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Stockholm

Stockholm

  • Status: Released
  • 12-04-2019
  • Runtime: 92 min
  • Score: 5.836
  • Vote count: 403

Based on the extraordinary true story of the European city’s 1973 bank heist and hostage crisis that was documented in the 1974 New Yorker article “The Bank Drama” by Daniel Lang. The events grasped the world’s attention when the hostages bonded with their captors and turned against the authorities, giving rise to the psychological phenomenon known as “Stockholm Syndrome.”

Ethan Hawke

Lars Nystrom

Noomi Rapace

Bianca Lind

Mark Strong

Gunnar Sorensson

Christopher Heyerdahl

Chief Mattsson

Bea Santos

Klara Mardh

Mark Rendall

Elov Eriksson

Ian Matthews

Detective Halsten Vinter

John Ralston

Detective Jakobsson

Shanti Roney

Olof Palme

Christopher Wagelin

Vincent

Thorbjørn Harr

Christopher Lind

Gustaf Hammarsten

Taxi Driver

Vladimir Jon Cubrt

Bank Manager

Nonnie Griffin

Old Lady in Bank

Anders Yates

Bank Employee

Linzee Barclay

Injured Lady Bank Customer

Michael Rinaldi

Office Photographer

Nick Stojanovic

Sniper

Shay Santaiti

Volunteer

Nora Prinzen-Klages

Bianca's Daughter

Lars Classington

Reporter #1

Scott McCrickard

Reporter #2

Jonelle Gunderson

Olof Palme's Secretary

David Christo

Uniformed Cop

Jessica Sherman

News Reporter #1

Clive Walton

News Reporter #2

John Jarvis

Gas Technician

Daniel Falk

Prison Guard #2

Hanneke Talbot

Vincent's Assistant

Alexander Musgrove

Pedestrian (uncredited)

Uhraney Adrian

Reporter (uncredited)

Carrie Beale

Pedestrian (uncredited)

Violetta Pioro

Swedish Nanny (uncredited)

Rebecka Andersson

Witness (uncredited)

Iman Mirbioki

Witness (uncredited)

Peter McGinn

My wife and I enjoyed this movie. I was a little surprised at how relatively close the plot was to what I read about the incident. It was paced well enough to make what went on in the hostage situation believable. After watching a preview, I expected more humor, but some of it was subtle, too subtle for some reviewers, I’m guessing. The soundtrack to this film is made up mostly of lesser known (to me at least) Dylan songs. They knew enough to keep the movie fairLy short, at around 90 minutes. They knew they weren't working on Gone with the Wind. I was also relieved that they didn't use that old dependable crutch, the almighty flashback. What backstory they needed they revealed in character dialogue. So it is a pretty good movie. I won’t go out of my way to watch it again, but I don’t see it as time wasted either.