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  1. Shooting the interiors for Thirst began on 15 March 1949, coming to an end less than a month later on 9 April. Shooting the exteriors began on 29 June, ending on 5 July. Bergman in Images: My Life in Film : A large part of the film takes place during a train journey through was-torn Germany. In Prison I had begun to experiment with longer takes ...

  2. Released: 1949-10-17 Genre: Drama. Casts: Naima ... Where to watch Thirst Thirst movie free online Thirst free online. You may also like. Thirst with Shay Mitchell.

  3. Oct 23, 2014 · Quote: With Thirst (1949), Ingmar Bergman began to display an astonishing technical virtuosity and control over the medium of film. A crosshatched, multilayered narrative, sewn together with fascinating side trips and flashbacks, Thirst was adapted by theater critic (and Bergman mentor) Herbert Grevenius from four controversial short stories written by famed Swedish stage actress Birgit Tengroth, and moved Bergman even further away from his theatrical origins.

  4. A needy couple in a bad marriage travel back to Stockholm after a trip to Italy. Meanwhile, a widow resists seductions from two different persons - her psych...

  5. Synopsis. Lusting after sinful pleasures. Sang-hyun, a respected priest, volunteers for an experimental procedure that may lead to a cure for a deadly virus. He gets infected and dies, but a blood transfusion of unknown origin brings him back to life as a vampire. Now, Sang-hyun is torn between faith and bloodlust, and has a newfound desire for ...

  6. The principal couple, Bertil and Ruth, travel home by train to Sweden from Switzerland, at each other’s throats the whole way. Meanwhile, in Stockholm, Bertil’s former lover, Viola, tries to evade the predatory advances of her psychiatrist, and then of a ballet dancer who was once Ruth’s friend.

  7. Directed by Ingmar Bergman • 1949 • Sweden A couple traveling across a war-ravaged Europe. A disintegrating marriage. A ballet dancer's scarred past. Her friend's psychological agony. Elliptically told in flashbacks and multiple narrative threads, Ingmar Bergman's THIRST shows people enslaved to memory and united in isolation.