Here Is Your Life (1966)

Here Is Your Life (Här har du ditt liv)
Directed by Jan Troell
Written by Jan Troell and Bengt Forslund from a novel by Eyvind Johnson
1966/Sweden
Svensk Filmindustri
First viewing/Amazon Instant

 

[box] “I like work: it fascinates me. I can sit and look at it for hours.” ― Jerome K. Jerome[/box]

Beautiful, if overlong, coming-of-age story.

It is 1914 in rural Sweden and our hero Olof Persson (Eddie Axberg) is as old as the century.  Circumstances force him to search for work.  The jobs he can find involve hard manual labor in the outdoors with men at least twice his age.  Olof makes many different friends that help shape his life.

After a few years, he meets a cinema owner (Gunnar Bjornstrand) who hires him to post advertisements.  He moves on from there to ticket taker and usher before getting a job with a travelling circus as a projectionist.  We see him become interested in philosophy and leftist politics.  He also has various forms of girl and woman trouble as he ages.

This is a good looking and well-acted film (many Bergman regulars are in the cast).  On the other hand, it is almost three hours long and took at least an hour to grab my attention.  Once it did, I liked it a lot.

Clip (with Max von Sydow)

 

4 thoughts on “Here Is Your Life (1966)

  1. I haven’t seen this, but I wanted to pop in and recommend a 1966 Japanese film I saw a few days ago. It was called The Face of Another and it was a creepy Japanese plastic-surgery film that was just as creepy and weird as you would expect from a creepy Japanese plastic surgery movie made in 1966.

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