Mio in the Land of Faraway

Mio in the Land of Faraway
Swedish DVD cover
featuring 1987 promotional artwork.
Directed byVladimir Grammatikov
Written byWilliam Aldridge
Based onMio, My Son
by Astrid Lindgren
Produced byIngemar Ejve
StarringChristopher Lee
Christian Bale
Nicholas Pickard
Timothy Bottoms
Susannah York
CinematographyAleksandr Antipenko
Kjell Vassdal
Edited byDarek Hodor
Music byBenny Andersson
Anders Eljas
Production
companies
Distributed bySandrew Metronome
Release dates
  • July 1987 (1987-07) (MIFF)
  • 18 August 1987 (1987-08-18) (NIFF)
  • 16 October 1987 (1987-10-16) (Sweden)
Running time
99 minutes
CountriesSweden
Soviet Union
Norway
LanguageEnglish
BudgetSEK 55,000,000 (est.)
Box officeSweden: SEK 17,799,205

Mio in the Land of Faraway (Swedish: Mio min Mio; Russian: Мио, мой Мио, romanizedMio, moy Mio) is a 1987 fantasy film directed by Vladimir Grammatikov, and starring Christopher Lee, Christian Bale, Nicholas Pickard, Timothy Bottoms and Susannah York. Based on the 1954 novel Mio, My Son by Astrid Lindgren, it tells the story of a boy from Stockholm who travels to an otherworldly fantasy realm and frees the land from an evil knight's oppression.

Mio in the Land of Faraway was co-produced by companies from Sweden, Norway and the Soviet Union with a budget of about fifty million Swedish kronor, making it the most expensive film adaptation of an Astrid Lindgren book during her lifetime.[1] It featured an international cast consisting largely of British, Russian and Scandinavian actors, while its filming locations included Stockholm, Moscow, Crimea, and Scotland. The film was shot in English and subsequently dubbed in Swedish and Russian. Its special effects were created by Derek Meddings. The film's theme song, "Mio My Mio", was composed by two former ABBA members, Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus, and performed by the Swedish band Gemini.

Released in 1987, the film saw Nicholas Pickard's debut as an actor and marked Christian Bale's first appearance in a feature film. It won the Cinekid Film Award in Amsterdam, while its theme song became a top three hit in Sweden. However, Swedish reviewers received the film unfavorably, criticizing it as a poor adaptation of Lindgren's novel.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference pippipals14 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).