The Matriarch (film)
The Matriarch | |
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The Matriarch theatrical release poster (Finnish) | |
Directed by | Markku Pölönen |
Produced by | Suomen Filmiteollisuus |
Written by | Markku Pölönen |
Starring |
Peter Franzén Sanna-Kaisa Palo Samuli Vauramo Jenni Banerjee Heikki Kinnunen |
Music by | Vesa Mäkinen |
Cinematography | Jan Nyman |
Edited by | Markku Pölönen |
Release date | 14 September 2007 |
Running time | 90 min |
Country | Finland |
Language | Finnish |
Budget | €1,400,000 |
Box office | €435,981 |
The Matriarch (Finnish: Lieksa!) is a 2007 Finnish comedy-drama film written, directed and edited by Markku Pölönen and produced by the Pölönen-owned film production company Suomen Filmiteollisuus.
Plot
Martta (Sanna-Kaisa Palo) and Otto (Heikki Kinnunen) are a pair of traveling tailors who claim to be bastard descendants of the Romanovs and wander from town to town in Finland seeking work, accompanied by their two half-witted adult sons, Hippo (Tuomas Uusitalo), Repe (Tatu Siivonen) and equally silly son-in-law Ventti (Toni Wahlstrom). The family occasionally turns to crime when they can't quite make ends meet, and the boys begin turning to violence with greater frequency when Otto weakens and Martta becomes the head of the family business. Their fortunes take an unexpected turn when the brothers assault and abduct a man they call Kaspar (Samuli Vauramo), who becomes the family's sidekick in their travels. Despite Kaspar's inability to speak, he attracts Martta's youngest daughter, an attractive young woman named Lara (Jenni Banerjee), but the family is in disarray when a long-lost half-brother, Laszlo (Peter Franzen), suddenly re-emerges and tries to wrest control of the clan away from his mother.
Cast
- Peter Franzén - Laszlo
- Sanna-Kaisa Palo - Martta
- Samuli Vauramo - Kasper
- Jenni Banerjee - Lara
- Heikki Kinnunen - Niccolo/Otto
- Toni Wahlstrom - Ventti
- Lotta Lehtikari - Veera
- Elina Knihtila - Roosa
- Puntti Valtonen - Jori
- Janne Reinikainen - Lutku
- Heikki Hela - Mojo
Soundtrack
The soundtrack includes the song "While Your Lips are Still Red" by Tuomas Holopainen and Marco Hietala.