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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SwedenhielmsSwedenhielms - Wikipedia

    Swedenhielms is a 1935 Swedish comedy-drama film directed and co-written by Gustaf Molander. The film is based on the play by Hjalmar Bergman from 1923 and starrs Gösta Ekman, Karin Swanström, and Tutta Rolf.

  2. Swedenhielms: Directed by Gustaf Molander. With Gösta Ekman, Björn Berglund, Håkan Westergren, Tutta Rolf. The Swedenhielms is an old aristocratic family. The head of the family is professor Rolf Swedenhielm. His three children Bo, Julia and Rolf Jr also live in the house. They also have an excellent house maid, Boman.

    • (362)
    • Comedy, Drama
    • Gustaf Molander
    • 1935-09-05
  3. The Swedenhielms is an old aristocratic family. The head of the family is professor Rolf Swedenhielm. His three children Bo, Julia and Rolf Jr also live in the house. They also have an excellent house maid, Boman. Because of the family's extravagance, they are heading for bankruptcy.

    • Gustaf Molander
    • 2
  4. The Swedenhielms is an old aristocratic family. The head of the family is professor Rolf Swedenhielm. His three children Bo, Julia and Rolf Jr also live in the house. They also have an excellent house maid, Boman. Because of the family's extravagance, they are heading for bankruptcy.

  5. The Swedenhielms is an old aristocratic family. The head of the family is professor Rolf Swedenhielm. His three children Bo, Julia and Rolf Jr also live in the house. They also have an excellent house maid, Boman. Because of the family's extravagance, they are heading for bankruptcy.

    • Gustaf Molander
    • SF Studios
  6. The widower and famous chemist Rolf Swedenhielm lives with his adult children Rolf Jr, Julia and Bo in a big apartment in Stockholm. The self-image of the Swedenhielm family is one of noblesse, grandeur and idealism, but in reality the family is bankrupt.

  7. Gustaf Molander's Swedenhielms (1935) is adapted from the single most popular play in the Swedish theater, the 1925 comedy by Hjalmar Bergman (1883-1931). While Molander's 1935 adaptation is by far the best-known film version, the play was also made into a 1947 Danish film and various productions for Swedish television.