JAKARTA - Norway is one of the countries that has its natural beauty, no wonder in the end many films choose to make Norway the location for their film shooting.
Not many people know that the following successful films are taking the beauty of nature in Norway, here's a list of films!
The first film to take on the setting of Norway's natural beauty is the James Bond film, No Time to Die, which is Daniel Craig's last film as an agent of 007. In this film, if you watch it, you can recall the scene of a girl running away from a masked man in a frozen lake.
Apparently, the lake is called Langvann which is located near Hakadal, Norway, a village in the Viken area, north of Oslo. This place is only an hour's walk through the forest from the Hakadal train station.
The Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince film also uses the Norwegian country's background in one of their scenes. The first from the background of the Hogwarts Express train journey that passes through a snowy landscape where they use the Rauma railway line close to Bjorli village, Norway.
Then, the scene where Harry Potter (Daniel Radcliffe) and Ron (Rupert Grint) talk about the harsh Snape curse was taken on the Norwegian Railway Club's museum train.
Based on the popular science fiction novel of the same title and directed by Denis Villeneuve, Dune is the story of a talented young man who has to travel to one of the most dangerous planets in the universe to secure the future of his family and nation.
In Dune, it is shown when their main player, Timothee Chalamet as Paul Atreides walks on a beach on his home planet, Caladan, before leaving for Arrakis.
The beach can be found on the west coast of the Stadlandet peninsula in the northwestern part of Nordfjord, Norway.
In the legendary scene where Han Solo (Harrison Ford) and Luke Total (Mark Hamil) had to hit the cold air and onslaught of Imperial All Terrain Armored Transports filmed in Norway in 1979. In fact, the shooting location is inside and around Finse village on the edge of the Hardangerjkulen glacier.
Star Wars fans will easily recognize the mountainous landscape here. There are a number of hiking trails around the Finsevatnet lake and the glacier area. However, visitors are not allowed to climb without a guide in winter.
The train station in Finse is located 1,222 meters above sea level, and right next to it is the Finse 1222 hotel where the film crew stayed during production.
Right behind the hotel, scenes were made where, after his tough encounter with wampa, Luke was creeping tired through the snow, and Obi-Wan jurisprudence instructed him to go to Master juxtaposed's Dagobah system.
The hotel occasionally holds events for fans in February, including tours of film locations with dog gliders.
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The battle scene between Hunt and criminals John Lark (Henry Cavill) at the end of the film Mission: Impossible - Fallout took place on the edge of a 600-meter high cliff in the Himalayan mountains in the peninsula.
In reality, the spectacular fight was filmed in Preikestolen, the famous Batu Mimbar in Norway.
Tom Cruise himself is thought to be enjoying Norway very much. The reason is, he returned to Norway to film his seventh film, Mission: Impossible - Dead Economy - First part.
And this time, its mission is more dangerous than ever, featuring one of the biggest acts in film history with a motorcycle jump from a cliff that ends with an umbrella from Mount Helsetkopen in Sunnm Badminton. There is also an intense action scene at Rauma Railway in Badmindalsnes.
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