Nordisk Film
0 sources
Nordisk Film
Summary
Nordisk Film is a business[1]. It ranks in the top 3% of business entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (854 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Nordisk Film was a member of RettighedsAlliancen[3].
- Nordisk Film is located in Copenhagen Municipality[4].
- Nordisk Film is in the country of Denmark[5].
- Nordisk Film is in the country of DK[6].
- Nordisk Film's instance of is recorded as business[7].
- Nordisk Film's instance of is recorded as film industry[8].
- Nordisk Film's founder is recorded as Ole Olsen[9].
- Nordisk Film is owned by Egmont Fonden[10].
- Nordisk Film's headquarters location is recorded as Copenhagen[11].
- Nordisk Film's child organization or unit is recorded as Zentropa[12].
- Nordisk Film's child organization or unit is recorded as Nordisk Film Kino[13].
- Nordisk Film's child organization or unit is recorded as Maipo Film[14].
- Nordisk Film's child organization or unit is recorded as Avalanche Studios Group[15].
- Nordisk Film's child organization or unit is recorded as Supermassive Games[16].
- Nordisk Film's child organization or unit is recorded as Fantefilm[17].
- Nordisk Film's child organization or unit is recorded as Nordisk Film Biografer[18].
- Nordisk Film's Commons category is recorded as Nordisk Film[19].
- November 6, 1906 marks the founding of Nordisk Film[20].
- 1947-01-03 marks the founding of Nordisk Film[21].
- Nordisk Film's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 55.66787222222222, 'lon': 12.514663888888888}[22].
- Nordisk Film's location of formation is recorded as Copenhagen[23].
- Nordisk Film's parent organization or unit is recorded as Egmont International Holding[24].
- Nordisk Film's official website is recorded as https://www.nordiskfilm.com/[25].
- Nordisk Film's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Nordisk Film[26].
- Nordisk Film's product or material produced is recorded as cinematography[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
GLEIF Golden Copy — Level 1 entity data
-
Legal Entity Identifier (LEI): 21380094H5HFAAA5RI10[28]
-
Registered legal name: Nordisk Film A/S[29]
-
Legal jurisdiction: DK[30]
-
GLEIF entity category: GENERAL[31]
-
Legal form (ISO 20275 ELF): ZRPO[32]
-
Entity status: ACTIVE[33]
-
LEI registration status: LAPSED[34]
-
Entity created: 1947-01-03[35]
-
LEI first registered: 2014-02-24[36]
-
LEI last updated: 2024-03-18[37]
-
LEI next renewal: 2025-03-31[38]
-
Managing LOU: 485100001PLJJ09NZT59[39]
-
Registration authority: RA000170[40]
-
Authority entity ID: 52145015[41]
-
Conformity flag: NON_CONFORMING[42]
Body
Founding
Nordisk Film's founder is recorded as Ole Olsen[9]. Recorded inception include November 6, 1906[20] and 1947-01-03[21]. Its location of formation is recorded as Copenhagen[23].
Operations
Nordisk Film's headquarters location is recorded as Copenhagen[11]. Its parent organization or unit is recorded as Egmont International Holding[24]. Subsidiaries include Zentropa[12], a film production company[43], in Denmark[44], founded in 1992[45], headquartered in Hvidovre Municipality[46]; Nordisk Film Kino[13], a cinema chain[47], in Norway[48], founded in 1926[49], headquartered in Oslo[50]; Maipo Film[14], a film production company[51], in Norway[52], founded in 2001[53]; Avalanche Studios Group[15], a video game developer[54], in Sweden[55], founded in 2003[56], headquartered in Stockholm[57]; Supermassive Games[16], a video game developer[58], in United Kingdom[59], founded in 2008[60], headquartered in Guildford[61]; and Fantefilm[17], a film production company[62], in Norway[63], founded in 1997[64], headquartered in Oslo Municipality[65].
Ownership
Nordisk Film is owned by Egmont Fonden[10]. Products include cinematography[27], television series[66], video game[67], and advertising[68].
Why It Matters
Nordisk Film ranks in the top 3% of business entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (854 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[69] It is known by 31 alternative names across languages and contexts.[70]