Autumn Sonata [Criterion Collection]
Retail: $39.95
Our Price:
$26.74
Save: $13.21
In Stock - Ships in 24 Hours
-
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen Rating:
NR-
Language:
Swedish, English Studio:
CriterionUPC:
037429126127Year of Release:
1978Item Number:
HVD000162Release Date:
01/11/2000Genre:
Drama –
Family Drama –
Foreign Films –
Psychological Drama –
Reunion Films
Format:
DVD
MOVIE DESCRIPTION:
Ingrid Bergman, the Swedish expatriate who became one of Hollywood's greatest stars, and Ingmar Bergman, one of the world's most acclaimed filmmakers and Sweden's most honored director, worked together for the first and only time in this intensely personal drama about the troubled relationship between a mother and daughter. Charlotte (Ingrid Bergman) is an acclaimed concert pianist who is visiting her daughter Eva (Liv Ullmann), the wife of a parson in a rural community, for the first time in seven years. While Charlotte and Eva struggle to be civil, there is a deep emotional gulf between them. Eva resents her mother for not caring enough for her as a child, feeling that Charlotte was more interested in her career and her other daughter, Helena (Lena Nyman), who is severely handicapped and can only communicate through inarticulate noises. Charlotte, on the other hand, is uncomfortable with the fact that Helena now lives with Eva, and she is still coming to terms with the emotional devastation of her husband's recent death. Herbstsonate, released in America as Autumn Sonata, earned Ingrid Bergman some of the most enthusiastic acclaim of her career; she received an Oscar nomination for Best Actress, and she won the same honor from the National Board of Review and the New York Film Critics Circle. It was also her last theatrical release; she would appear in only one more project, a TV movie about the life of Golda Meir, before her death in 1982. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
DVD FEATURES:
- Region: 1
- Number of Discs: 1
- Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1 (Vistavision)
- Audio: 5.1, PCM Mono
- Subtitle: English
- Features:
- Audio essay by noted film historian Peter Cowie
- Original theatrical trailer
- About the transfer
AWARDS
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
- Nominated Best Actress - 1978 (Ingrid Bergman)
- Nominated Best Original Screenplay - 1978 (Ingmar Bergman)
Hollywood Foreign Press Association
- Won Best Foreign Film - 1978
- Nominated Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama - 1978 (Ingrid Bergman)
National Board of Review
- Won Best Actress - 1978 (Ingrid Bergman)
- Won Best Director - 1978 (Ingmar Bergman)
- Won Best Foreign Film - 1978
National Society of Film Critics
- Won Best Actress - 1978 (Ingrid Bergman)
New York Film Critics Circle
- Won Best Actress - 1978 (Ingrid Bergman)
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
Director:
Ingmar BergmanProducer:
Katinka Farago, Lew Grade, Martin StargerScreenwriter:
Ingmar BergmanCinematographer:
Sven NykvistEditor:
Sylvia IngemarssonProduction Designer:
Anna AspSet Designer:
Anna AspCostume Designer:
Inger Pehrsson
REVIEW:
- The first and only time Ingmar Bergman and Ingrid Bergman worked together for the screen, Autumn Sonata is an intense yet frequently overlooked family drama. It is excessively talky, and rightly so, with the two main protagonists holed up in a country estate after a seven-year separation to duke out their problems in a passionate dialogue. The tense mother-daughter relationship is deeply investigated, with Ingrid as Charlotte, the successful career mother, and Liv Ullman as Eva, the neglected and put-upon daughter. With a sickly sister struggling to survive in the next room, these actors stir up some heated emotions and stormy conversation. The scene where each woman performs Chopin on the piano is a moving portrait of the power exchanges at work in their relationship. Both actresses get a chance to expand on their usual film personas. As Eva, Ullman is typically timid before exploding with confrontational energy. Ingrid Bergman shows a darker emotional side as Charlotte, her classic beauty-queen face covered in tears and photographed in intimate close-ups. Diagnosed with terminal cancer right before shooting, she tinges the already brutally personal events with a mournful subtext. The look of the film is almost as stunning as the performances. Though it dates the film to the '70s, the earthtone colors of oranges, reds, and yellows are used throughout as an excellent thematic accompaniment to the melancholy mood of regret, pain, and catharsis. Made toward the end of Ingmar Bergman's career during his "chamber film" phase, Autumn Sonata marked the last theatrical appearance of Ingrid Bergman. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi
Autumn Sonata [Criterion Collection] - Available now from DVDPlanet.com, join our mailing list and receive special offers and promotions.






Find us on Facebook
Become an Affiliate