest Icelander to make the climb.
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The Identification Committee of the National Commissioner of the Icelandic Police is working on the identification of a body swept up on the beach at Kaldbaksvík in Strandir, the eastern West Fjords, on Saturday. The body was found by travelers in the area.
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Outgoing Prime Minister of Iceland Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir stated that The Simpsons episode which was dedicated to Iceland and premiered on Sunday had definitely served as good promotion for the country.
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The party council of the Independence Party and central committee of the Progressive Party have been called to separate meetings tonight to discuss the planned coalition of the two parties in Iceland’s next government.
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The 2013 April-May issue of Iceland Review & Atlantica has been released. Packed with informative and entertaining stories, highlights include an interview with outgoing Prime Minister Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir and the people who know her best, a photo essay of ice caves in Europe’s largest glacier and a colorful feature on life in the West Fjords.
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The 11th Reykjavík Shorts & Docs. Catch it while it lasts!
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