![]() ![]() ![]() Such a story, though in this case based on fact, pertains more to fantasy than to fiction. He marries her anyway, and gets her pregnant-whereupon she has both the baby and a complete reversal of the symptoms of her illness. ![]() And it becomes apparent that Ake Falck's "A Time in the Sun," which opened yesterday at the Carnegie Hall Cinema, has a visual program, a pleasant one, to match its decently sentimental story.The story concerns a handsome, successful young writer who meets a lovely young nurse who is dying of Hodgkin's disease. Somewhat later, atter we know the characters, it devotes such close attention to fragments of human anatomy that it seems at times to be recalling those "geography of the body" movies that in provincial film societies used to substitute for art (and sex).But much later, after the hero and heroine have married and settled down to her pregnancy, the area of vision has widened to include rarely less than a bed, a body, or a corner of a cozy apartment. AT the very first, as the credits come on, it looks like a kind of micro-cinematography. ![]()
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