Back in 2020, filmmaker Robert Eggers invited his actors to come and shoot The Northman in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and later in Iceland. The shoot had been delayed because of COVID, but now was the time.
Nicole Kidman was apprehensive. But at the same time, she had a sense of duty and wanted to support the auteur and his creative and ambitious endeavor. So she traveled to Belfast to portray the Viking Queen Gudrún and step into the world of 10th-century Iceland, the era when the story is set.
“I arrived here and because of the pandemic everything had been pushed, [there were] enormous schedule changes, and at one point I didn’t know if I was even going to make it,” Nicole said at the time of shooting the film via a Zoom call from Belfast. “And then I just went: ‘No, this is what I do: I’m an artist, I travel, I show up, I support filmmakers, and [Robert] has tackled this massive Viking project and he is making it a true Viking movie.’”
That true Viking movie begins in the fictional court of Hrafnsey – ‘Raven Island’ in the North Atlantic – where Queen Gudrún is captured by Fjölnir after he has killed King Aurvandil, who is Gudrún's husband and Fjölnir's brother. Amleth, the young son of Queen Gudrún and King Aurvandil, witnesses his uncle’s violent act. As Amleth escapes being killed himself, he flees his homeland vowing to return one day to save his mother, avenge his father’s death, and reclaim the throne.
Many years later, Amleth (now played by Alexander Skarsgård) learns that King Fjölnir has lost his kingdom and lives as a chieftain in Iceland. Thus, he travels there with a group of slaves. This is where most of the film takes place, set in the year 914, during the settlement of Iceland and before the establishment of the Althing (Parliament) in 930. It’s a world of lawlessness and brutality – a world that Nicole was thrown straight into upon arrival. On her first day of shooting, she had to ride a horse dressed in Viking costume, looking stoic and comfortable as a queen.
“I got here and I was completely overwhelmed,” she says. “And I thought: ‘Oh my God, I’m never going to get through.’ And then something happened: I was up on the mountain and I had to get on a horse because I’m in all the gear and all dressed, and suddenly I just started to go: ‘Okay, take it on Nicole and feel it and be it.’ And it unleashed a sort of Viking spirit now that’s in me, and I’m up there for 14 hours on a mountain in severe conditions, freezing cold, mud everywhere, going: ‘I love this!’ And I'm screaming and holding a sword and I’m like: ‘Oh my God, what’s happened?’ It’s coming and Gudrún is my name, Gudrún has arrived.”