Scenes from a Marriage is a thought-provoking drama that delves into the intricacies of a couple's marriage, highlighting themes of love, infidelity, selfishness, and loneliness. Through an honest portrayal of their struggles, the film provides insights into the complexities of human relationships.
Trespassing Bergman is a documentary that explores the life and work of the renowned Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman. The film takes place on the isolated island of Fårö, where Bergman lived and filmed many of his movies. Through interviews, film clips, and photographs, the documentary offers a portrait of the artist and delves into his personal and professional life. It offers a unique insight into Bergman's creative process and his contribution to the history of cinema.
A documentary about the life of Ingrid Bergman, a Hollywood actress who rose to fame in the 1930s. The film explores her personal and professional journey, including her marriages, friendships, and the challenges she faced as a Swedish actress in Hollywood. It also delves into her impact on cinema history and her legacy as a talented and iconic artist.
In the sixties, Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman (1918-2007) built a house on the remote island of Fårö, located in the Baltic Sea, and left Stockholm to live there. When he died, the house was preserved. A group of very special film buffs, came from all over the world, travel to Fårö in search of the genius and his legacy. (Released in 2013, edited and abridged, as Trespassing Bergman.)
A slasher film centered around the Swedish celebration of Saint Lucy's Day.
Blad-Johan and the Nature Filmer are two cartoon characters who are part of this rhapsodic montage of crazy ideas and situations that take place in nature.
In Stockholm, a nurse and a newspaper reporter become embroiled in a romantic rivalry as they clash over a high-profile trial. Amidst jealousy and falling reputations, they navigate the complexities of love and journalism.
A journey through Swedish queer film history.
The desolate and mysterious island of Fårö, Sweden, Baltic Sea, 2004. Swedish master filmmaker Ingmar Bergman (1918-2007) looks back on his personal and artistic life; a journey through more than sixty years devoted to film, plays and television programs. (An abridged version of Ingmar Bergman Complete, 2004; a collection of three thematic documentaries: Bergman and Film; Bergman and Theater; and Bergman and Fårö Island.)
Ludvig and Sussi Battwyhl, Louis and Katja Brenner and Julia and Kurt Balzar are upper class millionaires. They don't seem to do any real work but still need a vacation in the mountains. Everybody seems to be romantically involved with everybody. A rich American woman joins them.
One can't help wondering whether, some quarter-century ago, Carsten Brandt had the slightest inkling of the epic dimension the project he was then starting to conceive – The Gentle Pain – would take on in the subsequent decades. For it became epic in just about every sense of the word: the film is very long; it tells a multi-layered story characterised as much by its digressions as by its main narrative thread, which concerns a filmmaker’s attempts to make sense of the life of Thorkild Hansen, a Danish traveller/historian/writer internationally probably best known for his non-fiction novel Processen mod Hamsun (1978); and it took a long time to finish – and then sat on a shelf due to legal battles galore. What is now finally revealed is a monument of modern(ist) cinema: a work that as much charts one man’s journey into his soul as a voyage of discovery into another artist’s mind.
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