Iceland, a sparsely populated island nation in the
North Atlantic, has a climate that is tempered by the warm currents of the Gulf Stream.
But Dagur Kari's film, Noi Albinoi, isn't placed in the relatively
cosmopolitan environs of the capital,
Reykjavik; Kari locates his coming-of-age
tale in a remote village in the north of the island. Geography is a major character in the
film--penetrating cold, omnipresent snow and ice, and the isolated and lonely desolation
permeate every frame of the film and the psyches of its characters. Looming over the
village, which is perched along the edge of a fjord, is a monolithic massif, an icy,
menacing presence.