Activate your BLOCKBUSTER On Demand device

Lickå Sjöman Movies

1987  
 
In Sweden, the popular post-WWII newspaper cartoon strip created by Steve Terry was known as Jim & The Pirates instead of Terry and the Pirates, its U.S. moniker. In this children's story based on some of the stories from that strip, a pre-teen boy receives counseling from his dead father's ghost on how to cope with new developments in his life -- from his mother's getting a new boyfriend, to the fine art of chopping onions. The boy learns a pretty good trick from his father's shade which enables him to use his imagination to turn a boring birthday party into an ocean adventure among pirates. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Ewa FrölingStellan Skarsgård, (more)
 
1986  
 
The premise in this thriller-black comedy is that there may be something seriously wrong with Kaare (Goren Dyhrssen). He has been imprisoned for arson and after he is released on probation he joins up with his girlfriend Monika (Licka Sjoman). The two of them go to his family's farm where Kaare tells Monika that his parents have died in an automobile accident. A tame fox hangs out around the grounds, doors go creak in the night, and Kaare has a penchant for playing with matches and setting pieces of furniture on fire. Monika must have a high tolerance for the decidedly weird. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Lickå SjömanWillie Andreasson, (more)
 
1982  
R  
Add Fanny & Alexander to QueueAdd Fanny & Alexander to top of Queue 
Though he made allusions to his own life in all of his films, Fanny and Alexander was the first overtly autobiographical film by Ingmar Bergman. Taking his time throughout (188 minutes to be exact), Bergman recreates several episodes from his youth, using as conduits the fictional Ekdahl family. Alexander, the director's alter ego, is first seen at age 10 at a joyous and informal Christmas gathering of relatives and servants. Fanny is Alexander's sister; both suffer an emotional shakedown when their recently-widowed mother (Ewa Froling) marries a cold and distant minister. Stripped of their creature comforts and relaxed family atmosphere, Fanny and Alexander suddenly find their childhood unendurable. The kids' grandmother (Gunn Wallgren) "kidnaps" Fanny and Alexander for the purpose of showering them with the first kindness and affection that they've had since their father's death. This "purge" of the darker elements of Fanny and Alexander's existence is accomplished at the unintentional (but applaudable) cost of the hated stepfather's life. Ingmar Bergman insisted that Fanny and Alexander, originally a multipart television series pared down to feature-film length, represented his final theatrical film, though within a year after its release he was busy with several additional Swedish TV projects, and his final work, the 2003 Saraband (also produced for Swedish television), eventually received global theatrical distribution. Oscars went to Fanny and Alexander for Best Foreign Film, Best Cinematography (Sven Nykvist), Best Costume Design and Best Art Direction/Set Decoration. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Pernilla AllwinBertil Guve, (more)
 
1982  
 
In 1982, Ingmar Bergman emerged with one of his most singularly acclaimed films - a work that dramatically broke away from much of the moody psychodrama that characterized such earlier motion pictures as Cries & Whispers and Hour of the Wolf. Entitled Fanny and Alexander, and originally intended as the director's "swan song," this epic plunges into the life of a theatrical family named the Ekdahls, in turn-of-the-century Sweden. Bergman filters life through the eyes of the two titular Ekdahl children (Pernilla Alwin and Bertil Guve), as they come of age, lose their father unexpectedly, and must contend with their mother's remarriage to an uncaring, dictatorial clergyman from whom there seems to be no escape. Instantly hailed as a masterpiece, Fanny won a slew of international awards, including four Oscars. Yet curiously, the three-hour theatrical version seen in the U.S. did not represent the full depth and breadth of Bergman's vision. He also prepared a five-hour version for Swedish television, one that ran locally as a miniseries in 1984, in four separate installments. The extended running time gives the director to further develop and flesh out his characters, substories and themes, and will thus strike many fans of the original film as a remarkable discovery. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Pernilla AllwinBertil Guve, (more)
 
1977  
 
Sexual minorities such as transvestites, transsexuals, necrophiliacs and sado-masochists are lumped together and are given a close examination in this film by director Victor Sjoman, who made I Am Curious, Yellow. Viveca Lindefors and Bunnar Bjornstrand are two of the featured performers. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Kjell BergqvistLickå Sjöman, (more)