

For this is a cat-and-mouse thriller, delivering all the wild twists and turns, charades and chases, that come with the genre. Here, the Rubens painting is a classic macguffin depicting (significantly) a classical hunting scene. Except nothing here is quite as it seems, and Roger is soon fighting for his love and his life against a different kind of headhunter perhaps even more ruthlessly calculating than himself. Sure, the worryingly handsome – and even more worryingly tall – gentleman has clearly caught Diana's eye, but Clas' military and corporate background in tracking technology makes him a perfect match for the executive position at GPS firm Pathfinder that Roger needs to fill, while Clas is also said to possess a rare and valuable Rubens that could resolve all Rogers' economic problems in one swift domestic heist. With Roger's coffers near empty and the police circling, suave stranger Clas Greve (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) arrives on the scene just at the right moment.

#HEADHUNTERS MOVIE JO NESBO HOW TO#
But all this is a front for a deeply insecure man, obsessed - as his voice-over monologues suggest - with his merely middling height, anxious that his wife will trade him in for a better, taller model, and worried, with good reason, about how to finance his overstretched lifestyle.Ĭertainly Roger's day job as a respected corporate headhunter is not enough to pay the bills, so he moonlights as an art thief, breaking into the homes of his high-flying clients with the help of a corrupt security officer (Elvind Sander).

He dresses in the finest suits, lives in an immaculate house, showers his perfect wife Diana (Synnøve Macody Lund) with expensive gifts (while denying her the baby that she truly craves), and oozes confidence. This is a very mainstream movie that just happens to be in Norwegian.įor respected corporate headhunter Roger Brown (Aksel Hennie), who prizes reputation above all else, the maintenance of appearances is everything. Indeed, language aside, there are few if any culturally specific references to be found in Morten Tyldum's film, which will easily lend itself to translation into English given that it is already fluent in Hollywood idiom. Filling the void in the Nordic thriller market left by Stieg Larsson's Millennium Trilogy (and even borrowing some aerial shots from the original The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo), Headhunters comes with impeccable pedigree as an adaptation of novelist Jo Nesbø's 2008 international bestseller, and was optioned for an American remake even before its Norwegian release.
