Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe tenants in a Swedish boarding house are expecting a visit from Don Carlos, a famous opera singer from Argentina. When an unexpected visitor turns up, he is mistaken for Don Carlos.The tenants in a Swedish boarding house are expecting a visit from Don Carlos, a famous opera singer from Argentina. When an unexpected visitor turns up, he is mistaken for Don Carlos.The tenants in a Swedish boarding house are expecting a visit from Don Carlos, a famous opera singer from Argentina. When an unexpected visitor turns up, he is mistaken for Don Carlos.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Carl Hagman
- Don Carlos
- (as Calle Hagman)
Nils Ericson
- Nisse
- (as Nils Ericsson)
- …
Hugo Bolander
- Notarien
- (Nicht genannt)
Helga Brofeldt
- Pensionatsgäst
- (Nicht genannt)
Lena Cederström
- Ung pensionatsgäst
- (Nicht genannt)
Berns De Reaux
- Don Carlos' betjänt
- (Nicht genannt)
Harry Essing
- Styrman på ångbåten
- (Nicht genannt)
Sigge Fürst
- Sjungande man på ångbåten
- (Nicht genannt)
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"The love of the old things is not because they are old. It's just that aging and decay give the necessary distance, or arouse the necessary sympathy." - Susan Sontag in her famous essay on camp, first published in Swedish in Chaplin 1966.
On various grounds, Weyler Hildebrand's Pensionat Paradiset (1937) is a veritable Swedish classic, some would call it a cult film. Early on, it came to be called, to some extent deceptively, "the pilsner film of the pilsner films". A couple of weeks after the premiere, it came to trigger the famous Concert Hall debate, after the criticism of the Swedish film had been heard strongly throughout the thirties.
It was a meeting arranged by the Swedish Writers' Association in order to scourge the scarcity of Swedish film and at best also suggest improvements. Several well-known cultural personalities participated, among them Vilhelm Moberg, the educator Gunnar Hirdman and the film critic Carl Björkman. In his review of Pensionat Paradiset in "Dagens Nyheter", Björkman had coined the later classic statement: "Swedish film - a disgrace to our culture".
Pensionat Paradiset ended up in the loophole for this blistering criticism. Is it a question about substandard art or exalted kitsch? The fact is that the audience has since loved the film as much as the cultural elite hated it.
From being originally ridiculed by critics, Pensionat Paradiset is today considered the crown jewel of the Swedish comedy in film. Bursting with immortal lines and crazy jokes, wonderfully revelry in archipelago environments and smorgasbord tables and of course Thor Modén's priceless singing effort with "A real Mexican".
On various grounds, Weyler Hildebrand's Pensionat Paradiset (1937) is a veritable Swedish classic, some would call it a cult film. Early on, it came to be called, to some extent deceptively, "the pilsner film of the pilsner films". A couple of weeks after the premiere, it came to trigger the famous Concert Hall debate, after the criticism of the Swedish film had been heard strongly throughout the thirties.
It was a meeting arranged by the Swedish Writers' Association in order to scourge the scarcity of Swedish film and at best also suggest improvements. Several well-known cultural personalities participated, among them Vilhelm Moberg, the educator Gunnar Hirdman and the film critic Carl Björkman. In his review of Pensionat Paradiset in "Dagens Nyheter", Björkman had coined the later classic statement: "Swedish film - a disgrace to our culture".
Pensionat Paradiset ended up in the loophole for this blistering criticism. Is it a question about substandard art or exalted kitsch? The fact is that the audience has since loved the film as much as the cultural elite hated it.
From being originally ridiculed by critics, Pensionat Paradiset is today considered the crown jewel of the Swedish comedy in film. Bursting with immortal lines and crazy jokes, wonderfully revelry in archipelago environments and smorgasbord tables and of course Thor Modén's priceless singing effort with "A real Mexican".
Wusstest du schon
- PatzerIn the opening scene of the movie, when people are singing aboard the steam boat, you especially see Sigge Fürst in the middle of the crowd. In the long shots of him, he's wearing a checkered tie, but in the closeups, his tie is polka dotted. At the start of the song, the man next to him, playing the accordion, is wearing a white cap, but by the end of the song, he's bare-headed.
- SoundtracksVälkommen i det gröna
Music by Jules Sylvain
Lyrics by Sven Paddock (1936)
Performed by Sigge Fürst and Folke Helleberg
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By what name was Pensionat Paradiset (1937) officially released in Canada in English?
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