An eleventh century Viking Prince sails to America to find his father, who on a previous voyage had been captured by Indians.An eleventh century Viking Prince sails to America to find his father, who on a previous voyage had been captured by Indians.An eleventh century Viking Prince sails to America to find his father, who on a previous voyage had been captured by Indians.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Jerry Daniels
- Kiwonga
- (as Jacob Jerry Daniels)
Chuck Pierce Jr.
- Young Eric
- (as Chuck Pierce)
Curtis Jordan
- Norseman
- (as Curtis Jordon)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn 1980, one of the ships from movie was recovered in the mangrove swamps of Hillsboro County, FL. A research team from Norway, leas by one Odden Byrd, working with the University of Tampa came in to supervise the salvage and recovery of the boat with the intent of restoring it and sailing it back to Scandinavia, but the boat broke apart and sank while being towed across Tampa Bay.
- GoofsOil tanker seen sailing in the background of one scene.
- Crazy creditsIn the closing credits, the town of "Newbern" North Carolina is thanked for the used of the reproduction Viking ship. That is an antiquated version of the town's name. Founded by Swiss settlers in the early 1700's, the town has for many, many years been known as "New Bern".
- ConnectionsFeatured in 42nd Street Forever, Volume 5: The Alamo Drafthouse Edition (2009)
Featured review
Truly awful
Plastic/aluminium armour. Knight's armour on Thorvold and a LoneRanger mask, under his knights helm. Black vikings, white Native Americans...of course the largest insult is that this dreck was filmed in Florida, as evidenced by the foliage and the sugar white sand on the beach. I don't remember Vikings ever landing in Tampa, unless it was in a football game.
I won't even address the little mustache worn by Mr. Majors, as compared to the full beards of his 'Viking' co-horts.
This is a film you can't believe you are watching, yet won't turn off, because you can't look away.
Of course the climax of the film has the 'Vikings' running through water on a sandbar...anyone watching, who is familiar with Lee Majors as the "Six Million Dollar Man" will find themselves waiting to hear the music/sound effects that accompanied 'Steve Austin' whenever he was performing his feats of strength, or running to save the day.
All this film needed was BigFoot.
I won't even address the little mustache worn by Mr. Majors, as compared to the full beards of his 'Viking' co-horts.
This is a film you can't believe you are watching, yet won't turn off, because you can't look away.
Of course the climax of the film has the 'Vikings' running through water on a sandbar...anyone watching, who is familiar with Lee Majors as the "Six Million Dollar Man" will find themselves waiting to hear the music/sound effects that accompanied 'Steve Austin' whenever he was performing his feats of strength, or running to save the day.
All this film needed was BigFoot.
helpful•85
- Naneki1
- Nov 9, 2006
- How long is The Norseman?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Die Nordmänner
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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