To Joy (1950) Poster

(1950)

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7/10
"There must be a meaning. If there isn't you make one up. Otherwise you can't live."
theachilles20 January 2007
Stig and Marta are two young musicians playing together in a Swedish orchestra. They meet, they fall in love and they get married. If this synopsis leaves you expecting a romantic film, you'll be disappointed to find out a rough, realistic, yet very sentimental piece of art.

In this film, Bergman uses a quite interesting storytelling method that works really effectively. Although the way their marriage ends is revealed to us in the opening sequence making the rest of the film a flashback (a technique with which Bergman is already familiar with), when the movie reaches its final scene, one can't help but be extremely moved by the way things end up.

Once again, the performances are great and it is clear that these actors open up their own private world for all of us to see, and they can do that simply because they feel comfortable with a director like Bergman. They know they are in safe hands. Victor Sjostrom definitely steals the show (and Bergman will work with him again in Wild Strawberries), but it is the face of Maj-Britt Nilsson (Marta) that will remain in your mind for a long time.

Already in these early films of his, the Swedish master shows his love for close-ups. He likes to diminish the distance between the audience and the actors, especially their faces, sharing the belief that not only their eyes, but also the texture of their skin can reveal to us a whole lot of things about the characters. After all, close ups are one of the great advantages of cinema that have ultimately become one of the most characteristic building blocks of this art form, and Bergman working simultaneously in the theatre, is very much aware of that. Although the extreme close ups are easier to notice and admire, Bergman has also a great arsenal of shots and camera movements that so easily uses in this film. The shots of the orchestra performing either from high above or through the musicians, shows a camera that can move constantly but also in a discreet and, one could say, abstract way. He also proves to be very capable with mise-en-scene, as deep-focus long takes are used in several scenes.

The use of music is also notable, as you will definitely see for yourselves in the remarkable montage sequence in the ending. Classical music is of course common in the director's filmography, but it follows certain stages that are worth mentioning. In his first period, in which "To Joy" is definitely included, Bergman uses pieces performed by large orchestras, grandiose in a way. And it's certainly no coincidence that in these films, a great number of characters are used for narrative purposes (surely Stig are Marta are in the foreground, but there's also the conductor, Sonderby, the mistress and her old husband, Marcel and a few others). But from early 60's on, begins a period in which Bergman uses music of a smaller scale (especially string quartets) and in these films very few characters are introduced to us and, very often, in an isolated place (e.g. Through a Glass Darkly, Silence, Persona).

If you watch carefully this film, you will see many signs of what Ingmar Bergman is going to evolve to. His dramatic approach in human relationships and his effort to capture those moments between two heartbeats, between two lovers. But also his realistic point of view, especially when it comes to marriage (as Scenes From a Marriage a good 20 years after will confirm). A very good film.
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7/10
Strings Picked Apart ...
Xstal4 February 2023
When you set up shop and form a marriage, you need to acquire a rather large carriage, to shackle yourselves to, and fill it with you, just make sure you've got plenty of storage. Now your carriage will have many seals, but occasionally these become unpeeled, you'll both try and unpick, then resolutely re-stick, as you turn it into a big wheal. Far too often the damage is done, and the carriage just runs out of fun, so you fill it with distraction, which leads to inaction, the start of the end has begun. This all happened to Stig and to Marta, but they managed to find a big plaster, until one fateful day, something got in the way, with a carriage derailing disaster.

There are some things you can't foresee but they usually result because of a lack of vision.
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8/10
Not Very Joyful
cstotlar-118 April 2012
The "Joy" part, by the way, refers to Beethoven's "Ode to Joy" from the Ninth Symphony. It pops up twice, once near the beginning and the other time at the end. It's hard to figure out where this film is aiming. The leading man is unpleasant in every way. He is completely self-centered, self-involved and pessimistic. His wife on the other hand is everything good he is not. And yet the film doesn't necessarily follow through on her character. There are some big payoffs though. It's always a joy (pun intended) to see Victor Sjostrom on screen. He would appear later in Bergman's "Wild Strawberries", again as an old man. This time he's an orchestral conductor who gets to know the two young protagonists over the years. They are both musicians. The husband is chasing after fame on stage and the film makes his lack of real talent painfully obvious. The musical excerpts are quite extraordinary. What you see is actually what you hear! Hollywood could pick up on something here - big time. Again, Sjostrom's job as conductor is impeccable. A lot of work went into this. The symmetry is also wonderful with the last images matching the first. And after all, the "Ode to Joy" doesn't arrive until the end of Beethoven's last symphony

Curtis Stotlar
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7/10
Uneven, but still worth-while early Bergman
runamokprods8 April 2012
Somewhat one-sided and sometimes melodramatic portrait of a doomed marriage, this still has it share of lovely moments, not least of which is the on-screen performance of great classical music by the orchestra that both protagonists are part of.

While their romance starts sweetly, Stig rapidly turns into a hateful character, his failure to reach stardom as a solo musician translated into taking out his frustrations on his sweet wife, and coldly having an affair to counter his feelings of impotence and self-loathing.

While an interesting portrait of an artist's own ambition standing in the way of being better at their craft (it's Stig's need for approval and outward success that doesn't allow him to really thrown himself, body and soul into his music – or his marriage), Marta his wife just comes off as too perfect a martyr.

There are moments where the acting is very strong, and some of the photography is lovely, but the film just feels a bit like the character of Stig – too self-conscious and too sure about who is right and wrong. Still, there are lots of hints of Bergman's genius to come, and it's well worth seeing for those.
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9/10
to the joy of Bergman and combining drama and music
Quinoa198430 July 2007
Ingmar Bergman's seventh film, To Joy, is actually a fairly bitter film, more often than not, in looking at the destructiveness of a marriage between two people who somehow got stuck with each other to fall in love. And yet there are some moments that are quite joyful, or at least in the terms that Bergman will allow from time to time, and they help ring this as less a total work of despair than an examination of 'average' people who can't stand not having more. Stig (Stig Olin) and Marta (Maj-Britt Nilsson) meet as they're both musicians in an orchestra conducted by Sönderby (Victor Sjostrom).

She's the only woman in the orchestra, but it's not exactly that they have love at first sight in the slightest. Their connection grows following a party where Stig gets drunk and makes a depressing grandstanding fool of himself in front of friends, and somehow his downbeat manner is charming to Marta. Soon they grow closer, even fall in love perhaps, though their future marriage is complicated by Marta becoming pregnant. This scene, when she reveals it three months on to Stig, is the first real crack in the relationship. It only cracks more, with the occasional patch-up, and the question stands more or less- as Stig is looking back on the relationship following his wife and one of his child's deaths- is what could have come from all of this?

Bergman deals with his characters, at this stage in his career, in trying to just find the simple and really not very simple truths of what Stig and Marta are together and separate. For the first half it almost looks like Stig is a bit too two-dimensional, particularly for a Bergman film (and Olin doesn't play him extremely well, even if he does deliver the beats fairly well, perhaps in line with his own character's inadequacies). He can't seem to enjoy anything that he does because he always wants more, to be a supreme soloist, than to have what he already has gotten. Marta, on the other hand, after having several potential men before going with Stig, tries her best to cope with having two kids that she probably wasn't totally thrilled to have in the first place.

There's a great little scene where Sanderby recounts walking in on Stig and Marta after having some kind of odd tender moment (as well as later on after having a quarrel), without them noticing Sanderby walk in, and the expression still underneath their faces when he formally walks in. In typical Bergman fashion we see the disintegration of a relationship (quite a brutal argument in bed really, more of emotional violence than physical), even if the sort of 'patching-up' period towards the end is a little weaker than what's come before.

So on the one hand there is this aspect, the drama of two people having a constant push-and-pull tie that binds them through Stig's delusions of grandeur and self-pity and fear manifesting in other forms (notably into the arms of another woman) and Marta's own semi-helplessness, which is very good, if imperfect, as classic Bergman storytelling. On the other hand it's also one of the best examples of classical music being used as incidental music: there's not exact musical score like if we hear music accompanying the characters giving the emotional cues during an argument scene or when Sanderby offers advice or gets irritated at Stig, but rather the music of Sanderby's orchestra (and Sjostrom, I might add, is pitch-perfect in the role of the weathered and brilliant second-banana conductor) fills in the spaces at times of the emotional context.

Probably the most successful, and joyful, scene is when Stig finds out Marta has the baby, by running out quick during a rehearsal, the music going along as he's on the phone, then continuing as he sits back down, and as Sanderby asks quietly of one musician who asks another to another to Stig what happened, as the music plays on. This, plus the second greatest cinematic interpretation of Beethoven's 9th symphony 4th movement in a climax (the first being Clockwork Orange), make To Joy worth seeing all by itself, if only for Beethoven fans.

As one of the several films included on the recently released Eclipse DVD series, To Joy will appeal to fans of Bergman's knack at telling of characters in shattered, honest romance, and to those looking for some classical music bliss and have seen The Magic Flute or Autumn Sonata too many times.
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Even in pain, there is joy, if we look for it
armpetd121 January 2002
This is my favourite film. It is perceptive, gentle, full of deep human understanding. Inspirational, running the whole gamut of the human condition, leaving one sad, but also feeling and understanding what true joy really is. Sublime.
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6/10
Just a little ordinary
tim-764-29185623 November 2010
A moderate and still early film from Bergman that explores death, marriage and ultimately hope, through another common theme for many of his films, classical music.

Starting off in an uneasy tone, a telephone call brings bad news. From them on we get an insightful drama how the relationship and then marriage of the couple started, hiccuped through career ups and downs, infidelities, children and then reconciliation.

It's well scripted, as usual. But, for me there' too much emphasis on watching orchestras rehearsing, whilst important to the story (the husband is a notable violinist, his wife a member of the same orchestra) to many it would seem like padding. Many of the ups and downs and tribulations they face are not at all unusual, either for Bergman, nor for a relationship drama by anybody else.

Despite its often bleak outlook, To Joy, aptly played by the orchestra at the end, sparks a measure of hope and continuity.
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9/10
Love in relationship - spoilers for To Joy and The Cranes are Flying
PoppyTransfusion29 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
In this review I want to discuss the main theme of To Joy, as I see it, and compare it with The Cranes are Flying (1957) of which I was vividly reminded whilst watching To Joy. To make the comparison spoilers for both films are necessary so do not read if you have not seen either film.

"Imagine trying to decipher this complicated, secret language that two lovers develop and talk uninhibited."

I think this was Sondersby's (the orchestral conductor) line and it seems to be the major theme of the film; the secret language of lovers in a relationship. A language that can be captured in music but not by sight. Many of the reviews mention their dislike of Stig (the husband) and indeed he is not an especially sympathetic character, who we, the audience, know little about to help 'explain' or 'understand' him. But it seems unfair to demonise him within his relationship and marriage to Marta. We as an audience see and hear what occurs between them, yet we are outside the language of love (which includes pain and hatred) that envelops the two. From the outside in, Stig is not intelligible to us as he is to Marta. Or vice versa.

Unlike her he seems to have been ambitious and with a desire to be an artist of repute. She seems more content to be part of an orchestra and later part of a marriage. He struggles to have and retain a separate identity throughout the film. This becomes increasingly difficult with the arrival of two children in his marriage with Marta. The reality hits home that he might never be the man he dreamt of becoming and he expresses this by having an affair with a woman, herself married, who admires him from afar whilst Marta loves him very near. There is a grubbiness in Stig's affair, as implied by the behaviour of cuckolded husband and lecherous, voyeuristic tenant, that is absent from his marriage to Marta. In the marriage there is a clarity and crispness of something pure in feeling, even when the feeling is antagonistic.

The film felt full of tension and pathos and I felt for both of them in their difficulties. The dialogue between them was great; at once melancholic but with a subtle invective that served to wound each other more. The cruelest moment occurred when Marta criticised Stig after he slapped her around the face. She takes responsibility for her actions but says she will never forgive Stig, whose momentary violence gives way to remorse and the painful realisation that he will not be forgiven and his wife is filled with contempt for him. Is this not a classic moment in relationships: When one feels the everlasting pain they have either caused or nursed in their relationship and the residue with which it coats everything that follows? Moments like this during the film made me sit up and pay attention to the truth of a reality unfolding on the screen.

Yet in spite of all this there was enough beauty and majesty in the relationship of Stig and Marta, as in the music, to remind me of the love story of Boris and Veronika in The Cranes are Flying. It helped that the actresses who played Marta and Veronika were dark-haired and dark-eyed as seen in the many close-ups of their faces. The character of Stig was no Boris by any means but the love and joy, when it was just there without sorrow or recriminations, was similar in both cinematic relationships. And of course both films end with a character mourning the death of the other. Each bereaved partner has an emblematic toy of the now-dead loved one: For Stig it was the bear he gave Marta as his first present; for Veronika it is the squirrel Boris left her when he departed for war. Ultimately Stig and Veronika reach through their mourning to a joy which is present beyond laughter or happiness, as per Sonderby's closing description of joy.

For Stig that joy is present in playing music for his son. For Veronika it is celebrating the end of war and the return of many who survived to be reunited with family and loved ones. In each case their love of another has given them something, a type of joy, that cannot be eradicated by death. Both Stig and Marta surrender to joy. In The Cranes are Flying Veronika's surrender is shown in beautiful black and white photograph with shots that pan up and down as she gives away her flowers. In To Joy Stig's surrender is played out to the music of Beethoven performed by the orchestra, of which he is and Marta was, a part.

My second favourite Bergman film after Wild Strawberries.
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7/10
Otherwise you can't go on living
gbill-748778 July 2019
This seems to be a deeply personal work for Bergman, and it's interesting that the backdrop to the story is classical music. We get extended sequences of an orchestra practicing or performing, and the music exudes a feeling of being grand, joyful, perfect, and immortal, whereas by contrast the lives of these characters are small, sad, flawed, and fleeting. It's hard to know how much of the story is Bergman flagellating himself for the failure of his second marriage and his inadequacies as a young artist, but regardless, I love the film for its raw honesty, and for showing the husband to be the childish, insecure, and selfish one in this couple's marriage. They both seem to seek authenticity and meaning early on in their relationship, and start off their marriage promising to be honest and kind to one another, but inevitably things deteriorate, the entropy of which is (in various forms) a recurring theme in Bergman's work.

I loved the shot on the boy at the end, it's powerful, but in the overall scene, I would have preferred an even more somber sequence amidst that soaring music. (It's hard to believe I'm saying I would have preferred something being more somber in a Bergman film, so I hope that's not saying more about me than I'm saying about the film, hehe) Anyway, it was wonderful to see legendary director Victor Sjöström as the cranky orchestra conductor, just as he'd appear later for Bergman in 'Wild Strawberries,' and look for Bergman himself in a cameo in the doctor's office.

A few quotes: Bergman seemingly through Stig (Stig Eriksson): "I'll tell you the secret of real art. It's created when you're unhappy. I prefer being unhappy. God knows it's the state I usually find myself in."

And maybe Bergman through Marta (Maj-Britt Nilsson): "There's so much misery, laziness, and indifference, in body and in mind. In the end you don't believe in anything. You think that's just how it is. That's the whole meaning. (Stig: There doesn't have to be a meaning.) Yes there does. If there isn't, you make you one up. Otherwise you can't go on living."

And lastly this one, Bergman on music in 1960: "I would say that there is no art form that has so much in common with film as music. Both affect our emotions directly, not via the intellect. And film is mainly rhythm; it is inhalation and exhalation in continuous sequence. Ever since childhood, music has been my great source of recreation and stimulation, and I often experience a film or play musically."
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8/10
Early Bergman and one of the better ones
TheLittleSongbird9 February 2013
Ingmar Bergman has rapidly become one of my favourite and most admired directors. He did go on to better things than To Joy and his other early films, but a lot of promise can be seen here. The characters are not as dimensional or compelling in their realism, like in the best of Bergman's films, Marta can be seen as too perfect and Stig is not an easy person to like at all. However, the acting is very good. Stig Olin and Maj-Brit Nilsson give strong performances but Victor Sjostrom gives the best performance. As ever with Bergman, To Joy is superbly directed, while the script is thoughtful and the film itself is beautifully shot. The story is intriguing and paced well, and there are some good themes that are well done they were written even more compellingly in Bergman's later films. The music is amazing and utilised beautifully. Overall, one of the better Bergman films if not among his better overall ones. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
Engaging reflection of a couple working through early marriage
steiner-sam28 May 2021
Ingmar Bergman's "To Joy" (Till glädje) is one of his earlier films. It opens and ends with a community orchestra and choir playing Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.

The story features the courtship and marriage of Stig Eriksson and Marta Olsson, who met while playing violin in the orchestra. Victor Sjöström, who stars in "Wild Strawberries" is the conductor of the orchestra. At the beginning of the film we learn that Marta has been killed in an accident at their summer cottage. It's followed by a long flashback about their tempestuous relationship.

Stig believes himself a skilled player and dreams of a solo career, but his hopes are dashed in one disastrous performance. Stig and Marta have a troubled relationship, but the last several years have seen reconciliation and joy.

It is said the film is semi-autobiographical about Bergman's first two marriages. I found the film an engaging reflection of a couple working through their first six or seven years of marriage.
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8/10
My brief review of the film
sol-10 April 2006
Although the plot of this film is rather simple - a man reflecting on the good and bad times that he had with his wife - it is handled well by Bergman, who gives the film an interesting audio and visual side, including creative editing changes, and at least one meaningful aerial shot early on the piece. The protagonist and his wife are concert musicians, and in the first few scenes, and in some later on, non-original music is used superbly to coincide with the action on screen. There are however a few concerts scenes that may have been better had they been trimmed in length, as seeing a whole concert performed is not necessary in the story. Although the film is mostly a series of memories, there is also one is ill-judged point in which a character other than the protagonist starts to narrate events, which is not possible in the way the story is told. Also, there is room to complain about the film being a bit too literal, but there is hardly reason to concentrate on the drawbacks of the film when it is such a delight to watch, and so well done where it is well done. Victor Sjöström, as the maestro, delivers fine support, and the film is an excellent example of great visual storytelling. In the years after this, Bergman would go on to direct more complex films that would require more skill on his behalf, but this early entry still stands up fairly well, even if not up to the standard of some of his latter work. The final sequence is especially well done, both in how it uses music, and in the contrast that it has to the first scene in which the man's son is seen.
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6/10
Lesser early Bergman, with shades of his later greatness
davidmvining20 November 2019
Early Bergman is interesting. With the great silent film director Victor Sjosstrom as his mentor, Bergman gained a strong visual sense early. With his love of and background in theater, he was able to get strong performances out of his actors pretty much out of the gate. However, while most of what I've seen of his early work contains scenes with sharp as a knife writing and biting performances, there's often something missing in the larger sense.

To Joy was made in 1950 and was Bergman's eighth film as director. Of the early work I've seen, it's pretty hit or miss. Crisis is outright bad, but A Ship to India is rather good (not the masterpiece Bergman boasted it was upon its release). To Joy falls in between. I wanted to like it more than I did, but there are some larger elements that I don't think get quite the support that they should.

First, the movie feels like a first draft of Scenes from a Marriage, Bergman's fantastic television miniseries about a couple who marry, divorce, and reunite over several years. I don't want to say that the way to fix To Joy is to add three and a half hours and get it to the length of the miniseries, but I do think that all it really needs is more time.

The movie is the story of a couple's relationship as they fall into love, marry, separate after having two children, and then fall back in love again only to have the relationship torn apart again by the wife's death, along with one of the two children. There are individual scenes that, taken out of context, feel like they should hit me emotionally pretty powerfully, but the problem is that by the time we get to those scenes, we don't have a strong enough sense of the relationship as a whole. To see the two begin to rend apart is muted by the fact that we never really saw them terribly happy before that point. I really feel like an extra half hour where we saw the two in a more "normal" state before things flew apart would make the ultimate destruction of the relationship impact more deeply.

I think this is best emphasized by the final scene. Throughout the movie, Bergman had used the couple's careers as musicians in an orchestra to help not only score the film, but underline the conflict of emotions at given moments. The final scene is the husband playing the Ode to Joy in the orchestra with great emotion to an audience of one, his son, the last of his family. Again, out of context, it feels quite powerful, but the son has had once quick scene up to that point. I had to think about who the little boy was for a moment before I remembered him, despite there being only one little boy in the movie. There was no connection between me and the boy, or between the boy and his father. It really undermined the power of the scene, which had the husband playing this joyful music to images of his deceased wife and their most unpleasant moments. It should have worked better than it did.

But, as I said, Bergman's filmmaking at this point was refined and rather wonderful. His mise en scene, particularly in his conversations where he kept both faces in frame and in focus as much as possible, is really strong. His camera work is almost elegant in its movements. And his use of the music through the story is very well done. I just wish the movie had filled out the earlier parts of the relationship more, and given us more time with the children to feel for them as part of the equation of the relationship.
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5/10
Unconvincing, sentimental Bergman melodrama
DC19779 January 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This is not one of Bergman's better films, perhaps understandably so as he was still in the earliest stages of his career. The main problem is with the script and characters which focus on the relationship between a frustratingly subservient woman (Maj-Britt Nilsson) and her selfish scumbag (for want of a better word) husband (Stig Olin).

Judging by this film and Summer Interlude which was made the following year, Bergman appears to have chosen Nilsson to play beautiful young women who deserve much better but instead fall for annoying young men; especially so in the character of Stig in this film, played fairly unconvincingly by Olin. Nilsson, on the other hand, is very good.

Olin's character spends the first part of the film whining and complaining, making the viewer wonder what on earth Marta (Nilsson) sees in him. He then spends the rest of the film mostly ill-treating and disregarding her which then leaves us asking why she puts up with it all.

Stig is a thoroughly selfish unpleasant character who happily lies down and accepts his wife's offer to make tea and a sandwich as she goes into labour, attends an orchestra rehearsal instead of being with her as she gives birth, is unfaithful to her and then beats her when she finally confronts him about it.

This outdated depiction of marriage is finally complete as Marta honestly blames herself for provoking her husband into repeatedly striking her.

Perhaps this was convincing stuff 60 years ago but the portrayal of a young woman who is prepared to give so much yet accept so little in return just doesn't ring true today.

Their subsequent reconciliation towards the end of the film seems artificial and tacked on purely as a means of building up to an emotional (but as it turned out, overly sentimental) climax.

I found it impossible to feel any sympathy for the husband at the end of the film so Bergman's attempts to move his audience just didn't work for me. One feeling I did get as the film ended was a reminder of the very similar way Beethoven's 9th Symphony was used at the end of A Clockwork Orange. This could have even been a direct reference by Kubrick.

The similarity was so strong that I was half expecting Stig's son to turn to us and say 'I was cured, alright' as the camera moved in on him in the final shot.
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6/10
Early collaboration between Bergman and Sjöström, preceding "Wild strawberries"
frankde-jong17 August 2022
"To joy" is a film about a couple married too soon. In "Summer with Monica" (1953, Ingmar Bergman) it is particularly the woman who is not mature enough, in "To joy" it is the man.

Stig Eriksson (Stig Olin) values his career more than his marriage. The goal of his career is to become the first violinist of the orchestra in which he plays. Even the conductor (played by Vitor Sjöström) can not persuade him that there is also much satisfaction to be gained from a more serving role in the orchstra. Only when it is too late he realises that the conductor was right when his son visits a rehearsal of Beethovens ninth (the title of the movie "To joy" is derived from the name of this symphony) to listen to his father.

"To joy" is an early Bergman. Ingmar Bergman was a director who had to learn his trade, so the quality of this film is below the quality of the films he made in his prime. Noteworthy is the collaboration with former director Victor Sjöström, who counselled Bergman in his early years. This collaboration (Bergman as director, Sjöström as actor) would become very famous when it was repeated when Bergman was in his prime ("Wild strawberries", 1957).

Bergman was maybe not yet fully grown as a director, he did show some selfknowledge. During the making of "To joy" Bergman's own marriage was dissolved. It is not unlikely that the character of Stig Eriksson contains some autobiographical elements.
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8/10
What Is Joy? That's the Real Question
Hitchcoc12 March 2015
It took a long time to have even a slight interest in Stig and pouting, depressing being. He is a mediocre violinist playing in a second tier orchestra. He has an incredibly inflated view of his abilities. When he gets his opportunity to solo, he blows it, but, of course, none of it is his fault. He becomes involved with Marta, who is herself a complex being. He is known for his embarrassing behavior, like he exhibits at her birthday party. But still she finds in him something that leads to their getting married. Her pregnancy derails things for a while but they fall back together. Meanwhile, he begins to see a beautiful young woman, the wife of a much older man and friend. He really is a cad and even though things are going so well, he can't handle a settled situation. Eventually, this involvement with a mistress becomes too much for the couple. She gets fed up and he regresses to his tight little self- centered world. At some point he sees that there is more to life than wandering around in the pits and they are reunited. We already know the ending because the whole thing is done in flashback. There is stunning cinematography, lovely closeups, black and white images that translate emotionally. Bergman seemed to be a master from the very beginning of his career.
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7/10
Expertly directed....but also a bit unpleasant.
planktonrules22 June 2011
Warning: Spoilers
My comment above is not necessarily a criticism, but it is a fact that among the many films of Ingmar Bergman is a VERY high percentage of depression movies. Bergman seemed to revel in exploring the depressing and banal aspects of life--and this film is swimming in it! So, if you are looking for a happy film, avoid this one at all cost! But, if you can appreciate the masterful direction, then it's well worth seeing.

The film begins as a musician learns that his wife was just burned to death and his daughter burned terribly. As I said, it's NOT a happy-go-lucky film! The film then looks backward--seven years ago when the two joined the orchestra and began a relationship. It's interesting how adult all this is--even for a European film. Premarital sex, cohabitation, abortion and adultery are all discussed during the course of the film. Some of this is very good and I could appreciate it, but some also seemed in a deliberate effort to get the viewer to dislike the leading man (Stig Olin). He was a thoroughly self-absorbed artist who seemed to think that brooding and selfishness were necessary for the artistic temperament. As for his wife (Maj-Britt Nilsson), she put up with hell from this man through much of the film--and it was hard to see why. Now I can respect the film for being this daring, but it also makes the film a tough sell as most people just don't want to see films where it's so difficult to care about the characters. But, on the other hand, their acting and direction are so nice you cannot just dismiss the film.

By the way, one of Bergman's favorite actors, Victor Sjöström, is in the film in a great role as a gruff old conductor. At first, he's easy to dislike--but over time you see his character grown and morph into a guy who really helped give color to this film.
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To Joy
Michael_Elliott29 February 2008
To Joy (1950)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Lightweight but sometimes charming and touching drama from Ingmar Bergman about a husband (Stig Olin) who looks back over his marriage after the sudden death of his wife (Maj-Britt Nilsson). While this isn't the classic touch we'd later see in such films as Scenes from a Marriage and Saraband, this film remains somewhat interesting simply because we know the director went onto better things. The screenplay is actually pretty good even though it's a tad bit shaky during certain scenes but the real highlight are the two performances, which really keep this from getting boring. The basic story is that husbands are little cry-babies and the wives are the backbone and strength to a relationship. The two actors, especially Nilsson, pull this off very well.
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7/10
My rating: 7
kekca26 August 2013
We have seen such movies that touch existential problems of the social being and they all are same in searching of the leading motive in its existence. They all lead the being modus of the existence to the mood in which is possible the phenomenon of love.

In Bergman's style this movie is pretty human and realistic. It tells about the one's fight with himself, self-overwhelming, egocentricity and egotism, dreams for ruling in the world like a semi-god presence dressed in body; to accepting the other, sobering, becoming a man, family and children.

The image of the protagonist shows us hard but not in any case unpleasant character, sunk in honestly presented true realism of life, washed and ironed after being dingy with light postmodern delusions.

Known to everyone story told in unknown way. In moments too long fragments with concert plays are not able to spoil this movie. On the contrary.

http://vihrenmitevmovies.blogspot.com/
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7/10
Sjöström's movie
Mattias24 February 2000
Although Olin and Nilsson is good as always, it is Sjöström that makes this movie worth watching. He was a terrific actor, returning to Bergman a few years later in 'Wild Strawberries'. The plot itself nothing out of the ordinary, if you have seen several Bergman movies. Worth mentioning is also Beethoven's wonderful classical music, 'To Joy'.
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6/10
Interesting but Uneven
SpaaceMonkee5 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I usually try not to include spoilers in my reviews, but I feel I have to here in order to give an honest appraisal.

Marta and Stig both are violinists in an orchestra. They join the orchestra at the same time, then start dating, get married, and have a child. Throughout, Marta is the stronger of the two. Stig is, frankly, rather whiny. He comes across as selfish and moody. He also is ambitious, but he lacks the talent to match his ambitions, a mismatch which seems to generate in him a sense of inadequacy that drives him to be even moodier and more selfish. We learn later that he has a mistress and that he gives her money, even though his wife and children have little to spare. He also coldly tells Marta that the mistress is none of her business. Then, he smacks Marta in the face. Stig is thoroughly unlikeable throughout most of the movie.

To Joy takes a deep dive into important topics, including marital relations, professional aspiration, and personal evolution. I wanted to like it more, and parts of it were quite thought provoking. Ultimately, however, it lacked punch. I attribute this to an uneven pacing. Large portions of them movie focus on Stig's shortcomings and failures, all of which are magnified by Bergman's decisions to begin the film with the call announcing Marta's death and then tell the story almost entirely through retrospective. The late parts of the movie show Stig maturing, realizing his past errors, and becoming more accepting of his professional situation. All of this, we see in the movie, makes him a better husband, a person Marta loves and misses.

But, this apparent redemption happens so quickly, in terms of film time, that we hardly have an opportunity for it to sink in before returning to the start where Marta has died. Even in the final moments of the film, as Stig sees flashbacks of his relationship with Marta, many of the reflections are of the fights or his bad decisions, like giving her a bloody nose. This is, perhaps, one of the few movies that likely would have benefited from being longer and playing out the "improved" relationship between Stig and Marta more, as well as providing some insight into Stig's relationship with his children. Instead, To Joy fall short of its potential.
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5/10
Not much joy to be found here...
MOscarbradley4 January 2020
The title is a bit misleading since there isn't that much joy to be found in Ingmar Bergman's 1950 film "To Joy". It begins with the off-screen death of one of its two leading characters and is then told in flashback. They are violinists in an orchestra who marry but find living together difficult. She's Maj-Britt Nilsson and he's Stig Olsen and the conductor is played by Victor Sjostrom.

The music's great but the material is just another chilly Bergman view of infidelity and an unhappy marriage; watching it you feel as if the director had all of Olsen's character's ambition but had yet to fully realise his talent. Nilsson's beauty and natural warmth shine through and Gunnar Fischer's cinematography is suitably crisp but overall, a minor addition to the Bergman canon.
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7/10
Bergman's early ode
lee_eisenberg23 November 2023
Most people probably know Ingmar Bergman as the director of "The Seventh Seal" and other philosophical movies. One of his early efforts looks at the effects of a career on a relationship. "Till glädje" ("To Joy" in English) depicts a musician whose determination to achieve greatness in his field harms his marriage. It's not a great movie, but an interesting one. As with most of Bergman's movies, it requires a long attention span. On top of this, like most movies that depict people trying to start families, it makes family life look unpleasant (speaking as a cinephile, I don't like the idea of having to give up movie-watching just to raise children, especially since I wouldn't know their mental states).

All in all, an okay movie.
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