All Things Fair (Lust och fägring stor) 1995 - 'where did I buy it?' scene (subtitles)
- Where did I buy it?
- I bought it in London.
- I just managed to
- outfit myself
- before it was too late.
- The last traveling
- Father did.
- He sat in his chair and
- the cars just had to wait,
- while he wheeled across
- Bond Street:
- Rolls and the Bentleys.
- Daddy smiled once,just once.
- And then the war came.
- Don't talk about Daddy,
- not about Daddy.
- You're talking about
- your father.
- It's a bad habit I have
- during intimate moments
- And your father, I want
- to know all about you.
- What does he do?
- He hunts elk ; an elk hunter.
- A seasonal worker?
- That's just in the autumn.
- Mmm. That's why we're so poor
- No, he's a private chauffer,
- for managing directors
- and such.
- He did shoot an elk once,
- but he said he 'downed' it
- He drove a few aristocrats
- to their hunting grounds
- and then
- they sat him on a stool
- and put a gun in his hands
- Not shot, 'downed'.
- It's at home, takes up
- half the flat.
- It's smaller than yours.
- We have to duck when
- we pass it.
'Where did I buy it?' scene from All Things Fair (Lust och fägring stor) 1995. Marika Lagercrantz and Johan Widerberg
more »« lessAll Things Fair (37). Subtitles English CC Audio languages Svenska. The movie then goes off into all sorts of strange directions. Entertaining, though. Ταινία All Things Fair (1995) online με ελληνικους υποτιτλους Mάλμο, Σουηδία, Δευτέρος Παγκοσμιος Πολεμος. Ο Stig είναι ένας 15χρονος μαθητής στα πρόθυρα της. All Things Fair (1995) ගුරුවරිය සහ සිසුවා අසම්මතය (18+) සිංහල උපසිරැසි සමඟ Oct 5, 2013 18+, All, Featured Articles, MaxxA, Sinhala Subtitle, අමුතුයි, චිත්රපටි, තීරණය ඔබේ, දිමුතු තරංග.
All Things Fair 1995 Full Movie English Subtitles Subtitle
Rec Full Movie English Subtitles
How much I regret the passing of director Bo Widerberg who can create a film such as this one with its dramatic portrayal of human problems, human relationships and human emotions. It was not so much the dialogue but more the unspoken words that grabbed my attention and held me to the end. A long silence can be filled with meaning....a stolen look, a fleeting glance, a flicker of a smile, a movement of the eye....all these subtle messages electrify the air between Viola the teacher and Stig the student in the class room. We know at once that in some magical way their lives have been drawn together and as we are caught up in the drama we seem to know that eventually the ending will not be a happy one.
Under the guise of having special coaching lessons, Stig gains entrance into his married teacher's household after his evening cinema job. Shy at first he soon experiences the delights of a continuing relationship with Viola who is a very competent teacher in all respects. Perhaps we can pardon Viola for her 'cradle snatching' when we find out that her husband has taken to drink and seems almost permanently drunk.
The love scenes are sensitively handled and the remarkable changes which develop in the characters create an imposing piece of cinema. Stig seems to take on a degree of security in a scene where he accuses the husband of the impossible situation. But who is really to blame? That is the intriguing part of the film.
There are some aspects that are not explained thus the viewer becomes involved. As for the stolen encyclopaedia, why would Stig carry them off. Is he just in a vindictive mood and does it just to annoy Viola or have those volumes become special to him because they belonged to Viola.
Under the guise of having special coaching lessons, Stig gains entrance into his married teacher's household after his evening cinema job. Shy at first he soon experiences the delights of a continuing relationship with Viola who is a very competent teacher in all respects. Perhaps we can pardon Viola for her 'cradle snatching' when we find out that her husband has taken to drink and seems almost permanently drunk.
The love scenes are sensitively handled and the remarkable changes which develop in the characters create an imposing piece of cinema. Stig seems to take on a degree of security in a scene where he accuses the husband of the impossible situation. But who is really to blame? That is the intriguing part of the film.
There are some aspects that are not explained thus the viewer becomes involved. As for the stolen encyclopaedia, why would Stig carry them off. Is he just in a vindictive mood and does it just to annoy Viola or have those volumes become special to him because they belonged to Viola.