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Friday, May 16, 2008

CRISIS (1946)

This early Ingmar Bergman pic is largely a formulaic piece of sentimental dramedy about an 18 yr-old girl whose life is turned upside-down when her real mother shows up from the big city and takes her away from the life she’s known. After some tough knocks, she ends up back in her small hometown with her adopted mom and the slightly older boarder who’s always loved her. It’s a confident piece of work, but it’s more valuable for its odd tone and characterizations; especially the swiftly darkening moods that set in about halfway thru and a nihilistic/Nietzschean/ne’er-do-well pal who flits from Mom to daughter without changing his flirtatious tune. There’s more than just historical interest here, just don’t be put off by the opening reels that play like a Swedish Andy Hardy pic.

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