Sällskapsresan eller Finns det svenskt kaffe på grisfesten (1980)
19KSällskapsresan eller Finns det svenskt kaffe på grisfesten: Directed by Lasse Åberg. With Lasse Åberg, Lottie Ejebrant, Jon Skolmen, Kim Anderzon. Swedes travel to the Canary Islands on a package trip.
“u0026quot;Jak kan flyga. Jag är inte rädd.u0026quot;u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eStig Helmer (Lasse Åberg) cements his status as lovable nerd in Sällskapsresan (1980), a goofy lanky man who never quite stopped being a shy boy. His nickname is u0026quot;The Giraffu0026quot; and he always ends up saying the wrongs things. Although this film is one of many in a series of cult comedies starring Åberg and his band of eccentric friends, it is the funniest and most memorable one. If you live in Scandinavia, you will have seen it a dozen of times and if you have grown up in the typical Swedish way, you will have laughed at it even more so.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eSällskapsresan sees Stig Helmer and his Norwegian friend Ole Bramserud on a charter-trip to the Canary Islands. Stig Helmer is asked by his doctor to deliver a package to a friend of his at the destination and oblivious to the fact that it contains 50,000 SEK, Stig accidentally loses it at the airport and a hilarious mess ensues. But this little criminal detour is not what is funny about the film. The many laughs come from seeing Stig Helmeru0026#39;s clumsy and naive ways juxtaposed to the sleek jet-set style of the pretentious travel guides.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWhat elevates Sällskapsresan (1980) and its sequels above generic comedy formula is its brilliant, clear-eyed use of Swedish clichés. Everyone who is a child of the 1950s-1980s has probably been to the Canary Islands at one time or another and encountered the silly tourist things that are present in this film. Here they are overblown and hilarious, but still subtle enough to get us to identify with them. The whole film is really extremely realistic, as are all its stereotypical characters. A real classic.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003e8.5/10”