King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden opens up about his private life and his views in this intimate documentary about royal duties.King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden opens up about his private life and his views in this intimate documentary about royal duties.King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden opens up about his private life and his views in this intimate documentary about royal duties.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Kronprinsessan Victoria
- Self
- (as H.K.H. Kronprinsessan)
Christina Magnuson
- Self
- (as Princess Christina Mrs. Magnuson)
Queen Silvia
- Self
- (as H.M. Drottningen)
Featured reviews
The production should have 10 stars. The filming was excellent. Beautiful pictures. Beautiful light. Beautiful scenes. The music very well chosen. The scenes without speaking has a great effect.. The journalist was no good. She didn't create a room for the king to feel confident and maybe losen up and tell more about himself. Instead she put the spotllight on herself. She came to play a role in the way she interviewed the king and that is a big failure. He is the one we want to learn about. Not her. It was like 'me, myself, I'. Of course the title says it: 'The Kind and I', but it's a shame she missed her chance to make a really good documentary.
No mention about successes or what the king actually does. It's just full of negativity. Questions are disrespectful and probing. It would have been better to get to know the king. Instead he was pushed against the wall and he put up his guard.
How can you put this out and be proud? A huge possibility lost. You put the king under a microscope, instead of creating mutual trust.
So in essence what you're saying in your film is that he's a human who has challenges like everyone else. And you give an incredible amount of space for negativity. It's very challenging to watch.
The soundtrack is from hell itself. I'm gonna have nightmares about this one.
How can you put this out and be proud? A huge possibility lost. You put the king under a microscope, instead of creating mutual trust.
So in essence what you're saying in your film is that he's a human who has challenges like everyone else. And you give an incredible amount of space for negativity. It's very challenging to watch.
The soundtrack is from hell itself. I'm gonna have nightmares about this one.
Aims High and delivers. The interviewer/producer Karin Af Klintberg is one of Swedens best documentary makers.
She puts faith in the pictures, here it isong sequences with great photography and cinematic music, a lot of classical music and opera. A bit pretentious and I love it.
Not a journalistic piece but has some cinematic ambitions.
The story about the king is somewhat untold. He had a struggle in his life with his dad passing away early and he has to take on the role as the king. The king is surprisingly open and delivers a good performance.
This is much better than I would ever hoped for, even though I really like Karin Af Klingberg's style. As for the negative reviews, we'll this is not a portrait to please royalists. This is something more, a deeply human picture. All thumbs up.
She puts faith in the pictures, here it isong sequences with great photography and cinematic music, a lot of classical music and opera. A bit pretentious and I love it.
Not a journalistic piece but has some cinematic ambitions.
The story about the king is somewhat untold. He had a struggle in his life with his dad passing away early and he has to take on the role as the king. The king is surprisingly open and delivers a good performance.
This is much better than I would ever hoped for, even though I really like Karin Af Klingberg's style. As for the negative reviews, we'll this is not a portrait to please royalists. This is something more, a deeply human picture. All thumbs up.
This documentary only showed that the king of Sweden is a white man born on the 1940s without the ability to talk about feelings or go deep. It has a lot to ask for and I wish not the queen and Victoria would have been given a bigger role as it would have broaden the picture. What I did like is the fact that Silvia said "I love you' to the king and he replied "shhhh". I would have wished more of those things, more of them being human beings just as you and I. Not someone you can't even call "you". It's a weird tradition and I hope it doesn't last that long, cause I can see the money being spent way better.
What looked like a promising documentary at the beginning slowly gets more and more cringeworthy with each interview of the King by a pushy and disrespectful journalist who treats him like a child but at the same time seems desperate for his approval. I am surprised that the King even finished the film as he was clearly displeased and uncomfortable with the rude and intrusive manner displayed by interviewer/ director Karin af Klintberg. If you are looking for an example of how NOT to interview an important person this film clearly demonstrates it. By the end the clear winner is the King who conducts himself professionally and honourably with a sense of humour at times. The clear loser is Karin af Klintberg.
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Details
- Runtime
- 1h 38m(98 min)
- Color
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