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Fanny y Alexander

Título original: Fanny och Alexander
  • Miniserie de TV
  • 1983
  • 1h 30min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
9.0/10
5.1 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Fanny y Alexander (1983)
Drama

Dos niños suecos viven las alegrías y las tragedias de su familia, los Ekdahls.Dos niños suecos viven las alegrías y las tragedias de su familia, los Ekdahls.Dos niños suecos viven las alegrías y las tragedias de su familia, los Ekdahls.

  • Elenco
    • Ewa Fröling
    • Jarl Kulle
    • Börje Ahlstedt
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    9.0/10
    5.1 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Elenco
      • Ewa Fröling
      • Jarl Kulle
      • Börje Ahlstedt
    • 10Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 1Opinión de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Episodios5

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    Elenco principal27

    Editar
    Ewa Fröling
    Ewa Fröling
    • Emilie Ekdahl
    • 1983
    Jarl Kulle
    Jarl Kulle
    • Gustav Adolf Ekdahl
    • 1983
    Börje Ahlstedt
    Börje Ahlstedt
    • Carl Ekdahl
    • 1983
    Bertil Guve
    Bertil Guve
    • Alexander Ekdahl
    • 1983
    Pernilla Allwin
    Pernilla Allwin
    • Fanny Ekdahl
    • 1983
    Gunn Wållgren
    Gunn Wållgren
    • Helena Ekdahl
    • 1983
    Allan Edwall
    Allan Edwall
    • Oscar Ekdahl
    • 1983
    Erland Josephson
    Erland Josephson
    • Isak Jacobi
    • 1983
    Jan Malmsjö
    Jan Malmsjö
    • Biskop Edvard Vergerus
    • 1983
    Harriet Andersson
    Harriet Andersson
    • Justina
    • 1983
    Kerstin Tidelius
    Kerstin Tidelius
    • Henrietta Vergérus
    • 1983
    Lena Olin
    Lena Olin
    • Rosa
    • 1983
    Pernilla August
    Pernilla August
    • Maj
    • 1983
    Gunnar Björnstrand
    Gunnar Björnstrand
    • Filip Landahl
    • 1983
    Stina Ekblad
    Stina Ekblad
    • Ismael Retzinsky
    • 1983
    Mats Bergman
    Mats Bergman
    • Aron Retzinsky
    • 1983
    Christina Schollin
    Christina Schollin
    • Lydia Ekdahl
    • 1983
    Mona Malm
    Mona Malm
    • Alma Ekdahl
    • 1983
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios10

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    Opiniones destacadas

    10YellowManReanimated

    Bergman's Last Masterpiece

    The story begins at Christmas: it is the very early part of the 20th century and the Ekdahls are coming together to celebrate under the roof of the family's matriarch: Helena. As they do so, we see the surfacing of the complexities, buried resentments and background tensions which exist within all large families. Amidst this set up, we are presented three brothers: Gustav, a burly, emotional man who is having an affair with his brother's nanny; Carl, an intellectual, petty individual who is experiencing a crisis of confidence as well as a crisis in his finances; and Oscar, the eponymous Fanny and Alexander's father, he is the owner of a local theatre who has dedicated his life to the world of make-believe. He has also inculcated in his children a reverance for imagination and story-telling. The family celebrations are immoderately festive: there's copious amounts of eating, there's dancing, illicit sexual encounters, an oedipal-esque menage a trois, which includes Alexander, and, for him and the rest of the children, there's ample space for imagination and play. As the film progresses, these events become something of a nostalgic ideal. Very soon after, the children are forced to contend with the illness and death of a loved one. They are whisked away from their world of family and theatre into a life of privation and austerity. Many twists and turns will have to occur before they can return to the place they once were. Of course, the truth is that they will never be able to fully return and, yet, neither will they fully be able to leave. The joys of their childhood will forever remain buried within their memories. It will be the treasure trove they can dig for in the midst of the vicissitudes of their future existence.

    This epic film operates as a humanistic reflection on life and human nature. Bergman, along with Jean-Luc Godard, is the foremost name in existentialist cinema and he often deals with powerful themes such as the silence of God, the limits of love, and the pervasiveness of despair. This film operates as a weaving together of his observations and experiences of life as an artist but, first and foremost, as a human being. His writing is immaculate, he takes the time to make his characters genuinely rich and well-rounded. He tells a story in which there are no heroes or villains, just clumsy human beings, striving for but never quite reaching ultimate balance and wisdom. In the character of Alexander, he tells a coming-of-age story, a story of defiance, vulnerability and resiliance. The film, as a work of art, is a celebration of art itself. The tools needed to create are the tools many of the characters, especially the children, use to survive and make sense of their world. He uses long takes with naturalistic dialogue and centres the viewer within the confines of multiple sets, hardly any of the action takes place in outside locations as if to make it abundantly clear to the viewer that, despite the naturalism of the piece, this tale also is a tale of the imagination, taking place within a world created by its director. In telling this tale, he is both using and allowing his audience to experience a form of escpaism in order to evaluate the meaning and value of existence. This is cinema which unites its creator with its audience in order to produce a dense shared experience. It's a gift from one human being to another which says: this is how I have lived and sometimes prospered, may you also live, may you also sometimes prosper.
    10WhoKilledLauraPalmer

    A Masterpiece in Every Way

    WOW watched this whole thing last night, what a complete masterpiece. I am very curious to see the Theatrical Version to see what was cut, but I can't imagine missing anything from the TV version. Every moment has a purpose and the length gives the story even more profound power. It's absolutely brilliant and hit me harder than anything I've watched in a long time. I would definitely encourage people to seek out this full version if they can.
    10london_angel

    Mystery or Misery? Reflecting on Bergman's 'Fanny and Alexander'

    The greatest talent of an artist is measured by the timelessness of his work. Ingmar Bergman undoubtedly creates such a masterpiece by delving into the inner motives of his characters, separating their true nature from their outwardly fraudulent diligence and honesty. Hypocrisy is not a modern invention, as shown brilliantly in 'Fanny and Alexander' from 1975.

    It is frightening how hypocritical ideals change over time, yet the underlying desire to pretend is passed down through generations. The Church and its rule back then, and later communism and socialism-in the wrong hands, these can become tools of oppression rather than means of prosperity and love. Bergman's characters stand firm against emotional and physical abuse, triumphing with the freedom of life.

    Magic, love, and joy are the instruments that fortify cruelty. For Alexander, the world of dreams and imagination is a way to complete the puzzle of reality. His unconscious manifests in the form of ghosts of past people to provide support, or even become an inner governor as in the case with the bishop. Additionally, the miracle of Judaism and its spiritual power resurrect justice in several ways: more obviously and straightforwardly through the children's rescue by Isak, and another much more mysteriously-through the androgynous angel Ismael's sensitive perception of Alexander's hostile inner thoughts and their aim to fulfil the tantalising hope, which granted Alexander physical escape but a mental trap. Could this be the reason for keeping Ismael locked up?

    Last but not least, the overarching theatre theme serves as an allegory for liberty and the triumph of imagination. The theatre disappeared, and creativity was oppressed during the bishop's rule. Its reappearance marks a new chapter in the Ekdahl family's history. The reference to Hamlet in Alexander can be noticed from the second act. The Ekdahls are irreversibly associated with the world of theatre and cultural anthropology. Interestingly, the family members are shown to possess recognisable sins, yet remain honourable and pure-the contrast appearing throughout the personages of the movie. Progressive views go hand-in-hand in the artist's house: about love and marriage, about the relationship between women and men, and about women's position in the world.

    Although the movie is mostly a reflection of reality from Alexander's perspective, his sister Fanny appears to shadow her brother's rebellion with a soft acceptance of events.

    This movie's artwork reflects on religious rules, the artistic opposition to all the unfairness of reality, and the power of art and magic to withstand it. It is strong yet funny and catchy, serving as a pillar of hope and faith against the darkest sides of ourselves. Bergman's visionary ideas make this movie worth watching even today!
    9tildiz149

    Strong family drama with a personal touch.

    The Ekdahl family gathers their loved ones to celebrate Christmas together. Helena Ekdahl is the matriarch of the Ekdahl family. She has many relatives. Among them you can find her three sons, three daughters-in-law and a bunch of grandchildren.

    Fanny and Alexander are two of Helena´s grandchildren. Their parents are Emilie and Oscar Ekdahl. One day something terrible happens. Oscar falls ill and dies. Everybody is devastated.

    Bishop Edvard Vergérus was the one who held Oscar´s funeral. He marries Emilie Ekdahl, but their marriage begins to crumble quite soon. Why? Because bishop Vergérus is strict and conservative.

    I really like this TV series. I watched it on SVT play. It was edited into a feature film. Yes, it is very long and yes, I took breaks. But I didn´t feel like I was wasting my time. I think that the cast and crew knew what they were doing. Ingmar Bergman took inspiration from his own life in "Fanny and Alexander". And the result is, in my opinion, a strong family drama with a personal touch. I would have liked to get a little more clarity, at least in a few scenes.

    I´m looking forward to watching the shorter movie version, but I want to know much more about Ingmar Bergman first. I suggest that you watch "Fanny and Alexander".
    10Quinoa1984

    Bergman packs almost *everything* into one epic, personal, haunting and sometimes comical experience

    Suffice to say Fanny and Alexander, the last film that Bergman *intended* to direct for theaters (he had two others that were released on TV that also made it to US theaters, besides the point), is the stuff that most artists, writers and filmmakers wish they can accomplish in one fell swoop. Here is a work that encapsulates the obsessions, desires, fears, passions, anger, anguish, hatred, warmth, cold, humor, and probing questions in Bergman's life work- some 50 movies including scripts made by other directors- while also working as very possibly his best film, his richest, the one that says everything there needs to be said about being a kid, having a warm family, and being (rightfully) on your guard about men of the cloth.

    It's also, as I sort of realized watching a wonderful new (digital?) print of the UNCUT 5 hour version at the IFC center, something that might have some comparisons with Pan's Labyrinth: this is a story of a child who has an imagination all his own, but also the story of what happens to him and his sister after the death of their father.

    After losing the strongest father-figure force that she knew, Emilie Ekdahl remaries to a figure who seems to have an equally strong presence, Bishop Vergerus, who subsequently imposes that she and the children take no posessions and live with him and his family in a cold, medieval home out of the 15th century. Like Captain Vidal, Bishop Vergerus believes in freedom, and subsequently free will, but also believes in swift punishment, "strong, harsh love" for his wife and new step-kids, and the only retaliation Alexander has are his 'fantasies', which are all his own but with their own force to them.

    Least that's the comparison I can make now, late at night and with so many thoughts and feelings about seeing the film once again. But it's got more than just the story of a boy's world of ghosts (not least of which, in a given Hamlet reference, his late father) and magic via Jewish rabbi Isak, but it's also the perfect telling of two kinds of family life.

    The first part of the picture, up until the section with the father's death, is full of lush, vibrant colors, brought out by Nykvist's cinematography, and the vibe is brought out in the Ekdahl family, which is full of warmth and love, lusts, some quarrelling, some emoting from the matriarch Ekdahl. Then when things turn to the Vergerus clan, it's all stark and gray and without any texture, with bars on the windows of the room where the children sleep (which also holds a dark secret). In Vergerus, I might add, the actor Jan Malmsjo creates one of the most terrifying of all cinema characters, the kind of evil that ranks up there with Nurse Ratched, where it's all in the face of 'it's for the good of *you*'.

    So, there's religion, there's spirituality, there's the supernatural, there's family, there's amazing, mind-blowing monologues, it's... a sumptuous film to take on a deserted island. It's the only one that goes past five hours I would think could work over and over and over again and still have bits and pieces to stimulate the mind, consciousness. And it's a fine piece of filmmaking to boot, on all fronts.

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    Argumento

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    • Versiones alternativas
      Conceived, shot and edited as a television miniseries from the start, it was then re-edited into the shorter feature film Fanny y Alexander (1982), which was released before the miniseries, but which writer/director Ingmar Bergman found very inferior.
    • Conexiones
      Edited from Fanny y Alexander (1982)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Suite No 2 for Cello Solo
      Written by Benjamin Britten

      Performed by Frans Helmerson

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How many seasons does Fanny and Alexander have?
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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 25 de diciembre de 1984 (Suecia)
    • Países de origen
      • Suecia
      • Francia
      • Alemania Occidental
    • Idiomas
      • Sueco
      • Alemán
      • Yidis
    • También se conoce como
      • Fanny and Alexander
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Uppsala, Uppsala län, Suecia
    • Productoras
      • Cinematograph AB
      • Svenska Filminstitutet (SFI)
      • Gaumont
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 30 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.66 : 1

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