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Charles XII (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles XII
Directed byJohn W. Brunius
Written byHjalmar Bergman
Produced byHerman Rasch
StarringGösta Ekman
Bengt Djurberg
Augusta Lindberg
Mona Mårtenson
CinematographyHugo Edlund
Music byOtto Trobäck
Production
company
Historisk Film
Distributed byHistorisk Film
Release dates
  • 2 February 1925 (1925-02-02) (part I)
  • 16 November 1925 (1925-11-16) (part II)
Running time
6 hours
CountrySweden
LanguagesSilent
Swedish intertitles

Charles XII (Swedish: Karl XII) is a 1925 Swedish silent historical film directed by John W. Brunius and starring Gösta Ekman, Bengt Djurberg and Augusta Lindberg. Because of its long running time of nearly six hours, it was released in two separate parts. The film depicts the life of Charles XII of Sweden (1682-1718) who oversaw the expansion of the Swedish Empire until its defeat at the Battle of Poltava. It was the most expensive production in Swedish history when it was made, and inspired a string of large budget Swedish historical films.[1]

Cast

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  • Gösta Ekman as Karl XII
  • Bengt Djurberg as Sven Björnberg
  • Augusta Lindberg as Major Kerstin Ulfclou på Berga
  • Mona Mårtenson as Anna Ulfclou
  • Harry Roeck-Hansen as Erik Ulfclou, peasant
  • Axel Lagerberg as Johan Ulfclou, theologian
  • Paul Seelig as Bengt Ulfclou, lieutenant
  • Palle Brunius as Lill-Lasse Ulfclou
  • Tyra Dörum as Kajsa, maid at Berga
  • Nicolai de Seversky as Tsar Peter I of Ryssland
  • Pauline Brunius as Countess Aurora von Köningsmarck
  • Tor Weijden as August II av Sachsen-Polen, a.k.a. August the Strong
  • Einar Fröberg as Fredrik IV av Danmark
  • Ragnar Billberg as Hans Küsel
  • Märtha Lindlöf as Dowager Queen Hedvig Eleonora
  • Åsa Törnekvist as Princess Hedvig Sofia
  • Edit Rolf as Princess Ulrika Eleonora

References

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  1. ^ Historical Dictionary of Scandinavian Cinema p.228-29

Bibliography

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  • Sundholm, John & Thorsen, Isak & Andersson, Lars Gustaf & Hedling, Olof & Iversen, Gunnar & Moller, Birgir Thor. Historical Dictionary of Scandinavian Cinema. Scarecrow Press, 2012.
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