Title: Körkarlen
Country: Sweden
Region: 2
Releasing Studio: Svenska Filminstitutet
Case Type: Keep Case
Aspect Ratio: 1.37:1
Anamorphic?: Non-Anamorphic
PAL or NTSC?: PAL
Soundtracks: Dolby Digital 5.1 (orchestral music score by Matti Bye)
Subtitles (are they optional?): Swedish intertitles with optional English, German, French, Portuguese and Spanish subtitles
Cuts: (and if you know it, precise run time) None (107:17)
Commentaries: None
Extras:
The Shooting of Wild Strawberries (1957) (17:19) - behind-the-scenes footage by Ingmar Bergman, with Swedish or English narration
The Construction of Råsunda film studio (1920) (5:06) - behind-the-scenes footage
Interview with Ingmar Bergman (29:01) - excerpt from the documentary Victor Sjöström - ett porträtt av Gösta Werner (1981)
Photo Gallery (2:37)
12-page illustrated bilingual booklet (Swedish and English)
Notes: All extras have scores by Matti Bye and optional English subtitles. Also in the 6-DVD Svenska Stumfilmsklassiker box set.
Easter Eggs: None
Amazon ASIN (UK, French, German, USA releases only):
Source:* Own copy
The DVD comparison hasn't been altered since its initial entry and needs overhauling:
Tartan 2-DVD:
Missing runtimes: 107:21 / The Image Makers: 99:50
The current listing says this is in a "Digi-Pack", but I can find no evidence for it having ever been issued this way. Every copy I've seen, including mine, is
in a keep case and has a 4-page booklet with an essay by film historian David Thompson.
By the way, that particular type of packaging is
correctly spelled "Digipak", as it's a registered trademark. I always enter comparisons with the correct spelling but it usually gets altered to
some other variant. Annoying!
Tartan KTL DVD:
New note: Issued in a numbered limited edition of 2000 with a tri-fold sleeve insert and spine slip designed by Stephen O’Malley of KTL. Thereafter, it was issued with a standard sleeve insert.
The KTL score is described in the DVD and BD listings as "modern", but "electronic" is a better word as
all contemporaneously-recorded scores are "modern"!
Grapevine Video DVD-R:
The listing itself doesn't state that it contains both the original Swedish version and "The Stroke of Midnight" 1922 US re-edit.
Soundtrack: Dolby Digital 2.0 stereo
live theatre organ score by Blaine Gale (both versions)
New note: Heavily compressed and unrestored 24fps transfers on a single-layer DVD-R.
New footnotes:
OVERALL: Draw
- The R2 Svenska Filminstitutet DVD is restored and has many exclusive extras.
- The R2 UK 2-disc Tartan release is restored and has a TV movie on the making of the film.
- The R2 UK 1-disc Tartan release is restored and has a different score.
- The R0 US DVD-R has two versions of the film, a different score and an exclusive featurette, but the transfers are sped-up and of overall poor quality.
Though full specs are unavailable at present, there is also a US Criterion DVD featuring the latest restoration, both the Swedish and UK scores, and several exclusive extras. The film has also been released in Germany by Absolut Medien. If you have access to these releases or know of a reliable review, then please let us know via our forums.
Ultimately, it's up to you which you choose but a fan may wish to own more than one.
These are the versions of the film currently in circulation:
- Original Swedish version: unrestored 16mm reduction, tinted and transferred at 24fps (74 min)
- The Stroke of Midnight (1922 US re-edited release): unrestored, untinted 16mm reduction, transferred at 24fps (74 min)
- Original Swedish version: 1998 Swedish Film Institute restoration, tinted and transferred at 16fps (106 min)
- Original Swedish version: 2011 Swedish Film Institute/Criterion restoration, tinted and transferred at 16fps (106 min)BD:
New note: 1080i due to pulldown method used for 16fps transfer.
New footnote:
OVERALL: Blu-ray A
The only official release to date.After the footnote runtime, add: Original Swedish version: 2011 Swedish Film Institute/Criterion restoration, tinted and transferred at 16fps
Caps-a-holic, for both comparisons.