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Les Émigrants

Original title: Utvandrarna
  • 1971
  • Tous publics
  • 3h 11m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
8K
YOUR RATING
Les Émigrants (1971)
EpicPeriod DramaDramaHistory

An 1840s Swedish farming family struggle with their unyielding land and decide to embark on the arduous journey to new hope in America.An 1840s Swedish farming family struggle with their unyielding land and decide to embark on the arduous journey to new hope in America.An 1840s Swedish farming family struggle with their unyielding land and decide to embark on the arduous journey to new hope in America.

  • Director
    • Jan Troell
  • Writers
    • Bengt Forslund
    • Jan Troell
    • Vilhelm Moberg
  • Stars
    • Max von Sydow
    • Liv Ullmann
    • Eddie Axberg
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.0/10
    8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jan Troell
    • Writers
      • Bengt Forslund
      • Jan Troell
      • Vilhelm Moberg
    • Stars
      • Max von Sydow
      • Liv Ullmann
      • Eddie Axberg
    • 20User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 5 Oscars
      • 8 wins & 11 nominations total

    Photos183

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    Top cast29

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    Max von Sydow
    Max von Sydow
    • Karl Oskar
    Liv Ullmann
    Liv Ullmann
    • Kristina
    Eddie Axberg
    Eddie Axberg
    • Robert
    Sven-Olof Bern
    • Nils
    • (as Svenolof Bern)
    Aina Alfredsson
    • Märta
    Allan Edwall
    Allan Edwall
    • Danjel
    Monica Zetterlund
    Monica Zetterlund
    • Ulrika
    Pierre Lindstedt
    Pierre Lindstedt
    • Arvid
    Hans Alfredson
    Hans Alfredson
    • Jonas Petter
    Ulla Smidje
    Ulla Smidje
    • Inga-Lena - Danjel's Hustru
    Eva-Lena Zetterlund
    • Elin - Ulrika's Dotter
    Gustaf Färingborg
    • Prosten Brusander
    Åke Fridell
    Åke Fridell
    • Aron på Nybacken
    Agneta Prytz
    Agneta Prytz
    • Fina-Kajsa
    Halvar Björk
    Halvar Björk
    • Anders Månsson - Hennes Son
    Arnold Alfredsson
    • Kyrkvärd
    Bror Englund
    • Måns Jakob
    Tom C. Fouts
    • Pastor Jackson
    • Director
      • Jan Troell
    • Writers
      • Bengt Forslund
      • Jan Troell
      • Vilhelm Moberg
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    8.08K
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    Featured reviews

    8dromasca

    the history that repeats itself

    'The Emigrants' ('Utvandarna' in Swedish) directed by Jan Troell was released in 1971 and is based on a series of novels written by Vilhelm Moberg and published between 1949 and 1959. The story takes place one hundred years earlier, sometime in the middle of 19th century. And yet, seen today, this film telling the story of a group of Swedes who emigrated from Europe to the United States because of economic hardships and religious persecutions has a strong resonance in the actuality of the second decade of the 21st century. The migrants putting their lives in danger to cross the high waters following the dreams of freedom and better lives for them and their children may speak different languages and their skins may have a different color today, but seeing this film today reminds that most of us or our ancestors have been once migrants. The images of the columns of men and women in march on land or clustered in fragile boats sailing on dangerous seas look so familiar.

    As a historical document 'The Emigrants' is a great film. It shows us a moment of crisis in the history of Sweden and Europe, one of those periods that produced the great human migrations to America in the 19th century. From the point of view of American history it is a film about the Zero Moment of the American dream. There is, of course, a lot of naivety in the image that future immigrants have about the New World. Even the most educated of them owe their knowledge of reading propaganda books, written in order to encourage emigration, which contained many inaccuracies, intentional or not. But precisely this naivety is one of the pillars of the American dream. The road is littered with obstacles and not everyone who starts it reaches the promised shore. The power and quality of the film also lies in the description of the psychology and motivation of those who leave their country and the places where they were born and lived forever to embark on an adventure that seems exceptional today. And again, we cannot help but compare what we see in the film with the psychology and motivations of many of today's migrants.

    The extremely thorough reconstruction of life in 19th-century Swedish villages contributes to the authenticity and credibility of what we see on screen. The film has an exceptional distribution with Max von Sydow and Liv Ullmann in the lead roles. With its over three hours 'The Emigrants' has a format and duration that can be a test for today's viewers. Those who will respond to the challenge will enjoy a quality film show about an episode of history that resonates in the present.
    10erik-konze

    if you should have the luck of stumbling onto this film at a rental shop, thank Fellini's ghost - grasp it and head for the check out.

    Jan Troell, has truly captured the feeling of what inspires people to emigrate and the subsequent hardships that await in the land of hope. True masters of the craft, Sydow and Ullmann, are superb in their performances. They truly pull you into the time, the frame of mind and thus make you feel like you are sharing their voyage. A great film that is everything a film should be - moving. It is a mystery why this film did not win an Oscar for best foreign picture, best actress and best actor - though with all fairness, with both Caberet and The Godfather in the running, it would have required a miracle. If you should have the luck of stumbling onto this film at a rental shop, thank Fellini's ghost - grasp it and head for the check out.
    8Oblomov_81

    A realistic look at the pursuit of the American dream

    When Jan Troell's "The Emigrants" was released in the U.S. in 1972, it opened to excellent reviews and received the honor of being one of the few foreign-language films to receive a Best Picture nomination. It didn't win anything, though, and seems to have been forgotten over the years. Perhaps this is because the public has since found other Swedish films to be more noteworthy, in particular the works of Bille August and the later works of Ingmar Bergman.

    Sad to say, because "The Emigrants" is a film that closely examines two very different cultures in an effective and insightful way. A diverse group of Swedish peasants (among them a married couple, a priest, a prostitute, and a young upstart) endure back-breaking labor in their homeland to little profit. They decide to move to the states after being influenced by the exaggerated stories spread abroad (everyone has more than enough food, everyone is filthy rich, etc.). The audience sympathizes with them not just because they endure so much in Sweden, but also because they believe the stories they hear about frontier life in America. Yes, they will obviously have to strive and struggle to survive in their new home, but they are all the more admirable because of their adherence to the American dream.

    "The Emigrants" is harsh and often unrelenting in the straightforward way it depicts the realities encountered by the Swedish settlers. The scenes where they travel across the ocean in a small, cramped, and diseased ship are appropriately claustrophobic and terrifying. Later, the family at the center of the story threatens to break up when Liv Ullmann's character, a fragile young mother, loses track of her daughter while hurrying to board a steamboat.

    Although most of the characters were better developed in the sequel to this film, "The New Land," Troell's story is very moving in its sincere depiction of how outsiders came to this country to pursue their hopes and dreams.
    8Jeremy_Urquhart

    A tough but engaging watch

    Part 1 of a two-part epic (the second part is 1972's The New Land), I half thought about watching The Emigrants and its second part as one long movie, but The Emigrants by itself is plenty for now. I'd probably burn out and therefore not be able to appreciate The New Land properly if I tried to marathon them, but do plan to find the time to finish this two-part epic within the next day or two.

    The Emigrants alone feels like two, or maybe even three, movies in one. Its runtime exceeds three hours, and it tells the story of a group of farmers in Sweden during the 1800s deciding to start a new life in America. This first half of the overall saga involves establishing how bad life was for a farmer in Sweden, then showing the arduous journey by boat from Sweden to America, and then finally, it spends some time with the characters as they travel further inland after setting foot in America.

    It's gruelling by design, and viscerally captures how difficult such a journey would have been back during the middle of the 19th century. The section spent at sea is particularly harrowing, but I guess it has to be, and it doesn't shy away from anything when it comes to claustrophobia, seasickness, lice, terrible food, disease, and death. It makes The Emigrants a tough but compelling watch, and part of me wonders what The New Land will do to keep the stakes high, because it's hard to imagine things getting worse than that trip across the ocean (I may end up eating my words 24-48 hours from now, but we'll have to wait and see).

    Not a film for everyone, but I thought it moved pretty well considering its length and slow pace. Performances were generally strong, and it had some very good visuals too. I get the sense Terrence Malick would have loved this movie, too, because I see bits of Badlands, Days of Heaven, The New World, and A Hidden Life in here at times.
    10MovieGuyFunTime

    Stunning in its Deceptive Truth and Complex Simplicity

    The Emigrants is one of the best stories ever told of a family's emigration to America to flee an authoritarian government and find better land for farming.

    I was trying to explain one of the most unique things about the film (and its 2nd part, The New Land) to my brother but I was having a hard time finding the words. Finally, "transfixed" was what I was looking for. The film is long but it held me "transfixed" with nearly every scene. The shots are long. The dialog is often sparse. The soundtrack is almost non-existent. Rather, the director holds one nearly spellbound by "showing" rather "telling" the story. The imagery and expressions on the actors' faces and their silent actions relate most of what makes this film so powerful.

    As the viewer, you feel almost like you are right there with the characters, sharing the moments along side them. One becomes immersed in what is happening as if you are there. The powerful empathy that the film manages to generate within the viewer is really quite amazing given the lack (or maybe due to the lack) of modern cinematic styles and techniques.

    Another thing about this film that is incredibly impressive is that the viewer really gets a sense of how someone migrating from Sweden at the time would see things and think. The perspective is fresh and unapologetically authentic. Unlike many films set in the past, it does not "dumb-down" any aspect by modernizing or "updating" anything to make it easier for a modern audience to relate to (language, mannerisms, music, etc.). One of my biggest peeves about modern films set in the past is that, other than the wardrobe, everything else is modern... modern language, modern manners, modern politics/norms, modern music (electric guitar in the soundtrack of a "western" film?). It is also refreshingly unpolluted by modern-day political correctness.

    This is really a fantastic work of art that in many ways, gets better with time as it is so accurate and truthful to the situation and period. The 2nd part, "The New Land" is equally as fantastic. It is not a "sequel" per se, but rather the filmmaker realized he would need several hours to accurately portray the story set out in the book and one movie would be too long. So, it was essentially shot as one long movie but released in two parts in back-to-back years.

    This film really provides the viewer with an authentic sense of the times and the situations many emigrants went through in the mid-19th century. One of the best film discoveries I've made in a long time. Highly recommended.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      When filming the scene towards the end, where Karl Oskar walks off to find a better place for his settlement, director Jan Troell forgot to yell, "Cut." Max von Sydow just kept walking and walking, waiting for a "cut", and nobody realized until they took lunch.
    • Goofs
      On the train west a character shows an American silver coin and yells out it has "In God We Trust" on it. The scene is the 1850s and the motto was not added to American silver coins until 1867.
    • Quotes

      Arvid: What do you think it will cost to ship us there?

      Robert: Around 200 riksdaler.

      Arvid: Ya, well, might as well forget it. 200 riksdaler. I'll never have that much.

      Robert: You don't have it?

      Arvid: I will go anyway. We can travel to America on foot.

      Robert: Nah, there's an ocean. You can't go on foot to America.

      Arvid: Do you mean there is no way?

      Robert: I'm afraid there is not. America is an island.

      Arvid: Damned ocean.

    • Alternate versions
      The USA television version, retitled "The Emigrant Saga", consists of this film plus its sequel, Le nouveau monde (1972), joined and re-edited together in chronological order and dubbed in English.
    • Connections
      Edited into Spisok korabley (2008)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 13, 1974 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Sweden
    • Languages
      • Swedish
      • English
      • Danish
    • Also known as
      • The Emigrants
    • Filming locations
      • Marine on St. Croix, Minnesota, USA
    • Production company
      • Svensk Filmindustri (SF)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,156,554
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 3h 11m(191 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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