muted

The Painter and the Thief

Rating7.5 /10
20201 h 46 m
Norway
4582 people rated

An artist befriends the thief who stole her paintings. She becomes his closest ally when he is severely hurt in a car crash and needs full time care, even if her paintings are not found. But then the tables turn.

Documentary

User Reviews

blensha

21/03/2025 06:56
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Burna Boy

21/03/2025 06:56
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Nikita

21/03/2025 06:56
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خليفة موحي

21/03/2025 06:56
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Football World

21/03/2025 06:56
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Smiley💛

21/03/2025 06:56
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Leidy Martinho

29/05/2023 21:40
source: The Painter and the Thief

Khaoula Mahassine

22/11/2022 09:00
This seemed an interesting story but everyone involved seemed very self centred and as such I found the film difficult to engage with. The documentary itself seemed very manipulative, in how the story was told and what was left out or held back, and at times it didn't feel particularly genuine. I admired the paintings but I didn't really get anything from the film.

Yemi Alade

22/11/2022 09:00
Greetings again from the darkness. Artists think differently than the rest of us. Not only do they see the world with an offbeat or skewed vision, but they process life events in ways we sometimes can't fathom. For instance, if a crime were committed against you - say, your property was stolen - your natural response would be anger, or a desire for justice for the perpetrator. In Norwegian director Benjamin Ree's documentary, Czech artist Barbora Kysilkova reacts much differently when her two most valuable paintings are stolen. She befriends the thief. We see the security video footage. Karl-Bertil Nordland and another man break into Oslo's Galleri Nobel and then walk out with Barbora's paintings. Upon being apprehended, the painter and thief have a chat in the courtroom. Bertil confesses that he chose the paintings because they were "beautiful." The artist is intrigued and invites the thief to pose for a portrait when he is released from jail. As if this situation isn't bizarre enough, Bertil claims he has no idea where the stolen paintings are, and has no memory of what happened. Yes, he's also a drug addict. It's a bit uncomfortable to watch post-prison Bertil lounging on Barbora's sofa as she sketches him and they converse about philosophies of life. Slowly, their relationship builds into a friendship. It's an unlikely connection through art. We get a rare glimpse of an artist at work, as we see Barbora in her studio working on her pieces. Of course, she is also saddened by the loss of the two unrecovered pieces, and we also witness the artist struggle with the commerce/business side of art, as she faces frequent rejections from galleries as she attempts to display her work. This is on top of the lectures from her boyfriend ... lectures delivered in the manner a parent would talk to their kid. One of the more surreal moments occurs when the camera films Barbora at Bertil's place, and she sketches him and his girlfriend in a provocative pose. During all of this, we hear Barbora discussing why she finds Bertil interesting, despite his junkie-criminal lifestyle. After all, he is the kind of guy who scores a fix on his way to rehab. Things get very interesting ... in a weird way ... when Ree turns the tables and films Bertil analyzing Barbora. These two have studied each other over the years, and may have a better understanding of their friend, than they do of themselves. Watching Barbora act as caregiver for an injured Bertil is a confusing development to process, but it goes back to how artists see the world through their own eyes. Her paintings may be ultra-realistic, but her life barely qualifies as our reality ... at least until the rent is past due. The connections through the circle tattoo may come across as somewhat creepy, and we find ourselves a bit skeptical of many scenes where the camera is present, but there is no denying this works as a remarkable character study of two people we wouldn't normally categorize as friends.

❖Mʀ᭄Pardeep ࿐😍

22/11/2022 09:00
I was intrigued by its title to start watching it. The main storyline is the evolvement of relationship between the victim and perpetrator which probably already has been done several times before. However, this one gave a new perspective with unexpected outcomes. The story started with the victim's two symbolic paintings were stolen. Police followed the video then arrested two perpetrators however those two paintings were never recovered. The victim is a struggling artist with an abused past so as one of the perpetrator. Somehow, they connected each other with profound understanding. The movie told a story of a unlikely relationship flourish between two people world apart. It is not so much to say but to feel. One of two paintings was recovered by the artist herself in the end. She was also repainting the other one throughout the whole movie. To the end, she revealed a painting with the same setting but different people from her original one, she and her perpetrator. It is symbolically abstruse. This documentary is well structured and beautifully told. I will recommend it.
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