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Cinema of Sweden

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Cinema of Sweden
No.ofscreens830 (2011)[1]
• Per capita9.9 per 100,000 (2011)[1]
Main distributorsSf Film19.0%
Walt Disney 13.0%
Warner Bros. 13.0%[2]
Produced feature films (2011)[3]
Fictional23 (53.5%)
Animated-
Documentary15 (34.9%)
Number of admissions (2011)[5]
Total16,269,803
• Per capita1.92 (2012)[4]
National films3,110,407 (19.1%)
Gross box office (2011)[5]
TotalSEK1.56 billion (~€154.6 million)
National filmsSEK 266 million (~€26.3 million) (17.0%)

Swedishcinemais known for including many acclaimed films; during the 20th century the industry was the most prominent ofScandinavia.This is largely due to the popularity and prominence of directorsVictor Sjöströmand especiallyIngmar Bergman;and more recentlyRoy Andersson,Lasse Hallström,Lukas MoodyssonandRuben Östlund.

Famous Swedish film and TV stars wereAnna Q. Nilsson,Victor Sjöström(also director, etc.),Lars Hanson,Warner Oland,Greta Garbo,Ingrid Bergman,Kristina Söderbaum,Zarah Leander,Anita Ekberg,Ann-Margret,Viveca Lindfors,Signe Hasso,Mai Zetterling,Max von Sydow,Erland Josephson,Ann Zacharias,Maud Adams,Britt Ekland,Ingrid Thulin,Ernst-Hugo Järegård,Agneta Eckemyr,Harriet Andersson,Bibi Andersson,Sven-Bertil Taube,Bo Brundin,Dolph Lundgren,Joel Kinnaman,Melinda Kinnaman,Pernilla August,Peter Stormare,Lena Olin,Stellan Skarsgård,Malin Åkerman,Alexander Skarsgård,Bill Skarsgård,Alicia Vikander,Izabella Scorupco,Noomi Rapace,Ola Rapace,Mikael Nyqvist,David Dencik,Helena Mattsson,Rebecca Ferguson,Fares Fares,andMyAnna Buring.

Early Swedish cinema

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Trolldrycken(1915)

Swedish filmmaking rose to international prominence whenSvenska Biografteaternmoved fromKristianstadtoLidingöin 1911. During the next decade the company's two star-directors,Victor SjöströmandMauritz Stiller,produced many silent films, some being adaptations of stories by the Nobel-prizewinning novelistSelma Lagerlöf.Sjöström's most respected films often made use of the Swedish landscape. Stiller fostered the early popularity ofGreta Garbo,particularly through theGösta Berlings saga(1924). Many of the films made at the Biografteatern had a significant impact on German directors of the silent and early sound eras, largely because Germany remained cut off from French, British, and American influences throughWorld War I(1914–1918).

The global expansion of the United States after World War I had its consequences in the dynamics of cinema and changed previous favorable market conditions that benefited Sweden's film exports to Europe. During wartimes,Hollywoodnot only was able to conquer its domestic market but also managed to increase its exports to European countries - which produced fewer films during wartime - and even toLatin America.[6]The neutrality of Sweden could have been translated in the fortification of its film industry, which to some extent was true since its production grew relatively during this period, but its market share declined severely. While in 1913, the last year before the War, the American share in Sweden was only about 4%; in 1919, the first year after the war, it was 80%.[7]

Facing the exponential growth of US films and its dominance domestically and internationally, Swedish film production, according toJan Olsson,"operated with a Nordic […] home base"[8]and felt compelled to adapt its market strategies to the new context to regain relevance. The order of the day was to stop what was called the risk of becoming not only the country but the whole continent a "colony of Film America".[9]The monopolistic organization ofSvensk Filmindustriin 1919 and also its further model of co-productions with other European film companies are one of the first expressions of the paradox that characterized the attempt of consolidating simultaneously anationaland atransnational cinema.The difficulty of delimiting how the production begins and ends is not the only restriction that makes these theoretical frameworks potentially problematic, but the multiple discourses that each film express reinforces the complexity that is a supposed property of cultural expressions.

To make Swedish films more appealing to the audiences, the challenge was the maintenance of their specificity - stories with a background based on literature about Nordic countryside was one of the "national" trademarks[10]- with some aspects that made Hollywood successful, such as an agile narrative pace. The new market dynamics established new different aesthetic expressions for Swedish cinema and its narratives expressed the duality betweencosmopolitanismand Swedish heritage.Flickan i frack(Girl in Tails,Karin Swanström,1926), for example, represents the convergence of these different perspectives with its portrayal of an urbanStockholmcontrasting with the countryside and the desire of the protagonist to become an independent woman but also to be recognized by the Swedish traditionalism.

The attempts of constructing a national cinema able to be also universal was a response to the Hollywood dominance, which, in the end, is the consequence of the consolidation of the United States economic supremacy; after all, European films were not able to develop the same capacity of escalation in production and exhibition. The capitalist tendency of constituting monopolies and concentrating wealth is extended also to cinema. By the end of the 1920s, all major US exhibitors had offices in Sweden.[11]

In the mid-twenties, Sjöström, Stiller, and Garbo moved to the United States to work forMGM,bringing Swedish influence to Hollywood. The departure left a vacuum in Swedish cinema, which subsequently went into a financial crisis. Both directors later returned to Sweden, but Stiller died soon after his return while Sjöström returned to theatre work for most of the remainder of his career.

The advent of thetalking movieat the beginning of the 1930s brought about a financial stabilization for Swedish cinema, but the industry sacrificed artistic and international ambitions for this financial success. Some provincial comedies emerged, created for the local market.

Swedish cinema through WWII

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During World War II Swedish cinema gained artistically, mainly due to the directorsGustaf Molander,Alf Sjöberg,Hasse Ekman,Anders HenriksonandHampe Faustman.

Post-war

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The influential Swedish filmmakerIngmar Bergmanrose to prominence in the fifties after he began making films in the mid-forties. His 1955 filmSmiles of a Summer Nightbrought him international attention. A year later, he made one of his most famous films,The Seventh Seal.In the 1960s, Bergman won theAcademy Award for Best Foreign Language Filmfor two consecutive years, withThe Virgin Spring(Jungfrukällan) in 1960 andThrough a Glass Darkly(Såsom i en spegel) in 1961. He won the award again in 1983, for the period family dramaFanny and Alexander(Fanny och Alexander). Bergman was nominated once for theBest Picture award,for the 1973 filmCries and Whispers(Viskningar och rop), the story of two sisters watching over their third sister's deathbed, both afraid she might die, but hoping she does. It lost toThe Sting.Although it was not nominated in theForeign Languagecategory, gave Bergman the first of three nominations forBest Director.Bergman also won fourGolden Globe AwardsforBest Foreign Language Film.

Working closely with Bergman,cinematographerSven Nykvisthad a major impact on the visual aspects of Swedish cinema. Twice the recipient of theAcademy Award for Best Cinematography,forCries and WhispersandFanny and Alexander,Nykvist is considered by many[who?]to be one of the greatest cinematographers. He also directedThe Ox(Oxen) (1991), nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1992.

Also starting his career working with Bergman,Vilgot Sjömandebuted in 1962 withThe Mistress(Älskarinnan), but attracted far wider attention in Sweden when his film491was banned by Swedish censors due to its explicit sexual content. After cutting, it was released in 1964. Sjöman went on to cause even wider controversy, depictingsexual intercoursein his 1967 filmI Am Curious (Yellow)(Jag är nyfiken – gul). The United States considered it to be pornography; it was seized by the customs and banned. When the film was eventually released in 1969, the publicity gained from the legal fight and its revolutionary graphic content drew huge crowds, making it the most successful Swedish film export ever, and the most successful foreign film in the US up to this point.[12]Most probably it was instrumental in establishing a view of Swedish cinema – and perhaps of Swedes in general – as having a liberal attitude towards sexuality.

Another Swedish postwar filmmaker of note isBo Widerberg.His 1963 filmRaven's End(Kvarteret Korpen) andThe Man on the Roof(Mannen på taket) are widely regarded as classics. His later works includeThe Man from Majorca(Mannen från Mallorca),The Serpent's Way(Ormens väg på hälleberget) andAll Things Fair(Lust och fägring stor). Widerberg received three Academy Award nominations for Best Foreign-Language Film,Raven's End,Ådalen 31andAll Things Fair,but never won.

Jan Troellstarted his career as Widerberg's director of photography, but could soon debut with his own filmHere's Your Life(Här har du ditt liv). He went on to directThe Emigrants(Utvandrarna) in 1971 and its sequelThe New Land(Nybyggarna) the following year. The films are based onVilhelm Moberg's epic novels about Swedish emigration to America in the 19th century, books extremely well known in Sweden.The Emigrantswas nominated for four Academy Awards, including Best Director and Best Picture. Troell then went to Hollywood, where he directedZandy's Bride,starringGene Hackman,andHurricane.He returned to Sweden to makeThe Flight of the Eagle(Ingenjör Andrées luftfärd), a film about the Swedish explorerAndrée's disastrous 1897 polar expedition. The film was nominated for an Academy Awards for best foreign language film. Later works include the controversialIl Capitano: A Swedish Requiem(Il Capitano),Hamsun,aboutKnut Hamsun,As White as in Snow(Så vit som en snö), and several documentaries.

In the 1960sIngmar Bergmansaw a comedic duo'svariety showonGröna Lundand told his studio "There are two funny guys down at Gröna Lund. Why don't you let them do a movie? There aren't too many funny movies these days." The duo wasHans AlfredssonandTage Danielsson,known asHasse & Tage,who made a movie calledSvenska bilder.Their own production companyAB Svenska Ordmade many more movies after that one, directed either by Hasse or Tage. They include, among othersDocking the Boat(Att angöra en brygga),The Apple War(Äppelkriget),The Man Who Quit Smoking(Mannen som slutade röka),Release the Prisoners to Spring(Släpp fångarne loss – det är vår!),Ägget är löst,The Adventures of Picasso(Picassos äventyr),SOPORandThe Simple-Minded Murder(Den enfaldige mördaren). These movies have cult status in contemporary Sweden.

1968 saw the release ofStefan Jarl's andJan Lindqvist's documentaryThey Call Us Misfits(Dom kallar oss mods). The first in what would become a trilogy, it is an uncompromising account of the life of two alienated teenagers. Stefan Jarl went on to make several other celebrated documentaries in the 1980s and 1990s.

Contemporary Swedish cinema

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Swedish director and screenwriterJohannes Nyholm(right) presentingKoko-di Koko-daatBuenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema2019.

Roy Anderssonhad a breakthrough with his first feature-length film,A Swedish Love Storyin 1969, and was awarded four prizes at theInternational Film Festivalin Berlin the same year. Following the financial and critical disaster of his 1975 filmGiliaphe took a two-decade break from film directing. In March 1996, Andersson began filmingSongs from the Second Floor,that premiered at the2000 Cannes Film Festival,winning the Special Jury Prize. Andersson's return to filmmaking was a major success with the critics, earning him fiveGuldbagge Awardsin Sweden for best film, direction, cinematography, screenplay and sound.

DirectorLasse Hallströmmade his feature-length film debut in 1975 with the comedyA Guy and a Gal(En kille och en tjej) featuring the well-known Swedish comic duoMagnus HärenstamandBrasse Brännström.He was the man behind most ofABBA's music videos, as well as the filmABBA: The Movie.My Life as a Dog,released in Sweden in 1985, was nominated for two1987 Academy Awards,fordirectingand foradapted screenplay.In 1987, it won theGolden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film.Following the film's international success, Hallström has worked onAmerican filmsWhat's Eating Gilbert Grape,The Cider House Rules,ChocolatandCasanova,among others.

In the comedy genreLasse Åberghas directed and also starred in some successful films that, although not praised by film critics, were box-office successes and have received cult status. The first one wasRepmånadin 1979, followed bySällskapsresanin 1980 and its four sequels. Although not part of theSällskapsresanseries,Repmånadwas very similar in style, depicting an inept outsider in various situations and traditions typical for Sweden in a humorous way.

Lukas Moodysson's first feature-length film,Show Me Love(English language name for the controversialSwedishoriginal title,Fucking Åmål) was a huge success in Sweden. The lovingly depicted teenage angst of the main characters played well with the audience and won fourGuldbagge Awardsin 1998. The follow-upTogether(Tillsammans) (2000) was an upbeat comedy, albeit with some darkly satirical undertones, set in a 1970sStockholmcommune. But Moodysson's filmmaking then took a radically different direction. The 2002Lilya 4-ever(Lilja 4-ever) is a dark, tragic story about trafficking in human beings, and the 2004A Hole in My Heart(Ett hål i mitt hjärta) deals with anamateur pornmovie recording, causing some controversy due to its shocking and disturbing footage.

Other young Swedish filmmakers that have seen major success in recent years includeLebanon-born directorJosef Fares,with the comediesJalla! Jalla!(2000) andKopps(2003), and therefugeedramaZozo(2005),Iranian-bornReza Parsawith the dramaBefore the Storm(Före stormen) (2000), andMaria Blom,with the comedyDalecarlians(Masjävlar) (2004).

During the late 1990s early 2000s several young filmmakers started exploring genre-films which had earlier been almost non-existent,Mikael Håfström's slasher filmStrandvaskaren,Anders Banke's vampire comedyFrostbitewhich was the first Swedish vampire film, Anders Jacobsson's satireEvil Edand Måns Mårlind's and Björn Stein's fantasy-thrillerStorm.Non of these films proved to be successful in Sweden but went to receive both acclaim and audience in foreign countries. In 2001 the low-budget comedy-horror filmTerror i Rock 'n' Roll Önsjönbecame Sweden's first zombie film.

More recently,Tomas Alfredson's (son ofHans Alfredson) romanticvampire film/drama filmLet the Right One In(Låt den rätte komma in) (2008) received widespread acclaim from critics all around the world, becoming one of the best reviewed films of the year.[13]In this particular tale, a bullied boy falls in love with a vampire girl who has just moved in next door. Also in the same year, directorJan Troellreturns with yet another period drama,Everlasting Moments(Maria Larssons Eviga Ögonblick) (2008).

In 2009, the feature filmsThe Girl With the Dragon Tattoo(Män som hatar kvinnor),The Girl Who Played with Fire(Flickan som lekte med elden) andThe Girl Who Kicked the Hornets' Nest(Luftslottet som sprängdes) became international hits with the first film making more than $100 million worldwide. All three films were based on the hit novels of the same names that together comprise the "Millennium series"by Swedish author/journalistStieg Larsson.

Another film maker to emerge from Sweden isRuben Östlund.In 2017 Östlund won thePalme D'orforThe Squareand in 2022 he won it again forTriangle of Sadness.

The Swedish film industry

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TheSwedish Film Institutewas founded in 1963 to support and develop the Swedish film industry. It supports Swedish filmmakings and allocates grants for production, distribution and public showing of Swedish films in their native country. It also promotes Swedish cinema internationally. Furthermore, the Institute organizes the annualGuldbagge Awards.

Through theSwedish Film Agreement,between the Swedish state and the film and media industry, theGovernment of Sweden,the TV companies which are party to the agreement, and Sweden's cinema owners jointly fund the Film Institute and thus, indirectly, Swedish filmmaking. The agreement usually runs for five years, and due for renewal from 1 January of the next year after expiration.

At a rate of about 20 films a year the Swedish film industry is on par with other comparable North European countries.

InTrollhättan Municipalitythere is a film production facility known asTrollywood;movies shot there includeShow Me Love,Dancer in the DarkandDogville.The movie studioFilm i Västcentered here produces about half of Sweden's full-length films.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ab"Table 8: Cinema Infrastructure - Capacity".UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Archived fromthe originalon 24 December 2018.Retrieved5 November2013.
  2. ^"Table 6: Share of Top 3 distributors (Excel)".UNESCO Institute for Statistics.Archivedfrom the original on 17 January 2014.Retrieved5 November2013.
  3. ^"Table 1: Feature Film Production - Genre/Method of Shooting".UNESCO Institute for Statistics.Archivedfrom the original on 5 November 2013.Retrieved5 November2013.
  4. ^"Country Profiles".Europa Cinemas. Archived fromthe originalon 9 November 2013.Retrieved9 November2013.
  5. ^ab"Table 11: Exhibition - Admissions & Gross Box Office (GBO)".UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Archived fromthe originalon 24 December 2018.Retrieved5 November2013.
  6. ^Bakker, Gerben. America's master: the European film industry in the United States, 1907-1920. In: Sedgwick, John and Pokorny, Michael, (eds.) An Economic History of Film. Routledge explorations in economic history. Routledge, London. 2004. p. 24-47
  7. ^Bjork, Ulf Jonas. 'The backbone of our business': American films in Sweden, 1910-50. Historical Journal of Film, Radio & Television, 01439685, Jun1995, Vol. 15, Issue 2.
  8. ^Olsson, Jan. "National Soul/Cosmopolitan Skin: Swedish Cinema at a Crossroads". In Jennifer Bean et al eds. Silent Cinema and the Politics of Space (Bloomington: Indiana UP, 2014), p. 250.
  9. ^Higson, Andrew, and Richard Maltby. 'Film Europe' and 'Film America': An Introduction ". In” Film Europe "and” Film America ": Cinema, Commerce and Cultural Exchange, 1920–1939, edited by Andrew Higson and Richard Maltby. Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 1999. p.1.
  10. ^Olsson. p. 251.
  11. ^Bekker, p. 40.
  12. ^Åberg, Anders (2010), 'The reception of Vilgot Sjöman's Curious films',Swedish Film: An Introduction and Reader,ed. Mariah Larsson and Anders Marklund, Lund: Nordic Academic Press
  13. ^"Top Movies - Best Movies of 2017 and All Time - Rotten Tomatoes".www.rottentomatoes.com.Archivedfrom the original on 28 February 2009.

Further reading

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  • Hjort, Mette; Lindqvist, Ursula, eds. (2016).A Companion to Nordic Cinema.Malden, Massachusetts: Wiley Blackwell.ISBN9781118475256.
  • Larsson, Mariah; Marklund, Anders, eds. (2010).Swedish Film: An Introduction and Reader.Nordic Academic Press.ISBN978-91-85509-36-2.
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