Gunnel Lindblom

  • Ingmar Bergman – Nattvardsgästerna AKA Winter Light (1963)

    1961-1970DramaIngmar BergmanSweden

    Quote:
    “God, why hast thou forsaken me?” With Winter Light, Ingmar Bergman explores the search for redemption in a meaningless existence. Small-town pastor Tomas Ericsson (Gunnar Björnstrand) performs his duties mechanically before a dwindling congregation, including his stubbornly devoted lover, Märta (Ingrid Thulin). When he is asked to assuage a troubled parishioner’s (Max von Sydow) debilitating fear of nuclear annihilation, Tomas is terrified to find that he can provide nothing but his own doubt. The beautifully photographed Winter Light is an unsettling look at the human craving for personal validation in a world seemingly abandoned by God.Read More »

  • Henning Carlsen – Sult aka Hunger (1966)

    Henning Carlsen1961-1970DenmarkDrama

    When Pontus, a poor writer, enters city life, he finds himself in a struggle. He spends his time selling what he can and looking for work. However, as he searches for food, his pangs eat at his sanity. Hesitant to admit his own poverty, Pontus drifts through the town, indigent and lonely, as the film captures his certain peril.Read More »

  • Jan Molander – Reservatet (1970)

    1961-1970DramaJan MolanderSweden

    Ann Fromm (Gundel Lindblom), age 34 and a lecturer in Slavic Languages, is married to Andreas (Per Myrberg), a 40-year-old architect. They introduce themselves to the TV audience as rich, happy, and uncomplicated. They are well-educated, well-mannered, and polite. Anna has had an affair with a common friend, Ellis (Erland Josephson), for 8 years. Their relationship is as conventional as a marriage. When Anna reveals her unfaithfulness to Andreas, their upper middle-class façade rupture. This event occurs in the same week as Martin Luther King is murdered.Read More »

  • Mai Zetterling – Älskande par AKA Loving Couples (1964)

    Drama1961-1970ArthouseMai ZetterlingSweden

    PLOT:
    For her feature film directing debut, actress Mai Zetterling turned to Agnes von Krusenstjerna’s controversial masterpiece of Swedish feminist literature, “The Misses von Pahlen,” an intense and personal seven-part novel that has been likened to the great works of D.H. Lawrence. As three pregnant women from different backgrounds wait to have their babies in a hospital in Stockholm at the outbreak of the Great War, they relive their childhood and youthful experiences via individual flashbacks. Drawing on the classic Ingmar Bergman style of Swedish filmmaking and collaborating with many of his favorite actors as well as the great cinematographer Sven Nykvist, Zetterling had produced a powerful fusion of personal emotional drama and a commentary on the role of women in a society in moral decline.Read More »

  • Mai Zetterling – Flickorna AKA The Girls (1968) (HD)

    Drama1961-1970ComedyMai ZetterlingSweden

    A theater company rehearses Aristophanes play “Lysistrata” in which the Athenian women revolt to force the men to suspend the war and make peace. The three leading female actresses, Liz, Marianne and Gunilla, all live in humiliating circumstances to their men.Read More »

  • Gunnel Lindblom – Sally och friheten AKA Sally and Freedom (1981)

    1981-1990DramaGunnel LindblomSweden

    Sally, a 28-year-old social worker who has just broken up from a ten-year marriage. She seeks freedom, but has trouble living alone. She soon finds a new man, lawyer Jonas, but Sally knows that the past is chasing her and do things more difficult for her freedom quest.Read More »

  • Susan Sontag – Bröder Carl (1971)

    1971-1980DramaSusan SontagSweden

    Two women, Karen (theatre director) and Lena, visit an island, a Swedish resort, where Lena’s ex-husband, Martin (choreographer), lives in comparative seclusion with a mentally disturbed ballet dancer named Carl. Carl is brother by guilt rather than blood, for Martin is somehow responsible for his breakdown.Read More »

  • Ingmar Bergman – Rabies (1958)

    1951-1960DramaIngmar BergmanSweden

    “This made-for-television film was based on Olle Hedberg’s script, which Ingmar Bergman had directed for the City Theatre of Hälsingborg as early as in 1945, and as a radio play the following year. Bergman, who called the play ‘an unpleasant piece’, used stage actors from Malmö. The scarce reviews of the film focused on Bergman’s faiblesse for the puppet theatre and the morality play, with the result that the characters functioned as types.”Read More »

  • Ingmar Bergman – Jungfrukällan AKA The Virgin Spring (1960) (HD)

    1951-1960CrimeDramaIngmar BergmanSweden

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    Set in beautiful 14th century Sweden, it is the sombre, powerful fable of wealthy land-owning parents whose daughter, a young virgin, is brutally raped and murdered by goat herders after her half sister has invoked a pagan curse. By a bizarre twist of fate, the murderers ask for food and shelter from the dead girl’s parents, who, discovering the truth about their erstwhile lodgers, exact a chilling revengeRead More »

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