Hets
- 1944
- 1h 41m
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn idealistic adolescent suffering under the thumb of a sadistic schoolmaster falls in love with a loose girl who is bullied and tormented by another lover.An idealistic adolescent suffering under the thumb of a sadistic schoolmaster falls in love with a loose girl who is bullied and tormented by another lover.An idealistic adolescent suffering under the thumb of a sadistic schoolmaster falls in love with a loose girl who is bullied and tormented by another lover.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
- Herr Widgren
- (as Olav Riego)
- Caligulas mor
- (scenes deleted)
- Student (3)
- (as Lars-Gunnar Carlsson)
- Moster Elisabeth
- (scenes deleted)
- Student (1)
- (uncredited)
- Lärare (1)
- (uncredited)
- Voice on the Radio
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Östergren
- (uncredited)
- Lärare (2)
- (uncredited)
- Student (2)
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn his second autobiography "Images: My Life in Film", Ingmar Bergman describes the filming of the exteriors as his actual film directorial debut: "When the film was virtually done, I made my debut as a movie director...[the] final scene shows Kjellin in the light of dawn, walking towards the awakening city. I was told to shoot these last exteriors, since Sjöberg was otherwise engaged. They were my first professionally filmed images. I was more excited that I can describe."
- GaffesWhen Caligula and Widgren sit in the window together towards the middle of the film, the boom mic can be seen reflected in the glass above them.
- Citations
Caligula: Caesar hostem aggressus devicit. Widgren?
Jan-Erik Widgren: Caesar defeated the enemy.
Caligula: Example of what?
Jan-Erik Widgren: Participial construction.
Caligula: Which one?
Jan-Erik Widgren: Participium coniunctum. Predicative attribute.
Caligula: Of what?
[Widgren fails to answer]
Caligula: Didn't you prepare for the lesson?
- ConnexionsFeatured in Bergman och filmen, Bergman och teatern, Bergman och Fårö (2004)
Bergman and the wonderful director Alf Sjoberg, get a terrifying performance (albeit if it is sometimes two-dimensional, or maybe not) by Stig Jarrell, who plays Vindgren's manipulative, "old-school" tormenting teacher, who also happens to be attached, so to speak, with Bertha. The link drives Vindregn into the kind of despair that makes the film, in the end, really work. There's also something very curious about how the script is so precise, so dark and occasionally shocking for a film from 1944 sometimes in the guise of a romantic melodrama. Bergman knows these characters, so much so that what occurs at the least stays true to what is known to be their characters. Change occurs slowly, if at all, and with the professor especially there is a great kind of push and pull that Jarrell does- at times he's like a little puppy trying to get sympathy for 'being sick', but it's all just a guise.
Torment, in the end, is an excellent, near-great film about what it's like for the "rotten apple" of the bunch. Vindgren isn't a bad kid, but the pressures from schoolwork (nearing graduation no less) on top of his seeming love-affair with a woman more scrambled up by her relationship with the professor, things boil over. The last twenty minutes are at times totally heart-wrenching, reaching the depths that Bergman would plunge even further to with his masterpieces in the 60's and 70's. But Sjoberg goes just at the limit, which is a plus and minus, as he tries to make it appealing for the period (with Hidling Rosenberg's musical score quite fitting at times), with some interesting, expressionistic lighting techniques that add that fine coat onto the subject matter. That Bergman/Sjoberg also make the regular school-scenes believable, and even put in some interesting bits with supporting characters (the nerdy kid has a couple of good scenes, though the scene stealer is the teacher-to-teacher talk where the good tries his best to face down the bad), is of equal merit.
In short, Torment, what first set off the little spark for Bergman's career (and likely provided Sjoberg with one of his best films) is worth looking for, if at the least for Bergman fans wanting to check out all of his films, but one may find it to be one of Bergman's most searing early works.
- Quinoa1984
- 8 déc. 2005
- Lien permanent
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Torment?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 41 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1