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Victor Sj?str?m Films | Victor Sj?str?m Filmography | Victor Sj?str?m Biography | Victor Sj?str?m Career | Victor Sj?str?m Awards

Victor Sj?str?m Filmography

Films As Director: 

1912: Tr?dg?rrdsma?staren (The Gardener) (+role); Ett  Hemligt ifterma?l (A Secret Marriage); En sommarsaga (A Summer Tale). 1913: L? jen och t?rar (Ridicule and Tears); Blodets r?story (Voice of the Blood) (+scenarist/scriptwriter, role) (released 1923); Lady Marions sommarflirt (Lady Marion's Summer Flirt); ?ktenskapsbryd?n (The Marriage Agency) (+scenarist/scriptwriter); Livets konflikter (Conflicts of Life) (co-director, role); Ingeborg Holm (+scenarist/scriptwriter); Halvblod (Half Breed); Miraklet; P? livets ?desv?gar (On the Roads of Fate). 1914: Pr?sten (The Priest); Det var i Maj (It Was in May) (+scenarist/scriptwriter); K?rlek starkare ?n hat (Love Stronger Than Hatred); D?men icke (Do Not Judge); Bra flicka reder sig sj?lv (A Clever Girl Takes Care of Herself) (+scenarist/scriptwriter); Gatans barn (Children of the Street); H?gfj?llets dotter (Daughter of the Mountains) (+scenarist/scriptwriter); Hj?rtan som m?tas (Meeting Hearts). 1915: Strejken (Strike) (+scenarist/scriptwriter, role); En avde m?nga (One of the Many) (+scenarist/scriptwriter); Sonad oskuld (Expiated Innocence) (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter); Skomakare bliv vid din l?story (Cobbler Stay at Your Bench) (+scenarist/scriptwriter). 1916: Lanksh?vdingens dottrar (The Governor's Daughters) (+scenarist/scriptwriter); R?sen p? Tistel?n (Havsgammar; The Rose of Thistle Island; Sea Eagle); I. Pr?vningens stund (Hour of the Trial) (+scenarist/scriptwriter, role); Skepp som motas (Meeting Ships); Hon segrade (She Conquered) (+scenarist/scriptwriter, role); Therese (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter). 1917: D?dskyssen (Kiss of Death) (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter, role); Terje Vigen (A Man There Was) (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter, role). 1918: Berg-Ejvind och bans hustru (The Outlaw and His Wife) (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter, role); T?sen fr?n stormyrtorpet (The Lass from the Stormy Croft) (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter). 1919: Ingmars?nerna, Parts I and II (Sons of Ingmar) (+scenarist/scriptwriter, role); Hans n?ds testamente (The Will of His Grace). 1920: Klostret I Sendomir (The Monastery of Sendomir) (+scenarist/scriptwriter); Karin Ingmarsdotter (Karin, Daughter of Ingmar) (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter, role); M?sterman (Master Samuel) (+role). 1921: K?rkarlen (The Phantom Chariot; Thy Soul Shall Bear Witness) (+scenarist/scriptwriter, role as David Holm). 1922: Vem director?mer (Love's Crucible) (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter); Det omringgade huset (The Surrounded House) (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter, role). 1923: Eld ombord (The Tragic Ship) (+role). 1924: Name the Man; He Who Gets Slapped. 1925: Confessions of a Queen; The Tower of Lies. 1927: The Scarlet Letter. 1928: The Divine Woman; The Wind; Masks of the Devil. 1930: A Lady to Love. 1931: Markurells I Wadk?ping (+role). 1937: Under the Red Robe.

Other Films: 

1912: Vampyren (Stiller) (role as Lt. Roberts); De svarta maskerna (Stiller) (role as the Lieutenant); I livets v?r (Garbagni) (role). 1913: Nar karlekan dodar (Stiller) (role as the painter); Barnet (Stiller) (role as medical student). 1914: F?r sin k?dleks skull (Stiller) (role as Borgen); H?gfj?llets dotter (Stiller) (role); Guldspindeln (Magnusen) (role); Thomas Graals b?sta film (Stiller) (role as Thomas Graal); Thomas Graals b?sta barn (Stiller) (role as Thomas Graal). 1934: Synnove Solbakken (T. Ibsen) (role). 1935: Valborgsma?ssoafton (Edgren) (role). 1937: John Ericsson (role). 1939: Gubben Kommer (Lindberg) (role); Mot nya tider (Wallen) (role). 1941: Striaen g?r vidare (Molander) (role). 1943: Det brinneren eld (Molander) (role); Ordet (Molander) (role). 1944: Kejsaren av Portugalien (Molander) (role). 1947: Rallare (Mattson) (role). 1940s: Farlig v?r (Mattson) (role). 1950: Till Gl?dje (Bergman) (role); Kvartetten som spr?ngdes (Molander) (role). 1952: H?rd klang (Mattson) (role). 1955: Nattens v?v (Mattson) (role). 1957: Smultronst?llet (Wild Strawberries) (Bergman) (role as Professor).

Victor Sj?str?m Career

Lived in Brooklyn, New York, from 1880; returned to Sweden to live with aunt, 1887; stage actor and director in Sweden and Finland, from 1896; formed own theater company, 1911;film director for Svenska Biograffilmstudio, Stockholm, from 1912; director for MGM, Hollywood, from 1923; worked under ?Americanized? name, "Seastrom"; returned to Sweden as actor, 1930; artistic director, Svensk Filmindustri, 1943-49.

Victor Sj?str?m Background

Born: 

Victor David Sj?str?m in Silbodal, Sweden, 20 September 1879; also known as Victor Seastrom.

Education: 

Attended high school in Uppsala, Sweden.

Family: 

Married 1) Sascha St. Jagoff, 1900 (died 1916); 2) Lili Bech, 1916; 3) actress Edith Erastoff, 1922 (died 1945), two children.

Died: 

In Stockholm, 3 January 1960.

Victor Sj?str?m Biography

With a career in film that in many ways paralleled that of his close friend Mauritz Stiller, Victor Sj?str?m entered the Swedish film industry at virtually the same time (1912), primarily as an actor, only to become almost immediately, like Stiller, a film director. Whereas Stiller had spent his youth in Finland, Sj?str?m had spent six formative years as a child in America's Brooklyn. Once back in Sweden after an unhappy childhood, his training for the theater proved fruitful. He became a well-established actor before entering the film industry at the age of thirty-two. ?The thing that brought me into filmmaking was a youthful desire for adventure and a curiosity to try this new medium,? he once said in an interview. The first films in which he appeared in 1912 were Stiller's The Black Masks and Vampyren.


Although Sj?str?m proved excellent as an actor in comedy, his innate seriousness of outlook was reflected in the films he directed. He developed a deep response to nature and the spectacular northern landscape, capturing the expanses of ice, snow, trees, and mountains in all their (to him as to other Scandinavians) mystical force. One of his earliest films was Ingeborn Holm, which exposed the cruelties of the forced labor system to which the children of paupers were still subjected. This film was produced partially outdoors; Sj?str?m's pantheistic response to nature was developed in Terje Vigen, his adaptation of Ibsen's ballad poem, with its narrative set in the period of the Napoleonic confrontation with Britain. Sj?str?m himself played Terje, the bitter Norwegian sailor who had been imprisoned for a while by the British for attempting to break through their blockade at sea in order to bring food through to the starving people, including his wife and son, in his village. He fails in this attempt and they die as a consequence. Terje's obsessive desire for vengeance is later purged as a result of his response to his British captor's child, whom he rescues in a storm.


Sj?str?m became a prolific director. He completed nearly thirty films between 1912 and 1918, the year he directed The Outlaw and His Wife. Of that film, French critic and filmmaker Louis Delluc wrote in 1921: ?Here without doubt is the most beautiful film in the world. Victor Sj?str?m has directed it with a dignity that is beyond words... it is the first love duet heard in the cinema. A duet that is entire life. Is it a drama?... I don't know.... People love each other and live. That is all.? In this film a rich widow abandons her estate to live in the mountains with her outlaw lover until, hounded by his pursuers, they die together in the snow. It is typical of the Swedish film that winter, after the symbolic summer of love, should become the synonym for death.


Sj?str?m's intense feeling for nature expanded still further in his first adaptation of a novel by Selma Lagerl?f who, as a writer in the grand tradition, became one of the primary inspirers of the Swedish cinema of this period. This adaptation was from The Lass from the Stormy Croft and featured a magnificent rustic setting which seems at once to transcend and embody the exigencies of human passion?the frustration of the poor peasant girl with her illegitimate child and the troubles that afflict the son of a landowner (played by Lars Hanson in his first important film role) who tries to befriend her. As Carl Dreyer, who in the same year made The Parson's Widow in Sweden, commented, "Selma Lagerl?f's predilection for dreams and supernatural events appealed to Sj?str?m's own somewhat sombre artistic mind."


Sj?str?m's most famous film before his departure for Hollywood in 1923 was The Phantom Chariot (also known as Thy Soul Shall Bear Witness), also based on a novel by Selma Lagerl?f. The legend had it that the phantom chariot came once each year, on New Year's Eve, St. Sylvester's Night, to carry away the souls of sinners. In the film the central character is David Holm, a violent and brutalized man who is brought to relive his evil past on St. Sylvester's Night, especially the ill-treatment he had given his wife, until his conscience is awakened. As Holm recalls his wicked deeds in flashback he is haunted by the approach of the chariot, and is saved just in time through reunion with his wife, whose imminent suicide he prevents. Holm is played brilliantly by Sj?str?m himself, while Julius Jaenzen's multi-exposure camerawork emphasizes the distinction between body and soul in visuals that surpass virtually all that had been achieved in cinematography by 1920.


In the postwar era, Swedish films, with their comparatively heavy themes, began to prove less popular as exports. Sj?str?m, like Stiller, left for America on the invitation of Louis B. Mayer at MGM. He was to remain in Hollywood six years, directing nine films under the name of Victor Seastrom. Of these, The Scarlet Letter, with Lillian Gish as Hester Prynne and Lars Hanson as the priest, and The Wind, also with Lillian Gish and Lars Hanson, are the more significant; the latter now ranks as a masterpiece of the silent cinema. Lillian Gish said of Sj?str?m that ?his direction was a great education for me ... the Swedish school of acting is one of repression.? In The Wind she plays a sensitive girl from Kentucky forced into marriage with a coarse cattleman from Texas, a repellent marriage which, along with the harsh Texan environment, finally drives her nearly insane and impels her to kill a male intruder in self-defense. The film, shot in the Mojave region, suffered from re-editing by the studio and the imposition of a sound track.


Sj?str?m's single attempt to recreate Sweden in America was The Tower of Lies (with Lon Chaney and Norma Shearer), an adaptation of Selma Lagerl?f s novel The Emperor of Portugal, which at least one American reviewer praised for, "its preservation of the simplicity of treatment in Thy Soul Shall Bear Witnessr


Sj?str?m returned to Sweden in 1928 and directed one good sound film, Markurells i Wadk?ping, in which he starred as a grim man, much like Terje Vigen, who is finally purged of his desire for revenge. Apart from directing a lame period romance in England called Under the Red Robe, with Raymond Massey and Conrad Veidt, Sj?str?m concentrated on his career as an actor, giving at the age of seventy-eight a great performance as the aged professor in Bergman's Wild Strawberries.?ROGER MANVELL