I Am Curious (Yellow)

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I Am Curious (Yellow)
Directed by Vilgot Sjöman
Produced by Göran Lindgren
Written by Vilgot Sjöman
Starring Vilgot Sjöman
Peter Lindgren
Lena Nyman
Börje Ahlstedt
Chris Wahlström
Marie Göranzon
Music by Bengt Ernryd
Cinematography Peter Wester
Editing by Wic Kjellin
Distributed by Grove Press
Release date(s) Sweden:
9 October 1967
United States:
10 March 1969
Running time 121 min
Language Swedish

I Am Curious (Yellow) (original Swedish title: Jag är nyfiken - gul) is a 1967 Swedish film directed by Vilgot Sjöman and starring Lena Nyman as a character named after her. It is a companion film to 1968's I Am Curious (Blue); the two were initially intended to be one 3½ hour film.[1] The films are named after the colours of the Swedish flag.

Contents

[edit] Style

Yellow was a landmark film that helped define the emergent change in Swedish film of the 1960s. Like a French New Wave film, the movie uses jump cuts and its story is not structured in a conventional Hollywood way. It also contains documentary elements; for example, it features a brief appearance by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. who is interviewed by Sjöman about his views on civil disobedience. This interview was filmed in March 1966, when Dr. King and Harry Belafonte were in Stockholm to start a new initiative for Swedish support of African Americans.[2]

[edit] Censorship

A notorious scene in which Lena kisses her lover's flaccid penis.

The film includes numerous and frank scenes of nudity and staged sexual intercourse. In one particularly controversial scene, Lena kissed her lover's flaccid penis. In 1969, the film was banned in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts for being pornographic. However, after proceedings in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts (Karalexis v. Byrne, 306 F. Supp. 1363 (D. Mass. 1969)), the Second Circuit Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court of the United States (Byrne v. Karalexis, 396 U.S. 976 (1969) and 401 U.S. 216 (1971)), the Second Circuit Court of Appeals found the movie not to be obscene.[3]

[edit] Influence

Olof Palme (who played himself in an uncredited role in the movie) and Lena Nyman, taken at the Guldbagge Award ceremony. Nyman won the 1967 award for Best Actress in a leading role.

The film's title was the inspiration for:

[edit] Reception

Initial reception to the films were hostile with Vincent Canby of The New York Times stating that, "I'm not very fond of this sort of moviemaking, which tries to disarm conventional criticism by exploiting formlessness as meaningful itself,"[4] but more modern critics have begun to look at the films as classics.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Vilgot Sjöman, I Was Curious: Diary of the Making of a Film (Grove Press, 1968)
  2. ^ Sjöman, published screenplay (Grove Press, 1968)
  3. ^ I Am Curious / Jag är nyfiken | Film International
  4. ^ The New York Times’ review of Blue

[edit] External links

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