Thursday, 9 July 2026

The Nordic Film Festival 2026 - Tom Ryan highlights a magnificent Bo Widerberg retrospective

 

Bo Widerberg


 

Two highlights from the Nordic Film Festival, sponsored by Hurtigruten and happening across Australia in July-August 2026, courtesy of Palace cinemas.


One is the all-too-brief Bo Widerberg retrospective, remembering the work of a Swedish filmmaker with heart, style and a social conscience. Born in Malmö in 1930, he died of stomach cancer in 1996. The program features  

three of his best films, hopefully the newly restored versions that screened in the seven-film series at the American Cinematheque in Los Angeles last month. 

Raven’s End (1963, 101 minutes), his second feature, tells the story of an aspiring young writer (played by Widerberg regular Thommy Berggren) aspiring to escape the constraints of the working-class area of Malmö that gives the film its title. 


In Being Bo Widerberg (2025, 105 minutes), the documentary accompanying the retrospective, Widerberg speaks of wanting to imbue his characters with a “realistic life”, and the film’s stylistic similarity to the British “kitchen-sink” melodramas of the time is irresistible.


Elvira Madigan (1967, 91 minutes), Widerberg’s first feature in colour, is probably the film for which he’s best known. A far cry from the gritty realism of Raven's End, it’s a visually elegant romantic drama set around the turn of the 20th century about a couple seeking an escape from their everyday lives in the idyllic Danish countryside. It features the glorious andante from Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 21 on the soundtrack and stars Berggren and Pia Degermark (pictured). 

 

 

The source is a real-life case, although the documentary about Widerberg excavates yet another link to his personal life, one that the writer-director appears to endorse. Characterising him as – among other things –something of a womaniser, it has him saying of his intentions in making the film, “I wanted to show how difficult it could be to be in love with the wrong person.”


Also based on a real-life incident, Ådalen ’31 (1969, 110 minutes) deals with events leading up to and following a workers’ strike in a Swedish sawmill region during which the military forces, summoned by local authorities, opened fire on protestors. Widerberg’s work persistently empathises with the struggle of the disempowered for their rights (see also, for example, 1971’s Joe Hill, starring Berggren in the title role), and, in Being Bo Widerberg, he describes what took place in 1931 as “a turning point in the history of our country”.

 

Widerberg at work

 

For its part, the documentary, written by Jon Asp who also co-directed with Mattias Nohrborg, offers a compelling, warts’n’all portrait of the filmmaker. It begins with home-movie footage of his Malmö childhood, before detailing his career from his early years as a novelist and, in his 1962 essay collection, The Vision in Swedish Film, as an outspoken critic of Ingmar Bergman’s “bourgeois” cinema. We frequently see him on set and in rehearsal, are introduced to his ill-fated struggle to shoot Joe Hill in the US (finished in Sweden) and to the controversy surrounding his final film, All Things Fair (1995). 


Illuminating brush strokes are provided by a wide range of interviews with many of his contemporaries, including Berggren, Jan Troell (who shot three films for him, including Raven’s End), and Degermark, who says of her experience of working with him, not altogether disapprovingly, “He was a great manipulator. And he did it to everyone.” 


Singling him out as a significant figure in the “Swedish New Wave” of the 1960s, numerous present-day dignitaries in the European filmmaking community – among them directors Olivier Assayas, his former partner, Mia Hansen-Løve, Lisa Langseth, Lars Von Trier and Roy Andersson – also offer their views. As do many of his wives and lovers and his four offspring, who were born to different mothers and feature as children in his films. The third eldest, Johan, has made a career as an actor (and plays the lead role in All Things Fair). 


Pervading the film is the sense of Widerberg as a restless, troubled, complicated figure. Often viewed as a “dissident” within the Swedish film industry, he was also admired as a major artist. Bemoaning Widerberg’s struggle to find adequate financing in his later years, producer and longtime collaborator Kalle Boman says of his work, “Why wouldn’t you treasure someone who can do something like that?” 


As noted by several interviewees, he’s also seen as the victim of severe bouts of depression, Berggren speaking with sympathetic dismay of the times when “the barbed wire in his head took over”. But his films speak for themselves, eloquent testimony that he was a creative force to be reckoned with.

Saturday, 4 July 2026

ABOUT CARLA SIMON - Rod Bishop discovers the work of the Spanish director

Carla Simon

Catalan writer-director Carla Simón was six-years-old when she was orphaned. Both her parents died from needle-transmitted AIDS.
 

Simón was forced to leave Barcelona for a small town in northern Catalonia, where she was raised by her uncle and his family. She later studied film in Barcelona and the London Film School. 

Now 39, she has helmed three feature films and eight shorts. 

 


SUMMER 1993 (2017), 
streaming on Apple TV

Simón’s first feature was an instant success and chosen to represent Spain at the 2018 Academy Awards. 

An autobiographical backstory to her latest feature Romería (2025), Summer 1993 opens with the orphaned six-year-old Frida (played by an astonishing Laia Artigas), being forced to leave Barcelona to live with her uncle Esteve, his wife Marga and their daughter Anna on a self-sufficient Catalonian farm.  

Frida is completely disorientated by the experience. Disorientated by farm life after Barcelona; disorientated by her new family; and particularly disorientated by a developing relationship with the four-year-old Anna. At various times, she puts the younger girl in danger and her new guardians fear they have been lumbered with a dysfunctional child. They wonder if they should get rid of her. 

In her village, rumours surround Frida and she becomes further disoriented when ostracized after bleeding in a playground accident. AIDS is never mentioned, but the blood phobia, the mention of ‘a virus’ and the constant trips to the doctor for blood tests make it clear both her parents have died of AIDS.

Frida’s hard-fought journey to accept her pariah status and come to terms with her new world drives a simple narrative distinguished by its heightened emotional power. Laia Artigas plays Frida brilliantly, with a poker face and wide-eyed observance of all around her, as she constantly figures out her new life. 

For a first feature, Summer 1993 heralds a fully formed filmmaker in confident control over nuance and ellipsis, and blessed with a quite remarkable child actor.

It won the Best First Feature Award at the Berlin Film Festival and three Spanish Goya Awards, including Best New Director and Best Screenplay. It won Best Director in the International Competition at Buenos Aires; and at the Gaudi Awards it garnered Best Film, Best Director, Best Screenplay, Best Supporting Actress, Best Editing. The Feroz Awards gave it Best Drama, Best Supporting Actor and Best Screenplay. In all, 30 awards from around the world.

 


 

ALCARRÀS (2022), streaming on Apple TV and Prime

Pedro Almodóvar has called Simón’s second feature a masterpiece: “Behind Alcarràs’s apparent simplicity lies a meticulous director, with hundreds of hours’ worth of work to make this masterpiece look like a documentary.”

It won the Golden Bear at the 2022 Berlin Film Festival and was Spain’s entry to the Academy Awards. Followed by Best Film, Best Director and Best Screenplay at Catalonia’s Gaudi Awards. Alcarrás screened in 60 international film festivals and sold to 35 territories.

The extended Solé family in Catalonia have farmed the same land for generations; land given to them in a verbal promise by a neighbouring family they hid during the Spanish Civil War. The new owner of the land disregards the old verbal agreement and wants them to destroy their fruit trees and install solar panels instead. Faced with rabbit plagues, flooding and price gouging from supermarkets, the family are marooned in a legal quagmire; their way of life doomed. 

The cast are entirely non-professional and Simón carefully fuses the rhythms of everyday farming life with the rhythms of the natural world. Hovering above her beautifully rendered portrait of this humanist family, is the encroachment of a ruthless commercial world wanting to repurpose the land and force protesting farmers into capitulation.

Once again, familial disorientation is Simón’s principal focus and this time a whole extended family are disoriented. Beautifully directed, Alcarrás once again also shows Simón’s extraordinary talent with actors of all ages.  

 


ROMERĺA (2025), current Spanish and Latin American Film Festival

In Competition at Cannes in 2025, Simón’s latest feature upgrades the orphaned six-year-old Frida of Summer 1993 to the now 18-year-old orphan Marina (Llúcia Garcia), who is wanting to apply for a scholarship to study film at a Barcelona university. 

But her name doesn’t appear on her father’s death certificate and she must obtain validation of her birth from a grandparent. Clutching her mother’s diary, she journeys to Vigo in Galicia to meet with her parental family for the first time. She wants her grandfather to sign the appropriate change to his son’s death certificate.

Everything is awkward about her visit, firstly with an uncle and his family; and then with a dressmaker aunt; with young cousins who have been warned not to touch Marina because of her blood; and with contradictory stories and dates about her parents. Finally at an extended family gathering in the sumptuous home of her grandparents, she finds she is anything but welcomed, or wanted.

Marina spends her whole pilgrimage (romeria) in wide-eyed, dazed disorientation, waiting for snippets of information about her parents. She does learn of their heroin addiction, their drug dealing, and her AIDS-positive mother taking Marina to Barcelona as a baby. She is devastated to learn the grandparents kept her AIDS-afflicted father a virtual hostage in their house until his death.

Simón then shifts gears from the naturalism of all her features, and creates a magical realist third act where Marina spectates on the lives of her parents.

Among its other qualities, Romería is a chance to wonder at who our parents really were before we were born. All Simón’s great strengths are in evidence here, her naturalistic acting performances; her ability to make us feel like wide-eyed spectators experiencing the chaotic humanity of extended family life; and the almost subliminal way she makes us feel the ache and pain of a lost family.

Carla Simón’s next project is a flamenco musical.

 


Thursday, 2 July 2026

On 4K UHD and Blu-ray - David Hare risks a small fortune and welcomes and asks some questions about the Imprint edition of THE CINEMA OF POWELL & PRESSBURGER - Collection Two (1942 - 1956)

 This is both an exciting and a bewildering release.

On the fabulous side the box includes not only the existing 4K mastered disc of The Red Shoes and I Know Where I’m Going (both of which Criterion has already released in superb editions) but it’s adding more new and newish restorations in Blu only of Black Narcissus, Colonel Blimp and One of our Aircraft is Missing as well as Oh Rosalinda! and Battle of the River Plate. The latter two are very far from peak Powell for me but their inclusion is rewarding for completists. Most importantly the box releases the first 4K UHD Dolby Vision discs worldwide of both The Small Back Room (an underrated Powell to be sure) and the most important title for me a 4K DV of Tales of Hoffmann. Given the whole box is credited to Fidelity In Motion for encoding I have not an atom’s concern about quality. And given my worship of Hoffman as a total, unfettered masterpiece of celestial beauty This box would make me an even happier man than I already am.
BUT….
This press release only presents the Powell box for RRP in tandem with several other boxes including what I consider a redundant Kubrick box bringing the cost over 500 bucks Oz. Does this mean they will perhaps never release the Powell box as standalone? If they don’t they’ve lost a customer. And equally important for people like me who already have everything in this box already except for the world prem 4K discs of Hoffman and Small Back Room, are these titles likely to be picked up in a parallel boxset or singly as 4K discs from somebody like Criterion? We don’t know and these days throwing around this sort of money on something not ideally priced for some of us who are already rabid and going-broke collectors?

(Mike Baard followed this up by sending this info...
David, good news, you will be able to purchase P&P set as a standalone.

BUT BACK TO DAVID

One thing I didn’t mention: the new 4K discs of IKWIG as well as Red Shoes will have DV/HDR. Criterion’s IKWIG is also mastered and encoded by FIM /MacKenzie but SDR/2160p. Only David MacKenzie could encode something so beautiful in both 8 bit and 10 bit 2160p and make them both sing. This is why I am risking a small fortune basically for the same deft hand with a new 4K of Hoffmann.

This is Imprint’s trailer for the Powell/Pressburger box in August. The music sample track is largely from Brian Easdale’s score for Red Shoes. What a masterpiece, what a score!




A FACEBOOK COMMENT

All the clips (on the trailer) you are showing are in the wrong aspect ratio. Not a good presentation.

Tuesday, 30 June 2026

Streaming on Disney + - Rod Bishop notes THE BEAR - (Season 5, Christopher Storer, USA, 2026)

Sydney (Ayo Edebiri) and Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) fixing prawns

The Fairfax press (link possibly paywalled) recently called Season 5 of The Bear “the equivalent of re-heated leftovers”. Yes, we’ve been here before. 

Seven of the eight episodes follow a full day at the restaurant and everything that could go wrong, does goes wrong, of course. 

The entire day is treated with all the drama, anxieties, pressures, neurotic boil-overs, and personality clashes as though the staff were planning the logistics for D-Day. Unlike D-Day however, the weather forecast is incidental: just the cost of doing business. It buckets down all day long and intense traffic jams mean every booking will be late. 

The water pipes burst first thing in the morning, not only destroying all their Bear uniforms, but flooding the kitchen and restaurant, making it impossible to clean dishes. This is an unfortunate necessity. Clean dishes are needed; they have three “turns” (sittings) tonight.

As he often does, Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) makes everything worse by not cancelling the 15 reservations he was asked to. The cancellations are necessary to fit in the three ‘turns’. He has too big a heart, and after a couple of calls, he can’t bear - pun intended - being a harbinger of disappointment. And, still doesn’t have the courage to confess this to the rest of the staff.

Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) meanwhile has been forced to reveal he is leaving the restaurant business for good and is handing over the reins to sous-chef Sydney (Ayo Edebiri). His staff greet this news as though their entire families have just been wiped out in a mudslide.

They don’t have enough food either, necessitating some on-the-spot menu changes. Outside, Uncle Jimmy and his crew are in the drenching thunderstorms trying to stop the restaurant from closure by finding whoever has the “air rights” above their building. 

And the Michelin “Star Man” has made a reservation.

Like “re-heated leftovers”, it’s all very predictable and unlike the rest of the series, there’s no standout episode. The drenching rain, the packed restaurant and the heated interchanges between staff, makes it feel even more claustrophobic, insular, and even parochial than it’s been in the past.

And the Michelin “Star Man”? No spoilers.


A BOLOGNA DIARY - links and a picture


Day 1 - Marco Bellocchio, Mitchell Leisen, John Abraham, Daisuke Ito

Day 2 - Kon Ichikawa  

Day 3 - Dariush Mehrjui, Mitchell Leisen, Daisuke Ito, Roy Del Ruth

Day 4 -  Daisuke Ito, Henry King, Paule Delsol

Day 5 - Nostalgia - Vittorio Cottafavi - Asta Nielsen

Day 6 - Mitchell Leisen, Julien Duvivier, Josephine Baker

Day 7 - Mitchell Leisen, Ritwik Ghatak, Jospeh Losey

Day 8 - Chaplin, Mitchell Leisen, Josephine Baker






Sunday, 28 June 2026

A BOLOGNA DIARY - IL CINEMA RITROVATO DAY 8 - Charlie Chaplin, Mitchell Leisen, Josephine Baker, a group photo and final critics' chart


Highlight of the official final night of Il Cinema Ritrovato 2026 was the screening in the Piazza Maggiore  of one of the ten greatest films ever made Charles Chaplin's A Dog's Life (USA, 1918) in a double bill with Charlie's Shoulder Arms (1918), accompanied by a full orchestra conducted by Neil Brand. Dave Kehr of MoMA in New York, which did the restoration, succinctly explained how they had gone back and found the original material and thus were able to supersede the version long circulating that Chaplin himself had put together from out-takes and other sources. Dave's intro was then followed by some interminably long and  totally already known thoughts offered by Arnold Lozano of the Association Chaplin/Roy Export, the price you probably have to pay to keep in good with the zealous protectors of the great man's legacy. 

Ginger Rogers PR shot for Ladyin the Dark

Before that happened there had been a screening of one of Mitchell Leisen's failures, Lady in the Dark (1944). The main problem was that some idiot at Paramount, not named by Wikipedia in its succinct description, decided to remove most of the Kurt Weill & Ira Gershwin songs that thrilled Broadway audiences in 1941. Wikipedia says: "The film version cut most of the Weill/Gershwin songs from the score. .. Part of "My Ship" was hummed by Ginger Rogers, but the song itself was never sung." If you want to know about the song here's Julie Andrew singing it in Star. The Technicolor archive 35mm print on display was sensational. In its day the film was a 'success".

Josephine Baker, The Siren of the Tropics

The afternoon was taken up with the final apparitions of Josephine Baker. Her
Fausse Alerte/False Alarm  from  1942 has her as part of a big ensemble cast as the population of Paris is being called on to respond to German bombing and her silent La Sirene des Tropiques/ The Siren of the Tropics has her as a local who saves the hero, a young man sent out to some colony as  a way of breaking up his relationship. His boss is under instructions to ensure he never comes back. Neither of them are up to the magnificent Zouzou

...and here's a bunch of people eating at La Pirata del Porto on the final night...five of them are from the Cinema Reborn Organising Committee... silent film accompanist Maud Nelissen was at the table but has managed to keep herself hidden!

Final night before most head off (Photo Ross Barnard)

Film

Geoff Gardner

Spiro Economopoulos

Ross Barnard

L’Innocente (Luchino Visconti)

 

****

 

Kuroi Junin No Onna/Ten Black Women (Kon Ichikawa)

*

***

 

Ten Seconds to Hell (Robert Aldrich)

 

***

 

***

Osho /The Chess Master(Daisuke Ito)

*

 

 

Amma Ariyan (John Abraham)

*

 

 

Geru No Kobi/The Servant’s Neck (Daisuke Ito

***

 

 

Oborokago/The Inner Palace Conspiracy (Daisuke Ito)

***

 

 

Ladies of Leisure (Frank Capra)

 

 

***

Sunrise (F W Murnau)

 

 

****

Night Nurse (William A Wellman)

 

 

***

The Overcoat (Grigory Kozintsev & Leonid Trauberg)

 

 

*

La Bugiarda (Luigi Comencini)

 

 

***

Putney Swope (Robert Downey)

 

 

***

Eight Girls in a Boat (Richard Wallace)

*

 

***

The Devils (Ken Russell)

 

***

****

Mirages de Paris (Feodor Ocep)

**

 

 

The Cycle (Darish Mehrjui)

****

 

 

Curse of Frankenstein (Terence Fisher)

 

***

***

La Derive (Paule Delsol)

***

 

**

Perfume of the Lady in Black (Francisco Barilli)

 

***

 

Accident (Joseph Losey )

 

**

***

The Damned (Luchino Visconti)

 

***

 

Die Fremde Vogel (Urban Gad)

***

 

 

Senso (Luchino Visconti)

 

****

 

Lenny (Bob Fosse)

 

***

 

Zouzou (Marc Allegret)

**

 

 

Meren Kasvojen Edessa/By the Edge of the Sea (Teuvo Puro)

 

 

**

What Price Glory (Raoul Walsh)

 

 

***

L’Image Originelle – Wim Wenders (Pierre Henri Gibert)

 

 

***

 

Drakula in Istanbul (Mehmet Mutar)

 

 

**

Sa Dam Ying/Big Boss Sis (Chung Sun)

 

**

**

Clash By Night (Fritz Lang)

 

 

***

Tales of Manhattan (Julien Duvivier)

**

 

**

Young Man with Ideas (Mitchell Leisen)

***

 

 

Darling, How Could You! (Mitchell Leisen)

***

 

 

Nagarik (Ritwik Ghatak)

**

 

 

A Man on the Beach (Joseph Losey)

***

 

 

House of Usher (Roger Corman)

 

***

 

Death in Venice (Luchino Visconti)

 

***

 

The Pornographers (Shoehei Imamura)

 

**

 

Peking Opera Blues (Tsui Hark)

 

***

 

A Dog’s Life (Charles Chaplin

****

 

 

Lady in the Dark (Mitchell Leisen)

*

 

 

False Alarm/Fausse Alerte (Jean de Baroncelli)

**

 

 

Ossessione  (Luchino Visconti)

 

 

**

Princesse Tam Tam (Edmond T Greville)

 

 

***

The Bartered Bride (Max Ophuls)

 

 

**