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Two People

Två människor

Sweden

1945

78 Min
Black and White
Swedish, Danish
  • Currently 3.4/5 Stars.
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DIR Carl Theodor Dreyer

EXEC Hugo Bolander

SCR Carl Theodor Dreyer

DP Gunnar Fischer

CAST Georg Rydeberg, Wanda Rothgardt, Gabriel Alw, Stig Olin

ED Carl Theodor Dreyer, Edvin Hammarberg

PROD DES Nils Svenwall

MUSIC Lars-Erik Larsson

Berlinale (Retrospective)

Synopsis

Two People is set in contemporary Stockholm. From a montage of newspaper headlines and close-ups of chemical instruments we learn that a young researcher, Arne Lundell, has been accused of plagiarising an older rival, Professor Sander. The rest of the film takes place in Lundell’s apartment; he and his wife, Marianne, are the only characters. Lundell is informed that Sander has committed suicide, but it soon turns out that he was actually murdered, and a chain of circumstantial evidence points to Arne. By accident Arne finds a letter revealing that Marianne was Sander’s mistress before she met Arne. Enraged with jealousy, he threatens to throw her out, but he changes his mind. Marianne now confesses that she shot Sander. Sander had looked her up, on the pretext of helping her husband, but he abused her confidence and stole Lundell’s research findings. A flashback shows Sander as a looming shadow, demanding that Marianne come back to him. That’s why she killed him. Arne wants her to flee, but she won’t live without his love and takes poison. Arne chooses to go to his death with her. —carlthdreyer.dk

Director

Original

Carl Theodor Dreyer

Carl Theodor Dreyer was born out of wedlock to a Swedish housekeeper, Josefina Nilsson (1855-1891), who gave him up for adoption immediately after. The first year and a half of his life was turbulent, but the little boy finally found a home with the Dreyer family and was named Carl Theodor after his adoptive father. Dreyer’s birth mother died not long after his eventual adoption. Several film scholars have interpreted Dreyer’s frequent depictions of tragic women as an autobiographical element in his films.

Dreyer began his career as a reporter, specialising in aviation early on, in 1910-1913. Himself an active balloonist, he got a balloonist’s certificate in November 1911. Alongside his journalism, he wrote screenplays. His first realised script was Bryggerens Datter (Dagmar) (Rasmus Ottesen, 1912), produced by Det Skandinavisk-russiske Handelshus. In 1913-1918, he worked as a script consultant and writer at Nordisk Film, where he also made his directorial debut… read more

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Francisco R.

20Aug11

Not as "disastrous" as most critics and Dreyer himself have referred to this film, though there is an evident lack of chemistry between the leads (a blatant example is the scene where the actress quickly turns her head to avoid being kissed in the mouth by the other guy) it's difficult to find another major fault in this movie, I enjoyed the simplicity and how swiftly the story unfolds.

Picture of Lefteris Becerra

Lefteris Becerra

26Jan11

interesante trabajo. fallido por las razones que el propio dreyer se detuvo a explicar, como que le impusieran a los actores, pero sin duda una mala película de un maestro como dreyer es siempre más interesante que los exitosos productos industriales que nos intentan sambutir vía la sumisión nacional a una una industria por lo demás deplorable como lo es hollywood

Picture of Aflwydd

Aflwydd

12Oct10

Despite what Bordwell writes, it's not a failure at all; in fact, it's outstanding. I'd eliminate the Hollywood background music if I could, but you can't have everything.

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