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The Virgin Spring

Jungfrukällan

Sweden

1960

89 Min
Black and White
Swedish
  • Currently 4.3/5 Stars.
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DIR Ingmar Bergman

PROD Ingmar Bergman

SCR Ulla Isaksson

DP Sven Nykvist

CAST Max von Sydow, Birgitta Valberg, Gunnel Lindblom, Birgitta Pettersson, Ove Porath, Axel Düberg, Tor Isedal

ED Oscar Rosander

PROD DES P.A. Lundgren

MUSIC Erik Nordgren

Synopsis

Winner of the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, Ingmar Bergman’s The Virgin Spring is a harrowing tale of faith, revenge, and savagery in medieval Sweden. Starring frequent Bergman collaborator and screen icon Max von Sydow, the film is both beautiful and cruel in its depiction of a world teetering between paganism and Christianity, and of one father’s need to avenge the death of a child. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Ingmar_bergman

Ingmar Bergman

The most famed and honored filmmaker ever to emerge from the nation of Sweden – and regarded by many as one of the three or four most brilliant directors of the 20th century – Ingmar Bergman radically altered the nature and meaning of the motion-picture form, transfiguring a medium long devoted to spectacle into an art capable of profoundly personal meditations into the myriad struggles facing the psyche and the soul. By focusing on the exploration of self with unparalleled intensity, Bergman brought to the screen a new sense of emotional intimacy, fusing the concepts behind Freudian psychotherapy with a dreamlike sensibility founded on visual metaphors, flashbacks, and extreme close-ups to create a revelatory cinematic world unlike any before it.

Born Ernst Ingmar Bergman on July 14, 1918, in Uppsala, Sweden, he followed a brief 1938 military stay by attending Stockholm University. While there, he staged his first plays, among them adaptations of Macbeth, August Strindberg’s… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 13 wall posts.
Picture of Elric Kane

Elric Kane

7Feb10

Schlockmeister Bergman's remake of the classic Wes Craven movie " Last House on the Left".   
Picture of Brendan

Brendan

1Nov09

Horrifying. One of the most affecting movies I've ever witnessed.   
Picture of Paul Jazz

Paul Jazz

12Oct09

amazing - still packs a punch and says a lot about the nature of vengeance. A true classic in the Shakespearean sense.  
Picture of Steve

Steve

4Sep09

Possibly Bergman's greatest cinematic endeavour. The Virgin Spring should be seen by more people.  

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Reviews

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Untitled

By Byron Brubake​r on June 1, 2009

This is my first Bergman film. He dramatically uses light and darkness and rustic scenery well. In fact he presents a story in simple black and white terms, straightforward good and evil. Max von…  read review

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By Sam Cooper on June 1, 2009

A tragic tale of a young girl who is on her way to church when she is suddenly ravished by two men and a younglin’. Bergman tests the limits of human faith and revenge with this excellent period piece…  read review

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By Paul Schlehr on March 23, 2009

I also disagree with Mr. Smith. It is unfortunate that many younger viewers of this film have been raised in the era of blockbuster movies, where the action must be non-stop and storytelling is a forgotten…  read review

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By Jeffrey Dick on February 20, 2009

I could not disagree with Christopher Smith more. Bergman masterfully employs cinematography in this film to create a continuity of human existence that does not modernize his medieval characters by…  read review

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Influence of Kurosawa on The Virgin Spring

9 posts by 5 people 10 months ago

DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.