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・ King's Farm, Texas
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・ King's Gambit, Fischer Defense
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King's Game
・ King's Garden
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・ King's Garden (Odense)
・ King's Gate
・ King's Gate (Kaliningrad)
・ King's German Legion
・ King's Glory Education Centre
・ King's Gold
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・ King's Hall
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King's Game : ウィキペディア英語版
King's Game

''King's Game'' (''Kongekabale'') is a 2004 Danish film directed by Nikolaj Arcel. It stars Anders W. Berthelsen, and Nicolas Bro as reporters uncovering a Government conspiracy. The film received critical praise and won many awards.
Produced by Nimbus Film, ''King's Game'' was originally a book written by former parliamentary press officer Niels Krause Kjær.
==Plot==
Eleven days before the parliamentary election, the Centre Party's main candidate, who is about to become the next Danish Prime Minister and his wife have a car accident. His situation is critical and nobody knows if he will survive. Even his wife, who is also hospitalised, is not informed. The next day, Torp is assigned to cover the election. Quickly, he is drawn into the internal power struggle in the Centre Party where two very different politicians, Erik Dreyer and Lone Kjeldsen, show interest in gaining power and potentially becoming the next Prime Minister. Torp, the son of a previous justice minister, writes his first front-page story after a tip-off from the Centre Party press coordinator, Peter Schou. The story turns out to be "planted spin" in order to damage Lone Kjeldsen (Nastja Arcel) to allow the advantage to Dreyer who benefits from her lost credibility.
Ulrik is determined to get to the truth behind the lies that drive Kjeldsen's vulnerable husband to suicide. Tracing the misinformation to its source, he reveals what he knows to his editor and the paper's owner who turns out to be an old college friend of Dreyer. Both close ranks and Torp is fired. Torp tries to confront Dreyer over what he knows to be a cover-up of the death of the leader Aksel Brunn who is reported as being still on life support though sources tell him the man was "brain dead from day one". Even Brunn's 22-year-old son is paid out to back Dreyer's stalling. But Dreyer dismisses Torp as an enemployed malcontent. Finally, by joining forces with a left-wing stringer, Henrik Moll (Nicolas Bro), Torp succeeds in exposing the plot and Dreyer on national television. The effects last only a short time before Dreyer's contacts and influence push him on a wave to the top.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「King's Game」の詳細全文を読む



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