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  1. Dec 24, 1979 · Faro Document 1979: Directed by Ingmar Bergman. With Ingmar Bergman, Irene Broman, Per Broman, Valter Broman. Fårö Document 1979 is the ten-year followup to the first documentary Bergman made about his adopted home, Fårö, where he filmed many of his best works and lived until the end of his life.

    • (670)
    • Documentary
    • Ingmar Bergman
    • 1979-12-24
  2. Aug 14, 2022 · Fårö Document 1979 is the ten-year followup to the first documentary Bergman made about his adopted home, Fårö, where he filmed many of his best works and li...

    • 104 min
    • 2.5K
    • Ingmar Bergman Channel
  3. In 2018, The Criterion Collection released the film on Blu-ray in Region A, along with 38 other Bergman films, in the set Ingmar Bergman's Cinema. Sequel. A second documentary, Fårö Document 1979, followed in 1979. Bergman shot the follow-up film observing the lives of the locals, including shearing sheep and carrying out other chores.

  4. Fårö Document 1979. Midway through his time in Germany, Bergman returned to Fårö for his second documentary exploration of the remote Swedish island he loved and the socio­economic realities experienced by those who lived there. Longer, more optimistic, and less ascetic than its predecessor, this film charts a calendar year in the life of ...

  5. Directed by Ingmar Bergman • 1979 • Sweden Midway through his time in Germany, Bergman returned to Fårö for his second documentary exploration of the remote Swedish island he loved and the socio­economic realities experienced by those who lived there. Longer, more optimistic, and less ascetic than its predecessor, this film charts a ...

  6. In 1969, with Sven Nykvist as cinematographer, Ingmar Berman made The Fårö Document, a film that ended with a rather pessimist view of the island’s future. One of the scenes in the film is of a school-bus and its young passengers. To these and to the realities ten years later Bergman returns in the long documentary Fårö Document 1979.

  7. Midway through his time in Germany, Bergman returned to Fårö for his second documentary exploration of the remote Swedish island he loved and the socio­economic realities experienced by those who lived there. Longer, more optimistic, and less ascetic than its predecessor, this film charts a calendar year in the life of the island's 673 inhabitants, many of whom he observes working tirelessly shearing sheep, thatching roofs, and slaughtering livestock, as well as going about various ...