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  1. Port of Call employs two elements that are recurring motifs in Bergman's work. First, there is the solitary female lead character, whose only salvation from a life of bleak rejection and self-inflicted cruelty is a potentially devastating relationship with a man who, whilst equally vulnerable, lacks her emotional depth and sensitivity.

  2. Port of Call is a pretty dull drama. It takes cues from the neorealist movement, which is about the only thing notable here, and that's only because it's an outlier for Ingmar Bergman. That all said, Port of Call is not a bad film. It deals with tough topics, being very frank about abortion for instance.

  3. Sep 10, 2012 · A striking opening sees heroine Jönsson saved from drowning herself, before flashbacks fill out her desperate plight: repressive treatment from a mother embittered by the failure of her own ...

  4. Port of Call (1948) Promoted film. Sweden, 99 min. Share this page Facebook Twitter Tumblr Pinterest Email Table of contents. This is a ...

  5. A suicidal factory girl out of reformatory school, anxious to escape her overbearing mother, falls in love with a sailor who can't forgive her past. Ingmar Bergman. Director, Screenplay. Olle Länsberg. Story.

  6. Port of Call is another early Bergman melodrama. He experiments with neorealism to tell the story of a working class girl who struggles to find love while living with a mother who is abusive. This movie was ahead of its time because it deals frankly with abortion, domestic abuse, suicide and sexuality.

  7. Port of Call is a film directed by Ingmar Bergman with Nine-Christine Jönsson, Bengt Eklund, Mimi Nelson, Berta Hall .... Year: 1948. Original title: Hamnstad. Synopsis: Berit is a young woman with problems. She is suicidal and depressed. Since it has been impossible for her to live with her mother, she has spent many years in institutions.