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I Am Curious (Blue)
I Am Curious (Blue)

I Am Curious (Blue) (1968)

55% User Rating
1h 47min
Drama

"Look who's flying into the blue!"

The same movie with the same characters, cast and crew as I am Curious (Yellow), but with some different scenes and a different political slant. The political focus in Blue is personal relationships, religion, prisons and sex. Blue omits much of the class consciousness and non-violence interviews of the first version. Yellow and Blue are the colors of the Swedish flag.

Vilgot SjömanDirector

Cast

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Maj Hultén

Doktor

Vilgot Sjöman

Vilgot Sjöman

Vilgot Sjöman

Lena Nyman

Lena Nyman

Anna Lena Lisabet Nyman / Lena

Börje Ahlstedt

Börje Ahlstedt

Börje

Sonja Lindgren

Sonja Lindgren

Sonja Lindgren

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Bertil Wikström

Bertil Wikström

Gunnel Broström

Gunnel Broström

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Hans Hellberg

Hasse

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Bim Warne

Hasse's Girlfriend

Peter Lindgren

Peter Lindgren

Lena's Father

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Gudrun Östbye

Lena's Mother

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Ulla Lyttkens

Lena's Friend

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Magnus Nilsson

Gun Jönsson

Gun Jönsson

Woman

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Pierre Fränckel

Man

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Hanne Sandemose

Woman

Frej Lindqvist

Frej Lindqvist

Marie Göranzon

Marie Göranzon

Marie

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Helle Sandemose

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Hagge Geigert

Entertainer

Bo Holmström

Bo Holmström

TV-reporter

Reviews (1)

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C
CRCulver
Rating 70%

September 6, 2018

In the 1960s Sweden underwent an enormous social upheaval, which brought it from a rather rigidly stratified and staid society, which cinephiles might have seen in Ingmar Bergman's earliest films, to a place where the old sexual taboos collapsed and angry class war broke out just like in some other Western European countries. The Swedish filmmaker Vilgot Sjöman decided to reflect those changing mores (and possibly spur some further more-changing himself) with his pseudo-documentary project <i>I am Curious</i>. He developed a script through a great deal of improvisation and then shot enough footage to release it as two films: "Yellow" in 1967, and "Blue" the following year (these titles refer to the colours of the Swedish flag). This review treats both of them. The main actress of these films was 22 year-old Lena Nyman who plays... Lena Nyman, a 22 year-old drama student already well into sexual exploration and political commitment. From the home she shares with her alcoholic father, she runs what she calls the Nyman Institute, keeping an enormous collection of files and wandering around Sweden with a microphone to record the reactions of Swedes to provocative questions like "Does Sweden have a class system?" and (to holidaymakers returning from fascist Spain) "What do you think about Franco?". She has tumultuous relationships, mainly sexual, with suave yuppie Börje (Börje Ahlstedt) and idealistic bohemian Hasse (Hans Hellberg). The films have another layer, however, where we see Vilgot Sjöman coaching his actors and establishing a sexual relationship with his lead actress -- but even this layer is fictional. One really admires everyone, director and his actors alike, for being able to play fictional versions of themselves at two different levels. The two films have a yin-yang relationship, covering roughly the same themes but in different proportions. Yellow is more about political engagement and non-violence in the context of the Cold War, and it attacks the hypocrisy of the Swedish left (which had become entrenched and no longer a force for social change) and the monarchy. That film is set mainly in Stockholm and deals with Lena's home life. Blue, on the other hand, explores the themes of religion and the prison system, and more of it is set in the countryside where we hear some of the attitudes of rural Sweden as opposed to the capital. Upon their release, these films (especially Yellow) were attacked as pornography, and Sjöman as a letch (even though it was the real-life Nyman's idea that there be a subplot where the director seduces his lead actress). However, the sex and nudity here is not titillating at all, rather it is simply one of the many sociocultural themes that Sjöman wanted to present and as unsexy as any real documentary. Furthermore, Sjöman was really no letch at all – among countercultural artists, he may have been ahead of his time in confronting the possibility that the new permissiveness wasn't just female liberation, it was also men finding it easier to coerce women into sex by accusing them of being uptight if they didn't put out, something which didn't occur to many 1960s idealists until the next decade. Another way in which Sjöman critically examines the New Left is by charting how those who preach non-violence could be very cruel in their interpersonal relationships with friends and family. I had seen only Yellow a few times and was prepared to consider this only a four-star deal, highly interesting as documentary material about 1960s Sweden, but missing something that truly moved me. However, getting a DVD set and finally seeing Blue provided that moving experience; it is quite impressive how Sjöman made the two films interlock with just enough overlap to make it a convincing whole. There's also some latent humour that becomes clear only on seeing both.

Media

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I Am Curirous (Blue) - Sonja Lindren

I Am Curirous (Blue) - Sonja Lindren

Recommended

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Frida
Ken Park
Lumumba
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
The Shawshank Redemption
Inception
It
Inside Out
The Godfather
The Wolf of Wall Street
Back to the Future
The Shining
Joker
The Mummy
Guardians of the Galaxy
The Devil Wears Prada
Troy
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Batman
The Social Network

Collection

I'm Curious Collection

Part of

I'm Curious Collection

Includes: I Am Curious (Yellow), I Am Curious (Blue)