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  1. Private Confessions (Swedish: Enskilda samtal) is a 1996 Swedish drama film directed by Liv Ullmann and written by Ingmar Bergman. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1997 Cannes Film Festival. Private Confessions is also a short TV series in two parts, premiering on Sveriges Television in 1996.

  2. Private Confessions: Directed by Liv Ullmann. With Pernilla August, Max von Sydow, Samuel Fröler, Thomas Hanzon. Five conversations frame a flawed marriage in this film written by Ingmar Bergman about his parents. Guilt-ridden wife Anna (Pernilla August) divulges an extramarital affair to a priest, her uncle Jacob (Max von Sydow). He presses ...

    • (469)
    • Biography, Drama
    • Liv Ullmann
    • 1999
  3. Despite an excellent, unaffected performance by Pernilla August, Private Confessions can't escape its melodramatic premise of adultery and redemption. Written by the King of Existentialism, the film (or shall I say mini-series) is structured along five conversations, though they do not follow any chronology, which has become a cool trick to use ...

  4. 10. Sept. 2012 · Film. Time Out says. Bergman's script takes the story of his parents' relationship further on from The Best Intentions - August and Fröler reprise their roles as his...

  5. 1. Okt. 1997 · Five conversations frame a flawed marriage in this film written by Ingmar Bergman about his parents. Guilt-ridden wife Anna (Pernilla August) divulges an extramarital affair to a priest, her uncle Jacob (Max von Sydow). He presses her to confess her sins to her husband, Henrik.

  6. NYC THEATRICAL PREMIERE OF THE COMPLETE DIRECTOR’S CUT. (1997) Five conversations over 28 years detail Pernilla August’s dalliance with young theology student Thomas Hanzon and how she handles it with equally clerical husband Samuel Fröler and uncle Max von Sydow.

  7. Guilt-ridden wife Anna (Pernilla August) divulges an extramarital affair to a priest, her uncle Jacob (Max von Sydow). He presses her to confess her sins to her husband, Henrik. As the film moves back and forth in time, the notion of truth is tested.