Screenplay
Arvid share the love with a young woman named Lydia, but as is customary at the turn of the century, is not love enough for a fairy tale to come true. While Arvid struggling to create the basis for their existence, Lydia's thirst for the good life leads her to marrying an older wealthy man.
Writer
Land owner Bill Bärnfelt sees a beautiful woman when he is out riding and immediately falls in love. But then his former fiancee turns up and makes a fuss.
Writer
The old Victor Branzell has a grandson, Alf, who is in love with a clerk in a glove shop, Lilian Lind. But Lilian with her simple background doesn't get accepted in the circles where Alf belongs, and they have now reached the conclusion that they can't have a future together. Marriage is impossible. Victor summons Lilian and Alf and starts telling them his life story.
Writer
Inger lives at home with his parents. She suspects that she is pregnant. A doctor notes her pregnancy and urge her to seek the child's father. The doctor offers her an abortion, but she refuses.
Screenplay
Dr. Glas is visited by Mrs. Gregorius who lives in an unhappy marriage and decides to help her, by any means necessary.
Screenplay
Writer
Writer
At the beginning of the 1920s, Pauline Brunius directed a series of short light comedies - or as she herself describes them "finer games of pleasure with a bit of esprit, maybe also a bit of emotion". She herself wrote the scripts for the films about the charming Stockholm family Winner, where the parents were played by married couple Frida and Olof Winnerstrand and the son Putte by Pauline and John Brunius' own son Palle.
Screenplay
Sitcom for 1920s cinemas about the Winter family.