Adalen Riots / Ådalen 31 (1969) (1950) [The Criterion Collection, Spine #1189]
Blu-Ray | BDMV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~35.8 Mbps | 1hr 54mn | 33.9 GB
Swedish: LPCM Audio, 1 ch, 1152 kbps | Subtitles: English
Genre: Drama, History, Romance
Blu-Ray | BDMV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~35.8 Mbps | 1hr 54mn | 33.9 GB
Swedish: LPCM Audio, 1 ch, 1152 kbps | Subtitles: English
Genre: Drama, History, Romance
Director: Bo Widerberg
Writers: Bo Widerberg
Stars: Peter Schildt, Kerstin Tidelius, Roland Hedlund
One of Bo Widerberg’s most explicitly political works imbues the true story of a 1931 labor strike with a powerful contemporary resonance. In the industrial district of Ådalen, in the north of Sweden, a peaceful demonstration takes a tragic turn, leading to a historic general strike. Amid these events, the teenage Kjell (Peter Schildt) experiences sacrifice and strife, love and loss, and the consequences of this shocking violence. Working once again with Elvira Madigan cinematographer Jörgen Persson—who captures shimmering, light-filled images in graceful widescreen—Widerberg entwines a stirring portrait of resistance with an intimate coming-of-age journey for a vision of history that feels vibrantly, urgently alive.
Extras:
- New 4K digital restoration approved by cinematographer Jörgen Persson, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
- Swedish television interview with director Bo Widerberg and labor-union chairman Hjalmar Näsström from 1968
Bo Widerberg’s New Swedish Cinema:
Driven by a desire to forge a socially conscious Swedish cinema—one that broke with the inward-looking psychodrama of Ingmar Bergman to give dynamic expression to the everyday experiences of working-class Swedes—writer Bo Widerberg turned to filmmaking in the early 1960s, realizing his ambition in politically committed yet poetic works that merge social-realist themes with a refined, often breathtakingly beautiful visual sensibility. Dramatizing the struggles of ordinary people fighting to chart their own destiny, these four acclaimed, popular, and pivotal films from Widerberg’s most prolific period live and breathe with a rare vitality—and helped launch a new Swedish cinema.
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