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7->''"Bring me the slaughtering-knife."''
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9''The Virgin Spring'' (''Jungfrukällan'') is a 1960 [[UsefulNotes/{{Sweden}} Swedish]] film directed by Creator/IngmarBergman and starring Creator/MaxVonSydow. It is partly [[OlderThanTheyThink based on the]] Swedish [[OlderThanPrint medieval ballad]] [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Töres_döttrar_i_Wänge ''Töre's daughters in Vänge'']]. Von Sydow is Töre, a prosperous 14th century Christian farmer who sends his innocent virgin daughter Karin (Birgitta Pettersson) off to carry candles to church for matins. Accompanying her is Ingeri (Creator/GunnelLindblom) the servant girl, who is heavily pregnant. Ingeri is a secret pagan, and she resents Karin so much that she prays to Odin to bring a curse down upon Karin.
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11Ingeri and Karin have an argument on the way and part. Ingeri enters the cabin of a mysterious old man, who shows her pagan sacrifices he has made, speaks of "three dead men riding north", and promises to give her strength. He makes obvious sexual advances towards her, and she flees in terror.
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13Meanwhile, Karin encounters three shepherds, two adults and a boy. They have a pleasant picnic together, until the mood darkens, the two adult shepherds turn mean, and they rape her. One of the rapists then bashes Karin in the head with a club, killing her. The two shepherds take Karin's possessions and strip the fine silk dress from her body before heading south. They then stop to take shelter--at Töre's farm.
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15''The Virgin Spring'' was written by Ulla Isaksson (who specialized in medieval history), and thus is one of the few Ingmar Bergman films that Bergman did not write as well as direct. It won the MediaNotes/AcademyAwardForBestForeignLanguageFilm. Twelve years later, it was remade by Creator/WesCraven, with a lot more blood and gore, as ''Film/TheLastHouseOnTheLeft''.
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17----
18!!Provides examples of:
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20* AdaptationDistillation: The film drops the twist at the end of the song where the rapists turn out to be the estranged sons of Töre and Märeta.
21* AdaptationExpansion: Expands a brief folk song to a 90-minute film, fleshing out the characters and introducing themes of faith and class that are nowhere in the original.
22* AnAesop: Faith can punish even good people. And do not think for even a second that "God" will protect you from misery or death.
23* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: Ingeri is horrified when she becomes convinced that her prayer for Odin to punish Karin was actually heard.
24* {{Chiaroscuro}}: The scene with Töre and his worrying wife at night in bed has one light source and the rest in darkness.
25* CodeOfHonour: Töre could have [[SlainInTheirSleep killed the brothers in their sleep]] but he allows them to wake up and face him in combat. Although, he always had the advantage of the larger weapon.
26* CradleOfLoneliness: After learning about her daughter's death, Märeta cries into Karin's dress the brothers gave her.
27* CreepyCrows: A creepy [[Myth/NorseMythology raven]] squawks as Karin and Ingeri approach the creepy old man's sinister cabin. It reappears at the end, almost as if to gloat.
28* DeadlyEuphemism: When the rapists offer to sell Karin's clothes to Märeta, she grows pale with shock, then forces herself to remain calm and tells them she'll ask her husband "what payment might be fitting for such a valuable dress."
29* DeathOfTheOldGods: The Sweden of this movie is almost completely Christianized, and Odin is reduced to hanging out in a shack in the woods trying to sucker in stray worshippers.
30* DeliberateValuesDissonance: The movie goes a long way in reproducing the mentality of the medieval Swedish countryside, a lot of which will appear strange to a modern audience. At the same time [[RealityIsUnrealistic it averts this trope]], exposing the rather liberal and cheerful relationship between Karin and her parents, standing in striking contrast to the sheep-like obedience expected of every child that, according to most people, was prevalent in that time period.
31* DontGoInTheWoods: The forest is a dark, scary place where pagan gods reside. Karin is killed there.
32* {{Foreshadowing}}: A conversation between Karin and Ingeri where Karin says she'll stay a virgin until marriage and Ingeri spitefully asks what she'll do if a man throws her down behind a bush to ravish her.
33* GodInHumanForm: It is implied that the scary old man in the cabin actually is Odin, who has appeared to grant Ingeri her wish. (Like Odin, the old man only has one eye.)
34* GreenEyedMonster: Pregnant, unwed, servant girl Ingeri hates the pampered Karin and calls down a curse upon her.
35* HarmfulToMinors: The youngest of the shepherds helps his older brothers capture Karin when she tries to flee but is completely traumatised by her rape and murder. It's rather obvious he had no idea what they were going to do to her. For the rest of the film [[GuiltRiddenAccomplice the guilt drives him nearly insane]]. Märeta tries to shield him from her husband's rage to no avail.
36* HateSink: The two shepherds stumble upon an innocent girl in the woods, and decide to rape and murder her for the hell of it. They unwittingly seek shelter in her parents' house that night, and decide to try and sell her clothes for a quick buck. [[spoiler:This backfires immensely, as the girl's father brutally murders them both.]]
37* IdiotBall: The parents are depicted as reasonable characters but they decide to let their [[TheIngenue innocent teenage daughter]] travel in a PimpedOutDress without a male guardian across the woods and beyond. What could possibly go wrong?
38* IncorruptiblePurePureness: Innocent virgin Karin. Possibly subverted, as Ingeri calls her out for dancing and flirting with a boy, but Karin insists that she was only looking for a husband for Ingeri.
39* ItsAllMyFault: Ingeri and Märeta both blame themselves for Karin's rape and murder, Ingeri because she wished for Karin to be harmed and then did nothing to help her and Märeta, because she envied Karin's closer relationship with her father.
40* TheLateMiddleAges: The setting.
41* LightFeminineAndDarkFeminine: Karin is blonde-haired, Christian, innocent, and a virgin. Ingeri is a dark-haired pagan, and at least eight months pregnant. Karin rides her horse side-saddle, while Ingeri rides like a man would.
42* MyGodWhatHaveIDone:
43** Töre after he kills the boy, whom the audience knows is innocent.
44** After they find Karin's body, a hysterical Ingeri cries that it is all her fault, for calling down Odin's wrath, as well as for standing frozen and watching while Karin is attacked.
45* NoNameGiven:
46** The old man in the cabin, who says he has no name "these days", and who may be the god Odin (his raven, his one eye and his apparently magic high-seat are clear indications of this).
47** The three shepherds are never named.
48* ObliviousGuiltSlinging: The Beggar wants to soothe the young boy by telling him about how Jesus will always take care of good people like him ... after first going into detail about what will happen to murderers and rapists. It doesn't exactly calm him down.
49* OhCrap: It doesn't even occur to Karin that the three shepherds could be dangerous ... until they start commenting on her slim waist and she recognizes the mark on the goats they stole. By then, it's too late.
50* OutlivingOnesOffspring: A reasonably happy and successful couple's young (and only) daughter is raped and killed by strangers.
51* ThePenance: Töre tells Märeta to go herself at night. Apparently, she is hurting herself with hot candle wax.
52* PietaPlagiarism: When Märeta cradles her daughter's body.
53* PimpedOutDress: Karin's heavily embroidered yellow silk gown, especially by the standards of the 14th century. (Until the 16th century, silk had to be imported from the Middle or Far East and therefore was extremely expensive.)
54* RageAgainstTheHeavens: After finding Karin's body in the woods, Töre cries out to God, saying that he doesn't understand why God would allow this to happen. But then he asks God for forgiveness for murder, and promises to build a church on the spot of his daughter's death.
55-->'''Töre:''' You see it, God. You see it. The innocent child's death, and my revenge. You allowed it! I don't understand You. I don't understand You. Yet, I still ask Your forgiveness. I know no other way to be reconciled with my own hands. I know no other way to live. I promise You, God... here on the dead body of my only child, I promise You that, to cleanse my sins, here I shall build a church. On this spot. Of mortar and stone... and with these, my hands.
56* RapeAndRevenge: Töre takes revenge, killing both of the rapists--and the innocent boy as well.
57* RapeAsDrama: Poor, ''poor'' Karin...
58* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Töre goes on one at the end of the film.
59* SceneryCensor: When Töre takes a bath before his revenge, he stands naked in the room but the tub covers his private parts.
60* SiblingsInCrime: The two unnamed shepherds who raped and killed Karin are siblings if their word can be trusted.
61* SpoiledSweet: Karin is pampered and spoiled, especially by her mother, but she's still essentially a good-hearted and kind young girl.
62* TheseHandsHaveKilled: Both shown and discussed, as Töre decides that God ''must'' exist if only so that someone can forgive what his hands have done.
63* TooDumbToLive: Karin told the brothers where she came from. When they come to the location, they have nothing better to do than try to sell Karin's clothing to her mother.
64* TheUnintelligible: The mute shepherd only speaks in unintelligible sounds which are interpreted by the thin shepherd.
65* ViolenceIsDisturbing: The mute shepherd clubbing Karin to death is done in a brutish manner and Karin crawls in the dirt for a moment afterwards with blood on her face. Töre's subsequent killing of the shepherds is dirty and primitive, especially when he wrestles the boy from his wife's hands and hurls him straight into a wall.
66* VirginSacrifice: Seemingly alluded to with the visual TitleDrop at the end. After Töre pledges to build a church on the spot where his daughter died, they lift up her body, and a spring bursts forth from the ground.
67* VomitDiscretionShot: The boy vomits off camera after witnessing Karin's death.
68* WhenIWasYourAge: Märeta tells Karin that she would have gotten a trashing from her parents if she talked to them like Karin talks to her.
69* WouldHurtAChild: In his rage (and acting on false information from Ingeri) Töre kills not only the two rapists but their traumatized little brother as well.

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