Bibi Andersson
17 titles
Filmography
17 results

Persona
(1966)An actress recovering from a breakdown exercises a strange hold over her nurse.

The Kremlin Letter
(1970)A network of older spies from the West recruits a young intelligence officer with a photographic memory for a mission to Russia. They must recover a letter written by the CIA that promises American assistance to Russia if China gets the atomic bomb.

The Girls
(1968)1968. Men are in charge and the world is burning. A travelling theatre company takes a production of Lysistrata on tour and it’s not long before the cast start seeing their own lives and relationships through fresh eyes. Zetterling’s riff on Aristophanes’ play revealed that little had changed in society since it was written. Simone de Beauvoir loved it.

Wild Strawberries
(1957)On his way to an awards ceremony, a distinguished professor is forced to face his past, come to terms with his faults and make peace with the inevitability of his approaching death.

I Never Promised You a Rose Garden
(1977)A mentally disturbed 16-year-old girl who’s been placed in a psychiatric institution struggles to cope between fantasy and actual realities of life.
The Touch
(1971)
The Devil's Eye
(1960)Satan sends Don Juan (Jarl Kulle) to seduce a country priest's (Stig Järrel) chaste daughter (Bibi Andersson).
All These Women
(1964)When the famous cellist Jarl Kulle bribes a critic to write his biography, the critic decides to blackmail him with the intimate details gleaned from the many women in his life.

Scenes from a Marriage
(1974)Over a ten-year period, a divorced couple work through their tormented relationship.
Brink of Life
(1958)Scenes from a Marriage
SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE chronicles the many years of love and turmoil that bind Marianne (Liv Ullmann) and Johan (Erland Josephson) through matrimony, infidelity, divorce, and subsequent partners. Shot in intense, intimate close-ups by master cinematographer Sven Nykvist and featuring flawless performances, Ingmar Bergman’s emotional x-ray reveals the intense joys and pains of a complex relationship.

The Passion of Anna
(1969)When Andreas (Max von Sydow) meets Anna (Liv Ullmann) he is a man struggling with the collapse of both his marriage and his emotional state. Subsequently, Anna is grieving the recent loss of her husband and son, and the two enter into a relationship. As things continue to deteriorate around them so do both of their mental states.

Duel at Diablo
(1966)A sweeping western tale about the conflict between the Apache and the white man as a cowboy travels with a family being pursued by the Apache.

Quintet
(1979)During a future ice age, dying humanity occupies its remaining time by playing a board game called "Quintet." For one small group, this obsession is not enough; they play the game with living pieces... and only the winner survives.

The Seventh Seal
(1957)A man seeks answers about life, death, and the existence of God as he plays chess against the Grim Reaper during the Black Plague.

Babette's Feast
(1987)Winner of the Oscar® for Best Foreign Film, Babette’s Feast is a mouthwatering marriage between gastronomy and cinema. Stéphane Audran, in a subtle and stunning performance, plays Babette, who through an act of culinary generosity, invites us to observe the cultural event that is the dinner table.

The Magician
(1958)Ingmar Bergman's The Magician is an engaging, brilliantly conceived tale of deceit from one of cinema's premier illusionists. Max von Sydow stars as Dr. Vogler, a nineteenth-century traveling mesmerist and potion-peddler whose magic is put to the test by the cruel, rational royal medical adviser Dr. Vergérus. The result is a diabolically clever battle of wits that's both frightening and funny.