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 CINEMA :Les blessures narcissiques d'une vie par procuration
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CINEMA :Les blessures narcissiques d'une vie par procuration

VIP-Blog de tellurikwaves
  • 12842 articles publiés
  • 103 commentaires postés
  • 1 visiteur aujourd'hui
  • Créé le : 10/09/2011 19:04
    Modifié : 09/08/2023 17:55

    Garçon (73 ans)
    Origine : 75 Paris
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    ©-DR- ELVIRA MADIGAN de Bo Widerberg (1967) p4

    29/07/2014 03:24

    ©-DR- ELVIRA MADIGAN de Bo Widerberg (1967) p4


           External reviews
           Showing all 9 external reviews

     






    ©-DR- ELVIRA MADIGAN de Bo Widerberg (1967) p5

    29/07/2014 03:44

    ©-DR- ELVIRA MADIGAN de Bo Widerberg (1967) p5


     
    Breathtakingly beautiful photography & music
    10/10
    Author: Don W from Long Island Motor Parkway
    29 January 2000

    Breathtakingly beautiful photography & music help to make this movie the finest love story I've seen. It's based on a true story that took place in 1859, although the movie is set at a somewhat later date. It's hard to imagine that these two young people, so full of life & love for each other, would choose the option they did to resolve their problems, but part of what this movie shows us is the inability of these two "upper class" individuals (Lt. Sparre is a Count, an aristocrat, & Elvira is a world famous circus performer who is mentioned in newspaper articles & a book) to cope with life once it has beeen altered beyond what they have been accustomed to deal with. If you choose not to read the subtitles,(ce qui serait très CON !) you'll still enjoy the movie for its visual beauty & the terrific music by Mozart & Vivaldi. Ironically,(?) the drawing Elvira pawns for pennies is by Henri Toulouse-Lautrec!!






    ©-DR- ELVIRA MADIGAN de Bo Widerberg (1967) p6

    29/07/2014 03:52

    ©-DR- ELVIRA MADIGAN de Bo Widerberg (1967) p6


    As beautiful as advertised
    9/10
    Author: Dennis Littrell from United States
    18 June 2001

    (Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it at Amazon.)

    This really is a beautiful movie, exquisite in detail, gorgeously filmed, directed with great subtlety and intensely focused. Nothing wasted or thrown away here.Everything counts. We feel the forebodings of tragedy first in the straight razor in Sixten's hand as he caresses the back of Elvira's head, and then again there is the knife on their picnics, stark, solid, sharp steel in the paradise of their love. Note too the shots on her belly. The child touches her stomach. She vomits from eating flowers...

    To really appreciate this movie it should be understood that it was filmed in the sixties and it represented to that audience something precious and true. Note the anti-war sentiment seemingly tangential to the story of the film, but nonetheless running as a deep current underneath. He was an army deserter, like those in the sixties who fled to Canada to avoid the draft and the body bags in Vietnam. Note his confrontation with his friend from the regiment, a scene that many in the sixties lived themselves. He gave up everything for love, but it really is her story, her choice. She chose a man with a wife and two children, a soldier.

    She had many other choices, as the friend reminded her, but for her he was the "last one." What they did was wrong, but it was indeed a summer of love, the cold northern winter in the distance, ripe red raspberries and mushrooms to eat and greenery everywhere and the sun brilliant and warm; and then in the next to the last scene with the children when she faints as the child pulls off the blindfold of the game and is surprised to face Elvira's belly, there is just a little snow on the ground, perhaps it is from the last winter, not completely melted.

    If you can watch this without a tear in your eye and a melancholy feeling about the nature of human love, you have grown too old. Theirs was a forbidden love, like that of Romeo and Juliet, a tragic love, doomed from the start, which is why the ending of the movie is revealed in the opening credits. Those who think a story is spoiled by knowing the ending, know not the subtle ways of story, of great tales that are told again and again. Knowing the ending only sharpens the senses and heightens the appreciation.

    Pia Degermark who plays Elvira, who is a tightrope walker,a girl of gypsies(?!) has beautiful calves(which is all we see of her body), a graceful style and gorgeous eyes, made up in the unmistakable style of the sixties, very dark with long heavily mascara'ed eyelashes. And she is a flower child, a fairy child of the forest, drawn to things earthy and mysterious, to a strong young man and a fortune teller who finds for her only small black spades in her future. In life we chase after butterflies. Sometimes we catch one.






    ©-DR- ELVIRA MADIGAN de Bo Widerberg (1967) p7

    29/07/2014 04:17

    ©-DR- ELVIRA MADIGAN de Bo Widerberg (1967) p7


    Sites externes
    Showing all 4 external sites
    Jump to: Miscellaneous Sites (2) | Photographs (2)

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    an enduring love story
    10/10
    Author: chris ivanyi (civanyi@ucla.edu) from Los Angeles
    6 January 2000

    I had the pleasure, and good fortune to see this film on the big screen. It exemplifies classic beauty, one is reminded of Renoir paintings. The film uses landscape to reveal inner emotions, a rarity these days. The structure reveals the final outcome in the beginning, leaving us with is an examination of a process so lovingly portrayed by Widerberg, a process so perfectly focused -- a delicate, lyrical love story -- quite an achievement.


     






    ©-DR- ELVIRA MADIGAN de Bo Widerberg (1967) p8

    29/07/2014 04:31

    ©-DR- ELVIRA MADIGAN de Bo Widerberg (1967) p8


    Gorgeous and Tragic Love Story
    10/10
    Author: kathik from Minneapolis, MN
    13 December 2006

    I saw this film when it came out in the 1960's. It is loosely based on a true story of two lovers, a beautiful tightrope dancer and a married Army Lieutenant, who run away together in the late 1800's. I was blown away by the sheer beauty of this film. There are no car chases or explosions. Instead, it brings you close to nature with the sights and sounds of the fields and trees, the wind, sumptuous berries, bird songs and crickets.  Their love plays out within some of the most beautiful scenery I have ever seen. It runs almost in real time, quietly moving their story along. This film left a lasting impression on me for decades.*
    I loved it.
    *
    *
    * Ce qui est mon cas.Je n'ai jamais revu ce film depuis sa sortie en salle





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