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The Mistress

Älskarinnan

Sweden

1962

77 Min
Black and White
2.35:1
Swedish
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DIR Vilgot Sjöman

PROD Lars-Owe Carlberg, Allan Ekelund

SCR Vilgot Sjöman

DP Lasse Björne

CAST Bibi Andersson, Birger Lensander, Per Myrberg, Gunnar Olsson, Birgitta Valberg, Max von Sydow, Öllegård Wellton

ED Lennart Wallén

PROD DES P.A. Lundgren

SOUND Stig Flodin, Brian Wikström

Berlinale (Competition)

Synopsis

While at a scientific gathering in Stockholm, Andersson begins an affair with von Sydow—an older, married man. He refuses to give up his wife for her, however, which causes Andersson much anguish. She tells boyfried Myrberg about the affair and then leaves both men to take a new job in Rome. About to board the train to Italy, she’s met by von Sydow, who has decided that he really needs her, and the two spend the night together. In the morning, Andersson realizes that this is not what she wants, and she breaks off the affair so that she can begin her new life. The film was released in 1962 but was not shown in the US until two years later. —tvguide.com

Director

Original

Vilgot Sjöman

Best known for 1968’s twin arthouse succès de scandales I Am Curious (Yellow) and I Am Curious (Blue), Swedish writer/director Vilgot Sjöman sustained a long and varied career as a filmmaker — a fact generally overlooked by cinephiles on the near side of the Atlantic, where the majority of his features (sadly) fell through the cracks of distribution, evading cinematic and video release.

In his early days, Sjöman struggled as an aspiring playwright, to such a degree that he failed to find backing for any of his theatrical pieces (or producers with any interest in mounting them). He nonetheless carved alternate roads to success — and reworked one of his plays as a novel, which he later adapted as a movie screenplay for Trots/Defiance (1952), directed by Gustaf Molander. Its triumph inspired the 28-year-old Sjöman to eschew theater for cinema, and in 1956 he high-tailed it to Los Angeles, with a scholarship to UCLA under his arm. He enrolled in a six-month film course and subsequently… read more

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