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CRISIS
(Kris, 1946)


REVIEW

"Don't just take our word for it. 'A bona fide fiasco,' was Bergman's own assessment of his directorial debut. Adapted from a Danish play Moderdyret (The Maternal Instinct) by Leck Fischer, it's a wholly contrived melodrama following the turmoil when errant mother Löfgren arrives in a tranquil village to collect the now teenage daughter (Landgré) left in the foster care of piano teacher Lind. The girl's soon working in her mum's Stockholm beauty parlour, but a potentially destructive relationship with handsome gigolo Olin sees her reassessing her priorities. Bergman's inexperience shows in the stodgy camerawork, stiff performances and sledgehammer use of music, while the eventual triumph of decent but dull country folk over iniquitous townies proves dismayingly parochial. Only Olin's existentially challenged artist/wastrel has the genuine Bergman tang, leading the rumpus as jazz-loving teens disrupt an establishment ball in a rare scene suggesting a film-maker of any promise."
— Trevor Johnston, Time Out


COMMENTARY

"If someone had asked me to film the telephone book I would have done so. The result might possibly have been better. I knew nothing, could do nothing and felt like a crazy cat in a ball of yarn."
— Ingmar Bergman


FURTHER READING



Cast
Credits
Nelly: Inga Landgré
Jack: Stig Olin
Jenny: Marianne Löfgren
Ingeborg: Dagny Lind
Ulf: Allan Bohlin
Uncle Edward: Ernst Eklund
Aunt Jessie: Signe Wirff
Malin: Svea Holst
Mayor: Arne Lindblad
Mayor's wife: Julia Caesar

Producer: Harald Molander
Director: Ingmar Bergman
Artistic Consultant: Victor Sjöström
Screenplay: Ingmar Bergman, adapted from the play Moderdyret [A Mother's Heart] by Leck Fischer
Cinematography: Gösta Roosling
Art Direction: Arne Åkermark
Music: Erland von Koch
Editor: Oscar Rosander


Crisis
Marianne Löfgren, Inga Landgré
Crisis
Gallery
CRISIS

Original title:
Kris ["Crisis"]

Other titles:
Crise (France); Crisi (Italy); Kriisi (Finland); Krise (Germany, Norway); Moderhjertet (Denmark)

Production:
Svensk Filmindustri

Distribution:
Svensk Filmindustri

Premiere:
25 February 1946 (Spegeln, Stockholm)

Running time:
93 minutes

Aspect ratio:
1.37:1

Language:
Swedish

Filmed:
on location at Hedemora, and at Råsunda Studios; from 4 July to 31 August 1945.