I Am Curious (Blue)
For the 2025 edition of FIKA(S), the festival and the Cinémathèque québécoise present a program dedicated to the Swedish New Wave. It highlights young filmmakers who emerged in the 1960s and, inspired by the French New Wave, sought to revitalize Swedish cinema, which was then dominated by Ingmar Bergman. Themes of transmission, self-affirmation, social struggle, and sexual liberation run through these award-winning films, many of which were praised at international festivals.
Lena continues her examination of the Swedish society and meet with various people, her lovers the director Vilgot and Börje among them, but also people like the singer Sonja and Lena's old friend Hasse, a journalist who lives with Bim on a lighthouse ship.

Vilgot Sjöman
Vilgot Sjöman was a Swedish filmmaker, screenwriter, actor, and producer. Born into a working-class family in Stockholm, his first film, The Mistress, earned Bibi Andersson the Silver Bear for Best Actress at the 1963 Berlin International Film Festival. Sjöman’s films often tackled controversial topics such as social class, morality, and sexual taboos, blending the emotionally tortured characters of Ingmar Bergman with the avant-garde style of the French New Wave. He is best known for 491 (1964), I Am Curious (Yellow) (1967), and I Am Curious (Blue) (1968), which pushed the boundaries of what was considered acceptable on screen, deliberately treating their subjects in a provocative and explicit manner. In the United States, the distributor of the I Am Curious films released them with the explicit goal of challenging censorship in the country. Throughout his career, Sjöman collaborated with renowned Swedish actors. Later in life, he became an outspoken critic of commercial breaks during the broadcast of films on television. His efforts culminated in a legal battle, for which he was awarded the Ingmar Bergman Prize in 2003.
