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A Song for Martin(En sång för Martin)

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Sweden, Germany, Denmark · 2001
Rated PG-13 · 1h 58m
Director Bille August
Starring Sven Wollter, Viveka Seldahl, Reine Brynolfsson, Linda Källgren
Genre Drama, Romance

Martin, conductor of a symphonic orchestra, meet Barbara, violine player and they start a relationship. Five years later Martin starts to develop loss of memory and becomes more and more confused. Finally he is diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease and Barbara tries to help as much as possible although Martin is often angry and violent towards her.

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What are critics saying?

80

Variety by

A moving love story with two exquisite central performances.

80

Washington Post by Desson Thomson

August, who also made "Pelle the Conqueror" and "House of the Spirits," steers this story to its stirring conclusion with firm lack of sentimentality.

70

TV Guide Magazine by Ken Fox

A touching examination of the ravages of Alzheimer's disease, made even more so by the extraordinary chemistry between Swedish actor Sven Wollter and his real-life wife, Viveka Seldahl, who died shortly after the film was completed.

50

New York Post by Megan Lehmann

This slow-moving Swedish film offers not even a hint of joy, preferring to focus on the humiliation of Martin as he defecates in bed and urinates on the plants at his own birthday party.

70

Film Threat by Michael Dequina

August so firmly establishes characters of Martin and Barbara and their relationship, so when the disease does enter the picture, the film does not suddenly become about that; the focus clearly remains on the effect it takes on the people.

88

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

Starts at the beginning and goes straight through to the inevitable end, unblinkingly. It doesn't relieve the pressure, as "Iris" does, with flashbacks to happier days.

70

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

Watching it, I kept imagining the depth of feeling Ingmar Bergman and his troupe might have brought to the same material. As much as A Song for Martin hurts, it doesn't quite go the distance.

60

Chicago Reader by Ted Shen

Only August's assured direction and the leads' solid performances elevate this above a TV "disease of the week" movie.

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