The Man on the Roof

(Redirected from Mannen på taket)

The Man on the Roof (Swedish: Mannen på taket) is a 1976 Swedish police procedural-thriller film directed by Bo Widerberg. It is based on the 1971 novel The Abominable Man by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö. The film stars Carl-Gustaf Lindstedt, Sven Wollter, Thomas Hellberg and Håkan Serner.

The Man on the Roof
Swedish DVD cover
SwedishMannen på taket
Directed byBo Widerberg
Screenplay byBo Widerberg
Based onThe Abominable Man
by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö
Produced byPer Berglund
StarringCarl-Gustaf Lindstedt
Sven Wollter
Thomas Hellberg
Håkan Serner
CinematographyOdd Geir Sæther
Per Källberg
Edited bySylvia Ingemarsson
Bo Widerberg
Music byBjörn J:son Lindh
Production
companies
Distributed bySF Studios, Swedish Film Institute
Release date
  • 1 October 1976 (1976-10-01) (Sweden)
Running time
110 minutes
CountrySweden
LanguageSwedish
Budget4 million SEK
Box office11.5 million SEK

Widerberg's direction was inspired by the 1971 American film The French Connection,[citation needed] and Widerberg would make one more crime film in 1984: The Man from Majorca.

The film won two Guldbagge Awards in 1977, for Best Film and Best Actor (Håkan Serner).[1]

Plot

edit

A veteran Swedish policeman named Stig Nyman is brutally murdered, bludgeoned and eviscerated with a bayonet while being treated for a secret illness at a Stockholm hospital. The investigation that follows is led by pragmatic veteran Martin Beck and uninspiring detective Einar Rönn. It turns out that the murdered man was known among colleagues for abusing his police privileges and brutalizing civilians. Although his colleagues generally disliked Nyman and had been aware of his behavior, the police force's esprit de corps had suppressed complaints about him and prevented any reprisals.

The investigation proceeds, and finally Beck and his team find a trail that leads to the murderer, who turns out to be an ex-policeman named Eriksson. Eriksson's wife Marja had diabetes and went out to buy insulin before passing out from her illness; Nyman found her unconscious on the street and instead of bringing in medical treatment, had her arrested for public intoxication and placed in a holding cell. She fell into a coma and died, and Eriksson blamed the police for the tragedy. Now, some years later, he has become a social misfit and the authorities are in the process of removing his daughter Malin from his custody.

As Beck and his team close in on Eriksson he climbs up on the roof of the apartment building where he lives in central Stockholm, bringing with him both an automatic rifle and a sharpshooter's rifle. He starts to fire at any policeman and police vehicle he can spot, killing one uniformed officer and seriously wounding another. The two cops who are in the middle of Eriksson's rampage are Dets. Kollberg (a married husband who has a progressive approach to his job) and Larsson (a macho hothead who doesn't like Kollberg specifically or the top Stockholm PD brass in general but who is a tough and smart cop). Larsson suffers a non-fatal wound from shrapnel hit by one of Eriksson's shots, and they get out of the area by disguising themselves as doctors.

When the police commissioner decides to bring in the anti-terrorist units, including two police helicopters, Eriksson shoots up one of the helicopters such that it crashes on a crowded plaza, Odenplan, near the building where he resides. Beck tries an individual initiative, climbing to the roof on a flimsy external ladder, but is shot in the chest, left severely injured and bleeding on a ledge leading to the roof until Kollberg bravely rescues him and gets him to a safe apartment along the building's facade. A group that includes Larsson, Hult (a stone-faced officer who was one of the few members of the force who was close friends to Nyman, and who resolves to avenge his death), special operations soldiers and a civilian volunteer with his own firearms on hand use explosives to blast to the roof where Eriksson is hiding. He stops them and is about to shoot Larsson when the civilian fires a shot that slams into Eriksson's shoulder and leaves him disabled. Hult rages towards Eriksson but only hits him once in the face before he's pulled away by other officers who arrest the sniper. Larsson tells the civilian he let him take the shot because a cop shooting another cop would be a whole other problem set, and bluntly says the civilian will have to answer questions about the unlicensed gun he had on hand. Eriksson is left staring into the sky as the movie ends.

Cast

edit

Production

edit

The actor Carl-Gustaf Lindstedt was picked for the part as the policeman Beck after Wideberg had seen him with a serious face in a talk show not knowing he was on air.[citation needed] Previously, Lindstedt was mostly known for roles in comedy films.

Filming took place between 11 December 1975 and 30 April 1976, using a budget of 3.9 million SEK.[2] Bo Widerberg didn't like the fake theater blood so pigs blood was used.

Reception

edit

The critics were very positive and especially praised the dialogue. Around 750,000 people attended the film in Sweden, making it the most successful film produced by the Swedish Film Institute until Fanny and Alexander was released in 1982.[2] The film was selected as the Swedish entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 50th Academy Awards, but was not nominated.[3]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Mannen på taket (1976)". Swedish Film Institute. 7 March 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Mannen på taket - Press reaction and comment" (in Swedish). Swedish Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 June 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2009.
  3. ^ Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
edit
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Guldbagge Awards for Best Film
1976/77
Succeeded by
Preceded by Guldbagge Awards for Swedish submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
1977
Succeeded by