Emil’s reputation for being a troublemaker makes the Svensson family’s neighbours take up a collection for sending the boy off to America. But even if he among other unfortunate mishaps causes his father to get stuck in the outhouse window and get bitten by crawfish, all is forgotten when he skillfully wins the family a free horse. And when Alfred the farmhand gets seriously ill, Emil puts his own life on the line, venturing into a snow storm to get his best friend to a doctor before it is too late. —IMDb
A born myth-maker and one of Sweden’s most celebrated and accomplished directors of children’s films, Olle Hellbom’s lifelong infatuation with the silver screen began during his own intense childhood.
Born in 1925, by the time he was 20 Hellbom had already travelled all the major cultural powerhouses of inter-war Europe: including months spent studying film in London and a formative visit to the set of David Lean’s haunting 1945 epic Great Expectations.
In the 50´s Hellbom cut his teeth on a series of shorts and commercials, most notably his penetrating, award-winning study of Swedish wood sculptor and folk artist Döderhultaren. It was the 60’s though when Hellbom’s light really began to shine, when, with partner Olle Nordemar, he directed the first version of an Astrid Lindgren story in colour. Although ignored on its initial release as a TV series, when transferred to cinemas in 1960 The Children of Bullerby Village quickly won the hearts of moviegoers all over Sweden… read more