4K · HDR
Guldvaskaren från Lannavaara
Overlook Pick

Guldvaskaren från Lannavaara

A Swedish dreamer chases ethical gold across continents—and pays the ultimate price for a boyhood dream.
82
User Score4 ratings
TMDB 8.216+20251h 35mSV
DocumentaryHistoryAdventure

Synopsis

A film about the gold panning adventures of Hans Söderström, an indigenous Swede. The story stretches from Scandinavia to Africa, via Asia and the Americas, but ultimately boils down to the simple boyish dream of finding gold. Lots of it. And oneself.

Director
Mattias LöwFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Freedom From Choice2 production companies
Release
November 7, 2025Released
Box Office
Budget $125,000

Top Cast

8 of 16
Mattias Löw
Mattias Löw
Self (Voice)
Hans Södertsröm
Self
Markus Lundberg
Self
Hanna Sardén
Self
King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden
King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden
Self (archive footage)
Queen Silvia of Sweden
Queen Silvia of Sweden
Self (archive footage)
Jenny Söderström
Self
Agne Söderström
Self

Trailers & Photos

No media available

Reviews

From TMDB users
candicetop
Jan 4, 2026

The Gold Panner from Lannavaara” is a quietly engaging documentary that offers an intriguing glimpse into Hans Söderström’s stubborn pursuit of gold between the Arctic and Africa. It balances character study and adventure reasonably well, with evocative imagery and a memorable, if flawed, protagonist. While it leaves some ethical and emotional questions only partially explored, the film still manages to linger in the mind as a thoughtful, unconventional portrait of a modern fortune seeker.

lassepetter
Mar 3, 2026

“The Gold Panner from Lannavaara” is that rare documentary that feels like someone spliced a slow Norrbotten village evening with a fever dream set in a gold mine. Hans “Hasse” Söderström wanders through the film as a tragic hero, overcaffeinated entrepreneur and your most conspiracy‑minded neighbour rolled into one – but with a heart that simply refuses to quit. The film pulls off the bizarre trick of making spreadsheets, debt notes and the tax office as dramatic as desert sand and muddy rivers. It’s as if someone pitched: “Imagine ‘There Will Be Blood’, but with Meänkieli, Swedish grassroots bureaucracy and Fairtrade anxiety.” And somehow, it works. The direction dares to linger on faces, slush and long silences until there’s humour in the hardship, without ever mocking Hasse’s furious, naïve idealism. We move from the stillness of Lannavaara to the heat of Africa as if the globe were only two bus stops wide. The result is a crookedly moving, unexpectedly funny and deeply human story about what happens when one man truly believes in gold, justice – and his own infallibility. In a world of polished, formulaic true‑crime docs, this one feels gloriously alive.

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