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Filmography Highlights

  • Autumn Sonata

    1978
    Rated:
    AA

    An Oscar-nominated Ingrid Bergman leads this powerful chamber-piece about the reunion of a mother with her mentally and emotionally damaged daughters

    Rating: 4 Star
  • Murder On The Orient Express

    1974
    Rated:
    PG

    Albert Finney is Hercule Poirot in this highly entertaining whodunit. Played with a nod and a wink, the big-name cast includes John Gielgud, Sean Connery, and an Oscar-winning Ingrid Bergman

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Cactus Flower

    1969
    Rated:
    PG

    Matthau is the dentist who, in order to avoid commitment, tells his girlfriends that he is married with children. However, when he finally agrees to tie the knot, and his chosen one Hawn insists on m

    Rating: 0 Star
  • The Inn Of The Sixth Happiness

    1958
    Rated:
    U

    In a story based on the Alan Burgess biography, Bergman plays Gladys Aylward, an Englishwoman who desperately wants to become a missionary in China. She earns the money to follow her dream by working

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Indiscreet

    1958
    Rated:
    TBC

    Dated but charming romantic comedy. Cary Grant pretends to be wed to dodge marrying new lady friend Ingrid Bergman. The leads' star wattage and the 50s London settings disguise the fact that it's paper-thin stuff

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Elena et les Hommes

    1956
    Rated:
    TBC

    A generally under-rated later effort by French master Renoir, Paris Does Strange Things stars Bergman as the Polish Princess who quickly becomes the toast of the town, charming the men of 1880

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Anastasia

    1956
    Rated:
    U

    A lush dabbling with the Ramonov legend, with Bergman as a suicidal waif who is passed off as the Russian princess. Bryner is the leader of a band of Russian exiles in Paris, who coaches her, initial

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Journey To Italy

    1953
    Rated:
    TBC

    Graceful depiction of an English marriage that reaches a crisis in the south of Italy. From the godfather of neo-realism, Roberto Rossellini, and starring Ingrid Bergman and George Sanders

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Europa 51

    1951
    Rated:
    TBC

    Bergman is a wealthy American, who overcomes the trauma of her son's suicide by relocating to Rome and doing good works for the poor and needy. It's the kind of high-gloss, location-filled self-absor

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Under Capricorn

    1949
    Rated:
    PG

    Hitchcock oddity, like a second-rate Gainsborough melodrama transplanted to Australia, in which a drunken Bergman, driven to the bottle by her husband's cruelty, is drawn to her cousin (Cotten), just

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Joan of Arc

    1948
    Rated:
    U

    At two and a half hours this is a long haul. Still, it gained Bergman a Best Actress Oscar nomination and she so enjoyed the role that she filmed the opera Joan at the Stake with Rossellini six years

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Notorious

    1946
    Rated:
    U

    Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant bluff and double-bluff their way around Rio in this darkly engaging post-War tale of alcohol, espionage and dastardly fugitive Nazis

    Rating: 5 Star
  • Bells of St Mary's, The

    1945
    Rated:
    U

    Affable sequel to Are You Going My Way, which has Crosby reprising his role as Father O'Malley, the happy-go-lucky, boater-wearing pastor who locks horns with frosty Sister Benedict (Bergman)

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Gaslight

    1944
    Rated:
    PG

    An inferior Hollywood remake of a 1939 British film (which in turn was adapted from Patrick Hamilton's stage play 'Angel Street'). Despite this, it boasts a fine performance from Bergman as the frail

    Rating: 0 Star
  • For Whom The Bell Tolls

    1943
    Rated:
    U

    During the height of the Spanish Civil War, a young American joins a partisan group to destroy a bridge. Hemingway adaptation starring Gary Cooper and Ingrid Bergman

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Casablanca

    1942
    Rated:
    U

    With nearly every line of its script engraved on the collective unconscious, and its central performances of Bogart and Bergman defining iconic cool, Casablanca is an exultant classic. "Here's looking at you, kid"

    Rating: 5 Star
  • Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde

    1941
    Rated:
    TBC

    This version of the oft-filmed Robert Louis Stevenson classic certainly has the star power behind it, with Tracy (who apparently played the part under duress) as the mild-mannered doc whose experimen

    Rating: 0 Star
  • Intermezzo

    1939
    Rated:
    TBC

    Bergman speaks English on film for the first time in a classic role as an up-and-coming pianist who falls into an affair with a far more musically experienced, and married, violinist (Howard) while g

    Rating: 0 Star