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  1. 27 feb 1998 · The Glassblower's Children: Directed by Anders Grönros. With Lena Granhagen, Stellan Skarsgård, Pernilla August, Oliver P. Peldius. Based on the novel by Maria Gripe, this is the story of two children, Klas and Klara, growing up in the poor Swedish countryside of the mid-19th century.

    • (1,4K)
    • Drama, Family
    • Anders Grönros
    • 1998-02-27
  2. The Glassblower's Children (Swedish: Glasblåsarns barn) is a Swedish film, first intended to open on 25 December 1996, but ending up released to cinemas in Sweden on 27 February 1998, directed by Anders Grönros.

  3. 27 feb 1998 · Based on the novel by Maria Gripe, this is the story of two children, Klas and Klara, growing up in the poor Swedish countryside of the mid-19th century. Their father Albert is a glass-blower, famous for his beautiful vases, but still unable to earn enough money for his wife Sofia and the children.

  4. 5 giorni fa · After her husband kidnaps the glassblower's children, they are turned into amnesiacs and forced to live in the castle, where they are tortured and abused by their tutor, a...

    • (52)
    • Anders Grönros
    • Drama
    • Stellan Skarsgård
  5. This is the story of two children, Klas and Klara, growing up in the poor Swedish countryside of the mid-19th century. Their father Albert is a glass-blower, famous for his beautiful vases, but still unable to earn enough money for his wife Sofia and the children.

    • Anders Grönros
    • Stellan Skarsgård
  6. 27 feb 1998 · Based on the novel by Maria Gripe, this is the story of two children, Klas and Klara, growing up in the poor Swedish countryside of the mid-19th century. Their father Albert is a glass-blower, famous for his beautiful vases, but still unable to earn enough money for his wife Sofia and the children.

  7. 25 mag 2024 · The Glassblower’s Children. (1998) IMDb. Seen in 2021. The local lord has a pair of siblings kidnapped, hoping this will please his wife. A charming blend of Scandinavian folktale archetypes, Selma Lagerlöf’s contributions to the golden age of Swedish cinema in the 1910s, and a deeper humanism befitting the 1990s.