
The maidservant Emma has three grown up daughters. All three have concerns about marriage.


Is this worth your time? If you have a soft spot for black-and-white dramas that feel like they were pulled from a grandmother’s attic, sure. Go for it. But if you need pacing, modern stakes, or characters who don’t speak in polite platitudes, you’re probably going to hate it. It moves at the speed of a slow-turning pa...

still_frame

still_frame

still_frame

still_frame

still_frame

still_frame

still_frame

still_frame


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Sigurd Wallén

Maurice Elvey
Community
Log in to comment.
"Is this worth your time? If you have a soft spot for black-and-white dramas that feel like they were pulled from a grandmother’s attic, sure. Go for it. But if you need pacing, modern stakes, or characters who don’t speak in polite platitudes, you’re probably going to hate it. It moves at the speed of a slow-turning page. Emma’s three daughters are the center of everything here. They spend most of the runtime worrying about who they’ll wed, and honestly, the anxiety feels very 1930s. It’s not q..."

Richard Lindström
Sigurd Wallén
Sweden

