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Aleksander Huser

Huser is a regular film critic in Ny Tid.
00:02:41

An internal arms race 

Based on an interactive installation and the US police respectively, two documentaries at Bergen International Film Festival deal with the ever-expanding weapons industry. 
00:01:47

Specific measures to save tomorrow

There is no excuse to wait until tomorrow. The documentary Tomorrow presents constructive solutions to the climate problems the world faces.

To take the law into your own hands

Cartel Land is a startlingly close documentary on civil protection on every side of the Mexico-US border. 

Corruption in the open

Film festival HRHW: The road to modern China seems to be paved with the methods of the Wild West, one would believe the documentary The Road.

In the waiting room of martyrdom

EURODOK: Two young men are waiting to be called into action as suicide bombers in Syria. Pål Refsdal's new documentary paints a surprisingly intimate portrait.

She is Malala

Davis Guggenheim's documentary portrait does not contain much new, but let's get to know the activist, teenager and phenomenon Malala Yousafzai a little better.

Political thriller in the middle of the line

In its fifth season, Homeland is more socially relevant than ever. But the series creators are increasingly concerned with creating excitement rather than formulating political messages.

Beyond themselves

Several of the Norwegian documentaries at the Bergen International Film Festival combined deeply personal stories with significant social news, and were consequently anything but navel-gazing.

The war after ISAF

SOUTH MOVIE: Tell Spring Not to Come This year depicts Helmud Province in Afghanistan after ISAF forces withdrew, as seen through the eyes of local forces.