
Áramótaskaup: 2015
Comedy · TV Movie · Family
Overview
Áramótaskaup: 2015 is an annual Icelandic TV movie satirizing the events of the year.
Top Cast


Atli Fannar Bjarkason
Atli Fannar Bjarkason
Atli Fannar Bjarkason


Guðjón Davíð Karlsson
Guðjón Davíð Karlsson
Guðjón Davíð Karlsson


Katla M. Þorgeirsdóttir
Katla M. Þorgeirsdóttir
Katla M. Þorgeirsdóttir


Steinþór Hróar Steinþórsson
Steinþór Hróar Steinþórsson
Steinþór Hróar Steinþórsson


Anna Hafþórsdóttir
Anna Hafþórsdóttir
Anna Hafþórsdóttir


Birgitta Birgisdóttir
Birgitta Birgisdóttir
Birgitta Birgisdóttir


Bjarni Snæbjörnsson
Bjarni Snæbjörnsson
Bjarni Snæbjörnsson
Bylgja Babylons
Bylgja Babylons
Bylgja Babylons


Eggert Þ. Rafnsson
Eggert Þ. Rafnsson
Eggert Þ. Rafnsson


Egill Ólafsson
Egill Ólafsson
Egill Ólafsson
Similar Movies

Film version of the Neil Simon play has three separate acts set in the same hotel suite in New York's Plaza Hotel with Walter Matthau in a triple role. In the first, Karen Nash tries to get her inattentive husband Sam's attention and help save their failing marriage. In the second, brash film producer Jesse Kiplinger tries to seduce his former one-time flame Muriel. In the third, Roy Hubley and his wife Norma try and persuade their daughter, a bride to-be with cold feet, out of the bathroom before her approaching wedding ceremony.

A powerful, intimate portrait of three women living in the same house during different eras who all face unplanned pregnancies. The vignettes follow a recently widowed nurse struggling to take control of her life in the early 50s, a mother of four balancing raising a family and maintaining a career in the 70s, and a student making a difficult decision with the help of one woman that will change the course of both their lives in the 90s.

In modern-day London, three men (Craig Ferguson, Jimi Mistry and David Morrissey) and three women (Olivia Williams, Jane Horrocks and Catherine McCormack) fall in and out of love and back again, to the Greek-chorus accompaniment of two cab drivers, who engage in an ongoing conversation about sex. A winning romantic comedy, Born Romantic is the second feature by British writer-director David Kane of This Year's Love fame.

Injustice and the demands of the world can cause stress for many people. Some of them, however, explode. This includes a waitress serving a grouchy loan shark, an altercation between two motorists, an ill-fated wedding reception, and a wealthy businessman who tries to buy his family out of trouble.

















