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Sweden |
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1961-1970 |
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| 1961 | ||||
| Films of Note | ||||
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Såsom i en spegel (Through a Glass Darkly) (Ingmar Bergman) [MORE] [ADD] |
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| 1962 | ||||
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Älskarinnan (The Mistress) (Vilgot Sjöman) [MORE] [ADD] |
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Nattvardsgästerna (Winter Light) (Ingmar Bergman) [MORE] [ADD] |
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Vaxdockan (The Doll) (Arne Mattsson) [MORE] [ADD] |
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| 1963 | ||||
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| 23/9 - |
Tystnaden (The Silence), the final part of Ingmar Bergman’s trilogy, is released. The previous films are Såsom i en spegel (Through a Glass Darkly) in 1961, and Nattvardsgästerne (Winter Light) in 1962. Ingrid Thulin, Gunner Lindblum and Jörgen Lindström star. [MORE] [ADD] |
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– Harry Schein founds the Swedish Film Institute and becomes its first managing director. Its creation brings an end to entertainment tax, which is replaced with a levy of 10% on every cinema ticket. [MORE] [ADD] |
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Kvarteret Korpen (Raven’s End) (Bo Widerberg) [MORE] [ADD] |
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| 1964 | ||||
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| 16/3 - |
Vilgot Sjöman’s 491 is released. The film is banned by Swedish censors because of its homosexual content and off-screen scene in which a woman is raped by a dog. [MORE] [ADD] |
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| 21/12 - |
Älskande par (Loving Couples), actress Mai Zetterling’s directorial debut, is released. The film stars Harriet Andersson, Gunnel Lindblom and Anita Björk as three expectant mothers reflecting upon their past relationships with men. [MORE] [ADD] |
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| Sweden 1964: Other Films of Note | ||||
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Att älska (To Love) (Jörn Donner) [MORE] [ADD] |
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För att inte tala om alla dessa kvinnor (Now About All These Women) (Ingmar Bergman) [MORE] [ADD] |
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| 1966 | ||||
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| 18/10 - |
Ingmar Bergman's Persona is released. Liv Ullmann and Bibi Andersson co-star. [MORE] [ADD] |
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| Sweden 1966: Other Films of Note | ||||
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Här har du ditt liv (This is Your Life) (Jan Troell) [MORE] [ADD] |
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| 1967 | ||||
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| 24/4 - |
Bo Widerberg’s Elvira Madigan, the true story of a 19th Century tightrope artist (Pia Degermark) who embarks on an affair with a married army officer (Thommy Berggren) which destroys them both, is released. [MORE] [ADD] |
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| 9/10 - |
Vilgot Sjöman’s controversial Jag är nyfiken - en film i gult (I am Curious – Yellow) is released. The film is seized by US customs and banned for two years because of its sexually explicit content. [MORE] [ADD] |
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| Sweden 1967: Other Films of Note | ||||
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Hugo och Josefin (Hugo and Josephine) (Kjell Grede) [MORE] [ADD] |
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| 1968 | ||||
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| 25/3 - |
Dom kallar oss mods, Stefan Jarl and Jan Lindkvist’s documentary about alienated teens is released. It is the first mainstream film to feature unsimulated sexual intercourse. [MORE] [ADD] |
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| 29/9 - |
Ingmar Bergman’s Skammen (Shame), starring Liv Ullmann and Max Von Sydow, is released. [MORE] [ADD] |
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Sweden 1968: Other Films of Note |
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Vargtimmen (Hour of the Wolf) (Ingmar Bergman) [MORE] [ADD] |
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| 1969 | ||||
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Films of Note |
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Adalen ’31 (Bo Widerberg) [MORE] [ADD] |
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En Passion (A Passion) (Ingmar Bergman) [MORE] [ADD] |
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Ni ljuger (You’re Lying) (Vilgot Sjöman) [MORE] [ADD] |
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Riten (The Rite) (Ingmar Bergman) [MORE] [ADD] |
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| 1970 | ||||
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– Sandrew’s Grand 1-2-3, the country’s first multiscreen cinema, opens in Sveavägen, Stockholm. [MORE] [ADD] |
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Sweden 1970: Other Films of Note |
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En Kärlekshistoria (A Swedish Love Story) (Roy Andersson) [MORE] [ADD] |