St Olavsleden – The Hidden Gem of Pilgrimage

“We wanted a film explaining the route. We got an engaging story attracting pilgrims from around the world”.

DIRECTORS NOTE

The Story of St Olavsleden was never meant to become a traditional tourism film. Very early in the process, it became clear that the real story was not only about the destination — but about solitude, reflection and the people living along the trail.

Originally, the idea was to follow one pilgrim’s journey from Sweden to Norway. But during production, the film slowly changed shape. The deeper we travelled into the landscape, the clearer the true essence of St Olavsleden became: the feeling of walking through history almost entirely alone, while constantly being met by warmth and curiosity from the local communities along the way.

The production itself was highly documentary in nature. No large crew. No controlled sets. Just long days on the road, adapting to weather, people and unexpected opportunities. Some scenes were captured spontaneously. Others required rebuilding parts of history together with local actors and volunteers on Frösön in Jämtland, where sequences connected to the story of Saint Olav were recreated during an intense five-hour shoot across multiple locations.

For me, filmmaking has always been less about perfect planning and more about learning to recognise when the real story appears in front of you. That is what happened here.
This film is ultimately a tribute to slow travel, Nordic history and the rare feeling of silence that still exists in some parts of the world.

DIRECTORS NOTE

The Story of St Olavsleden was never meant to become a traditional tourism film. Very early in the process, it became clear that the real story was not only about the destination — but about solitude, reflection and the people living along the trail.

Originally, the idea was to follow one pilgrim’s journey from Sweden to Norway. But during production, the film slowly changed shape. The deeper we travelled into the landscape, the clearer the true essence of St Olavsleden became: the feeling of walking through history almost entirely alone, while constantly being met by warmth and curiosity from the local communities along the way.

The production itself was highly documentary in nature. No large crew. No controlled sets. Just long days on the road, adapting to weather, people and unexpected opportunities. Some scenes were captured spontaneously. Others required rebuilding parts of history together with local actors and volunteers on Frösön in Jämtland, where sequences connected to the story of Saint Olav were recreated during an intense five-hour shoot across multiple locations.

For me, filmmaking has always been less about perfect planning and more about learning to recognise when the real story appears in front of you. That is what happened here.
This film is ultimately a tribute to slow travel, Nordic history and the rare feeling of silence that still exists in some parts of the world.

DIRECTOR
Mattias Brannholm

CINEMATOGRAPHY
Mattias Brannholm

DRONES
Mattias Brannholm

EDITING
Mattias Brannholm

COLOR
Mattias Brannholm