[NYTr] A Cuban Look at Ingmar Bergman Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2007 20:28:56 -0500 (CDT) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit Cuba Now - Aug 6, 2007 http://www.cubanow.net/global/loader.php?&secc=6&item=3089&cont=show.php Loneliness, Faith, Evil Death of Ingmar Bergman By Lisandro Otero Cubanow.- Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman died a few hours ago in his secluded home on the island of Faro. His work in the b50s and b60s brought about an enthusiastic fanaticism among his legion of admirers. No one had ever treated human adversities with such depth and realism. He seemed to have been devoured in the pyre of devotions, in the fundamentalisms of religious faith, in the militancy of the most sectarian beliefs. He followed a strict rationality when he shot his films. But his strict Lutheran education left a profound imprint. His father was a chaplain to the King of Sweden, and his family lived a strict atmosphere of methodic devotion. He used to write his own scripts, which sometimes took him years, but he gave his actors a scheme of the drama situation and let them improvise their dialogues. He only used the same histrionics: Max von Sydow, Bibi Andersson, Liv Ullman, Ingrid Tulin, among others, who knew how to play their roles. He gave his photography director, Sven Nykist, some instructions about the plot atmosphere, the tension between characters, the light he wanted, and let him just work each situation. His use of foreign participation enriched many of his films with the addition of his crewbs bright ideas. He always used his main characters in vulnerability and defenseless conditions, something that Woody Allen, one his most faithful disciples, quickly learned. His films happened in a somber and tormented atmosphere, debating about death, loneliness, faith, and the eternal struggle between good and evil, in a sterile metaphysical debate. His disciples also included Russian Andrei Tarkovsky and American Robert Altmann. Bergman wasnbt initially attracted to cinema. He considered himself a theater man. He directed plays in Helsingfor, Gothenburg, and MalmC6, including the Stockholm Royal Dramatic Theatre, which he directed from 1963 to 1966. His plays about his favorites Stringdberg and ObNeill gave him a big reputation. But before then, films such as bThe Seventh Sealb (1956) (Det sjunde inseglet), and bWild Strawberriesb (1957) (SmultronstC$llet), had brought him worldwide admiration. Besides, he penned films such as bMs Juliab, bThe Virgin Springb, and bFanny and Alexander,b which brought him praise and good critical acclaim. Three of his films won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film: bThe Virgin Springb in 1961; bThrough a Glass Darklyb in 1962; and bFanny and Alexanderb in 1984. He also won the Golden Palm at the Cannes Film Festival. Another cause for his success were his low-budgeted films. None of them ever cost over 400 thousand dollars, the average budget being 200 thousand. He used to say that Hollywood was obsessed with the sales and that it was the cause of a number of flops and deformations. Thatbs why he never left Sweden to work abroad. He got married five times and had nine children. He lived in Munich from 1976 to 1982 after his government accused him of tax evasion. The then moved to the isolated island of FC%rC6, where he lived until his death yesterday. Bergman was criticized by his seclusion in human intimacy in times of great conflicts, something he ignored. In England they practiced bfree cinemab and in France bnouvelle vagueb, but they all tried to express the same, the boredom of a Europe that had been sacrificed in the game of big powers, and that was tired of being used as a the scapegoat of ideologies. The Italian cinema of those years was characterized, together with neorealism, by the use of chronicles to tell everyday situations and their contradictions, the use of the political arsenal to denounce social injustices. Good examples from those years go from Viscontibs bLa Terra tremab to Fellinibs bLa Dolce vita.b The b50s and early b60s were highlighted by the reconstruction of Europe, the urban explosion, the decrease of farmers, the construction of a new left. Those were the times of the McCarthy aggressiveness in the United States against liberals and its decline after Stalinbs death in the Soviet Union. There was the Korean War and the Suez Canal conflict, the Budapest insurrection, the French colonial war in Algeria, the civil rights vindication in the US after the Little Rock crisis, the Cuban revolution, the construction of the Berlin Wall, and the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Those were times of many historical events that defined the character of the twentieth century. None of that can be seen in any of Bergmanbs films. * ================================================================= .NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems . Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us . .339 Lafayette St., New York, NY 10012 http://www.blythe.org . List Archives: https://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ . Subscribe: https://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================