Thursday, 9 April 2009

Three Strange Loves (1949)

Three Strange Loves (aka Thirst aka Törst)

Without meaning to pun on the title Three Strange Loves is a strange little film. There are a couple of different plot threads weaved together very flimsily. Often whole sequences feel random, or serve as just a little vignette, with no real function to the main plot (which is vague anyway).

The film is based on short stories by Birger Malmsten, and I think this is the problem. If the scriptwriter (Herbert Grevenus) could have picked just one or two to put the main focus on, rather than (seemingly) include as many as possible. One thing the film has going for it is that it contains references to lesbian relationship- remember this is 1949 and that sort of thing just wasn't done or talked about, let alone put on film! So full marks for bravery.

Stylistically there's a lot of long shots, but Bergman cleverly makes it almost unnoticeable. Other than that the film is unremarkable. A book on writing screenplays I once read said: "You can make a bad film out of a good script, but you can never make a good film out of a bad script." This film suffers from that problem.

Rating- 5/10

Top 5-
1) Prison
2) Music In Darkness
3) Torment
4) Port of Call
5) Three Strange Loves

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