A ghost called Vita Frun (White Lady) is accused of several murders. Detective Hillman is contacted to resolve the case.A ghost called Vita Frun (White Lady) is accused of several murders. Detective Hillman is contacted to resolve the case.A ghost called Vita Frun (White Lady) is accused of several murders. Detective Hillman is contacted to resolve the case.
Margit Carlqvist
- Maria, Maid
- (as Margit Carlquist)
Inger Bengtsson
- Bus Driver
- (uncredited)
Hugo Björne
- Lawyer
- (uncredited)
Tor Borong
- Servant
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis is one the of films in a pentolgy of the Folke Mellvig/Lars Widding murder mystery stories , the 5 films being : The Lady in Black 1958, Mannequin in Red 1958, Rider in Blue 1959, Lady in White 1962, and The Yellow Car 1963
- ConnectionsFollowed by Den gula bilen (1963)
Featured review
While it's not really a part of the Hillman-movies, "Vita frun" features Holmsten as the detective Hillman and along for the ride is also regulars Hallberg and Granhagen. The plot is simple enough: A ghost, called "vita frun" (The White Lady) ,is blamed for the strange deaths that occur at a country manor. But is it really a ghost? This film manages to be quite unintentionally hilarious at times, when Mattsson tries to give his old-fashioned ghost story a sense of true pathos and a "Bergmanesque" sense of doom. The actors mostly play the whole silly plot commendably straight, but that sometimes makes supposedly serious lines like "You want to die, Eivor! You want to drown in the swamp!" an unexpected comedic delight. The downside of "Vita frun" are some very talky scenes that could have been omitted (or better developed) and the character Freddy, as the (so-called) comic sidekick with a stutter, who is 100% annoying. But Mattssons sense for visuals does manage to make an impression during the course of the movie, creating suspense by using lights and shadows and weird camera angles. There is one TRULY creepy scene and several others that are genuinely eerie. And it's all shot in glorious black-and-white, adding a lot of atmosphere, by Hilding Bladh who also lensed the pre-giallo "Mannekäng i rött". Sweden has never had a director like Arne Mattsson who often put style before content and was ridiculed in the 50's and 60's for being totally politically incorrect, but today we can appreciate his movies for what they are: somewhat slow-moving at times, unnecessarily theatrical, but pure entertainment
Details
- Runtime1 hour 49 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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