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Kursk (2018)

6.6 | Nov 07, 2018 (BE) | Drama, History, Thriller, Action | 01:58
Budget: 20 000 000 | Revenue: N/A

Together till the end

Barents Sea, August 12th, 2000. During a Russian naval exercise, and after suffering a serious accident, the K-141 Kursk submarine sinks with 118 crew members on board. While the few sailors who are still alive barely manage to survive, their families push for accurate information and a British officer struggles to obtain from the Russian government a permit to attempt a rescue before it is late. But general incompetence are against all their efforts.

Featured Crew

Executive Producer
First Assistant Director
Director of Photography
Screenplay
Makeup Artist
Executive Producer
Facial Setup Artist
Executive Producer

Cast

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Matthias Schoenaerts
Mikhail Averin
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Léa Seydoux
Tanya Averina
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Peter Simonischek
Admiral Vyacheslav Grudzinsky
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Max von Sydow
Admiral Vladimir Petrenko
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August Diehl
Anton Markov
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Colin Firth
Commodore David Russell
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Bjarne Henriksen
Russian Rescue Ship Captain
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Magnus Millang
Oleg Lebedev
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Artemiy Spiridonov
Misha Averin

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
7 | May 23, 2024
As with many a tale like this - we will probably never know the whole story of how the Russian submarine "Kursk" came to sink and of the desperate attempts to rescue the stranded sailors. What Thomas Vinterberg does here, though, is direct a film with a plausible, quite compelling, narrative that elicits good, solid, performances from Matthias Schoenaerts and August Diehl who manage to convey the claustrophobic scenes on board remarkably well. Max von Sydow exemplifies the old guard establishment figure to a T and lends all the more to the frustration that maybe more could have been done to save lives had politicking played a less prominent role in the salvage process. Any comments on the accuracy of the efforts at international collaboration would be speculative, but Colin Firth does imbue some genuine sense of eagerness to assist and an awareness of the urgencies involved. This is well worth a watch.