Incluvie – Better diversity in movies.
Identity in film through scores, reviews, and insights.

Incluvie – Better diversity in movies.
Explore identity in film through scores, reviews, and insights.

trailer bannerplay button
Scenes from a Marriage poster

Scenes from a Marriage (1974)

Johan and Marianne are married and seem to have it all. Their happiness, however, is a façade for a troubled relationship, which becomes even rockier when Johan admits that he's having an affair. Before long, the spouses separate and move towards finalizing their divorce, but they make attempts at reconciling. Even as they pursue other relationships, Johan and Marianne realize that they have a significant bond, but also many issues that hinder that connection.
- / 5
INCLUVIE SCORE
- / 5
MOVIE SCORE
Representation

Pictures and Videos


Incluvie Gala Ad

Movie Information


Johan and Marianne are married and seem to have it all. Their happiness, however, is a façade for a troubled relationship, which becomes even rockier when Johan admits that he's having an affair. Before long, the spouses separate and move towards finalizing their divorce, but they make attempts at reconciling. Even as they pursue other relationships, Johan and Marianne realize that they have a significant bond, but also many issues that hinder that connection.

Rating:
Genre:Drama, Romance
Directed By:Ingmar Bergman
Written By:Ingmar Bergman
In Theaters:9/15/1974
Box Office:

Runtime:169 minutes
Studio:Cinematograph AB

Cast


Director

Ingmar Bergman

Director

noImg
cast

Liv Ullmann

Marianne

cast

Erland Josephson

Johan

cast

Bibi Andersson

Katarina

cast

Jan Malmsjö

Peter

cast

Gunnel Lindblom

Eva

cast

Wenche Foss

Modern

cast

Bertil Norström

Arne

cast

Anita Wall

Mrs. Palm

cast

Rossana Mariano

Young Eva

cast

Lena Bergman

Karin

cast

Ingmar Bergman

Voice of the Press Photographer (uncredited)

Articles You May Like


Review: The Roses – Marriage and the Sweet Taste of Revenge

The Roses is a wickedly sharp marital warfare comedy that transforms domestic dysfunction into high art. Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch deliver powerhouse performances as a couple whose fairy-tale romance implodes when his architectural career collapses just as her culinary empire takes off. What makes Jay Roach's remake so devastatingly effective is its refusal to pick sides—both spouses are equally sympathetic and monstrous, wielding Tony McNamara's razor-sharp dialogue like weapons forged from shared intimacies. It's a film that dares you to laugh at relationship wreckage while forcing you to confront the uncomfortable truth that the line between passionate love and mutual destruction is terrifyingly thin.

Nilufer Ozmekik
September 12, 2025

'A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night' Review: A Powerful (If Unintentional) Look At the Exploitation of Women

A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night, though its feminism may be unintentional, cannot exist without its focus on women reclaiming power. The movie is feminist by definition, even if Amirpour didn’t write it with that in mind. A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night is mesmerizing, poetic, and stunning, both for its portrayal of feminist ideas and its powerful story that is both horrific and subtly romantic at once.

Marisa Jones
September 27, 2021