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Edvard Munch

  • TV Movie
  • 1974
  • Not Rated
  • 3h 30m
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
3.5K
YOUR RATING
Edvard Munch (1974)
Period DramaBiographyDramaHistoryMysteryRomance

This biopic of Norwegian Expressionist painter Edvard Munch focuses on the influences that shaped his art, his devastating affair with a married woman that will haunt him for the rest of his... Read allThis biopic of Norwegian Expressionist painter Edvard Munch focuses on the influences that shaped his art, his devastating affair with a married woman that will haunt him for the rest of his lifeThis biopic of Norwegian Expressionist painter Edvard Munch focuses on the influences that shaped his art, his devastating affair with a married woman that will haunt him for the rest of his life

  • Director
    • Peter Watkins
  • Writer
    • Peter Watkins
  • Stars
    • Geir Westby
    • Gro Fraas
    • Kerstii Allum
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.1/10
    3.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Peter Watkins
    • Writer
      • Peter Watkins
    • Stars
      • Geir Westby
      • Gro Fraas
      • Kerstii Allum
    • 25User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 wins total

    Photos8

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    Top cast64

    Edit
    Geir Westby
    Geir Westby
    • Edvard Munch
    Gro Fraas
    • Fru Heiberg
    Kerstii Allum
    • Sophie Munch - 1868
    Eric Allum
    • Edvard Munch - 1868
    Susan Troldmyr
    • Laura Munch - 1868
    Ragnvald Caspari
    • Peter Andreas Munch - 1868
    Katja Pedersen
    • Inger Munch - 1868
    Hjordis Ulriksen
    • Housemaid - 1868
    Inger-Berit Oland
    • Sophie Munch - 1875
    Amund Berge
    • Edvard Munch - 1875
    Camilla Falk
    • Laura Munch - 1875
    Erik Kristiansen
    • Peter Andreas Munch - 1875
    Anne-Marie Daehli
    • Inger Munch - 1875
    • (as Anne Marie Dæhli)
    Johan Halsborg
    • Dr. Christian Munch - 1884
    Gro Jarto
    • Laura Catherine Munch - 1884
    Lotte Teig
    • Aunt Karen Bjølstad - 1884
    Rachel Pedersen
    • Inger Munch - 1884
    Berit Rytter Hasle
    • Laura Munch - 1884
    • Director
      • Peter Watkins
    • Writer
      • Peter Watkins
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    8.13.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7jahhdog

    Hard to watch but an interesting interpretation of the art process

    I think it is a film for those interested in creative process and or Edvard Munch.

    I had no idea how bleak Norwegian life was yet as the film postulates it is out of bleakness new ideas can flourish.

    I enjoy the film most when 19th century life in the Norwegian city of Kristiania (Oslo) is described. The legalized prostitution, the walks/promenades, the puritan lifestyle.

    I enjoyed it least post Munch's affair/relationship I understand Munch's obsession with his lover and I think they match it well with his desire to create art yet this I feel is also the weakest part of the film. The endless shot of him and her post relationship give the film a monotony that had me checking my watch and wondering "how long IS this film?"...

    Still I feel it is worth watching as the way the film is shot has it moments when it makes you feel part of the Bohemian culture and pub life. It was like I was there, especially when the actors look into the camera.

    It is also interesting to note that the actors had a huge part in creating and contributing lines to the film. A truly collaborative film...
    10jeandigo

    Painter's Biopic like no others

    Probably the most powerful biography of a painter on film with Tarkovski's "Andrei Rublev" and Pialat's "Van Gogh". The way Watkins handles the narration of his film and of Munch's life and art is simply amazing. A perfect example of life as art and art as life. The commentary is never redundant with what is seen on the screen and like the works of Munch, the shape of the movie is like a spiral, where scenes come back over and over, in a repetitive manner, like the paintings/carvings of Munch, who often drew the same subjects. It makes you want to see more of Munch's works as well as other movies by Watkins. Definitely worth being seen more than once.
    10caburns90

    A BRILLIANT FILM ON EDVARD MUNCH

    This is one of the most moving, experimental films I have ever seen. Peter Watkins' political understanding of the times and his compassion for the struggling, alienated artist is superb. He has a unique method of linking the present to the painter's traumatic past, namely the deaths of his mother and sister from tuberculosis, when he was a boy. The camerawork and close-ups of individual faces is excellent. Munch's grief, when he loses the woman he loves, leads to his best works and a premature death. No other director has made a film about the inner and outer worlds of an artist as well as this. I highly recommend the film.
    10flannelgraph

    The Citizen Kane that no one saw.

    Peter Watkins' Edvard Munch contains artistic innovations in editing and story that surely would have changed the face of how films are made--if only more people had seen it. Through an inspired stream-of-consciousness editing style, Watkins approximates the workings of the mind with greater success than ever before seen on screen. Because of this achievement, Watkins is able to convey, with vivid strokes, the intensity of Munch's emotions, and how they led to his tortured art. It is tragic that this film has not seen larger distribution, just as it is tragic that Watkins' other films are cloistered by the very companies that produce them. But then again, I cannot imagine going to the cineplex and watching a statement of life through art as soaring and original as Edvard Munch. For now, I'll continue to treasure it alone.
    tomgillespie2002

    A beguiling and moving experience

    Since the mid-1950's the films of Peter Watkins have utilised a mix of documentary and fiction techniques to question these forms of media construct. From the historical portrayals of real, or imagined "realities" (Colluden (1964), The War Game (1965)), to science fiction dystopian visions of political systems (The Gladiators (1969), Punishment Park (1971)), Watkins has placed his cinematic eye within dramatised verite settings, refusing to conform to fiction narrative structures and the normative styles of documentary cinema. In Watkins' anachronistic cinema the characters (whether fictional or historical figures) are photographed as if the action is actually happening, and he breaks conventions further by interviewing characters, filming them in the talking head format, which eliminates the fourth wall in fiction cinema and television, and involves the viewer with the formal realities of detail. Watkins states on his website (pwatkins.mnsi.net) that Edvard Munch is his most personal film. It is certainly his most emotionally engaging, one that is not necessarily as political or prescient as previous films, but perfectly captures the emotional turmoil and strain that goes into the creative process, and particularly the ways in which events in an artists life effects the evolution of form and style.

    The eponymous Munch's (played, like all here by amateur actor Geir Westby) life and career is dealt with in the usual Watkins style, focusing largely on the period between 1884 and 1894, a period in which his painting developed into what would become Expressionism. It shows a young man struggling with shyness and emotional immaturity, one that when confronted with rejection from Fru Heiberg (Gro Fraas), a married woman who has affairs with bohemian types (the film constantly reminds us of the historical realities of women in 19th century Norway, who require men to live), Munch becomes jealous and possessive. The film juxtaposes these emotional moments of anguish and the tragedies of Munch family fatalities that struck the young throughout his early life, with the development of Munch's painting style. Watkins shows throughout the actual painting process. Beginning with the breathtaking picture The Sick Child, Watkins shows the anger and psychological torment that went into it. The ways in which Munch attacked to painting with knives or the non-bristle end of the brush, which created a startlingly bleak image, devoid of unnecessary details.

    Of course, as with anything different within an artistic medium, Munch's stripped down aesthetic was not met with praise initially, and Watkins shows the various vitriolic reactions from the art establishment and critics, both through over-heard conversations in gallery spaces, and the filmed interviews with detractors. During these moments, Munch can be seen skulking on the periphery, further exacerbating his deteriorating psychology, but this imbalance and possible fastidiousness influences his further subversion of the classical painting style - and one that would lead to German Expressionism. Periodically the narrator will place historical facts against the period portrayed, and the film is certainly as much about history (sometimes in relation to contemporary politics), as it is about an artist.

    The bohemian group that Munch spent time with, headed by anarchist Hans Jaeger, would openly discuss political and social issues. Even women would be part of this group, and along with the formal discussion, the "film crew" interview various female exponents, discussing feminism and the role of the female within society. Placed within this historical context, the present (at least in 1974 when the film was released) was in what appeared to be a new sexual revolution, and the feminist movement was a media convention, but in 19th century Europe, these women see what they are able to achieve living within the constraints of a male dominated society. Whereas prostitution (in the '70's it was pornography) is socially seen as immoral and degrading, these female thinkers see it as motivating, a process of female empowerment. In Edvard Munch the women are self-contained, they are individual and have power over their own lives. But this is not exclusively inclusive of female characters, it is also a film (through its documentary style) that includes the audience.

    Munch is the best use that I have seen of Watkins' idiosyncratic documentary style, because it is an emotional exploration, as well as a political one. The emotional aspects are embellished by the characters acknowledgement of the viewer. Throughout the film the characters look directly into the camera, addressing the audience with a glance, at times to question their own actions (should we do this?), or by including the audience in the emotional events that are occurring, you always feel included, even when those moments are incredibly voyeuristic. I at times even felt that I should not be privy to this, such was the effect of this connecting barrier. Like much of Watkins' work (and himself as a figure), Edvard Munch has been marginalised. Watkins' criticism of mass media has clearly left him out of main stream publication, and his work (whilst now gaining distribution and serious praise) is difficult to see commercially. Originally made for a Norwegian/Swedish television co-production, the film lost distribution due to the studios refusal to play it. The film did received an international release in a shortened version, but the 221 minute version is now accessible. It sounds exhausting, but the majesty and emotional connection the film presents makes it a beguiling and moving experience, and it is easily the most in depth exploration of the artistic process.

    www.the-wrath-of-blog.blogspot.com

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This film has a 100% rating based on 13 critic reviews on Rotten Tomatoes.
    • Quotes

      Narrator: I felt as if there were invisible threads between us. I felt as if invisible threads from her hair still twisted themselves around me. And, when she completely disappeared there, over the ocean, then I felt still how it hurt, where my heart bled, because the threads could not be broken.

    • Connections
      Referenced in A Discussion with Peter Watkins (1977)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 12, 1974 (Norway)
    • Countries of origin
      • Sweden
      • Norway
    • Languages
      • French
      • English
      • Norwegian
      • German
      • Swedish
      • Danish
    • Also known as
      • Эдвард Мунк
    • Production companies
      • Norsk Film
      • Norsk Rikskringkasting (NRK)
      • Sveriges Radio
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $43,539
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $3,961
      • Jun 19, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $76,949
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 3h 30m(210 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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