Shopkeeper Lind is taking his daughter on a long journey to a distant church to be baptized. His daughter is with a servant in the last sled, which trails behind out of sight and comes under attack by a wolf pack. In the confusion that arises as they flee, the baby falls out of the sled. Jåmpa, a Sámi man, finds the baby and takes her to his Sámi employer, the rich Aslag Laagje, who adopts her to be his daughter. Laagje baptizes the child as Laila. A year later, Laagje visits Lind and his bereaved wife, and realizes that Laila is their daughter. He returns Laila to them, but not long afterwards the plague decimates the village and kills her parents. Jåmpa goes to the village and finds Laila in the care of an elderly couple. He take Laila back to Laagje, and she grows up together with Laagje's adopted son, Mellet, who falls in love with her. Laila, however, eventually meets her cousin Anders Lind and become fond of him. After Anders helps rescue her after a canoe accident, they arrange to rendezvous at midnight, but Anders cannot come because his father falls ill and dies. Laila believes he has betrayed her and agrees to marry Mellet. With the aid of Jåmpa and at the last moment, Anders arrives at the church just before the wedding ceremony concludes. Laila and Anders resolve all and become engaged.
About the film
Laila was directed and edited by George Schnéevoigt, who also wrote the film's script based on Jens Andreas Friis's . The book, originally published in Norwegian in 1881 as From Finmarken, was translated into a Swedish in 1882 with the title Lajla : en Berättelse Från Lappmarken. produced the film with as production manager. The interiors were recorded in Nordisk Film's studio in Valby, Denmark and the exteriors of Outer Billefjord and Skoganvarre, Karasjok, Bossekop, Skjærvøy, Geilo, and Ustaoset. The film was shot by and Allan Lynge. The film premiered on October 6, 1929 at the cinema Palace in Denmark. On October 12, 1929, the film was previewed on the National Theatre Oslo, and on October 14, 1929, it had a Norwegian bio-premiere at the Circus World Theater and the in Oslo. It had a Swedish bio-premiere on November 11, 1929 at and the Olympia in Borås. The title was named Laila in Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, Laila - Die Tochter des Nordens in Germany, and Laila, La Figlia del Nord in Italy. In Norway, the film was distributed by Norrøna-Film AS, in Sweden by AB Svensk Filmindustri, and in Denmark by International Film. Several of the actors in the film had previously worked with Schnéevoigt in the 1928 film. The movie was released in 2011 on DVD by Flickeralley.com.