Saraband -- Ingmar Bergman
Posted: February 5th, 2006, 12:58 am
recent film ca. 2003 by Ingmar Bergman, the greatest director/screenwriter ever.
this is purportedly his 'last' film; and it is good, by his standards, which is to say, great by any other standards. if you are a fan of his, get the DVD version of this 'cause it has a documentary on the making-of this film, which is in a way at least as good as the movie itself! -- that is, if you are interested in his work b/c it enable you to see him work, indeed micromanaging the process.
the title is a term for a typeof musical piece. the film is scenario-wise a sequel to Scenes from a Marriage, which was [planned as. or actually?] a serial television show [Swedish] then released as a feature film, consisting of -- you guessed it -- scenes from a troubled marriage of professionals. starring Liv Ullman, one of the best actresses to work with Bergman. Scenes from a Marriage, btw, formed the basis for Woody Allen's comedy Scenes from a Mall from the late 80s i think.
however, the characters from the prior film are more peripheral in muchj of Saraband which focuses primrily on the man's granddaughter, played by young actress Julia Dufvenius, whose portrait the camera is occupied with taking during many shots; she is a vintage Bergman woman in the tradition of Liv Ullman and Bibi Anderson [if you don't know what i am talking about, See: PERSONA, ca. 1961, or for that matter, THE SEVENTH SEAL 1957 -- the greatest film ever made].
but the film this one most resembles, thematically, is Wild Strawberries, with its emphasis on the interweaving of themes of aging, family, love, hate, nostalgia, anxiety-unto-death.
what is quite striking, and is explicitly revealed in the accompanying documentary, is that the problem of the meaning of death for life, whch is one of the central concerns of this most existentialist of filmmakers, is a problem that has remained unresolved throughtout the auteur's career -- no surprise there -- but still one that he seeks a solution for. inspiring and depressing at the same time, like much of tragic art and maybe even the comic as well?
this is purportedly his 'last' film; and it is good, by his standards, which is to say, great by any other standards. if you are a fan of his, get the DVD version of this 'cause it has a documentary on the making-of this film, which is in a way at least as good as the movie itself! -- that is, if you are interested in his work b/c it enable you to see him work, indeed micromanaging the process.
the title is a term for a typeof musical piece. the film is scenario-wise a sequel to Scenes from a Marriage, which was [planned as. or actually?] a serial television show [Swedish] then released as a feature film, consisting of -- you guessed it -- scenes from a troubled marriage of professionals. starring Liv Ullman, one of the best actresses to work with Bergman. Scenes from a Marriage, btw, formed the basis for Woody Allen's comedy Scenes from a Mall from the late 80s i think.
however, the characters from the prior film are more peripheral in muchj of Saraband which focuses primrily on the man's granddaughter, played by young actress Julia Dufvenius, whose portrait the camera is occupied with taking during many shots; she is a vintage Bergman woman in the tradition of Liv Ullman and Bibi Anderson [if you don't know what i am talking about, See: PERSONA, ca. 1961, or for that matter, THE SEVENTH SEAL 1957 -- the greatest film ever made].
but the film this one most resembles, thematically, is Wild Strawberries, with its emphasis on the interweaving of themes of aging, family, love, hate, nostalgia, anxiety-unto-death.
what is quite striking, and is explicitly revealed in the accompanying documentary, is that the problem of the meaning of death for life, whch is one of the central concerns of this most existentialist of filmmakers, is a problem that has remained unresolved throughtout the auteur's career -- no surprise there -- but still one that he seeks a solution for. inspiring and depressing at the same time, like much of tragic art and maybe even the comic as well?