Watch: Höstsonaten 1978 123movies, Full Movie Online – After having neglected her children for many years, world famous pianist Charlotte visits her daughter Eva in her home. To her surprise she finds her other daughter, Helena, there as well. Helena is mentally disabled, and Eva has taken Helena out of the institution where their mother had placed her. The tension between Charlotte and Eva only builds up slowly, until a nightly conversation releases all the things they have wanted to tell each other..
Plot: After a seven-year absence, Charlotte Andergast travels to Sweden to reunite with her daughter Eva. The pair have a troubled relationship: Charlotte sacrificed the responsibilities of motherhood for a career as a classical pianist. Over an emotional night, the pair reopen the wounds of the past. Charlotte gets another shock when she finds out that her mentally impaired daughter, Helena, is out of the asylum and living with Eva.
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A PERFECT MOVIE
What makes a movie perfect is not only the intensity of emotion you feel when seeing it, and it’s not only the seamless matching of technique and artistry, it is the truth of feeling conveyed and the unrelenting attention to the details of the crafts of writing, acting, and directing, making certain that those details work together to create meaning – a view of life, and whatever forces are behind life, that are as varied, contradictory, and complete as a living being. It is this that Bergman managed to accomplish with AUTUMN SONATA. The hyperbolic use of the word ‘perfect’, too often spontaneously tossed out as a result of confused and mawkish sentimentality (just as one Liv Ulmann’s interpretation of a Chopin prelude is described as mawkish in the film) has a right to be used in the case of this work. There are no demons or angels in this movie. There are a collection of remarkably real characters whose actions and their motivations are fully explained by themselves, in dialog that is explicit and direct but not delivered as an artificial way of getting across the creator’s judgment on his characters. Ingrid Bergman, in what is doubtlessly the finest performance of her career, portrays a mother who has neglected her children all her life and is confronted by this fact by her grown daughter whose adoration as a child has turned into an apparently irreversible hatred. “There is no forgiveness” is a line uttered by Liv Ulmann after summarizing the crimes of her mother’s neglect and the results of that neglect. And yet, the character’s contradictory feelings are clearly seen in the moments when her need for vengeful expression of her pain has faded away. The daughter who has condemned her mother, quite honestly, wants to keep trying to resolve the conflict, to heal the gaping wounds in her heart and in her sister’s heart – a sister who, arguably, has been physically crippled by the cold withdrawl of her mother’s feelings and her mother’s competitive need to be the leading female character in everyone’s life. Ingrid Bergman’s character, though seen as a villain in the emotional eyes of her daughter, comes across as complex as Ulmann’s. She has an awareness of her crimes of neglect but remains helpless, by choice and by need, to confront them within herself and make amends to resolve them. Her own childhood is the reason. The isolation that she felt, instead of inspiring her to not repeat the mistake with her own children, took the course of isolation, of seeking praise from the outside, of being the central character in the lives of people around her. Her insatiable hunger for love from others, though, remains forever unsatisfied. Her selfishness, even though she is painfully aware of it, is something which she has learned how to hide from herself. Her methods, of physical distance or the perfection of her work as a pianist has, for all her adult life, successfully obfuscated her pain – until an all-night exposing of the naked truths of hurt and distrust that are thrust upon her by her daughter.Anyone with a mother or father can find identification with the characters in AUTUMN SONATA, as long as they can tolerate the pain of the truth that lies at the center of their all-too-human needs and the hurtful action that those needs have caused.
A powerful and moving film, if not one of Bergman’s best
Autumn Sonata was a movie that did move me a lot, but I’d hesitate in calling it one of Ingmar Bergman’s best. I did find The Seventh Seal, Wild Strawberries, Fanny and Alexander, Cries and Whispers and Persona even better. This said, apart from an occasional over-load of speeches that come across as too theatrical, Autumn Sonata is still a remarkably good film. As ever with Bergman, it is wonderfully photographed(by none other than Sven Nykvist) and directed, and it has some lovely scenery too. The music is beautiful and haunting, I have to say as a life-long fan of classical music that the use of the Chopin prelude is one of the finest uses of classical music in film to me. The script is mostly thought-provoking and the story, which is essentially a study of guarded emotion, resentment and regret, has the Bergman darkness and harrowing moments like with the sister with the horrible degenerative disease and the drowned toddler. Charlotte’s selfishness is also very powerfully conveyed as is Eva’s sense of resentment, while the scene that moved me most was the two at the piano. Both leading ladies are outstanding, Ingrid Bergman’s elegant but somewhat faded beauty is ideal for the selfishness of her character, but I was even more impressed by Liv Ullman, who has such intensity in her eyes and facial expressions. All in all, powerful and moving, and while it is not one of my favourites from Bergman it is still highly recommendable. 9/10 Bethany Cox
Original Language sv
Runtime 1 hr 39 min (99 min), 1 hr 32 min (92 min) (UK)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated PG
Genre Drama, Music
Director Ingmar Bergman
Writer Ingmar Bergman
Actors Ingrid Bergman, Liv Ullmann, Lena Nyman
Country West Germany, United Kingdom
Awards Nominated for 2 Oscars. 10 wins & 10 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix Mono
Aspect Ratio 1.66 : 1
Camera Arriflex 35 BL
Laboratory Film-Teknik, Stockholm, Sweden
Film Length 2,540 m
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format 35 mm, Digital