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I Am A Woman Now Film

1965 film

I, a Adult female
I A Woman film poster.jpg

American release film poster

Directed by Mac Ahlberg
Screenplay by Peer Guldbrandsen
Based on Jeg-en kvinde (novel)
by Agnethe Thomsen
(penname: Siv Holm)
Produced past
  • Peer Guldbrandsen
  • Fritz Ruzicka
Starring
  • Essy Persson
  • Preben Mahrt
  • Jørgen Reenberg
  • Tove Maës
  • Erik Hell
Cinematography Mac Ahlberg
Edited past Edith Nisted Nielsen
Radley Metzger
Music by Sven Gyldmark

Production
companies

  • Nordisk Film
  • Europa Film
  • Novaris Picture
Distributed past Audubon Films

Release dates

  • 17 September 1965 (1965-09-17) (Denmark)
  • 8 November 1965 (1965-11-08) (Sweden)

Running fourth dimension

95 minutes
Countries
  • Kingdom of denmark
  • Sweden
Language Danish
Box role Swedish krona ii,388,000 (Sweden)
$4.5 million (US/Canada) (rental)[1]

I, a Woman (original Danish: Jeg - en kvinde ) is a 1965 blackness-and-white Danish-Swedish erotic flick whose intermission-through popularity helped initiate a moving ridge of sexploitation films into mainstream American theaters in the tardily 1960s,[2] and inspired Andy Warhol to write and direct his feature-length experimental film version I, a Man.[3]

Background [edit]

Directed by Mac Ahlberg as his feature flick debut,[4] and written past Peer Guldbrandsen, the movie was based upon the best-selling 1961 novel Jeg - en kvinde by Agnethe Thomsen written nether her pseudonym Siv Holm.[v] The story starred Essy Persson, in her motion-picture show debut, equally a immature nurse who breaks costless of a repressed upbringing to explore sexual freedom. Information technology also featured established Danish movie stars including Preben Mahrt, Jørgen Reenberg and Tove Maës.[6]

The American distribution rights were purchased by Radley Metzger who edited the pic to remove the flashbacks, added English titles and placed it into mainstream movie theaters.[7] Metzger said it was "probably the first feminist erotic film released in the '60s and information technology pushed a button with every woman in America."[seven] Past earning more than 4 million dollars in the United states, Metzger credited I, a Woman as the major catalyst for his subsequent success in making pornographic films.[7] Despite poor reviews by mainstream media, the film'due south box part success encouraged the evolution of the sexploitation picture industry. According to an commodity in Variety magazine, I, a Adult female "freed itself from the exploitation houses, it invaded bourgeoisie and immediately struck paydirt."[8]

Plot [edit]

The young nurse Siv (Essy Persson) is frustrated by the strict restraints of her religious parents (Tove Maës and Erik Hell) and her slow fiancé, Sven (Preben Kørning). At the hospital where she works, a married antiques dealer named Heinz Gersen (Preben Mahrt) flirts with Siv. Although she is warned that Gersen is a philandering playboy, Siv allows him to seduce her and they have an affair. Gersen tells Siv that he loves her and proposes to go out his wife for her. Having only just discovered a new earth of sexual liberty, Siv rejects Gersen'south proposal. She then breaks off her date with Sven, moves away from her parents and finds a nursing position in another urban center. Siv meets Lars, a sailor (Bengt Brunskog), and they begin a relationship. When Lars proposes union, Siv breaks upwardly with him. Siv begins dating Doctor Dam (Jørgen Reenberg) at the hospital where she works. Dam also falls in love with Siv, so she stops seeing him and decides that no single human being will ever completely fulfill her ain desires. Siv has a sexual encounter with a stranger named Eric (Frankie Steele) who Siv realizes perfectly matches her own promiscuity. Eric tells Siv that he won't see her anymore considering he is afraid that she will autumn in love with him.

Cast [edit]

  • Essy Persson as Siv Esmuth
  • Preben Mahrt as Heinz Gersen, an antiquarian dealer
  • Jørgen Reenberg every bit Dr. Dam
  • Tove Maës as Siv'southward Female parent
  • Erik Hell as Siv'due south Male parent
  • Preben Kørning as Sven, Siv'due south fiance
  • Bengt Brunskog as Lars Thomsen, a sailor
  • Frankie Steel as Erik, the stranger
  • Ebba With as Head Nurse
  • Wandy Tworek as Violinist
  • Malene Schwartz as Siv's vocalization (Danish overdubbing)
  • Carl Ottosen as Lars' voice (Danish overdubbing)

Reception [edit]

AllMovie wrote that as an "developed-oriented drama" and as "i of the start sexually-themed films from Sweden to observe an audience (and wide release) in America", I, a Woman was "a surprise box office success" which led three years later to a sequel by the aforementioned filmmaker.[nine] When The New York Times reviewed the 1968 sequel Jeg - en kvinde 2, they found it to be "wearisome and pointless", specially in comparison to the before film which was "sizzling, bad—and a resounding money-maker."[4]

Roger Ebert panned the flick, offering that if a viewer chose to miss seeing one film in 1967, I, a Woman would be the one to miss, and past comparing, "all the other crummy movies I've had to sit down through in this job weren't so bad".[10] He bemoaned how publicity compared the picture favorably to Dear John, Virginia Woolf, Casino Royale and even Denizen Kane, writing information technology had "uninteresting camera work, mediocre performances and a mechanical plot", besides as very poor subtitles which destroyed the mood "every 10 minutes by throwing in something utterly vulgar, ill-timed or otherwise inappropriate."[10] Ebert felt the film exhibited "the maturity of a thirteen-year-former cranking the handle on the penny-peepshow at a county off-white."[x] Contrarily, TV Guide praised Essy Persson in this, her debut role, and wrote "The film's simple merely fashionable aesthetics are a real care for, even if they can't ultimately compensate for a disappointingly sparse plot", and concluded "the film is most compelling when seen in calorie-free of the labored progress of feminist soapbox; information technology's an artifact from a time when the notion of a adult female taking charge of her sexual life was both risque and revolutionary".[six]

Releases [edit]

Release titles include its original Jeg - en kvinde in Sweden and Denmark,[11] Eu, Mulher in Brazil,[12] Minä - nainen and Olen nainen in Finland,[13] Moi, une femme in French republic,[14] Erotismos in Greece,[15] Io una donna in Italy,[xvi] Soy una mujer in United mexican states,[17] Ik een Vrouw in Netherlands,[xviii] Jeg - en kvinne in Norway,[19] Jag - en kvinna in Sweden,[20] Ja, Zena in Yugoslavia,[21] Ich eine Frau in West Germany,[22] and every bit I, a Adult female in the United States.

Nether its original championship Jeg - en kvinde, the film had 1965 theatrical releases in Denmark on September 17, and in Sweden on November 8. In 1966 the film had re-release in Kingdom of denmark on July 4, followed by releases August 12 in West Frg, another re-release in Denmark on September 7. Also in 1966, the film had its American premiere October eleven in New York Urban center, and November 11 in Netherlands. In 1967, the film premiered July 7 in Chicago, Illinois and again re-released in Kingdom of denmark on August 9. In 1968 the film released Jan 11 in Kingdom of norway, February 21 in France, and June 1 in Japan.

Sequels [edit]

Two sequels were produced: 2 - I, A Woman, Role 2 (1968),[4] and The Daughter: I, A Adult female Part Iii (1970).[23] as well every bit the Danish-Swedish sex comedy I, a Lover. The motion picture I, a Woman also inspired Andy Warhol to write and direct his feature-length experimental pic version I, a Man.[3]

References [edit]

  1. ^ "All-fourth dimension Film Rental Champs", Variety, seven January 1976 p 48
  2. ^ Schaeffer, Eric (Spring 2002). "Gauging a Revolution: 16mm Film and the Rise of the Pornographic Feature" (PDF). Cinema Journal. 41 (3): 3–26. doi:ten.1353/cj.2002.0010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-10-31. Retrieved 2014-ten-31 .
  3. ^ a b Thomas, Kevin (Baronial nine, 2001). "Sadness and Humour From Warhol". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  4. ^ a b c Thompson, Howard (March 15, 1969). "Screen: Amour, Amour:Sequel to 'I, a Woman' Here From Denmark". The New York Times . Retrieved October 22, 2014.
  5. ^ Piil, Morten (2008). Gyldendals Danske Filmguide (in Danish). Denmark: Gyldendal Boghandel. p. 267. ISBN978-87-02-06669-2.
  6. ^ a b Wolgemuth, Elizabeth. "review, I, A Woman". Television receiver Guide . Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  7. ^ a b c Gallagher, Stephen (Summer 1967). "The Libertine". Filmmaker Magazine. IFP.
  8. ^ "Far Out (Long Island) Sex activity," Diverseness, June fourteen, 1967, thirteen.
  9. ^ Demming, Mark. "I, A Woman (1965)". AllMovie. Retrieved October 22, 2014.
  10. ^ a b c Roger Ebert (July 12, 1967). "Review: I, A Woman". rogerebert.com. Retrieved October 22, 2014.
  11. ^ staff. "Jeg - En Kvinde, Mac Ahlberg (DK, 1965)" (in Danish). Det Danske Filminstitut. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  12. ^ staff. "European union, Mulher (I, a Woman)" (in Portuguese). Inter Filmes. Retrieved iv December 2014.
  13. ^ staff. "Olen nainen (1965)" (in Finnish). Synopsi TV. Retrieved four December 2014.
  14. ^ staff. "Moi, une femme (1965)" (in French). Synopsi TV. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  15. ^ staff. "Erotismos" (in Greek). el.iedb.eu. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  16. ^ staff. "Io, una donna (Danimarca, Svezia · 1965) - Jag-en kvinna" (in Italian). Screenweek. Retrieved four December 2014.
  17. ^ staff. "Soy una mujers" (in Spanish). el.iedb.eu. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  18. ^ staff. "Ik een Vrouw (1965)" (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 7 December 2014. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  19. ^ staff. "Jeg - en kvinne". Filmweb. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  20. ^ staff. "Jag - en kvinna" (in Swedish). nyheter24.se. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  21. ^ staff. "Ja, Zena" (in Croatian). el.iedb.eu. Retrieved 4 Dec 2014.
  22. ^ staff. "Ich, eine Frau" (in German language). Online Moving picture Datenbank. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  23. ^ Greenspun, Roger (October 24, 1970). "Moving picture: Continuing Tale of 'I, A Woman':Interracial Sex Theme Besides Gets Workout 'The Daughter' Makes Information technology a Family Affair". The New York Times . Retrieved October 23, 2014.

External links [edit]

  • I, a Adult female at the Internet Movie Database
  • Jeg - en kvinde at the Swedish Film Database
  • Jeg - en kvinde at the Danish Pic Plant (in Danish)

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I,_a_Woman

Posted by: vincentsparleathe.blogspot.com

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