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Intermezzo (1936)

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Intermezzo

14 opiniones
7/10

early star-making performance for Bergman

The original version of 'Intermezzo', starring Ingrid Bergman - who later recreated the role in Hollywood opposite Leslie Howard - and Gosta Ekman, is an involving story of a mid-life crisis, an intermezzo, a passion driven by music.

Tired, bored, and a stranger to his family, Holger Brandt (Ekman) is searching for a new accompanist but when he finds his daughter's music teacher, Anita Hoffmann (Bergman) events begin to move in quite a different direction. Of course we don't see any romantic involvements beyond a bit of friendly kissing and heightened dialogue between Brandt and Hoffmann which pinpoints their relationship - and the film is all the better for it.

As good as the version with Bergman/Howard, this version is rarely seen but well worth catching. Ekman - who has more than a passing resemblance to the great German actor Conrad Veidt - is the perfect suffering artist, looking for excitement and a new definition of love; while Bergman makes the character of Hoffmann believable in her infatuation with Brandt without seeing ridiculous.
  • didi-5
  • 10 ene 2009
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6/10

When the Young meets the Elder

The original version of this Swedish melodrama by Gustaf Molander is short (the American remake is even shorter) and to the point. A famous and not very young violinist (Gösta Ekman) meets a pretty and fresh-as-a-daisy pianist (Ingrid Bergman), he believes he met his match and she falls for him or something he has. Although the final solution tries to make us believe that the violinist is a fervent family man who will return to the loving arms of his abandoned but addict-to-marriage wife (Inga Tidblad), we know better: even if Hollywood insists in pairing ageing male stars with girls who could be their great-granddaughters, the truth is that age does count. On the pianist's side, it is obvious that his fame and talent impressed her, but when she wins a "stipend" to study, she takes the right decision. Interestingly, Hans Ekman who plays Åke, the son (to his real-life father) turned into filmmaking and was Ingmar Bergman's rival for a while.
  • EdgarST
  • 1 may 2004
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6/10

A touching and pleasant love story

  • ackstasis
  • 19 ene 2008
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It Must Be True!!

The Swedish version of "Intermezzo" is so heartwrenching that it must be true. Okay, so maybe that's an exaggeration, but this film is certainly one of the greatest screen romance films. It's definitely a film for artists, who need to always attempt to balance their lives between the home fires and the passion of one's creative calling. Watching this one will certainly remind the viewer to not take for granted what their love life offers them.
  • postmanwhoalwaysringstwice
  • 18 feb 2003
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7/10

interesting morality tale

This is the Swedish version of INTERMEZZO. The film was remade for English-speaking audiences just 3 years later with a mostly non-Swedish cast, except for Ingrid Bergman who reprized her role from the original.

While this Swedish version isn't quite as polished as the other, it is the original and seems a little less polished--and this ISN'T necessarily a bad thing. Because of the lack of polish, the film seems more like it was filmed with real people and the problems seemed more universal. Also, while I didn't approve of the lead running around on his family, it sure brought up a lot of moral questions and made me think. A decent, though not great, film.
  • planktonrules
  • 21 feb 2006
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7/10

Ingrid Bergman's First Lead in the Movie David O. Selznick Noticed Her

Before becoming one of the most popular stars in Hollywood, young Ingrid Bergman gained acting experience in Swedish movies. Appearing in eleven films in her native Sweden, Bergman was spotted by film producer David O. Selznick in November 1936 "Intermezzo." The independent studio owner was so impressed by Bergman's acting in her first motion picture as a lead, he immediately made her an offer for her to come to Hollywood. She accepted. Her relocation to America to play in English-speaking roles made Bergman the fourth most legendary movie actress in cinematic history, according to the American Film Institute ranking.

Bergman's biographer Charlotte Chandler called her "arguably the most international star in the history of entertainment." Life magazine described her as having "greater versatility than any actress on the American screen. Her roles have demanded an adaptability and sensitiveness of characterization to which few actresses could rise."

Selznick was swayed with her acting in "Intermezzo" by her "natural sweetness." It was quite a complement for the young Swedish actress since her Anita Hoffman, the piano teacher for the daughter of a master violinist, was basically a home wrecker who falls for family man musician Holger Brandt (Gosta Ekman). Bergman was 22 when she played Anita, yet her on-screen talent was years ahead of other actresses her age. Named after Princess Ingrid of Sweden, Bergman had an attentive father who dreamed of his only surviving daughter to be an opera star (his wife died when Ingrid was two). She embraced acting at an early age, whom her father documented freely with his camera. "I was perhaps the most photographed child in Scandinavia," Bergman recalls. She was an orphan at 14 when her father died, but her acting ambitions never wavered. "I knew from the beginning I wanted to be an actress," Ingrid claimed.

Bergman earned a scholarship at the Royal Dramatic Theatre School, the same school Greta Garbo attended. With just one year under her belt in a three-year program, she was hired by a Swedish film studio in 1932 at 17, launching her long acting career. Six credited movies later, Bergman received her first major role as the reluctant mistress to the habitually touring violinist who was happily married to his wife. "Intermezzo" was her third movie under director Gustaf Molander, who was a former scriptwriter for Victor Sjostrom and Mauritz Stiller, Sweden's top silent movie directors. The actress credits Molander for his instructive insights, but the director who co-wrote "Intermezzo," noted "I created Intermezzo for her, but I was not responsible for its success. Ingrid herself made it successful."

Bergman excelled in the Swedish (and one German) films she appeared before accepting Selznick's invitation to America. The only hesitation by the producer was, according to his son Danny, "She didn't speak English, she was too tall, her name sounded too German, and her eyebrows were too thick." To make her feel comfortable, Selznick invited Bergman to stay with him and his wife. Also, he wanted her to be comfortable before the American camera and film crew by placing her in the same role as Anita she played in her Swedish film in the 1939 remake of "Intermezzo" opposite Leslie Howard .
  • springfieldrental
  • 1 sep 2023
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6/10

The Swedish version

What's the difference between the 1936 and 1939 Intermezzo films? Not much, except that one's in English and the other's in Swedish. Both are exactly the same story, and both star Ingrid Bergman as the alluring other woman who makes a decent family man stray. Basically, you just have to make the choice of whether you want to read subtitles or not.

In this Swedish version, Gosta Ekman is a respected violinist who has two children and a devoted wife. Ingrid is a pianist, and when she starts teaching his little girl how to play, they both start fantasizing about playing duets together. This is a very 1930s plot line, where the woman is the great temptress and the man is practically possessed by his feelings for her. Like in The Blue Angel, the man is not an active participant, but is instead the victim. Sometimes that is the case in real life, when homewreckers really go out their way to seduce a married man. But most of the time, as in the immortal words from French Kiss, they don't "steal anything that doesn't want to be stolen", so a lot of these 1930s movies aren't that realistic. However, if you want to see a very, very young Ingrid Bergman speaking in her native tongue, you can rent it. She doesn't play a femme fatale; in fact, her character is quite sweet, but just keep in mind the blame doesn't rest solely on her shoulders.
  • HotToastyRag
  • 10 feb 2023
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8/10

May-December romance

The original Swedish version of "Intermezzo" was shown on cable recently. Having seen the American treatment, we felt curious to see how it compared. This film directed by a legend of the Swedish cinema, Gusfaf Molander, is a joy to watch. Mr. Molander also wrote the screen treatment with Gosta Stevens.

The Swedish version shows American audiences a different style of acting. The idea of an older man with a loving family, falling in love with a prettier young woman is the basis of the story. In this version, the difference is more notable because Holger, the famous violinist, looks much older than in the American version. This seems to make a better case for making a case about how ultimately Holger comes back to the family. Also it makes it easier for us to accept the fact that Anita, the young pianist, realizes how deep Holger love for his family, and especially his young daughter, Anne Marie, weighed in her decision to leave him.

The performances are strong. Gosta Elman, one of the best Swedish actors makes a formidable Holger. The young Ingrid Bergman is perfect as the young Anita. Inga Tidblat, the abandoned wife Magrit gives an understated reading to her part. She understands perfectly one day this would happen. Erik Berglund and Hugo Bjorne play Charles and Thomas, Holger's friends who never make any judgment to him, yet one can watch how much they disapprove of this liaison.

The film is as effective as the American remake, although, the latter version seems to have been more fully realized and easy to take than its Swedish one. At any rate, this is a film to witness Gustaf Molander at his best!
  • jotix100
  • 7 jun 2005
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4/10

Is Intermezzo Swedish for naptime?

When I read a movie synopsis that suggests a young piano teacher runs off with her student's dad, I expect them to, you know, go somewhere.

Here I am nearly an hour into my nap - I mean, this movie - and they don't appear to have gone anywhere. Just a bunch of talk, talk, talk. Who cares. It's all so stagebound and inert, set to a repetitive violin soundtrack.

As for the principals. Bergman was still stuck in Sweden, which is to say she hadn't been glammed up by Hollywood yet. That's fine. She got better looking the older she got, but she's not exactly an ugly duckling as a younger woman, either. But holy h3ll, the guy she runs off with is a mess. Gosta Ekman has sickly dark circles around his eyes, and it's not due to the makeup department. He was a cokehead who was knocking on death's door, as it turned out. The makers of this movie might have been better off had they exploited that look and made this a gothic horror film.

As released, it's a talky, dull melodrama that offers little dramatic tension and even less insight. It survives today as a curiousity piece within the Bergman ouevre.
  • ArtVandelayImporterExporter
  • 2 ene 2022
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10/10

Terrific Movie!!

"Intermezzo"(1939) was Ingrid Bergman's first American film, but it wasn't the first film she made. She had made 6 Swedish films before this original version of "Intermezzo"(1936). This made her a star in her native country. The American remake would make her a star around the world.

It's a unique story of a brilliant violinist, with a sweet loving family, who falls for his accompanist, and the pain it brings to all involved. I haven't seen the American version, but the original is great. The acting is just so natural, just like they were actually living these lives. It's strange to hear Ingrid speaking Swedish, but she laughs and looks like she always did. The best things about this movie is the beautiful soundtrack, the intelligent script, terrific acting, and that cute little girl who played the daughter(I forgot kids were like that). I lucked out finding this video at a lumber store(?), but what a find. If you get the chance to see the original, see it. It's that good!!
  • timmauk
  • 1 abr 2001
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5/10

Better than the remake, but still not very good

  • xan-the-crawford-fan
  • 27 sep 2021
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8/10

An Opportunity Worth Seizing

I was lucky enough to catch this at Melbourne's wonderful Astor Cinema and was astonished to re-read the external review that panned it. This was the first pre ww2 Swedish movie I'd seen and I'd have to say that I'm yet to see any Hollywood films of its vintage that are any better. I thought that the principal cast, Gosta Ekman, Inga Tidblad (who yes does look strikingly like Kristen Scott Thomas), Ingrid Bergman, Eric "Bullen" Berglund, and Britt Hegman were terrific and the telling and pacing of the story was faultless. The poor matching of sets and trite dialogue that often marred films that were coming out of the UK and USA at the time was mercifully missing and the film was a delight. Yes its great to see Ingrid Bergman looking radiant (and at times more than a little like Gretta Garbo) but all the other components that make up this film aren't too shabby either. If you get the opportunity to see this film, I don't think you'll regret seizing it.
  • woodford-2
  • 30 ago 2008
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5/10

The overrated Mr Howard

Never saw the attraction of the foppish Mr Leslie Howard, here, in Gone with Wind, The Scarlet Pimpernel, etc etc. That Scarlett O'Hara would pine for such a wuss for a lifetime always made me laugh. He has no screen presence at all, no vibe, nothing cinematically special.

As for the much vaunted Ms Ingrid Bergman, another totally ordinary screen presence, and her perennial "continental" accent grating to boot.

Neither would have achieved much "stardom" today, in a field so utterly crowded with real gifted natural actors.

The story of the "love story" here is also pretty silly. Totally predictable in the first 10 minutes of the thing.

Perhaps in its time it was considered scandalous, now I say: big deal.

What IS a big deal is the much put upon wife welcoming the cad "home" at the end. A home he was perfectly happy to abandon with such wanton abandon.

The old Hollywood trope of women either as saints or femmes fatales. And not a real convincing complex woman in sight.

Five stars for the sheer historical curiosity value and for the best thing in this mediocrity: the luminous child Anne Todd. Now there's a girl worth watching on the screen.
  • marydm-43470
  • 31 jul 2021
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8/10

You Can't Hurry Love

This is coming from someone who is neither an Ingrid Bergman fan nor a fan of subtitled movies. I was surfing my cable channels, when this movie just popped up from nowhere. As you can tell my overwhelming joy in watching subtitled movies is pretty negative. The movie description said it was about a TORRID love triangle. Of course this peaked my curiosity. Peaking my curiosity and watching the movie until the end are totally two different things but to my surprise I watched the movie until the credits rolled and was not disappointed. I am still in shock that I actually enjoyed this movie. As soon as I come out of shock, which has to be soon if I plan to stay employed, I will be searching for more movies with subtitles. ENJOY!
  • Dlepool
  • 6 jun 2005
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