Riders of Justice
Markus goes home to his teenage daughter, Mathilde, when his wife dies in a train crash. All appears to be a tragic accident until a mathematics geek, who was also a fellow passenger on the train, and his two colleagues show up.
Cast
Mads Mikkelsen
Markus
Nikolaj Lie Kaas
Otto
Andrea Heick Gadeberg
Mathilde
Lars Brygmann
Lennart
Nicolas Bro
Emmenthaler
Gustav Lindh
Bodashka
Roland Møller
Kurt
Albert Rudbeck Lindhardt
Sirius
Anne Birgitte Lind
Emma
Omar Shargawi
Palle Olesen
Omar Shargawi
Aharon Nahas Shadid
Jacob Lohmann
Kenneth
Henrik Noël Olesen
Noah
Gustav Dyekjær Giese
Adrian
Klaus Hjuler
Rocker 1
Peder Holm Johansen
Officer
Christina Ibsen Meyer
Psykolog 1
Rikke Louise Andersson
Psykolog 2
Jesper Ole Feit Andersen
Politimand 1
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Comments
10 Comments
i love the movie
💯💯
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Mathilde's bicycle gets stolen and she has to ride with her mother. The car doesn't start and they have to take a train. Computer programmer Otto claims to be making a prediction program but it has no business value. He gets fired and gets on the same train. He gives his seat to Mathilde's mother. A train accident leaves the mother dead. One of the other dead victims is a witness ready to testify against the motorcycle gang, Riders of Justice. Using statistics, Otto is certain that the accident is a deliberate attack to kill the witness. He and his friend Lennart track down Mathilde's military father Markus (Mads Mikkelsen). With Otto's hacker friend Emmenthaler, the group decides to track down a suspect in the train derailment. This is a Danish film. It's one of those shoot 'em up killing bad guys movies except it's not just that. It's funnier and more poetic. It's emotionally packed. It takes quirky turns. The characters are compelling, funny, and damaged. I can't wait for the English remake and fear it at the same time.
Another really good Scandi movie, this time hailing from Denmark, and featuring one of my favourite actors working today, Mads Mikkelsen. This is less the thriller it's sold as by the trailer and more of a study of grief and bereavement. As a recent widower, it really hit home with me, and Mikkelsen nails the complexities of the part perfectly. It's also packed full of deep characterisation, realism, perfectly judged quirky comedy, and a few fine thriller aspects to boot. Nothing not to love here.
