Charles XII (film)
| Charles XII | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | John W. Brunius |
| Written by | Hjalmar Bergman |
| Produced by | Herman Rasch |
| Starring | Gösta Ekman Bengt Djurberg Augusta Lindberg Mona Mårtenson |
| Cinematography | Hugo Edlund |
| Music by | Otto Trobäck |
Production company | Historisk Film |
| Distributed by | Historisk Film |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 6 hours |
| Country | Sweden |
| Languages | Silent Swedish intertitles |
Charles XII (Swedish: Karl XII) is a 1925 Swedish silent historical film directed by John W. Brunius and starring Gösta Ekman, Bengt Djurberg and Augusta Lindberg. Because of its long running time of nearly six hours, it was released in two separate parts. The film depicts the life of Charles XII of Sweden (1682-1718) who oversaw the expansion of the Swedish Empire until its defeat by the Russian army at the Battle of Poltava, the decisive battle of the Great Northern War. The film was the most expensive production in Swedish history when it was made, and inspired a string of large budget Swedish historical films.