Night Games | |
---|---|
Directed by | Mai Zetterling |
Written by | David Hughes Mai Zetterling |
Produced by | Göran Lindgren |
Cinematography | Rune Ericson |
Edited by | Paul Davies |
Music by | Jan Johansson Georg Riedel |
Production company | Sandrews |
Distributed by | Sandrew Rank Gala Film Distributors Mondial Films Gefion Film Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Filmipaja City Film Sandrew Metronome Distribution Stiftelsen Svenska Filminstitutet Stockholm |
Running time | 105 minutes |
Country | Sweden |
Languages | English Swedish |
Night Games (Swedish : Nattlek) is a 1966 Swedish movie directed by Mai Zetterling and starring Ingrid Thulin. The film premiered at the 27th Venice International Film Festival where it was considered so controversial that it was shown to the jury in private. [1] The film was also the cause of former child-star Shirley Temple's resignation from the San Francisco International Film Festival. Temple denounced the film as “pornography for profit” and was against it being shown at the festival. [2]
Jan returns with his fiancée to his childhood home. While there he flashes back to his childhood, twenty years before when he lived an unfettered life watched over by a strange great-aunt and a hedonistic and often neglectful mother and father.
In particular he remembers watching his mother give birth to a stillborn child after refusing to go to the hospital in the middle of a party and his sexual obsession with his mother which included being caught by her while he was masturbating while listening to her read a bedtime story.
In the present, his relationship with his fiancée grows more strained as his past begins to affect the way he acts in the present.
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Mai Elisabeth Zetterling was a Swedish actress, novelist and film director.
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Dance, Little Lady is a 1954 British drama film directed by Val Guest and starring Terence Morgan, Mai Zetterling, Guy Rolfe and Mandy Miller. The film was made by independent producer George Minter and distributed by his Renown Pictures. It was shot in Eastmancolor at the Walton Studios near London. The film's sets were designed by the art director Frederick Pusey.
Pippi Longstocking is a Swedish children's novel by writer Astrid Lindgren, published by Rabén & Sjögren with illustrations by Ingrid Vang Nyman in 1945. Translations have been published in more than 40 languages, commonly with new illustrations.
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