I Am Curious (Yellow)
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I Am Curious (Yellow) is a Swedish film (Jag är nyfiken - en film i gult) of 1967, directed by Vilgot Sjöman and starring Lena Nyman as herself.
It was a landmark film that helped define the emergent change in Swedish film of the 1960s, though it borrows heavily from the style of Ingmar Bergman. Like a French New Wave film, the movie uses jump cuts and features a story not structured in the usual, Hollywood structure. In one sense, it is a documentary-within-a-movie, but this is complicated by the companion film, I Am Curious (Blue), released in 1968. This second “version” of the movie, that takes place before and after the first movie, has a more somber and bitterly satiric style, and further explication of the framing narrative.
Initially, I Am Curious (Blue) and I Am Curious (Yellow) were meant to be one 3 1/2 hour film. This is revealed in director Vilgot Sjöman’s book I Was Curious: Diary of the Making of a Film (published in English by Grove Press in 1968).
The film includes numerous and frank scenes of nudity and sexual intercourse. In 1969, the film was banned in the United States for being pornographic. After three court battles the Supreme Court legalized the movie by overturning the anti-obscenity law that regulated motion pictures.
The film's title was the inspiration for the name of The Fall’s 1988 album I Am Kurious Oranj as well as The Simpsons episode "I Am Furious Yellow".
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