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Width : 13.5 cm. Height : 1.4 cm. Binding : dvd. Length : 19 cm. Format : pal. Release Date : 2000-12-19. Theatrical Release Date : 1961-06-23. Studio : Tartan.
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About this product
Product Information
A disturbing study of the doubts, uneasiness and creeping paranoia of contemporary life. Swedish dialogue.
Product Identifiers
EAN5023965334626
eBay Product ID (ePID)3947861
Product Key Features
ActorMax von Sydow, Gunnar Bjrnstrand, Harriet Andersson
Film/TV TitleThrough a Glass Darkly
DirectorIngmar Bergman
LanguageSwedish
Subtitle LanguageEnglish
Run Time85 Mins
FormatDVD
Release Year2001
FeaturesBlack & White, With Subtitles, Star And Director Filmographies\Scene Selection\Philip Strick Film Notes\Extract From Bergmans Book Images My Life In Film\The Bergman Collection Trailer
GenreDrama, General
Additional Product Features
Number of Discs1
Certificate18
Country/Region of ManufactureSweden
ReviewsUSA Today - ...Harriet Andersson's performance is among the greatest in the director's canon...
Additional InformationTHROUGH A GLASS DARKLY won Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film for the second year in a row. (It was preceded by THE VIRGIN SPRING, which won in 1960.) The picture represents Bergman's first experiment with what he referred to as the chamber play, featuring only four characters whose configuration resembles that of a string quartet. Karin (Harriet Andersson), a young woman recently released from a mental institution, is on holiday on a secluded island with her father, David (Gunnar Bjornstrand), a writer; her husband, Martin (Max von Sydow); and her younger brother, Minus (Lars Passgard). The presence of her family, who are caught up in their own problems and unable to offer her the love and emotional support she requires, proves detrimental to Karin's mental condition instead of bringing about her recovery. Soon she is undergoing an emotional crisis, culminating in the memorable hallucinogenic episode in which she envisions God as a spider.<BR>This was the first film of Bergman's trilogy of faith--which also includes WINTER LIGHT and THE SILENCE--though this is a concept discredited later on by Bergman himself, who ultimately saw few thematic links among the three movies.