Sunday 5 August 2007

A Tribute to Ingmar Bergman

Ingmar Bergman was acclaimed by many critics, filmmakers and film fans as one of the greatest and most original filmmakers of all time, Bergman’s style has made a lasting impression on many audiences, and the filmic images in many of his work are among the most memorable in the history of cinema. Gathering influences from a number of different fields, Bergman has developed a very original style that can be coined as ‘Bergman-esque’, and this style has since inspired, and have been imitated by, so many filmmakers, from Woody Allen to Ang Lee, from Andrei Tarkovsky to Park Chan Wook, from Lars von Trier to Mamoru Oshii.

Since I have first watched Bergman’s ‘Cries And Whispers’ in my teenage years, I have fallen in love with Bergman’s style. Among my favorite Bergman films are ‘Cries And Whispers’, ‘Persona’, ‘Through a Glass Darkly’ and ‘Face to Face’.

The reason why I have been drawn to the cinematic world of Bergman is due to a Woody Allen film known as ‘Interiors’ (1978). Allen has known to admire Bergman intensely and ‘Interiors’ seems to be heavily influenced by Bergman’s style, especially from ‘Cries and Whispers’. This less known Allen film has changed my impression of the often comedic filmmaker and has also led me to the Bergman films.

Bergman’s films are all very confrontational – he has employed the most powerful images to press questions on the audience. He demands answers and opinions from the audience regarding the questions of the human condition. Even if the audiences are disillusioned by the stunning images they have experienced in a Bergman film, and are left silent during this experience, they will still be able to ponder on these questions long after the end of the film.

Bergman’s films are all very dark. Because he did not want to feed the audience with easy answers, he would like the audience to contemplate on difficult scenarios. His films are seen as very spiritual and in many cases philosophical. Influenced by Sjostrom (whom Bergman has casted as the protagonist in ‘The Wild Strawberries’), Ibsen and Strindberg, Bergman’s films are often related to existentialism. From these influences, one can easily appreciate why Bergman’s films are often minimalist, have very few key characters, and quite often are ‘chamber dramas’. These designs have all contributed to a starkness in his films, and it is especially so in his black-and-white films. When Bergman started making color films, he often employed Eastmancolor as the color source. In Bergman’s case, the use of Eastmancolor has provided the impression of coldness to his films. This coldness is also apparent in some other Eastmancolor films, among those Stanley Kubrick’s ‘Barry Lyndon’, many of Jean-Pierre Melville’s color crime films, and Akira Kurosawa’s ‘Kagemusha’. The Eastmancolor effect is most evident in ‘Cries and Whispers’, when the red color is presented in a very saturated way. In the film, the rooms in the manor is almost like the chambers of the heart, and the redness of the set design only heightens this aspect. In Bergman’s own words –

 ‘I have pictured the inside of the soul as a moist membrane in shades of red’.

Bergman’s clocks and mirrors

There are many recurrent motifs in the Bergman cinema. The first is the tools for contemplation and judgment. Clocks, watches and mirrors are often seen in many of Bergman’s films. The ticking of the clock and the reminder of the watch signify the time for judgment. And the mirror is the instrument for the character to face themselves and to contemplate their problems. Bergman’s characters cannot run away from their problems – they have to face the music when the time has come for confrontation. It is nevertheless not the end – because Bergman gives his characters an opportunity to examine their true selves and to gain self-knowledge from these often painful confrontations.

Bergman’s Faces

If there are the Kubrick stares and the Leone glares, then we have to remember the Bergman faces. The close-up of facial expressions in the Bergman cinema are certainly among the most powerful images in world cinema, and that is certainly an aspect many subsequent filmmakers have attempted to imitate. The camera angles and arrangements for the facial close-ups are often very innovative, and to this end ‘Persona’ and ‘Cries And Whispers’ serve as monumental achievements. The use of this motif is not merely about giving surprises or enhancing the visual sensations – the gestures and movements of the faces often convey important themes in the respective film, which I will discuss in specific circumstances in the future. In a sense, the face is the canvas for the human drama to take place, it is the place where the characters present themselves for the world, or just for themselves.

One final thing - I would love to recommend a great book, known as ‘The Films of Ingmar Bergman’ by Kalin (ISBN 0521389771). This is a great analysis on Bergman’s films and style, and I have been benefited a lot from the book. Hope you like it!

by Ed Law

Film Analysis