The Serpent's Egg (1978) on DVD
$19.98
Availability:
In stock
SKU
SERP1047
Actors: | Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, Bill Murray, Gilda Radner, Laraine Newman |
Director: | Ingmar Bergman |
Genre: | Drama |
Year: | 1978 |
Studio: | MGM |
Length: | 120 minutes |
Released: | December 16, 2014 |
Rating: | R |
Format: | DVD (NTSC/Region 1) |
Misc: | Color |
Language: | English |
Subtitles: | N/A |
DESCRIPTION:
Out-of-work trapeze artist Abel Rosenberg (David Carradine) finds the only way to navigate the surreal circus that is 1923 Berlin is to stay drunk. But even through his stupor, he can see the thread of a frightening mystery everyone he knows, even his most distant acquaintances, is dying violently. Can he survive...or will his mind and soul completely unravel?
This unusual political drama by Ingmar Bergman was filmed at Bavaria Film Studios in Munich during the director's exile from Sweden after encountering problems with tax officials back home. THE SERPENT'S EGG, a big-budget German-American coproduction, was Bergman's second work in English after THE TOUCH and is set in 1920s Berlin, shortly before Hitler's rise to power. Abel (David Carradine), a Jewish trapeze artist, and his late brother's wife, Manuela (Liv Ullmann), a cabaret performer and part-time prostitute, are forced to seek employment at a medical clinic run by Dr. Vergerus (Heinz Bennent), because other work is hard to come by in the poverty-stricken and inflation-prone city. But Abel and Manuela's financial problems are overshadowed by a gruesome discovery: the mad-scientist-like Vergerus is secretly conducting human experiments--foreshadowing the horrors of the concentration camps. Carradine was considered miscast by many critics who didn't know quite what to make of this film. Nightmarish and gripping, it depicts the political turmoil, ever-increasing Nazi brutality, and general moral decay of the time period in vivid, graphic images. Bergman has admitted to being a follower of Hitler's in his youth, and some have speculated that this film, deviating from the director's usual subject matter, represented an act of repentance of sorts.
Actors: | Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, Bill Murray, Gilda Radner, Laraine Newman |
Director: | Ingmar Bergman |
Genre: | Drama |
Year: | 1978 |
Studio: | MGM |
Length: | 120 minutes |
Released: | December 16, 2014 |
Rating: | R |
Format: | DVD (NTSC/Region 1) |
Misc: | Color |
Language: | English |
Subtitles: | N/A |
DESCRIPTION:
Out-of-work trapeze artist Abel Rosenberg (David Carradine) finds the only way to navigate the surreal circus that is 1923 Berlin is to stay drunk. But even through his stupor, he can see the thread of a frightening mystery everyone he knows, even his most distant acquaintances, is dying violently. Can he survive...or will his mind and soul completely unravel?
This unusual political drama by Ingmar Bergman was filmed at Bavaria Film Studios in Munich during the director's exile from Sweden after encountering problems with tax officials back home. THE SERPENT'S EGG, a big-budget German-American coproduction, was Bergman's second work in English after THE TOUCH and is set in 1920s Berlin, shortly before Hitler's rise to power. Abel (David Carradine), a Jewish trapeze artist, and his late brother's wife, Manuela (Liv Ullmann), a cabaret performer and part-time prostitute, are forced to seek employment at a medical clinic run by Dr. Vergerus (Heinz Bennent), because other work is hard to come by in the poverty-stricken and inflation-prone city. But Abel and Manuela's financial problems are overshadowed by a gruesome discovery: the mad-scientist-like Vergerus is secretly conducting human experiments--foreshadowing the horrors of the concentration camps. Carradine was considered miscast by many critics who didn't know quite what to make of this film. Nightmarish and gripping, it depicts the political turmoil, ever-increasing Nazi brutality, and general moral decay of the time period in vivid, graphic images. Bergman has admitted to being a follower of Hitler's in his youth, and some have speculated that this film, deviating from the director's usual subject matter, represented an act of repentance of sorts.
Product Name | The Serpent's Egg (1978) on DVD |
---|---|
This item is returnable | Yes |
Write Your Own Review